Again, Not Too Bright
by
Eric Margolis
by Eric Margolis
After Hamas'
stunning victory last week in Palestinian elections, a flustered
U.S. Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, tried to explain the
Bush administration's latest Mideast fiasco.
"I've
asked why nobody saw it coming," she offered plaintively.
Dear Miss Condi,
many of us saw Hamas' victory coming. You didn't because you failed
to face facts.
Your boss,
George W. Bush, made similar lame excuses trying to explain his
embarrassing failure to find WMD in Iraq by claiming all western
intelligence services believed Iraq had them which was untrue.
For a nation
that spends $40 billion annually on intelligence to be so wrong
about so much is utterly inexcusable. Condi, go stand in the corner
with Colin Powell.
Hamas won because
of Washington's total failure to push Israel into any meaningful
concessions under its dead-ended "Road Map to Peace,"
fatally undermining Bush's favourite, Palestinian president Mahmoud
Abbas and his Fatah party.
Palestinians
were fed up with corrupt Fatah leadership which appeared too cozy
with the U.S. and Israel. The more Washington bribed or arm-twisted
Fatah leaders to comply with its wishes, the more Palestinians backed
hardline Hamas. The feuding ninnies and crooks running Fatah stood
in sharp contrast to Hamas' disciplined, efficient, uncorrupt cadres.
When it became
clear Israel's leadership would continue PM Ariel Sharon's plans
to colonize the West Bank and confine Arabs in three isolated tribal
reservations, Palestinians voted for Hamas.
Why didn't
Rice see this obvious fact? Because, like the rest of the administration
and U.S. media, her view of the Mideast is warped by ignorance,
inexperience, and intense pressure from neoconservatives and religious
groups pressing for a crusade against the Muslim world.
Misinformed
America's shocked
reaction to Hamas' win shows how misinformed and misled it is about
the Mideast.
The propaganda
term "terrorism" has so fuddled the minds of Americans
that any rational analysis of Mideast events has become as impossible,
as it was during the 1950s and '60s to rationally analyze enormous
developments within the communist world, like the Sino-Soviet split.
Hamas' victory
provoked hysteria in New York City last week. Local papers trumpeted,
"Terror Nation," and "Terror Wins," absurdly
claiming Hamas threatens the very existence of Israel.
Hamas is responsible
for many criminal bombings of Israeli civilians. It refuses to recognize
the existence of the Jewish state. Israel and the U.S. brand Hamas
as "terrorists," but to Palestinians, Hamas are reformers
and resisters of occupation.
2,000 riflemen
Hamas has around
2,000 men with rifles. Israel has 200 nuclear weapons, armed forces
of 568,000, 3,687 tanks, 10,400 armored fighting vehicles, 5,432
heavy guns, and 402 superb combat aircraft. Hamas bombers have killed
Jewish civilians, but they do not threaten the Jewish state.
During the
intifada, twice as many Arab civilians have been killed as Jewish
civilians. Ironically, Israel helped create Hamas to rival the PLO,
and aided creation of Hezbollah in Lebanon.
The Arab world
has suffered some of the world's most brutal and corrupt regimes.
Mideasterners yearn for honest governments that represent them,
not foreign interests. Islamic parties appear to offer these qualities,
though they have yet to be proven.
In
the only fair election before Palestine in Algeria, 1991
Islamists won a landslide. Algeria's military junta declared
martial law and annulled the vote, igniting a ghastly civil war
that killed 150,000.
It's both sad
and amusing watching the White House, which has championed democracy
as a cure-all to its Mideast problems, threaten to cut off aid and
contacts with a new democratic government because it disagrees with
Washington.
Cutting
aid will only strengthen Hamas.
Hamas needs
to renounce bombing. The U.S. and Israel need to begin talking to
Hamas' moderate wing.
Name-calling
is not policy.
February
6, 2006
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail], contributing foreign editor for Sun National Media
Canada, is the author of War
at the Top of the World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2006 Eric Margolis
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