Why Do They Hate Us?
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
Youll
recall that immediately after the 9/11 attacks, U.S. officials declared
that the attacks had been motivated by the terrorists hatred
for Americas freedom and values. That refrain
produced the war on terrorism and, more recently, the
war on radical Islamo-fascism.
Nonsense,
said libertarians. The anger and hatred that Arabs and Muslims have
for the United States is rooted in decades of U.S. foreign policy
in the Middle East. Ending the U.S. governments decades-old
policy of empire and intervention would bring an end to the threat
of terrorism (and radical Islamo-fascism) against the United States.
The argument
of the freedom and values crowd boils down to this:
The decades of U.S. supplying of advanced weaponry and foreign
aid to the Israeli government, which is now being used to kill people
in Lebanon, and the U.S. governments obeisance and submissiveness
to the Israeli government, have had no adverse effect on how Arabs
and Muslims feel about the United States. Their anger and hatred
is caused by Americas freedom of speech, freedom of the press,
and rock and roll.
Therefore,
the argument goes, the chants of Death to Israel. Death to
America from hundreds of thousands of Shiites marching in
Baghdad last week had nothing to do with U.S. foreign policy but
were motivated instead by hatred for American principles and lifestyles.
(Reflect for
a moment on the utter perversity of it all: U.S. soldiers in Iraq
are dying to bring freedom and democracy to people
who are screaming Death to America and whose radical
Shiite government has aligned itself with Iran, which U.S. officials
consider to be an arch-enemy of the United States.)
The same freedom
and values argument was made with respect to more than a decade
of brutal sanctions against Iraq, which contributed to the deaths
of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children deaths that U.S.
officials maintained were worth it.
People in the Middle East were indifferent to those deaths, the
argument goes. Their anger and hatred were caused by the U.S. Bill
of Rights and the gambling casinos in Las Vegas.
After 9/11,
the greatest fear that U.S. officials had was that the American
people would figure out that U.S. foreign policy was at the root
of the terrorist attacks and thus demand a total reevaluation of
U.S. foreign policy. That might well have meant an end to all foreign
aid to the Middle East and a withdrawal of U.S. forces from the
region. That could have obviously meant a significant diminution
of the U.S. governments overseas empire and the military-industrial
complex, along with the enormously high taxes needed to pay for
it all. Thus, its not surprising that U.S. officials immediately
went on the propaganda attack after 9/11 in order to divert peoples
attention from U.S. foreign policy and toward the freedom-and-values
motivation for the 9/11 attacks.
If there is
another major terrorist attack on American soil, you can rest assured
that the immediate response of U.S. officials will be: It has nothing
to do with the U.S. governments unconditional U.S. taxpayer-provided
support of the Israeli government, or with the brutal sanctions
that contributed to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi
children, or with the callous position that such deaths were worth
it, or with the invasion and occupation of Iraq, which have killed
and maimed tens of thousands of Iraqi people. Theyll say instead
that its all about anger and hatred for Americas freedom
and values. And the sad part is that there will still be Americans
who fall for it.
What would
be wrong with terminating foreign aid not only to Israel but also
to every other country in the world and abolishing the taxes that
support such aid, leaving the American people free to keep their
own money and decide what to do with it?
What would
be wrong with letting Americans support Israel or Lebanon or the
Palestinians or any other cause in the world with their moral support
and their own money and leaving the U.S. government and U.S. taxpayer
money out of it?
What would
be wrong with ending the U.S. government's role as world policeman,
intervenor, meddler, and interloper, not only in the Middle East
but also in the rest of the world?
With the situation
in the Middle East degenerating into ever-increasing violence, conflict,
death, suffering, and destruction after decades of U.S. intervention,
what better time for the American people to reevaluate U.S. foreign
policy, not only in the Middle East but also in the rest of the
world?
August
10, 2006
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2006 Future of Freedom Foundation
Jacob
Hornberger Archives
|