When future historians start to discuss the first
decade of the 21st century and the dramatic events that unfolded in that era,
starting with the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York and Washington,
they will probably try to draw the outlines of the counterfactual what-if scenarios
and contrast them with what-really-happened.
They may suggest that 9/11 had provided Americans with a glimpse of Hell-on-Earth,
of what could happen if the tensions between the West and the Islamic world
degenerated into a bloody global confrontation. But they may also propose that
a mix of the right policies, including effective security measures and creative
diplomatic efforts, could have ensured that the goal of Osama bin Laden to create
the conditions for a War of Civilizations would not have been achieved.
But as we know now, U.S. foreign policy was hijacked after 9/11 by a bunch
of American ideologues who exploited the attacks on the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon in order to advance a U.S.-led messianic crusade to remake the
Middle East – in the most devastating way, as far as U.S. national interests
and the Western presence in the Middle East are concerned.
In retrospect, the United States and the European Union, backed by Russia,
China, and the rest of the international community, could have tried to ensure
that the goals of the invasion of Afghanistan were accomplished through the
capture of Osama and the rest of the al-Qaeda leadership, and that would have
been followed by pursuing a common strategy aimed against the radical Muslim
terrorist networks in Europe, Southeast Asia, and elsewhere while working together
with the pro-Western governments in the Middle East.
They could have also tried to manage in an imaginative way some of the explosive
policy issues that have helped to ignite anti-American sentiment in the Muslim
world, including the tensions with Iraq and Iran, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict,
and the rise of political Islamic movements.
That is not to argue that there would have been easy and quick solutions to
these and related issues. But there is a difference between trying to treat
a headache by banging your head on the wall and by taking a rest and an aspirin.
The Bush administration, led by a powerful group of neoconservative policymakers
and their allies in the think tanks, media, and even the blogosphere, ended
up placing the hunt for Osama on Washington's back burner and instead launched
a unilateral invasion of Iraq. The stated aims became "liberating"
Iraq from the rule of Saddam Hussein and turning it into a shining model of
freedom and democracy for the greater Middle East. The decision produced a fissure
in the transatlantic relationship, ignited anti-American hostility in the Middle
East and other parts of the world, and weakened the anti-terrorism alliance.
The Americans exacerbated the situation by giving a green light to Israel to
destroy the infrastructure of the Palestinian Authority and by refusing to move
toward rapprochement with Iran, with which Washington shared common interests
in post-Taliban Afghanistan and in post-Saddam Iraq.
At the same time, the neocon Democracy Project helped bring to power in Baghdad
a coalition of Shi'ite clerics with ties to Iran and helped elect the radical
Islamist Hamas in Palestine.
Putting all of these historic developments into context, one can conclude that
the post-9/11 U.S. policies were nothing short of a revolutionary attempt to
weaken the very fragile foundations of the political status quo in the Middle
East – without coming up with a viable and sustainable strategy aimed at
replacing them in a way that would help protect long-term American and Western
interests: the U.S. destroyed Iraq's military power, the only counterbalance
to that of Iran, without making an effort to co-opt Iran into the system.
It got rid of an Arab-Sunni dictator who had kept the lid on the ethnic and
religious powder keg of Iraq and helped create the conditions for a bloody civil
war there without deploying the necessary military troops to deal with such
an outcome.
In the process, the U.S. strengthened the power of the Shi'ites in the Middle
East who threaten the Arab-Sunni regimes there, and empowered Kurdish nationalism,
which has alarmed Turkey and Iran.
At the same time, U.S. policies that helped radicalize the Palestinians also
enabled the election of the Palestinian offshoot of the radical Muslim Brotherhood,
ensuring that the Palestinian-Israeli peace process would not be revived any
time soon and providing a sense of political momentum to Muslim Brotherhood
groups in Egypt and other parts of the Middle East.
Add to all of that the growing anti-Western emotions among Muslims worldwide,
as demonstrated in the recent "cartoons war," Iran's drive to achieve
nuclear military capability, and the continuing domestic challenges faced by
the pro-American regimes in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Pakistan, and it becomes
quite obvious that no one can now press the rewind button and restore the status
quo ante.
If anything, the powerful forces that have been unleashed by the U.S. cannot
be stopped and could intertwine with other global developments, including Sino-American
competition over energy and rising economic nationalism in the West.
Not unlike the aftermath of WWI, which brought about the collapse of great
empires, including that of the Ottomans in the Middle East, the dramatic changes
we are witnessing now will probably help produce much instability in the coming
years.
Copyright © 2005 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved.