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Attacks on the U.S. and World Future

Nadia Mahmoud Mostafa *

13/11/2001

The attack on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington is the most important and critical global events since the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the cold war. While the latter had resulted in international transformations, the so-called “War against the United States” must influence the state of the whole world. This war does not only shoot at the core of every item embodied by the United States in the world order after the cold war, it also tests the essential interactions, values and rules of this system. For these reasons and the possible structural and systemic consequences, some points should be highlighted through an observation of the first three days after the attacks.

 

After the cold war, many assumptions were suggested concerning the structure of the world order, its pattern of interactions, nature of rules and governing values. The most important of these assumptions are: first, the United States is the sole great power; second, the clash of civilizations between the Western civilization and the other civilizations (thus the South becomes a prime source of threat to the international stability and Western value system); third, how to establish a new world order adopting the values of democracy, freedom and human rights.

 

America Reaps Harvest of Her Deeds

 

Throughout the nineties these assumptions were tested several times to the extent that questions were raised concerning the reality of the era we live in. The following are the most crucial outcomes of this decade:

 

First: The great American power perceives its interests and security in an isolated sense from the security and stability of the rest of the world. As a consequence it does not lead the world but it drives it with an individual will.

 

Second: The dimension of the cultural civilization has manifestly taken its part – beside the political and economic dimensions – in the North/South gap. The recent Durban conference for combating racial discrimination was the last testing station that elucidated the depth of such gap.

 

Third: The values of democracy, freedom, and human rights are referred to and applied in only to the interests and issues of the North, as if they are the Western value system that cannot be implemented in any other place, in spite of claiming that they are universal and should be imposed with all means, flexible or inflexible.

 

International Evidence

 

The events of the September 11 came to shake the world, neither for its new style nor for the triggered flagrant number of casualties and material losses, for many parts of the globe have suffered much more losses and causalities. Yet this is the first time after more than half a century that the United States is exposed to such damage. If the events were depicted as “An American national catastrophe,” “America under attack,” “War acts against America,” or “Terrorist acts against America,” all carry evidences and implications underlying the state of international relations.

 

I note down my own remarks of these evidences on four levels: the U.S. status in the world order and the sources menacing her security, the U.S. relations with her Western allies including Israel, U.S. /South relations, and the American domestic state and its impact on American foreign policy and its world interactions.

 

The First Level: The U.S. Status in the World Order

American security is not isolated from world security, as the sources of threat are not only external. Since the end of the cold war, the “international” U.S. strategy puts “International Terrorism” on the list of what is perceived as a threat to world stability and security. Likewise, the U.S. administration set fighting terrorism as one of its crucial strategic objectives, as well as one of the important issues of the American foreign policy.

 

While American targets abroad were exposed in the last two decades to the so-called successive terrorist hits (Beirut, Lockerbie, Saudi Arabia, Kenya, Tanzania, Port of Aden), U.S. territory witnessed two other operations: one in the World Trade Center (1993), and the other in Oklahoma (1995). All strikes, except for Oklahoma, were linked to Middle Eastern elements. It has been settled in the American conscience that the South in general and the Middle East in particular, especially Arabs and Muslims, are the source for such terrorist menace that is pertinent to Islamic fundamentalism and the escalation of the consequences of the unresolved Arab-Israeli conflict.

 

In other words, the U.S. from within is not immune to terrorist threats and operations. The U.S. policies therefore focused on the foreign terrorist resistance, steering clear of the American oasis of safety. With the same token of protecting and secluding “the American island” from the calamities and threats that affect the rest of the world, establishing the U.S. missile armor for American military security and protection from external military threats crystallized the logic of defense.

 

The attacks on New York and Washington came with several different evidences. The assaults were accurate and innovative, launched directly from within the U.S. and through hijacked US civilian planes. The attacks were not only targeting U.S. territory and people, but also hitting two very important symbols of U.S. international strength: monetary and military might. They are also the symbols of the material values of welfare and security in Western civilization. These attacks were portrayed as unprecedented and unexpected.

 

New meanings underlined the nature of the war that is likely to hit a great power possessing the most enormous military arsenal in the world, of which countries and groups have previously experienced in war. It became apparent, after these attacks, that the credibility of the absolute security and excellence of a country as such can be shaken. U.S. security went through a test administered not by an external threat from another corresponding global power. Individuals belonging to groups of other creeds who managed to pose such strikes conducted it, and U.S. observers and politicians depicted it as a declaration of war against the U.S.

 

It is thus a birth of a new kind of war witnessed in American territory, a war from and toward the interior (whatever is said on its external extensions). There have been escalations in the Western analysts and observers’ have made many accusations including Middle Eastern elements topped by Osama bin Laden. The one held responsible for such attacks is not yet defined.

 

The U.S. official address did not accuse a definite party, although some scattered voices pointed to those such as right-wing American extremists or Western international terrorist groups fostering ideological stances against Western capitalism and democracy.

 

The questions are: Do the US officials and Western media undermine the responsibility of an American internal force having goals pertinent to society and the U.S. domestic and foreign policy? Why is there an insistence on the external sources? Is the American domestic status fine? Can’t the weakness come from within? Isn’t it what history says on the downfall of the great empires?

 

On the contrary, the threats declared and embodied by such attacks show, if undertaken by external elements, that U.S. security is vulnerable and inseparable from world security and stability, and from a just and truly democratic way of solving its problems. The comprehensive U.S. national security is not realized merely by military procedures and world power balances, but rather it is achieved by other measures springing out of the nature of American policies toward world issues.

 

Such policies evoke estimations on being the reason for the outbreak of hostility towards U.S. Many analysts rely on such hostility in interpreting the attacks events. In the light of what has been mentioned concerning the US status in the world order, its international position and extent of her credibility, the following question is raised: What will the U.S. reaction be?

 

The Second Level: The Nature Of The Reaction:

It is obvious that the manner of reaction was related to the official U.S. adjustment of the nature, aims and consequences of such attacks to the American security and the U.S. role in world leadership. Based on the speeches delivered by Bush, Blair, and NATO allies since the attacks, it is noticed that the attacks were adjusted to be as follows:

They are attacks against democracy and freedom, not only in the United States but also against the free and modern world. It is a war between good and evil, attacks by a new enemy against all, a declaration of the 21st century fight, i.e. a fight between the Western value system and enemies of the Western civilization. The world should be unified and allied to eradicate such enemy.

 

It should be noted that Israel entered such adjustment as a part of the Western civilization and free world, which confronts the terrorist enemies. For instance, Ehud Barak talked twice within five hours after the attacks on BBC TV asserting that their civilized modern world was in danger and needed their alliance and solidarity to stand against terrorism, which is an enemy that threats the entire free world.

A strong form of vigilant Western solidarity with the United States was shown by the NATO decision taken by unanimous votes on the second day after the attacks. For the first time in history, Article (5) concerning collective defense was enforced. NATO countries thus declared that the assault against the United States was an assault against them, which requires collective military defense, a matter confirmed NATO’s willingness to support a U.S. military choice against whoever was held responsible for the attacks.

 

Noticeably, Bush’s speeches, especially the one delivered in the White House the second day after the attacks, contained an indication for alliance with friendly powers to confront the new enemy, a matter interpreted as a U.S. desire to share the political and material burdens of this new world battle, since the United States is no more able to lead the world alone.

 

Yet, U.S. reaction toward the challenge imposed by the attacks on the US world image is still debatable without a final answer. Two trends are taking place in the US and Western circles concerning what the United States should do:

 

The first trend suggests punishing the attackers after accurately knowing them. The United States should investigate the reasons for hostility escalated against it, which makes it vulnerable to similar attacks, and so that it can control the future by handling the causes and evading the repetition of such antagonistic events.

 

The second trend calls for war, away from trials and legal and political procedures, i.e. to exploit with military force vigorously and promptly against elements known for their support of terrorism; these are definitely those countries and groups on the international terrorism list made by the U.S. administration.

 

While the Bush’s statements mentioned the necessity of patience and serenity in identifying the attackers and their supports so as to be punished, the voice of the second trend was raised in the U.S., Western and Israeli circles giving no space for the first trend to express itself. On the third day after the attack, 13 September, the talk began on the soon U.S. military strike against Afghanistan, if it did not hand over Osama bin Laden - the first suspect in the US and Western eyes.

 

Two features characterized the Arab and Islamic official reaction: A strong condemnation of the attacks expressing their cooperation with the American people and government to confront this catastrophe, and condemning any terrorist act against civilians. At the same time they avoided blaming U.S. policies as catalysts to such hostility and ignored the exposition to the nature of the potential U.S. reaction.

 

That was the case with the exception of Iraq, stating that the United States had experienced what it previously made the world experience. Castro was the first of the South leaders to remind the United States of the necessity to revise its world policies, which generate enmity.

 

In other words, whereas the North or the West were preparing to stand beside the United States to enter the allegedly war of civilizations declared against the Western civilization, those belonging to the other civilizations particularly the Islamic (Arab or non-Arab) had no choice but to condemn, apologize, defend and declare solidarity. Being seemingly in a state of accusation, they were victims of unjust U.S. policies, in more than one form and on more than one level.

 

The manufactured portrayal exhibited a discrete dichotomy that exists in the world, the North and South, but in a new attire and more dangerous than during and after the cold war. The dichotomy is entering a new stage, a stage in the aftermath of the attacks on New York and Washington, but some evidences of its birth have been unveiled by the Durban conference. The attacks were the impetus for its birth. Therefore we must ask, “What are the consequences on the relation with the South?

 

The Third Level: The Level Of Relations With The South:

The Western and American address, as shown in the media, carried an offensive attitude, though some were indeterminate about sources of attacks, while others explicitly accused Osama bin Laden, emphasizing that Western civilization is in danger, since the United States is in a state of war. But the question is still unanswered: With whom? Does the entire South fall under pits of terrorism?

 

The Arab media is overwhelmed with commentaries and analyses on the responsibility of U.S. international policies and the danger of the Israeli gains then attained through the smoke escalating from New York and Washington. While these commentaries and analyses lack rationality and reason, it can’t be denied that the natural emotions felt by the Arabs was comfort and happiness toward the U.S. events due to the affliction suffered as a result of the unjust and undemocratic policies in the Islamic region.

 

Many questions are raised: How can the attitude of the great Western powers be changed - while preparing for a comprehensive war against international terrorism to eradicate it - toward the political, economic and military issues of the South? Will the South be further marginalized as it has been since the end of the cold war? Will the gap in attitudes between the North and South deepen? Will the South governments and policies be exposed to more pressures as a punishment of their belonging to another civilization, which has supposedly threatened Western civilization?

 

It is crucial here to illustrate that the ongoing scenario does indicate a clash of civilizations based merely on them being different. It reflects a conflict caused by an abuse of a disorder in the world balance of powers for the interest of a certain civilization to sway the other civilizations, irrespective of the actuality of values and principles of a civilization, which it claims are universal and suitable for everyone.

 

The Fourth Level: America From Within

The coverage of the attacks focused on an essential aspect of the reaction of the American public near the site of the attacks. The following are the characteristics of their reaction: the Americans witnessed a battle that they never expected. They could not imagine that the capital of money and politics in the strongest state in the world exposed to such an attack. They could not believe that it happened. They did not know why and how it happened. At the beginning they were not aware of its severity.

 

It was natural that shock, bewilderment, and wonder are followed by rage. How does one express rage? How will it be developed? How will it influence the tendencies of U.S. policy?

Western media pointed the finger at Arabs and Muslims. In turn, the Arabs and Muslims of America were the first targets of that anger.

 

Likewise leaders of the American Arab and Islamic organizations were keen to concentrate on two things: give warnings and instructions on how to face violent acts and discrimination, as well as how to assert their integration with American society. 

 

Such an atmosphere surrounding Muslims and Arabs in the United States questions the reality of cultural plurality hoisted by the U.S. and Western governments. There is the reality of mergence of such groups in their new communities and their relative weight to influence public opinion and U.S. policy toward new tendencies that are more supportive of the issues of the Muslim homelands, Arab, and non-Arab.

 

On the contrary, the home situation in the U.S. after the attacks affects U.S. policy. It is taken for granted in U.S. foreign policy that the American public does not bother about the issues of foreign policy nor pressures it unless it directly influences its interests. Typical of this was the Vietnam War and the oil boycott. So will the experience of the attacks on New York and Washington have its evidence to, and if so, to what direction? Will it be more isolated from the world’s problems?

 

This is impossible in this stage of globalization. Will the influence be more toward “interventionism” for more punishment and retaliation of the South? Will it be a call for a revision of U.S. world policies, especially toward the Islamic region, in order to treat the causes of rising hostility against the United States - a hostility not instigated by a clash of civilizations and hatred of the Western civilization, but due to the unjust and undemocratic policies of the United States which claims its leadership of the free world of human democracy?

 

From the regions of the Arab Israeli conflict to the core of the Palestinian Intifada that confront the flagrant Zionist aggression, there have been severe impacts by the U.S. events. Before the eyes of the world, and as feared by the Palestinians, Israel reoccupied Janine and Jericho in the West Bank.

 

With the international status quo and in the short or long run repercussions of the attacks, the Arab governments should take clear actions considering that Israel is grabbing the opportunity to continue Sharon’s plan, which began September 28, 2000.

 


* Dr. Nadia Mahmoud Mostafa is Professor of International Relations, Cairo University and head of the Center for Civilizations and Political Studies, Cairo.

 

 

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