LONDON,
September 10 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - U.S. President George
W. Bush is reshaping the Middle East and he will threaten not only
Iraq, but also Syria, Iran and, by extension, Saudi Arabia and Egypt,
said British journalist Robert Fisk in an article published in the Independent
Tuesday, September 10.
Just
as Americans are recovering from the harrowing television re-runs of
the 11 September attacks, their President is going to launch the
biggest reshaping of the Middle East since the British and French
parceled out the Arab lands after the 1914-18 war, said Fisk in an
article entitled “Bush is intent on painting allies and enemies in
the Middle East as evil”.
“When
he addresses the United Nations on Thursday, George Bush will be
threatening not only Iraq, which had absolutely nothing to do with the
crimes against humanity in New York and Washington, but Syria, Iran
and, by extension, Saudi Arabia and Egypt,” he said.
The
Syrian Accountability Act, which accuses Damascus of supporting
“terrorism”, will come into force as President Bush is speaking
and will follow only days after the State Department branded the
Lebanese Hizbollah as the “A-team of terrorism”, more dangerous
even than Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda, he said.
Like
Iraq, the Hizbollah had nothing to do with the September 11 attacks -
indeed, they were among the first to condemn them - but the White
House now seems set on painting allies and enemies alike in the Middle
East as a focus of evil, he added.
Fisk
said that only The Nation among all of America’s newspapers
and magazines has dared to point out that a large number of former
Israeli lobbyists are now working within the American administration
and the Bush plans for the Middle East - which could cause a massive
political upheaval in the Arab world - fit perfectly into Israel’s
own dreams for the region.
The
magazine listed Vice-President Dick Cheney - the arch-hawk in the U.S.
administration - and John Bolton, now under-secretary of state for
Arms Control, with Douglas Feith, the third most senior executive at
the Pentagon, as members of the advisory board of the pro-Israeli
Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (Jinsa) before joining
the Bush government.
Richard
Perle, chairman of the Pentagon’s Defense Policy Board, is still an
adviser on the institute, as is the former CIA director James Woolsey.
Michael
Ledeen, described by The Nation as “one of the most
influential ‘Jinsans’ in Washington” has been calling for
“total war” against “terror” - with “regime change” for
Syria, Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the Palestinian Authority, Fisk
said.
“Perle
advises the Defense Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld - who refers to the
West Bank and Gaza as “the so-called occupied territories” - and
arranged the anti-Saudi “kernel of evil” briefing by Laurent
Murawiec that so outraged the Saudi royal family last month. The Saudi
regime may itself be in great danger as the princes of the House of
Saud attempt to seize more power for themselves in advance of the
departure of the dying King Fahd,” he said.
Next
month, Michael Rubin of the right-wing and pro-Israeli American
Enterprise Institute - who referred to the outgoing UN human rights
commissioner Mary Robinson as an abettor of “terrorism” - joins
the U.S. Defense Department as an Iran-Iraq “expert”.
According
to The Nation, Irving Moskovitz, the California bingo magnate
who has funded settlements in the Israeli-occupied territories, is a
donor as well as a director of Jinsa.
President
Bush, of course, will not be talking about the influence of these
pro-Israeli lobbyists when he presents his vision of the Middle East
at the United Nations on Thursday, Fisk said.
Nor
will he give the slightest indication that the region is, in the words
of its own kings and dictators, a powder keg of resentment and anger.
The tectonic plates of the Arab world are now grinding with increasing
violence. “Into this political earthquake zone, Mr Bush now seems
intent on leading his country, with his loyal British ally,” he
added.
Most
of today’s Arab nations were fashioned out of the ruins of the
Ottoman Empire by Britain and France in the aftermath of the First
World War - and Palestinians still blame Britain today for supporting
the formation of a Jewish homeland in Palestine, Fisk said.
“Both
European nations stationed tens of thousands of troops across the
region, suppressing Arab revolts in Palestine, Syria and Lebanon -
itself created by the French at the request of its Christian Maronite
community. The whole colonial framework led to the loss of tens of
thousands of lives before both the British and French retreated from
the Middle East,” he added.
Now
President Bush seems set on following the colonial powers into the
region for another military and political adventure - ostensibly to
spread “democracy" among those nations it most despises (Iraq,
Palestine and Iran) but in fact more likely to increase American
control of an increasingly anti-Western Arab world, he said.
The
Arabs themselves warn that this will lead to massive instability and
widespread violence, Fisk said.
“The
Israelis - and their allies in the U.S. administration - are hell bent
on the whole shebang.”