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Who Cares in the Middle East What Obama Says?

By Robert Fisk

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/fisk/who-cares-in-the-middle-east-what-obama-says-2290761.html

May 30, 2011 "The Independent" -- This month, in the
Middle East, has seen the unmaking of the President of
the United States. More than that, it has witnessed the
lowest prestige of America in the region since
Roosevelt met King Abdul Aziz on the USS Quincy in the
Great Bitter Lake in 1945.

While Barack Obama and Benjamin Netanyahu played out
their farce in Washington - Obama grovelling as usual -
the Arabs got on with the serious business of changing
their world, demonstrating and fighting and dying for
freedoms they have never possessed. Obama waffled on
about change in the Middle East - and about America's
new role in the region. It was pathetic. "What is this
'role' thing?" an Egyptian friend asked me at the
weekend. "Do they still believe we care about what they
think?"

And it is true. Obama's failure to support the Arab
revolutions until they were all but over lost the US
most of its surviving credit in the region. Obama was
silent on the overthrow of Ben Ali, only joined in the
chorus of contempt for Mubarak two days before his
flight, condemned the Syrian regime - which has killed
more of its people than any other dynasty in this Arab
"spring", save for the frightful Gaddafi - but makes it
clear that he would be happy to see Assad survive,
waves his puny fist at puny Bahrain's cruelty and
remains absolutely, stunningly silent over Saudi
Arabia. And he goes on his knees before Israel. Is it
any wonder, then, that Arabs are turning their backs on
America, not out of fury or anger, nor with threats or
violence, but with contempt? It is the Arabs and their
fellow Muslims of the Middle East who are themselves
now making the decisions.

Turkey is furious with Assad because he twice promised
to speak of reform and democratic elections - and then
failed to honour his word. The Turkish government has
twice flown delegations to Damascus and, according to
the Turks, Assad lied to the foreign minister on the
second visit, baldly insisting that he would recall his
brother Maher's legions from the streets of Syrian
cities. He failed to do so. The torturers continue
their work.

Watching the hundreds of refugees pouring from Syria
across the northern border of Lebanon, the Turkish
government is now so fearful of a repeat of the great
mass Iraqi Kurdish refugee tide that overwhelmed their
border in the aftermath of the 1991 Gulf war that it
has drawn up its own secret plans to prevent the Kurds
of Syria moving in their thousands into the Kurdish
areas of south-eastern Turkey. Turkish generals have
thus prepared an operation that would send several
battalions of Turkish troops into Syria itself to carve
out a "safe area" for Syrian refugees inside Assad's
caliphate. The Turks are prepared to advance well
beyond the Syrian border town of Al Qamishli - perhaps
half way to Deir el-Zour (the old desert killing fields
of the 1915 Armenian Holocaust, though speak it not) -
to provide a "safe haven" for those fleeing the
slaughter in Syria's cities.

The Qataris are meanwhile trying to prevent Algeria
from resupplying Gaddafi with tanks and armoured
vehicles - this was one of the reasons why the Emir of
Qatar, the wisest bird in the Arabian Gulf, visited the
Algerian president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, last week.
Qatar is committed to the Libyan rebels in Benghazi;
its planes are flying over Libya from Crete and -
undisclosed until now - it has Qatari officers advising
the rebels inside the city of Misrata in western Libya;
but if Algerian armour is indeed being handed over to
Gaddafi to replace the material that has been destroyed
in air strikes, it would account for the ridiculously
slow progress which the Nato campaign is making against
Gaddafi.

Of course, it all depends on whether Bouteflika really
controls his army - or whether the Algerian "pouvoir",
which includes plenty of secretive and corrupt
generals, are doing the deals. Algerian equipment is
superior to Gaddafi's and thus for every tank he loses,
Ghaddafi might be getting an improved model to replace
it. Below Tunisia, Algeria and Libya share a 750-mile
desert frontier, an easy access route for weapons to
pass across the border.

But the Qataris are also attracting Assad's venom. Al
Jazeera's concentration on the Syrian uprising - its
graphic images of the dead and wounded far more
devastating than anything our soft western television
news shows would dare broadcast - has Syrian state
television nightly spitting at the Emir and at the
state of Qatar. The Syrian government has now suspended
up to #4 billion of Qatari investment projects,
including one belonging to the Qatar Electricity and
Water Company.

Amid all these vast and epic events - Yemen itself may
yet prove to be the biggest bloodbath of all, while the
number of Syria's "martyrs" have now exceeded the
victims of Mubarak's death squads five months ago - is
it any surprise that the frolics of Messrs Netanyahu
and Obama appear so irrelevant? Indeed, Obama's policy
towards the Middle East - whatever it is - sometimes
appears so muddled that it is scarcely worthy of study.
He supports, of course, democracy - then admits that
this may conflict with America's interests. In that
wonderful democracy called Saudi Arabia, the US is now
pushing ahead with a #40 billion arms deal and helping
the Saudis to develop a new "elite" force to protect
the kingdom's oil and future nuclear sites. Hence
Obama's fear of upsetting Saudi Arabia, two of whose
three leading brothers are now so incapacitated that
they can no longer make sane decisions - unfortunately,
one of these two happens to be King Abdullah - and his
willingness to allow the Assad family's atrocity-prone
regime to survive. Of course, the Israelis would far
prefer the "stability" of the Syrian dictatorship to
continue; better the dark caliphate you know than the
hateful Islamists who might emerge from the ruins. But
is this argument really good enough for Obama to
support when the people of Syria are dying in the
streets for the kind of democracy that the US president
says he wants to see in the region?

One of the vainest elements of American foreign policy
towards the Middle East is the foundational idea that
the Arabs are somehow more stupid than the rest of us,
certainly than the Israelis, more out of touch with
reality than the West, that they don't understand their
own history. Thus they have to be preached at,
lectured, and cajoled by La Clinton and her ilk - much
as their dictators did and do, father figures guiding
their children through life. But Arabs are far more
literate than they were a generation ago; millions
speak perfect English and can understand all too well
the political weakness and irrelevance in the
president's words. Listening to Obama's 45-minute
speech this month - the "kick off' to four whole days
of weasel words and puffery by the man who tried to
reach out to the Muslim world in Cairo two years ago,
and then did nothing - one might have thought that the
American President had initiated the Arab revolts,
rather than sat on the sidelines in fear.

There was an interesting linguistic collapse in the
president's language over those critical four days. On
Thursday 19 May, he referred to the continuation of
Israeli "settlements". A day later, Netanyahu was
lecturing him on "certain demographic changes that have
taken place on the ground". Then when Obama addressed
the American Aipac lobby group (American Israel Public
Affairs Committee) on the Sunday, he had cravenly
adopted Netanyahu's own preposterous expression. Now
he, too, spoke of "new demographic realities on the
ground." Who would believe that he was talking about
internationally illegal Jewish colonies built on land
stolen from Arabs in one of the biggest property heists
in the history of "Palestine"? Delay in peace-making
will undermine Israeli security, Obama announced -
apparently unaware that Netanyahu's project is to go on
delaying and delaying and delaying until there is no
land left for the "viable" Palestinian state which the
United States and the European Union supposedly wish to
see.

Then we had the endless waffle about the 1967 borders.
Netanyahu called them "defenceless" (though they seemed
to have been pretty defendable for the 18 years prior
to the Six Day War) and Obama - oblivious to the fact
that Israel must be the only country in the world to
have an eastern land frontier but doesn't know where it
is - then says he was misunderstood when he talked
about 1967. It doesn't matter what he says. George W
Bush caved in years ago when he gave Ariel Sharon a
letter which stated America's acceptance of "already
existing major Israeli population centres" beyond the
1967 lines. To those Arabs prepared to listen to
Obama's spineless oration, this was a grovel too far.
They simply could not understand the reaction of
Netanyahu's address to Congress. How could American
politicians rise and applaud Netanyahu 55 times - 55
times - with more enthusiasm than one of the rubber
parliaments of Assad, Saleh and the rest?

And what on earth did the Great Speechifier mean when
he said that "every country has the right to
self-defence" but that Palestine would be
"demilitarised"? What he meant was that Israel could go
on attacking the Palestinians (as in 2009, for example,
when Obama was treacherously silent) while the
Palestinians would have to take what was coming to them
if they did not behave according to the rules - because
they would have no weapons to defend themselves. As for
Netanyahu, the Palestinians must choose between unity
with Hamas or peace with Israel. All of which was very
odd. When there was no unity, Netanyahu told us all
that he had no Palestinian interlocutor because the
Palestinians were disunited. Yet when they unite, they
are disqualified from peace talks.

Of course, cynicism grows the longer you live in the
Middle East. I recall, for example, travelling to Gaza
in the early 1980s when Yasser Arafat was running his
PLO statelet in Beirut. Anxious to destroy Arafat's
prestige in the occupied territories, the Israeli
government decided to give its support to an Islamist
group in Gaza called Hamas. In fact, I actually saw
with my own eyes the head of the Israeli army's
Southern Command negotiating with bearded Hamas
officials, giving them permission to build more
mosques. It's only fair to say, of course, that we were
also busy at the time, encouraging a certain Osama bin
Laden to fight the Soviet army in Afghanistan. But the
Israelis did not give up on Hamas. They later held
another meeting with the organisation in the West Bank;
the story was on the front page of the Jerusalem Post
the next day. But there wasn't a whimper from the
Americans.

Then another moment that I can recall over the long
years. Hamas and Islamic Jihad members - all
Palestinians - were, in the early 1990s, thrown across
the Israeli border into southern Lebanon where they
spent more than a year camping on a freezing
mountainside. I would visit them from time to time and
on one occasion mentioned that I would be travelling to
Israel next day. Immediately, one of the Hamas men ran
to his tent and returned with a notebook. He then
proceeded to give me the home telephone numbers of
three senior Israeli politicians - two of whom are
still prominent today - and, when I reached Jerusalem
and called the numbers, they all turned out to be
correct. In other words, the Israeli government had
been in personal and direct contact with Hamas.

But now the narrative has been twisted out of all
recognition. Hamas are the super-terrorists, the
"al-Qa'ida" representatives in the unified Palestinian
leadership, the men of evil who will ensure that no
peace ever takes place between Palestinians and
Israeli. If only this were true, the real al-Qa'ida
would be more than happy to take responsibility. But it
is not true. In the same context, Obama stated that the
Palestinians would have to answer questions about
Hamas. But why should they? What Obama and Netanyahu
think about Hamas is now irrelevant to them. Obama
warns the Palestinians not to ask for statehood at the
United Nations in September. But why on earth not? If
the people of Egypt and Tunisia and Yemen and Libya and
Syria - we are all waiting for the next revolution
(Jordan? Bahrain again? Morocco?) - can fight for
freedom and dignity, why shouldn't the Palestinians?
Lectured for decades on the need for non-violent
protest, the Palestinians elect to go to the UN with
their cry for legitimacy - only to be slapped down by
Obama.

Having read all of the "Palestine Papers" which
Al-Jazeera revealed, there is no doubt that
"Palestine's" official negotiators will go to any
lengths to produce some kind of statelet. Mahmoud
Abbas, who managed to write a 600-page book on the
"peace process" without once mentioning the word
"occupation", could even cave in over the UN project,
fearful of Obama's warning that it would be an attempt
to "isolate" Israel and thus de-legitimise the Israeli
state - or "the Jewish state" as the US president now
calls it. But Netanyahu is doing more than anyone to
delegitimise his own state; indeed, he is looking more
and more like the Arab buffoons who have hitherto
littered the Middle East. Mubarak saw a "foreign hand"
in the Egyptian revolution (Iran, of course). So did
the Crown Prince of Bahrain (Iran again). So did
Gaddafi (al-Qa'ida, western imperialism, you name it),
So did Saleh of Yemen (al-Qa'ida, Mossad and America).
So did Assad of Syria (Islamism, probably Mossad, etc).
And so does Netanyahu (Iran, naturally enough, Syria,
Lebanon, just about anyone you can think of except for
Israel itself).

But as this nonsense continues, so the tectonic plates
shudder. I doubt very much if the Palestinians will
remain silent. If there's an "intifada" in Syria, why
not a Third Intifada in "Palestine"? Not a struggle of
suicide bombers but of mass, million-strong protests.
If the Israelis have to shoot down a mere few hundred
demonstrators who tried - and in some cases succeeded -
in crossing the Israeli border almost two weeks ago,
what will they do if confronted by thousands or a
million. Obama says no Palestinian state must be
declared at the UN. But why not? Who cares in the
Middle East what Obama says? Not even, it seems, the
Israelis. The Arab spring will soon become a hot summer
and there will be an Arab autumn, too. By then, the
Middle East may have changed forever. What America says
will matter nothing.

(c) 2011 The Independent

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