Salman Rushdie on Anti-Americanism

by JanH 12 Replies latest jw friends

  • JanH
    JanH

    Anti-Americanism has taken the world by storm

    The US has an ideological enemy harder to defeat than militant Islam

    Salman Rushdie
    Wednesday February 6, 2002
    The Guardian

    They told us it would be a long, ugly struggle, and so it is. America's war against terror has entered its second phase, a phase characterised by the storm over the condition, status and human rights of the prisoners held at Camp X-Ray, and by the frustrating failure of the US to find Osama bin Laden and Mullah Omar.
    Additionally, if America now attacks other countries suspected of harbouring terrorists, it will almost certainly do so alone, without the backing of the coalition that supported the action in Afghanistan. The reason is that America finds itself facing an ideological enemy that may turn out to be harder to defeat than militant Islam: that is to say, anti-Americanism, which is presently taking the world by storm.

    The good news is that these post-Taliban days are bad times for Islamist fanatics. Dead or alive, Bin Laden and Omar look like yesterday's men, unholy warriors who forced martyrdom on others while running for the hills themselves. Also, if the persistent rumours are to be believed, the fall of the terrorist axis in Afghanistan may well have prevented an Islamist coup against President Musharraf in Pakistan, led by the more Taliban-like elements in the armed forces and intelligence services - people like the terrifying General Hamid Gul.

    And Musharraf, no angel himself, has been pushed into arresting the leaders of the Kashmiri terrorist groups he used to encourage. (It's just two and a quarter years since he unleashed the same groups against India and engineered the last Kashmir crisis.)

    Around the world, the lessons of the American action in Afghanistan are being learned. Jihad is no longer quite as cool an idea as it was last autumn. States under suspicion of giving succour to terrorism have suddenly been trying to behave with propriety, even going so far as to round up a few bad guys. Iran has accepted the legitimacy of the new Afghan government. Even Britain, a state which has been more tolerant of Islamist fanaticism than most, is beginning to see the difference between resisting "Islamophobia" and providing a safe haven for some of the worst people in the world.

    America did, in Afghanistan, what had to be done and did it well. The bad news, however, is that none of these successes has won friends for the United States outside Afghanistan. In fact, the effectiveness of the American campaign may paradoxically have made the world hate America more than it did before.

    Western critics of America's Afghan campaign are enraged because they have been shown to be wrong at every step: no, US forces weren't humiliated the way the Russians had been; and yes, the air strikes did work; and no, the Northern Alliance didn't massacre people in Kabul; and yes, the Taliban did crumble away like the hated tyrants they were, even in their southern strongholds; and no, it wasn't that difficult to get the militants out of their cave fortresses; and yes, the various factions succeeded in putting together a new government that is surprising people by functioning pretty well.

    Meanwhile, those elements in the Arab and Muslim world who blame America for their own feelings of political impotence are feeling more impotent than ever. As always, anti-US radicalism feeds off the widespread anger over the plight of the Palestinians, and it remains true that nothing would undermine the fanatics' propaganda more comprehensively than an acceptable settlement in the Middle East.

    However, even if that settlement were arrived at tomorrow, anti-Americanism would probably not abate. It has become too useful a smokescreen for Muslim nations' many defects - their corruption, their incompetence, their oppression of their own citizens, their economic, scientific and cultural stagnation. America-hating has become a badge of identity, making possible a chest-beating, flag-burning rhetoric of word and deed that makes men feel good. It contains a strong streak of hypocrisy, hating most what it desires most, and elements of self-loathing ("we hate America because it has made of itself what we cannot make of ourselves").

    What America is accused of - closed-mindedness, stereotyping, ignorance - is also what its accusers would see if they looked into a mirror.

    These days there seem to be as many of these accusers outside the Muslim world as inside it. Anybody who has visited Britain and Europe, or followed the public conversation there during the past five months, will have been struck, even shocked, by the depth of anti-American feeling among large segments of the population, as well as the news media.

    Western anti-Americanism is an altogether more petulant phenomenon than its Islamic counterpart, and, oddly, far more personalised. Muslim countries don't like America's power, its "arrogance", its success; in the non-American west, the main objection seems to be to American people. Night after night, I have found myself listening to Londoners' diatribes against the sheer weirdness of the American citizenry. The attacks on America are routinely discounted ("Americans only care about their own dead"). American patriotism, obesity, emotionality, self-centredness: these are the crucial issues.

    It would be easy for America, in the present climate of hostility, to fail to respond to constructive criticism, or worse: to start acting like the overwhelming superpower it is, making decisions and throwing its weight around without regard for the concerns of what it perceives as an already hostile world. The treatment of the Camp X-Ray detainees is a case in point.

    Colin Powell's reported desire to grant these persons PoW status and Geneva Convention rights was a statesmanlike response to global pressure; his apparent failure to persuade President Bush and Mr Rumsfeld to accept his recommendations is a worrying sign. The Bush administration has come a long way from its treaty-smashing beginnings. It should not retreat from consensus-building now. Great power and great wealth are perhaps never popular.

    And yet, more than ever, we need the United States to exercise its power and economic might responsibly. This is not the time to ignore the rest of the world and decide to go it alone. To do so would be to risk losing after you've won.

    See http://www.guardian.co.uk/afghanistan/comment/story/0%2c11447%2c645579%2c00.html for original

    - Jan
    --
    - "How do you write women so well?" - "I think of a man and I take away reason and accountability." (Jack Nicholson in "As Good as it Gets")

  • Nathan Natas
    Nathan Natas

    I'm reminded of a cosmetic commercial on TV years ago - the supermodel tosses her head of luxurious silky hair in the way that only a supermodel can, looks into the camera and says, "Don't hate me because I'm beautiful."

    If the USA is hated because of its effectiveness, that will just have to be our cross to bear.

    If other nations envy us, they can try to emulate us a bit more.

    Yes, we are no theocratic paradise on earth, and yes, we have more corruption in business and politics than we wish we had, but to my mind the underlying fabric of the USA is the unspoken social contract that accepts the tennents of our Declaration Of Independance and Constiution.

    "Wolves howl outside the City, and we are unafraid."

  • Gozz
    Gozz

    America did not become effective yesterday. The country has almost always been a spectacle. But arrogance never makes friends. President Bush’s utterances have hurt the sensibilities of many decent people, and has helped the Anti-American cause. The threats to go after countries, the ‘with us or against us’ speech cut a peculiar picture of America, as seen through the behaviour of the leadership. IF Anti-Americanism is rising, then the American people should look within.

  • Nathan Natas
    Nathan Natas

    I wonder how many of the sensitive little nations we have offended will have the 'nads to refuse our billions of dollars of foreign aid.

  • Mindchild
    Mindchild

    I thought Rushdie's article was a pretty accurate reflection of what is happening around the world and is at least partly true in terms of why American's are hated so much.

    We are indeed the country that many other nations love to hate, not only for their own self interests (it always helps to have a bad guy around to point to your own incompetence and corruption) but because of the globalization and encluturation that America brings with it. Just as the fundies in the Bible belt of America complain loudly about how our youths are getting corrupted by sex, violence, etc. other nations detest the effects our culture has on their own. Too make things worse, we as a consumer nation are importing discontent and unhappiness to the whole Third world as they can see the "rich" lifestyle we have that they can never obtain. This leads to very frustrated and angry people who often turn to crime or drugs as a result.

    The American negativity goes far beyond this though for causation because of the Third world debt issues. We are a rich nation and the Third world is very poor. The third world economies are buried in debt and their buying power is peanuts compared to ours. Look at a country like Ecuador where the average skilled worker is lucky to make $1.00 USD per hour and some of us in the USA make 20 times this. People resent the rich getting richer and the poor poorer.

    We as a country, are the world's biggest hypocrites with our talk about cleaning up the world and demanding changes by other countries but ignorning our own obligations.

    I could go on but I think anyone can see the point by now. We are not terrible bastards bent on destroying the world but we are playing out the "tragedy of the commons" in a big way so that we win, but everyone else loses. The way things are going, the gap between rich and poor will just get wider and over 3/4 of the world will live constant lives of misery while the rest of us live in fortifed castles, wondering why the hell everyone hates us.

    Skipper

  • metatron
    metatron

    An Arab commentator pointed out that 'loving America' was never
    that important. While such love is extolled as the greatest of
    virtues in the West, it's hard to imagine the Arab world
    feeling the same way.
    What's been missing is fear and respect - Clinton certainly
    let things slide, image wise.

    The vacuum here is Europe - why should the U.S. be expected
    to do it all? I suspect that Europe will continue to draw inward
    regardless of their newfound unity - they've seen the 'job' and don't want it.

    Personally, I'd like to see new energy sources and the abandonment
    of the whole Middle East. Actually, taking away all their oil money
    might be the best thing for the Islamic world - it would force
    them to confront reality.

    metatron

  • crownboy
    crownboy

    I tend to agree with you, Mindchild.

    As much as I'd like to give the finger to the rest of the world and tell them "the U.S. is better, so what?", I do feel we have an obligation to help the rest of the world out, if not for their interest, at least for ours. While we're far and away better than all countries, we're not better than every country combined (as yet ). If the gap between rich and poor countries continue, and we continue to exploit 3rd world countries (yes, we do exploit them. Just because they're too poor to complain doesn't mean we don't), I forsee ourselves going into "Israel mode" as far as having to protect our boarders against foreigners that hate us. Sure, our most dangerous threat right now are Islamist extremist, but don't think that our educating them but keeping them poor will change things all that much. Poor people breed hatred, pure and simple. There have been violent uprisings in non Islamic countries too. More money has to find its way to poor people. I'm not advocating Communism, but perhaps a little less greed on the part of super wealthy capitalist would go a long way in helping the poor. Pay the third world people a little more. Give them enough money to buy food and send their children to school. Eliminate the high interest rates on the debt these countries have to pay (the World Bank is the mafia), so that they can actually stand a chance of paying the actual debt and not just interest payments. Sure, the super rich will go from making immoral sums of money to very impressive sums of money, but they'll still be rich and people will be happy enough to not want to start a revolution (look at the American middle class ).

    As far as people hating us because of our miltary prowess in the war, tough! I knew the American military wouldn't "take years" to crush the Taliban, and I knew our miltary could run infinite circles around our most competitive foe, much less a group of foot soldiers. If you soccer watching Euros think that's bad, who cares? (At least your education system is better ). The bastards attacked us on our soil, do we need the EU's permission to defend ourselves? (I know, 80 countries were directly touched by fatalities, but you think Luxembourg is Bin Laden's main object of hate?). You Euro's need to do some soul searching and see if maybe you guys don't suffer from "penis envy" as well. I expect better of Europeans.

    And those Cuban detainees should definitely be POW's. That is a genuine example of American arrogance.

    Go therefore and baptize the people in the name of the father and of the son... what the hell, we just need to bring up the yearbook numbers!

  • ThiChi
    ThiChi

    Cut & Paste? Welcome........

    “We all fell down from the milky way, hanging around here for the judgement day, heaven only knows who’s in command.”- Jimmy Buffet

  • Englishman
    Englishman

    Rushdie is talking crap as is usual.

    Anyone with half a brain can see that support for the US is incredible, OK, some broadsheet newspaper is trying to change peoples opinions the same as always.

    Take no notice of this man, dear friends, he is just as portrayed in Bridgitte Jones' Diary - a complete buffoon.

    Englishman.

    Truth exists;only falsehood has to be invented. -Georges Braque

  • Seeker
    Seeker
    It would be easy for America, in the present climate of hostility, to fail to respond to constructive criticism, or worse: to start acting like the overwhelming superpower it is, making decisions and throwing its weight around without regard for the concerns of what it perceives as an already hostile world.

    Uh, that is exactly how the U.S. has acted for decades. See Latin America for one example after another.

    Americans have some great qualities, among them a willingness to help people all around the world. The American compassion is real. Sadly, those who have run America (yes, Democrats and Republicans alike) have taken a pragmatic view of crushing dissent around the world wherever they can fix an election, cause a coup, supply arms to rebels, whatever it takes. They may have had a good motive, wanting to protect American political interests in the face of real or perceived threats, but their heavy-handedness in dealing with other nations cause America to be hated. And not entirely without reason.

    Terrorism is wrong, awful stuff. Those who attacked America need to be dealt with swiftly and surely. But America also needs to clean up its dirty act in its dealings with other nations. When you act like the world's bully (in secret) while also acting like the world's policeman and helper (very publicly), and then you act shocked, SHOCKED to discover that they are not loved by those who resent the bully aspects, you are being naive.

    Those who don't know about America's bully aspects might think this post is wrong. Those in other countries who have been directly bullied know exactly what I'm talking about, and why America is hated by some, and will continue to be hated.

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