Obama’s
Speech
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
What are we
to make of Obama’s speech at Cairo University in Egypt? "I’ve
come here to Cairo to seek a new beginning between the United States
and Muslims around the world, one based on mutual interest and mutual
respect."
Cairo is the
capital of Egypt, an American puppet state whose ruler suppresses
the aspirations of Egyptian Muslims and cooperates with Israel in
the blockade of Gaza.
In contrast
to the Islamic University of Al-Azhar, Cairo University was founded
as a civil university. Obama’s Cairo university audience was secular.
Nevertheless,
Obama said startling words that many Muslims found hopeful.
He said that
colonialism and the Cold War had denied rights and opportunities
to Muslims and resulted in Muslim countries being treated as proxies
without regard to their own aspirations. The resulting blowback
from "violent extremists" bred fear and mistrust between
the Western and Muslim worlds.
Obama spoke
of the Quran, his middle name, and his family connections to Islam.
Obama praised
Islam’s contributions to civilization.
Obama declared
his "responsibility as president of the United States to fight
against negative stereotypes of Islam wherever they appear."
Obama acknowledged
"the responsibility we have to one another as human beings."
Obama acknowledged
Iran’s "right to access peaceful nuclear power."
Obama declared
that "no system of government can or should be imposed by one
nation on any other."
Obama’s most
explosive words pertained to Israel and Palestine:
"Israelis
must acknowledge that just as Israel’s right to exist cannot be
denied, neither can Palestine’s. The United States does not accept
the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements."
Obama declared
that "the only resolution [to the conflict] is for the aspirations
of both sides to be met through two states, where Israelis and Palestinians
each live in peace and security. That is in Israel’s interest, Palestine’s
interest, America’s interest, and the world’s interest. That is
why I intend to personally pursue this outcome with all the patience
that the task requires."
For Obama’s
commitment to be fulfilled, Israel would have to give back the stolen
West Bank lands, dismantle the wall, accept the right to return,
and release 1.5 million Palestinians from the Gaza Ghetto. As this
seems an unlikely collection of events, the nature of the "two-state
solution" endorsed by Obama remains to be seen.
After the euphoric
attention to idealistic rhetoric dies down, Obama will be criticized
for extravagant words that create unrealizable expectations. But
were the extravagant words other than a premier act of schmoozing
Muslims designed to quiet the Muslim Brotherhood in our Egyptian
puppet state and to get Muslims to accept US aggression in Iraq,
Afghanistan and Pakistan?
Obama decries
regime change, but continues to practice it, invoking women’s rights
to gain support from secularized Arabs. He admits that Iraq was
a war of choice but claims that al Qaeda, the Taliban, and 9/11
make Afghanistan a war of necessity.
Obama
said that "the events of 9/11" and al Qaeda’s responsibility,
not America’s desire for military bases and hegemony, are the reasons
America’s commitment to combating violent extremism in Afghanistan
will not weaken. Will Muslims notice that Obama’s case for America’s
violent extremism in Afghanistan and now Pakistan is hypocritical?
Al Qaeda, Obama
says, "chose to ruthlessly murder" nearly 3,000 people
on 9/11 "and even now states their determination to kill on
a massive scale." These deaths are a mere drop in the buckets
of blood that America’s invasions have brought to the Muslim world.
Moreover, the overwhelming majority of the Muslims America has slaughtered
are civilians, just as are the unarmed Palestinians slaughtered
by the American-equipped Israeli military.
Against al
Qaeda, whose "actions are irreconcilable with the rights of
human beings," Obama invokes the Koran’s prohibition against
killing an innocent. Does Obama not realize that the stricture applies
to the US and its "coalition of forty-six countries" in
spades?
America’s wars
are all wars of choice. The more than one million dead Iraqis are
not al Qaeda. Neither are Iraqi’s four million refugees. Yet, Obama
says Iraqis are better off now, with their country in ruins and
a fifth of their population lost, because they are rid of Saddam
Hussein, a secular ruler.
No one has
a good tally of the dead and refugees America has produced in Afghanistan.
Nevertheless, declared Obama, "The situation in Afghanistan
demonstrates America’s goals and our need to work together."
In his first
100 days, Obama managed to create two million Pakistani refugees.
It took Israel 60 years to create 3.5 million Palestinian refugees.
What Obama
has really done in his speech is to accept responsibility for the
neoconservative agenda of extending Western hegemony by eliminating
"Muslim extremists," that is, Muslims who want to rule
themselves in keeping with Islam, not in keeping with some secularized,
Westernized faux Islam.
Muslim extremists
are the creation of decades of Western colonization and secularization
that has created an elite, which is Muslim in name only, to rule
over religious people and to suppress Islamic mores. All experts
know this, and most of them hail it as bringing progress and development
to the Muslim world.
Obama said
that "human progress cannot be denied," but "there
need not be contradiction between development and tradition."
However, the West defines development and education. These terms
mean what they mean in the West. Muslim extremists understand that
these terms mean the extermination of Islam.
In typical
American fashion, Obama offered Muslims money, "technological
development," and "centers of scientific excellence."
All the Muslims
have to do is to cooperate with America and be peaceful, and America
will "respect the dignity of all human beings."
June
6, 2009
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
Americans lost the protection of law, has been released by Random
House.
Copyright
© 2009 Creators Syndicate
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