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Rice,
Washington’s new top diplomat, admitted the campaign to improve
the US image in the Muslim world has failed
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WASHINGTON,
November 25 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The United
States is alienating Muslims worldwide and losing the "the war of
ideas" because of adopting faulty policies and what is perceived
as "self-serving
hypocrisy", a Pentagon report has revealed.
While
Washington’s efforts to explain its policies have failed, improved
public relations efforts can not sell faulty policies, said the
toughly-worded report, conducted by the Defense Science Board and
released on Wednesday, November 24.
"Muslims
do not hate our freedom, but rather they hate our policies," the
Pentagon advisory panel was quoted by the BBC News Online as saying in
the report.
"The
overwhelming majority voice their objections to what they see as
one-sided support in favor of Israel and against Palestinian rights,
and the long-standing, even increasing, support for what Muslims
collectively see as tyrannies, most notably Egypt, Saudi Arabia,
Jordan, Pakistan and the Gulf states," it said.
"Thus,
when American public diplomacy talks about bringing democracy to
Islamic societies, this is seen as no more than self-serving
hypocrisy," added the report.
The
Bush administration claims the invasion-turned-occupation of Iraq is
as a mission to bring democracy to the oil-rich Arab country and
allegedly to thus serve as a model to others in the region.
Many
analysts cast harsh doubts on the claim, recalling that Bush declared
some dictatorships in Muslim countries as allies to Washington.
Anti-US
Sentiments
The
report said the US-led invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq have actually
increased anti-American sentiments across the Muslim world.
"US
actions appear... to be motivated by ulterior motives, and
deliberately controlled in order to best serve American national
interests at the expense of truly Muslim self-determination."
The
report also indicated that the US government had failed to adapt its
Cold War communications strategy to deal with the threat of extremism
in the Muslim world.
"In
stark contrast to the Cold War, the United States today is not seeking
to contain a threatening state empire, but rather seeking to convert a
broad movement within Islamic civilization to accept the value
structure of Western Modernity -- an agenda hidden within the official
rubric of a 'war on terrorism,'" it said.
"Today
we reflexively compare Muslim 'masses' to those oppressed under Soviet
rule.
"This
is a strategic mistake. There is no yearning-to-be-liberated-by-the-US
groundswell among Muslim societies -- except to be liberated perhaps
from what they see as apostate tyrannies that the US so determinedly
promotes and defends."
"War
of Ideas"
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Students burn a US flag as thousands protest inside Cairo University campus
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The
report said that the US is also losing the "war of ideas" in
the Muslim world, referring to all attempts by Washington to convey
information crucial to the so-called war on terrorism.
"In
this war, it is an essential objective because the larger goals of US
strategy depend on separating the vast majority of nonviolent Muslims
from the radical-militant Islamist-Jihadists," it said.
"But
American efforts have not only failed in this respect. They may also
have achieved the opposite of what they intended," the report
added.
In
2002, the Defense Department shut down its new Office of Strategic
Influence after critics accused the department of creating a
propaganda office to spread lies around the world under the premise of
misleading US enemies, according to Reuters.
The
report came a few weeks after another Pentagon report said that Radio
Sawa, the Arabic-language sister broadcaster of Voice of America that
was launched after the Iraq invasion, failed to attract its targeted
Arabic-speaking listeners.
The
Pentagon says the new report may not be official policy, but it does
highlight many concerns in official circles in Washington about how
the US government can communicate its messages abroad, the BBC News
Online reported.
Wrong
Way
The
report described US public diplomacy as being in crisis and urged the
creation of a strategic communications apparatus within the White
House.
"The
information campaign - or as some still would have it, 'the war of
ideas' or the struggle for 'hearts and minds' - is important to every
war effort," it said, referring to the so-called war on terror.
Observers
see the recommendation as window-dressing, as many in the Muslim world
call for solutions to such long-standing crises as Israeli occupation
of Arab lands in Palestine, Syria and Lebanon.
Muslims
across the world have been angered by the US-led invasion of Iraq
under the pretext of possessing weapons of mass destruction - none of
which have been found - along with a pro-Israeli bias.
Observers
also believe that unless the US ends its occupation of Iraq, Muslims
will remain suspicious of Washington’s foreign policy.
The
US had made the case for the invasion of Iraq on claims of finding
weapons of mass destruction.
Failure
to find any such banned weapons more than two years after the
occupation raised fears of false pretexts to attack Iraq, which has
the world’s second largest oil reserves.
In
August, US National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice admitted
failure to win hearts and minds of the world Muslims, in what experts
attributed to uneven-handed policy in the Middle East and unjustified
Iraq invasion.
"Unless
we take real action to be more even-handed in trying to resolve the
Mideast conflict, little else will matter," Ibrahim Hooper,
spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said
commenting on Rice’s statement.
President
Bush has named Rice to replace resigning Secretary of State Colin
Powell.