A Political, Not a Military Solution is
required
Tariq Ali
On a trip to Pakistan a few years ago I was talking to an ex-General about
the militant Islamist groups in the region. I asked him why these people, who
had happily accepted funds and weapons from the United States throughout the Cold War, had become violently anti-American
overnight. He explained that they were not alone. Many Pakistan officers who had served the US loyally from 1951 onwards felt humiliated by Washington's indifference.
'Pakistan was the condom the Americans needed to enter Afghanistan', he said. 'We've served our purpose and they think
we can be just flushed down the toilet.'
The old condom is being
fished out for use once again, but will it work? The new 'coalition against
terrorism' needs the services of the Pakistan Army, but General Musharraf will
have to be extremely cautious. An over-commitment to Washington could lead to a civil war in Pakistan and split the Armed Forces. A great deal has changed
over the last two decades, but the ironies of history continue to multiply.
In Pakistan itself, Islamism derived its strength from state patronage
rather than popular support. The ascendancy of religious fundamentalism is the
legacy of a previous military dictator, General Zia-ul-Haq who received solid
backing from Washington and London throughout his 11 years as dictator.
It was during his rule
(1977-89) that a network of madrassahs (religious boarding schools), funded by the
Saudi regime, were created.
The children, who were later
sent to fight as Mujahedeen in Afghanistan, were taught to banish all doubt. The only truth was divine
truth. Anyone who rebelled against the imam rebelled against Allah. The
madrassahs had only one aim: the production of deracinated fanatics in the name
of a bleak Islamic cosmpolitanism. The primers taught that the Urdu letter jeem
stood for 'jihad'; tay for 'tope'(cannon) , kaaf for Kalashnikov and khay for
khoon (blood).
2500 madrassahs produced a
crop of 225,000 fanatics ready to kill and die for their faith when asked to do
so by their religious leadersDespatched across the border by the Pakistan Army,
they were hurled into battle against other Muslims they were told were not true
Muslims. The Taliban creed is an ultra-sectarian strain, inspired by the
Wahhabi sect that rules Saudi Arabia. The severity of the Afghan mullahs has been
denounced by Sunni clerics at al-Azhar in Cairo and Shi-ite theologians in Qom as a disgrace to the Prophet.
The Taliban could not,
however, have captured Kabul on their own via an excess of religious zeal. They
were armed and commanded by 'volunteers' from the Pakistan Army. If Islamabad decided to pull the plug, the Taliban could be dislodged,
but not without serious problems. The victory in Kabul counts as the Pakistani Army's only triumph. . To
this day,the former US Secretary of State, Zbigniew Brezinski remains recalcitrant:
'What was more important in the world view of history?' he asks with more than
a touch of irritation, 'the Taliban or the fall of the Soviet Empire? A few
stirred-up Muslims or the liberation of Central Europe and the end of the Cold War?'
If Holywood rules necessitate
a short, sharp war against the new enemy, the American Caesar would be
best-advised not to insist on Pakistani legions. The consequences could be
dire: a brutal and vicious civil war creating more bitterness and encouraging
more acts of individual terrorism. Islamabad will do everything to prevent a military expedition
to Afghanistan. For one thing there are Pakistani soldiers, pilots
and officers present in Kabul,
Bagram and other bases. What will be their orders this time and will they obey
them? Much more likely is that Ossama Bin Laden will be sacrificed in the interests
of the greater cause and his body dead or alive will be handed over to his
former employers in Washington. But will that be enough?
The only real solution is a
political one. It requires removing the causes that create the discontent. It
is despair that feeds fanaticism and it is a result of Washington's policies in the Middle East and elsewhere. The orthodox casuistry among loyal factotums, columnists
and courtiers of the Washington regime is symbolised by Tony Blair's Personal
Assistant for Foreign Affairs, ex-diplomat Robert Cooper, who writes quite
openly: 'We need to get used to the idea of double standards'. The underlying
maxim of this cynicism is: we will punish the crimes of our enemies and reward
the crimes of our friends. Isn't that at least preferable to universal
impunity? To this the answer is simple: 'punishment' along these lines does not
reduce but breeds criminality, by those who wield it. The Gulf and Balkan Wars
were copy-book examples of the moral blank cheque of a selective vigilantism. Israel can defy UN resolutions with impunity, India can tyrannise Kashmir, Russia can destroy Groszny, but it is Iraq which has to be! punished and it is the Palestinians
who continue to suffer.
Cooper continues: 'Advice to
post-modern states: accept that intervention in the pre-modern is going to be a
fact of life. Such interventions may not solve problems, but they may salve the
conscience. And they are not necessarily the worse for that' Try explaining
that to the survivors in New York
and Washington.
The United States is whipping itself into a frenzy. Its ideologues talk
of this as an attack on 'civilization', but what kind of civilization is it
that thinks in terms of blood-revenge. For the last sixty years and more the
United States has toppled democrat leaders, bombed countries in three
continents, used nuclear weapons against Japanese civilians, but never knew
what it felt like to have your own cities under attack. Now they know. To the
victims of the attack and their relatives one can offer our deep sympathy as one
does to people who the US government has victimised. But to accept that somehow
an American life is worth more than that of a Rwandan, a Yugoslav, a
Vietnamese, a Korean, a Japanese, a Palestinian...that is unacceptable.
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