CAIRO,
September 11 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Arabs and Muslims
worldwide appeared angrier than ever at unfair U.S. policy toward them,
but many voiced sorrow on Wednesday, September 11, for the thousands of
Americans who died in last year's attacks.
"I
hate America, its policy, and even Americans themselves," said
Mahmud Mohamed, 38, a Cairo street sweeper.
However,
others here tempered their fury at U.S. policy with sympathy for the
American dead, Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.
"Of
course, I cannot be happy with what happened in the United States. It
wouldn't be human to enjoy seeing thousands of innocent people
die," said Selim Awad, a 48-year-old employer at a private company.
But
most Egyptians expressed what analysts described as growing Arab and
Muslim "anti-Americanism" because of U.S. policy toward Israel
and Iraq.
In
Syria, the official Tishrin newspaper said the Arabs have paid
the "highest price" for September 11, while Israel has
exploited the attacks on its U.S. ally by equating Palestinian
resistance with terrorism.
"Although
millions of Arabs expressed sympathies to the American people who are
known for their good heart and ingenuity, Israel has managed to exploit
this tragedy in favor of its expansionist plans and aggression,"
the paper said.
And
while Qatar's Al-Jazeera Television and other Arab media are now
reporting that Osama bin Laden orchestrated the attacks, many Arabs and
Muslims still doubt it and speak of a U.S.-Israeli plot, according to
AFP.
Shortly
after the attacks last year, few Arabs believed the so-called Islamic
militants were behind them.
In
Thailand, the Bangkok Post newspaper said Wednesday that Muslim
leaders in that country do not believe Bin Laden was responsible for
September 11, and instead think Washington wanted to use the attacks to
divide the world.
In
Kuwait, where Americans were hailed as liberators in February 1991, Bin
Laden is now widely regarded as a hero, according to a new poll, which
did not ask whether people believed whether he orchestrated the attacks.
Fuelling
Arab and Muslim anger, stirred already by U.S. support for Israel and
its and the U.S. war on Afghanistan, are fears that Washington is
preparing to launch its fiercest attack on Iraq since the 1991 Gulf war,
which devastated the Iraqi infrastructure.
Though
Arab armies took part in the U.S.-led force to liberate Kuwait, not one
Arab country now supports the attack on Iraq and they have, for more
than a decade now, complained of the high price the Iraqi civilian
population have paid for U.N. sanctions.
In
Pakistan, Islamic leaders said that strikes on Muslim countries,
including Afghanistan, were aimed at capturing their natural resources.
"An
attack on Iraq will be seen as an attack on the entire Islamic
world," warned Fazlur Rehman, a leader of the Jamiat Ulema Islam
(JUI) party. "It will fuel Muslim hatred against the United
States."
The
growing tempo of the U.S. war on terrorism stirs not only anger but
bafflement.
Arabs
and Muslims accuse the United States of backing Israel's military
occupation of Palestinian land, while always singling out Arab and
Muslim countries for military attacks.
In
addition to Afghanistan and Iraq, Libya and Sudan have also been
attacked by U.S. forces in the last two decades.
The
United States had "increased the gap of misunderstanding"
between Muslims and Western communities, according to the Malay-language
Utusan Malaysia.
In
Washington, the U.S. State Department has been conducting a long-term
study into the roots of anti-Americanism, in parallel with a major
campaign to improve the U.S. image abroad, particularly in Islamic
countries, that was launched in the wake of the September 11 attacks.
In
addition, the State Department has produced materials to counter the
perception that the U.S.-led war on terrorism is aimed at Islam and to
stress the religious freedom and quality of life that Muslims enjoy in
the United States.
However,
some pundits have argued that the publicity campaign has fallen on deaf
ears because it misses the point that it is actual U.S. policy and not
the packaging of it that has fueled anti-American sentiment