sure786
10-09-2002, 02:19
Assalamu-alaikum all Muslims and greetings to non-Muslims:
As one year approaches to 911 events perhaps we need to reflect on the most probable and sure causes.
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9/11, TERRORISM AND THE MIDDLE EAST: THE WAY OUT
by Jeff Halper
(Reprinted from Peaceworks, September 2002)
One of the most conspicuous features of the September 11 attack on the United States was the general inability to “get a handle” on what had happened. Thousands of responses filled our TV screens and newspapers. Those of the victims’ families were predictably emotional. So were the responses of the-man-on-the-street, which ranged from shaken and disoriented to patriotic and revengeful. Nor did the public get much perspective and clarity from the learned "experts," political figures and apologetic voices from the Muslim world. While all this is understandable in the immediate aftermath of the attacks, a year later we still do not have that perspective, that "handle." The overriding reaction continues to be one of "war" retaliation and victory as if we are simply in a conventional battle with the "bad guys."
A few voices have been raised, especially in Europe, questioning whether a "war on terrorism" will effectively solve the problem. "Terrorism" might be an accurate term for the 9/11 attacks, but it becomes dangerously simplistic and self-serving when used by interested parties to characterize all forms of conflict, violence and resistance to oppression. For that reason Amnesty International does not use the term, but speaks instead of "attacks against civilians." The indiscriminate use of the term "terrorist" allows strong parties especially states to define who is or is not a "terrorist," what is "legitimate" use of power and what isn't, who is "with us" and who isn't. It risks stigmatizing whole populations or religions. And the by-products of such an approach ever-escalating conflict in which the "nuclear option" has been mentioned, rising levels of personal insecurity, global xenophobia and the setting aside of human rights in favor of ethnic “profiling” and other discriminatory practices certainly outweigh the emotional satisfaction of taking revenge. And, in the end, it is almost a truism that combating what is essentially a political problem by military means is futile and self-defeating.
OK, say the military-minded realists (or "crackpot realists," as the sociologist C. Wright Mills once called them), so what is your suggestion? If military operations will not solve the problem of terrorism, what will? Ironically, an effective approach was aired just the week before 9/11 but the US was not listening because it had walked out of the World Conference Against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia And Related Intolerance. In late August-early September 2001 some 15,000 representatives of governments, NGOs and faith-based organizations met held under UN auspices in Durban, South Africa to formulate a covenant that would address just those inequities and grievances that nurture terrorism, oppression and conflict.
In the official Durban Declaration and Program of Action, government delegates reaffirmed the principles of equality and non-discrimination in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights; expand the notions of human rights and freedom from discrimination to include race, color, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status; affirmed the fundamental importance for States to sign and ratify to all relevant international human rights instruments; and welcomed the proclamation by the General Assembly of 2001-2010 as the Decade for a Culture of Peace and Non-Violence for Children of the World. They called on states to enact legislative, judicial and administrative measures to prevent and protect against racism, to ratify and effectively implement relevant international instruments on human rights, to promote human rights education in their societies, and to provide effective remedies at their own national levels.
The NGO Declaration was, as might be expected, sharper and more demanding in its tone. Whereas the government document confined itself to principles rather than to specific peoples and situations (with the exception of the Roma/Gypsies), the NGO Declaration spoke more unequivocally about colonialism and foreign occupation. Article 98 recognizes “that the Palestinian people are one such people currently enduring a colonialist, discriminatory military occupation that violates their fundamental human right of self-determination, including the illegal transfer of Israeli citizens into the occupied territories and establishment of a permanent illegal Israeli infrastructure.” It affirms that “the Palestinian people have the clear right under international law to resist such occupation by any means provided under international law.” Article 99 argues that “a basic ‘root cause’ of Israel’s ongoing and systematic human rights violations, including its grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention 1949…which is Israel’s brand of apartheid.”
In Durban NGOs and governments sought to take another important step in the painful process of creating an international civil society that possesses the moral and legal means to stop violations of human rights and punish crimes against humanity. The greatest enemies of such grassroots civil diplomacy are the world's most powerful governments, led by the US, who are loathe to relinquish one iota of their sovereignty. But here lies the only hope of truly coping with terrorism and its root causes while preserving the values of freedom and tolerance that are the very point of what we are struggling for.
2nd part follows in next thread
-----------------------
(Jeff Halper is the Coordinator of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions <www.icahd.org>. He can be reached at <jeff@icahd.org>.)
As one year approaches to 911 events perhaps we need to reflect on the most probable and sure causes.
------------------------------
9/11, TERRORISM AND THE MIDDLE EAST: THE WAY OUT
by Jeff Halper
(Reprinted from Peaceworks, September 2002)
One of the most conspicuous features of the September 11 attack on the United States was the general inability to “get a handle” on what had happened. Thousands of responses filled our TV screens and newspapers. Those of the victims’ families were predictably emotional. So were the responses of the-man-on-the-street, which ranged from shaken and disoriented to patriotic and revengeful. Nor did the public get much perspective and clarity from the learned "experts," political figures and apologetic voices from the Muslim world. While all this is understandable in the immediate aftermath of the attacks, a year later we still do not have that perspective, that "handle." The overriding reaction continues to be one of "war" retaliation and victory as if we are simply in a conventional battle with the "bad guys."
A few voices have been raised, especially in Europe, questioning whether a "war on terrorism" will effectively solve the problem. "Terrorism" might be an accurate term for the 9/11 attacks, but it becomes dangerously simplistic and self-serving when used by interested parties to characterize all forms of conflict, violence and resistance to oppression. For that reason Amnesty International does not use the term, but speaks instead of "attacks against civilians." The indiscriminate use of the term "terrorist" allows strong parties especially states to define who is or is not a "terrorist," what is "legitimate" use of power and what isn't, who is "with us" and who isn't. It risks stigmatizing whole populations or religions. And the by-products of such an approach ever-escalating conflict in which the "nuclear option" has been mentioned, rising levels of personal insecurity, global xenophobia and the setting aside of human rights in favor of ethnic “profiling” and other discriminatory practices certainly outweigh the emotional satisfaction of taking revenge. And, in the end, it is almost a truism that combating what is essentially a political problem by military means is futile and self-defeating.
OK, say the military-minded realists (or "crackpot realists," as the sociologist C. Wright Mills once called them), so what is your suggestion? If military operations will not solve the problem of terrorism, what will? Ironically, an effective approach was aired just the week before 9/11 but the US was not listening because it had walked out of the World Conference Against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia And Related Intolerance. In late August-early September 2001 some 15,000 representatives of governments, NGOs and faith-based organizations met held under UN auspices in Durban, South Africa to formulate a covenant that would address just those inequities and grievances that nurture terrorism, oppression and conflict.
In the official Durban Declaration and Program of Action, government delegates reaffirmed the principles of equality and non-discrimination in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights; expand the notions of human rights and freedom from discrimination to include race, color, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status; affirmed the fundamental importance for States to sign and ratify to all relevant international human rights instruments; and welcomed the proclamation by the General Assembly of 2001-2010 as the Decade for a Culture of Peace and Non-Violence for Children of the World. They called on states to enact legislative, judicial and administrative measures to prevent and protect against racism, to ratify and effectively implement relevant international instruments on human rights, to promote human rights education in their societies, and to provide effective remedies at their own national levels.
The NGO Declaration was, as might be expected, sharper and more demanding in its tone. Whereas the government document confined itself to principles rather than to specific peoples and situations (with the exception of the Roma/Gypsies), the NGO Declaration spoke more unequivocally about colonialism and foreign occupation. Article 98 recognizes “that the Palestinian people are one such people currently enduring a colonialist, discriminatory military occupation that violates their fundamental human right of self-determination, including the illegal transfer of Israeli citizens into the occupied territories and establishment of a permanent illegal Israeli infrastructure.” It affirms that “the Palestinian people have the clear right under international law to resist such occupation by any means provided under international law.” Article 99 argues that “a basic ‘root cause’ of Israel’s ongoing and systematic human rights violations, including its grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention 1949…which is Israel’s brand of apartheid.”
In Durban NGOs and governments sought to take another important step in the painful process of creating an international civil society that possesses the moral and legal means to stop violations of human rights and punish crimes against humanity. The greatest enemies of such grassroots civil diplomacy are the world's most powerful governments, led by the US, who are loathe to relinquish one iota of their sovereignty. But here lies the only hope of truly coping with terrorism and its root causes while preserving the values of freedom and tolerance that are the very point of what we are struggling for.
2nd part follows in next thread
-----------------------
(Jeff Halper is the Coordinator of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions <www.icahd.org>. He can be reached at <jeff@icahd.org>.)