"U.S.
Shouldn't Fight Violence With Violence"
The Baltimore Sun, 9/12/01
Stephen
Zunes, (links to online Media Guide)
SAN FRANCISCO - Terrorism is not rational, but an emotive reaction
by frustrated and angry people. Yet the common reaction to terrorism
is often no less rational, no less a reaction by a frustrated and angry
people.
It would behoove this great nation not to respond to yesterday's terrorist
attack on America in ways that would restrict civil liberties, particularly
if the terrorists are from an immigrant community. Already, analogies
are being drawn to Pearl Harbor, which resulted in the internment of
tens of thousands of loyal U.S. citizens of Japanese ancestry.
It is also important that the United States not retaliate militarily
in a blind dramatic matter, as has been done in the past. In 1997, in
retaliation for the terrorist attacks of two U.S. embassies in Africa,
the United States bombed a pharmaceutical plant in Sudan that supplied
more than half the antibiotics and vaccines for that impoverished country.
The Clinton administration falsely claimed it was a chemical weapons
plant controlled by an exiled Saudi terrorist.
In 1986, the United States bombed two Libyan cities, killing scores
of civilians, in response to the bombing of a West German discotheque
that killed American servicemen. Though the United States claimed it
would curb Libyan-backed terrorism, Libyan intelligence operatives ended
up blowing up a U.S. airliner in retaliation.
Military responses usually result only in a spiral of violent retaliation.
Similarly, simply bombing other countries after the fact will not protect
lives. Indeed, it will likely result in what Pentagon planners euphemistically
call "collateral damage," i.e., the deaths of civilians just
as innocent as those killed in New York City. And survivors bent on
revenge.
Today, in the Middle East, the United States backs an occupying Israeli
army as well as corrupt autocratic Arab dictatorships, which kill innocent
civilians using weapons our government supplies. We justify supporting
these repressive governments in the name of defending our strategic
interests in that important region. Ironically, it is just such policies
that may have provoked these terrorist attacks, inevitably raising the
question as to whether our security interests are really enhanced through
such militarization.
Even when the United States puts itself forward as a peacemaker, as
with the Camp David accords that led to the peace treaty between Israel
and Egypt in 1979, it may look very different to those in the region.
Indeed, not only did it avoid resolving the Palestinian question--the
key to peace in the Middle East--but the accords more closely resembled
a tripartite military pact than a real peace agreement in that it resulted
in tens of billions of dollars worth of additional American armaments
flowing into that already overly militarized region.
It is no coincidence that terrorist groups have arisen in an area where
the world's one remaining superpower puts far more emphasis on weapons
shipments and air strikes than on international law or human rights
and even blocks the United Nations from sending human rights monitors
or enforcing its own resolutions against an ally.
Nor is it surprising that that superpower would eventually find itself
on the receiving end of a violence backlash.
Similarly, it is not surprising that in the Middle East and other parts
of the world that have suffered violence, some people have the perverse
reaction of celebrating that the United States has now also experienced
such a massive and violent loss of life on its own soil.
These tragedies remind us of the need to focus not on unworkable missile
defense projects but instead on improved intelligence and interdiction.
Instead of continuing the cycle of violence, we need to re-evaluate
policies that lead to such anger and resentment.
Instead of lashing out against perceived hostile communities, we need
to recognize that America's greatest strength is not in our weapons
of destruction, but the fortitude and caring of its people.
Stephen Zunes is a senior policy analyst and Middle East editor
for the Foreign Policy in Focus project. He is an associate professor
of politics and chair of the Peace & Justice Studies Program at
the University of San Francisco.
COPYRIGHT 2001, Baltimore
Sun
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