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Daylight Bribery?
Promises of US Additional Aid

By Khaled Mamdouh
Staff writer – IslamOnline
 

09/01/2003

Republican Arlen Specter

The US explicit promise to consider additional aid to Egypt in return for Cairo’s support to Washington’s planned invasion of Iraq is nothing but daylight bribery. The question now becomes, would US aid to Arab states be considered blackmail or partnership?

On Saturday, January 4, 2003, Arlen Specter, a Pennsylvania lawmaker from US President George W. Bush’s Republican Party, said that the US hoped Arab countries would back a UN-sanctioned attack on Iraq, adding that Washington would consider additional aid to help alleviate the impact of a war on Egypt.

“Well, when you talk about an aid package to Egypt, the United States considers Egypt a very good friend and a very good ally,” said Specter, a member of the Senate appropriations committee. “If there were to be a situation which required further analysis and consideration, we would make that consideration,” he added.

However, according to an Egyptian political analyst, “The message is clear; only a fool would miss the stinking smell of blackmail. The US is using all its tools to achieve its goals.

“The US aid has been used for political objectives from the very beginning, however, that was never as clear and as blunt as it has been since Bush came to power. In the case of Saad Eddin Ibrahim and A Horseman Without A Horse, the aid was used as a pressure tool. Now, it is used as a blackmailing chip,” added the analyst, who asked not to be named.

Egyptian Scholar Saad Eddin Ibrahim

The analyst was referring to the case of a college professor and a human rights activist, with a US citizenship, who was arrested and tried by Egypt for spreading false information that tarnished the country’s image outside, as well as other charges of receiving foreign funds (allegedly to conduct social researches) without state permission. He was sentenced, twice, to seven years in jail, and the US practiced huge pressure over the Egyptian government for his release, and even canceled an additional aid package approved earlier to Egypt.

The other case is a TV series that Israel claimed was anti-Zionist, and the US followed suite, demanding Egypt not to air the series. Cairo, however, refused the pressure, went ahead and aired the series during the Muslim month of Ramadan.

“The US goes on with huge military buildup in the region, despite the full Iraqi submission to all demands of cooperation with the UN weapons inspectors. When Bush says that war is America’s last option, he is apparently lying, as Baghdad could never be the party seeking its own destruction,” he went on.

Even though no evidence of Iraq possessing any banned weapons has surfaced so far, after the inspectors examined more than 236 sites, the United States is still massing up troops in the region, equipped with the most sophisticated weapons.

Wide-Scale Quest for Support

On the political level, the US is engaged in a hectic process to garner the support of the entire region, for use of military bases and air space as well as world support to guarantee any UN resolution it may find itself forced to seek before going for the kill.

Making use of Egypt’s harsh economic situation, the US is apparently using its aid as a bargaining chip to guarantee the Egyptian leader’s support for its “ambiguous” plans, to put it mildly. Egypt’s minister of state for foreign affairs, Fayza Abul Naga, said in December 2002 that a US war on Iraq would cost her country from six to eight billion dollars in lost tourist, export and other revenue.

Blackmail Through Embarrassment

The US aid may not come in handy in case of another important “friendly Arab state”: Saudi Arabia, where not just moral support is needed, but ground bases and air space are also undoable with.

Observers believe that the news of a Saudi secret approval to an attack on Iraq, coupled with a consent to let the US use ground bases and air space in its military operations, published by the New York Times late December, citing US defense officials, was a deliberate leak with ulterior motives.

The Saudis, of course, were quick to deny the reports, asserting they would not take part in any aggression on Iraq, even one sanctioned by the UN. However, one cannot help but think, why? What’s the catch behind such leaks?

Some observers believe that such leaked news could either be true or untrue, but that is not the point here. In both cases, the Bush administration apparently wants to embarrass the Saudi royal family, send them a clear message: “you want stability at home, do not interfere with our plans, or your opposition groups will find more than one opportunity to discredit you before your people.”

Within the same context, press reports started highlighting an alleged hunger strike by suspected al-Qaeda members in a Saudi prison Friday, January 3. Also, statements by an opposition Saudi group, based in London, started to find their way to news headlines.

The question now is: Will the Saudis be able to stand the pressure till the end? Or will they play it safe and use the standard Arabic policy of talking tough against the US imperialistic attitude in public, while acting differently on the ground?

This question brings to mind a similar situation, but on a lesser scale. When the US fired an-air-to-ground missile from an unmanned spy plane, killing 6 Yemenis, including an alleged al-Qaeda regional leader some two months ago, the Yemeni officials were quick to cry “foul play” and accuse the US of taking the law into its hands, violating the air space of a sovereign state, etc.

A few days later, it turned out that the US sought Yemen’s “cooperation and permission” for the operation and actually got “both in a complete and full scale.” The confession came from the Yemeni side.

Horse Trading Started Long Before

An article published in the Los Angeles Times in September 2002, showed that horse-trading (mild description of blackmail and bribery) has actually started several months ago. After struggling for months to talk other nations into supporting his military campaign on Iraq, Bush began using cards they might find easier to understand: cash, weapons, business deals and favors.

Bush’s speech Thursday, September 12, before the General Assembly of the United Nations marked the start of intense behind-the-scenes negotiations to see what “inducements will help convert countries that so far have been balking, at least publicly, at joining the US campaign to strike Iraq.”

It was only natural that the US administration’s initial focus was on members of the United Nations Security Council, notably Russia, France and China. Their backing was important, as the United States tried to persuade the Council to enforce resolutions demanding that Iraq abandon its (alleged) chemical, biological and nuclear weapons programs.

Bush actually managed in that part, and he got resolution 1441. Now, the case seems different, he wants to strike, so it’s only logic that other countries up the price.

Back then, for example, US officials expected the Turks to ask for weapons and debt relief, the Russians and French for access to Iraqi oilfield business, the Qataris for cash to build an air base, and the Jordanians for guarantees of oil and trade.

Now, Turkey, a key US ally in the region, has already declared it wants 10% of the Iraqi oil, in return for its support for a US attack on Iraq. Turkey ‘s strategic location and frequent cooperation have made it America ‘s most important military partner in the region. The Turks contend that their participation this time would add a huge burden at a time when their country is trying to cope with crushing economic problems. They are also deeply worried that war with Iraq might lead to an independent Kurdish state that would threaten their own eastern territory.

No Serious Opposition

On the international level, observers say that Bush will eventually get what he wants, due to the many domestic problems facing the states whose consent he seeks. Russia has the Chechnya problem, and Moscow’s attempts to link the Chechens’ legal aspiration for independence to world terrorism will never yield results without America’s blessing.

Another permanent Security Council member, China, faces a similar problem with its Muslim minority, along with a very bad human rights record. France may give Bush a hard time, according to observers, but it will not stand in the face of the only superpower for the sake of Iraq.

Yet political observers and human rights activists continue to warn that a US strike on Baghdad could mean a regional and possibly worldwide explosion the scope or implications of which cannot be predicted.

Khaled Mamdouh is an editor and staff writer in the News Desk of IslamOnline. He is also a radio announcer, journalist and translator for several Arabic magazines.

The articles posted on this page reflect solely the opinions of the authors.

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