For archive purposes, this article is being stored on TheWE.cc website.
The purpose is to advance understandings of environmental, political,
human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues.

 

Thursday,26 , May, 2005 (17, Rabi` al-Thani,1426 )

 
Why Do Americans Hate Muslims?
Reem Al-Faisal, Arab News
 

A few weeks ago an American I met at a friends house asked a much repeated query, “Why do you the Muslims hate the Americans?”

To which I answered in the same way as all the preceding instances in which this question was posed to me:  “We don’t hate the Americans, we might disagree with a certain US policy and dislike recent American actions in the Muslim world but we surely don’t hate the American people.”

The American who interrogated me was clearly not convinced with my answer and secretly I wasn’t either.

The truth is that at present the Muslims hate America and now, they hate not only its policymakers but most of the American people since they have proven recently without a shadow of doubt that they agree with their elite by voting back into office, by a comfortable majority, the Bush administration inspite of it’s obvious record of lies and abuse of power.

The Americans can never claim from now on that they didn’t know that there where no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

They can’t claim that they didn’t know torture wasn’t widespread in American prisons, from Guantanamo to Abu Ghraib, and the thousands of other secret detention centers.

They surely can’t claim not to know of this entire episode in which thousands have lost their lives and much more have seen their homes and lands destroyed as a result of the American military and its leaders who don’t hesitate in using the massive destructive power of the US on defenseless civilians.

My American friend was right, we do hate them now, but he never asked himself the question “Why?”

Why should a people living on the other side of the planet feel any sort of emotion toward the Americans, be it hate or love?

Does anyone ever ask if the Muslims hate the Chileans or love the Chinese or dislike the Uruguayans?

No, we are forever asked to express some sort of intense emotion toward the Americans.

So, I have to admit finally, after decades of relations with the US, that they have convinced us that we should feel something and that our feelings have been boiled down today to pure hate.

And why not?

What have we as a people seen from the US in the past half century but an absence of respect for Muslim life, culture or religion, contempt and disregard for our rights and finally murder and torture from Afghanistan to Iraq.

Vetoed by the US at the UN Security Council

The US has further driven us to dislike America with its blind support for a colonialist power such as Israel, in fact the only one left in the region.

Whenever we have tried in the past to help alleviate the plight of the Palestinians we only got vetoed by the US at the UN Security Council followed by the free flow of arms and money to kill our fellow compatriots from Palestine to Lebanon.

And whenever we Arabs try to get arms to defend ourselves against one of the strongest armies in the world, which has never hesitated in using its destructive power with impunity against us, we are blocked by America from acquiring the means by which we could defend ourselves.

We have watched America attack us, destroy us, impose embargoes against our nations and then conquer our lands, imprison our people and generally deal with us as though we are savage animals whereby every single law be it international or even American is totally disregarded when it concerns the rights of Arab and Muslim individuals.

Then they ask us why we hate them?

Tell me why do you hate us?

What terrible crime have the Muslims committed against you in the past to deserve your interminable enmity?

What have we done to see you rampage through our lands destroying and killing, then claiming obscenely that it was worth it for the sake of liberty and democracy?

Is it worth it for the million and a half Iraqis murdered in the embargo or the thousands of Afghans killed by your ever so “smart” bombs?

Or should we ask the Iraqis of today, whom you’ve killed by the thousands?

Was all this death and destruction worth it for them?

Did you ever bother to ask their opinion before you played God with the lives and destinies of this nation?

Finally, you take aim at our religion by humiliating our beliefs.

You abuse our book, use our convictions to torture us and degrade us, disregarding your own laws and religion which is as noble as ours and to which torture and humiliation is anathema.

What were you thinking when you threw the Qur’an in the toilet or when you used religion as a means of torture?

I fail to see the efficacy of such actions in the so-called war on terror.

These methods only point to a deep sickness in your society to which it will take decades for us and the rest of the world to understand its cause and to measure its destructive results.

No, the question which someday will have to be answered is why, why do you the Americans hate us the Muslims so much?



— Reem Al-Faisal is a Saudi photographer and writer based in Jeddah.

 







Friday, May 13, 2005

Credibility matters little to Brits, Americans

By HELEN THOMAS
HEARST NEWSPAPERS

WASHINGTON — Funny thing about the United States and Great Britain.  I once thought their people cared about the credibility — and accountability of their leaders — especially when it comes to war and peace.  But now I note with regret that the voters in both nations have other priorities.

We're talking about the fact that the leaders of both nations chose to invade Iraq for flimsy reasons that were deliberately drummed up to convince their people that a Third World country was a threat to them.  Didn't the Brits say Saddam Hussein could attack in 45 minutes?

The historic election of Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair for a third term is a stunning affirmation that the British people no longer demand credibility from their leaders.

The false rationales for war by both President Bush and Blair went up in smoke without a public outcry.  I know Blair returns to power with a much smaller majority in the House of Commons — compared with his landslide victories in the past — apparently because of British disillusionment with the war.  He also is hearing post-election calls from within his own Labor Party for him to step down.  But still, he was re-elected.

In the case of Bush, the ill-advised war against Iraq did not take center stage in the presidential election last November.  His opponent, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., had voted for the war and delivered a coup de grace to himself by saying he would have done the same thing — invade Iraq, even after it had become apparent to all that the pretext for the invasion — Saddam's imaginary weapons of mass destruction — was a mirage.  Kerry blew it big time.

The war issue became irrelevant at that point, not that it was highlighted in any major way by the timid Democrats, who should have knocked it out of the park.

Instead, they were afraid of being accused of not supporting the troops.  Nonsense.  They could have kept more Americans alive by calling for a military withdrawal from Iraq.  Nearly 1,600 Americans are dead now and thousands wounded.

The Democrats also should have rejected the Bush policy of pre-emptive war, which is illegal under international law.

Instead the administration won the day by, among other things, encouraging the outrageous fabricators known as Swift Boat Veterans for Truth to denigrate Kerry's Vietnam War record.  What a fiasco, especially when you know that none of the highly eligible Bush team went to that war.  Bush went to elaborate lengths to avoid doing so.

The record to date, by leaks and memos, is overwhelming on both Bush and Blair.  For some unexplained motive, Bush obviously wanted a war and Blair wanted to be a player.

Iraq was on Bush's radar screen when he took office in 2001, perhaps even before.  Books by former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill and Richard Clarke, former head of counterterrorism at the White House's National Security Council, both attest to early signs — even before 9/11 — that war against Iraq was high on Bush's agenda.

In the run-up to the war, Vice President Dick Cheney and then-national security adviser Condoleezza Rice used appearances on Sunday television shows and in speeches to friendly audiences to start the drumbeat that Iraq had unconventional weapons.

Meantime, Blair was doing his share to build public support for war, even though he knew that his case was thin.

As the British re-election campaign was ending, the May 1 Sunday Times of London published a secret U.K. government memorandum discussing a July 23, 2002, meeting between Blair and his top security advisers.  The memo said that military action against Iraq "was seen as inevitable" and that Bush wanted to remove Saddam "through military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD," weapons of mass destruction.

According to the Times, the memo said that "the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy."

The report was not disavowed by the British government.  At the time of the memo, Bush officials were insisting they had no plans to attack Iraq.

I am not surprised at the duplicity.  But I am astonished at the acceptance of this deception by voters in the United States and the United Kingdom.

I've seen two U.S. presidents go down the drain — Lyndon B. Johnson on Vietnam and Richard Nixon in the Watergate scandal — because they were no longer believed.  But times change — and I guess our values do, too.




Helen Thomas writes for Hearst Newspapers.


Copyright 2005 Hearst Newspapers.




©1996-2005 Seattle Post-Intelligencer








 
 






























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































 
 





 
For archive purposes, this article is being stored on TheWE.cc website.
The purpose is to advance understandings of environmental, political,
human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues.