Chas W. Freeman, Jr.
Remarks to the
14th Annual US-Arab Policymakers Conference
The National
Council on US-Arab Relations
September 12,
2005 in Washington, DC
Ladies and Gentlemen:
Once again, I have been honored by the National Council on US-Arab
Relations and stand before you to offer a few thoughts on where we -- Americans
and Arabs -- are and where we may go from here.
I speak for myself alone, not for any organization with which I am affiliated. I speak because I believe US-Arab relations
matter greatly to my country and because, unlike many in Washington, I do not believe in
diplomacy-free foreign policy and have a healthy regard for what is now derided
as “reality-based analysis.”
Some things are, of course, going right in the Middle
East. The Saudis are
clearly winning their struggle against violent extremists. Palestinians in Gaza have been released from direct occupation by Israeli
settlers and soldiers. Lebanese are
exploring a new measure of autonomy, following the long-overdue Syrian
withdrawal from their country. Syrians,
relieved of the burden of keeping order in Lebanon,
may finally attempt their own reforms.
Women are being admitted to a larger role in society in some Gulf Arab
countries. Annoying as the results are to many, the expanded press freedoms pioneered in Qatar continue
to spread throughout the region.
Experiments with elections as a means of selecting leaders continue to
occur. High oil prices have produced an
economic boom in many Arab countries, though not, of course, in all. But, with few exceptions, despite the
propensity of the spindoctors here in DC to claim credit for anything positive
that happens in the Middle East, these developments owe little to the state of US-Arab
relations and have little impact one way or the other on American relations
with the Islamic world.
Our relations with the Arabs and with Muslims generally are at a historic
nadir. All of us,
Americans or Arabs, who are present want to do something about this. But what? We must start with an honest appraisal of
where we are.
My country’s tragically misguided lurch into militarism after 9/11 has
already cost us more on the broader international stage than anyone could have
imagined. In the span of a single
presidential term of office, four years, we have forfeited the international
esteem that once undergirded our global influence. We have lost the admiring deference to our
leadership of allies and friends alike, without gaining the respect of our
enemies and adversaries. Once seen as
the reliable champion of a generous and just international order based on the
rule of law, the United
States is now widely viewed as an
inveterately selfish spoiler in international organizations and a scofflaw in
international affairs. Once seen as the
last, best hope of humankind, the United States is now – according to
many polls – more feared than admired in a lengthening list of countries. We are much the weaker for all of this.
Nowhere is this dismaying reversal in foreign views of my country more advanced
than in the Arab and Islamic worlds. The
mutual estrangement of Arabs and Americans is driven by the consequences of
ill-considered US policies in Iraq,
the Holy Land, Afghanistan,
and at home. It is exacerbated by
hypocrisy, irresponsible passivity, and an absence of forceful leadership on
the Arab side. Adverse trends in
American-Arab relations in turn poison American relationships with the broader
world of Islam. Different policies and
approaches on both sides will be needed to regain the enormous amount of common
ground we have lost. More artful and
articulate explanations for policies that are fundamentally mistaken will not
do the trick.
The Anglo-American invasion and occupation of Iraq has cost my country its
international reputation, many lives, and hundreds of billions of borrowed
dollars. It is severely eroding both the
structure and the professional competence of our army. It has destroyed the Iraqi state and
destabilized and desecularized Iraqi politics, while expanding the regional
power and influence of Iran. It has catalyzed violent struggles, verging
on civil war, between Iraqi Arabs and Kurds, between Arab Sunnis and Sh`ias, and among Shi`i factions. It has generated at least three separate but
loosely coordinated insurgencies in Iraq. The occupation, which seemed like the
solution, has become the problem.
Our occupation in Iraq
is drawing youth from throughout the Islamic world into attacks on Americans,
by some estimates multiplying our enemies
ten-fold. By a process of Darwinian
natural selection administered by the very competent officers and men of the US Army and
Marines, we are creating an ever fitter cadre of enemies, expert in urban
warfare, bomb building, and the military choreography of the ambush. We have transformed Iraq from a reliable supplier of oil to the US and other
markets into an unreliable one. The Iraq conflict
and its side effects have contributed to raising energy prices to levels that
are beginning to take a serious toll on our economy.
Our inability to prevail on the battlefield in Iraq has underscored the limits of
our military power and emboldened our enemies.
Now Hurricane Katrina has shown how little we have learned about how to
deal with the consequences of large-scale traumatic events. The suffering of New Orleans has earned us the pity of the
world and the scorn of our enemies. It
invites renewed attempts by extremists to mount spectacularly deadly attacks on
our homeland.
I suspect that many, if not most leaders in the Arab world would
privately agree with the very negative assessment of American intervention in Iraq that I
have just given. Some, I know, have
spoken candidly to our president about Iraq,
Israel,
and the parlous state of American relations with the broader Islamic
world. Candor, not fawning evasion and
the hypocritical concealment of sincere differences of opinion, is the mark of
true friendship. And it is in that
spirit that I say to our Arab friends here today, if you do not express your
views and advocate your own interests, do not be surprised if they are
insouciantly ignored and trampled upon.
No one heeds the lion that does not roar but rolls over and plays dead
as others cross his territory at will.
And no one respects the dog that whines but seldom growls and never
bites.
It is particularly important that our Arab friends speak candidly to us
about Iraq and Iran. The best outcome still possible in Iraq, it now seems, is a Shia-dominated state
with a largely autonomous southern region heavily influenced by Iran and a
Kurdish region independent in all but name.
Such an Iraq
may or may not contain US garrisons and bases.
The United States
has not clarified its intentions. No one
has demanded that it do so. Some of the
same people who neoconned the United States into invading Iraq are now arguing
for an attack on Iran as a means of ensuring that it does not eventually
acquire nuclear weapons. If these
outcomes in Iraq and courses
of action against Iran
would serve the interests of the Arabs, then Arabs need only remain
silent. If they would not serve Arab
interests, as I believe they would not serve the interests of the United States, then Arabs must speak out to help
the United States
and the international community come up with
alternatives to them that would better serve our interests, or suffer the
consequences.
In Iraq,
the problem is not now – if it ever was – weapons of mass destruction, bad
government, or even terrorism; it is the occupation. The occupation generates the very phenomena
it was intended to cure. In that
respect, the Anglo-American occupation of Iraq has come to have much in
common with the Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands. In Iraq,
as in Palestine,
ending the occupation is the prerequisite for reversing the growth of terrorism
and restoring peace.
Not long ago, many Arabs took obvious pleasure in seeing a few thousand
Israeli settlers in Gaza
suffer the same sense of powerlessness and dispossession that hundreds of
thousands of Palestinians have experienced over the years. It is all too easy to forget that the Israeli
withdrawal was unilaterally imposed by the Israeli military on Israelis and
Palestinians alike. It was not agreed
with the Palestinians as part of a peace process and it has no clear
implications for any other part of the occupied territories. It seems likely, in fact, that the people of
Gaza have exchanged occupation by Israeli colonists and soldiers not for
freedom but for a state of siege, in which their access to the outside world
will continue to be controlled and perhaps severely restricted by their Israeli
neighbors. Meanwhile, Mr. Sharon, having
driven off on his own road, has made it clear that he has no intention of
pulling the road map out of the glove compartment and using it to
navigate. He gives every
evidence of a firm intention to continue to impose rather than negotiate
changes in Israel’s
relationship with its Palestinian captives.
The fact is, of course, that Israeli occupation and settlement of Arab
lands is inherently violent. Occupations
are acts of violence. The dispossession
of people from their land is an act of violence. Preventing people from coming to and going
from their own country is an act of violence.
And as long as such Israeli violence against Palestinians continues, it
is utterly unrealistic to expect that Palestinians will stand down from violent
resistance and retaliation against Israelis.
Mr. Sharon is far from a stupid man; he understands this. So, when he sets the complete absence of
Palestinian violence as a precondition for implementing the road map or any
other negotiating process, he is deliberately setting a precondition he knows
can never be met.
As long as the United
States continues unconditionally to provide
the subsidies and political protection that make the Israeli occupation and the
high-handed and self-defeating policies it engenders possible, there is little,
if any, reason to hope that anything resembling the former peace process can be
resurrected. Originally intended to
provide a basis for trading land for peace, the occupation has itself become
the problem. As long as it continues,
neither Palestinians nor Israelis will have personal security. As long as it continues, Israel will not find the acceptance by its Arab
neighbors that was offered at Beirut
in 2002. Moreover, the violent
confrontation could at any moment, as it did in the past, spread its murder and
mayhem well beyond the region. The most
immediate victims of the continuing savagery and injustice in the Holy Land are, of course, Palestinians and Israelis. But their agony disturbs the peace of the
world and wounds the hearts of billions beyond their borders.
The extremism
and terrorism bred by the continuing injustices and crimes against humanity in
the Holy Land thus continue to take their toll in places as remote from the
Holy Land as Britain, Thailand, Nigeria,
Indonesia, India, Pakistan,
and Afghanistan. In Afghanistan, an American-led
military operation to apprehend the perpetrators of 9/11 and to punish those
Afghan Salafis who had given them shelter has now taken on a seemingly eternal
life of its own. No one can now say when
or what might allow the US
to disengage from combat against the once discredited but now resurgent
Taliban. As in Iraq and Israel, the occupation is becoming
the cause of the very problems it was meant to resolve. If one recalls that the objective of al
Qa`ida and its extremist ilk has been to drive the United States and the West
from the Dar al Islam so that they can seize control of it, the growing
antipathy to the American presence is sobering.
Finally, a couple of necessary observations about the American home
front. I have recited a daunting
list of policy challenges, not to say catastrophes, for the United States. We have a political system premised on the
notion of competition between two parties – an adversary process in which one
party criticizes and proposes alternatives to the policies of the other. This system has clearly broken down. Patriotism is confused with silent
acquiescence in the policies proposed by our leaders. Policies that should be the subject of active
debate are accepted without a word of protest by a gullible public. Those who know better say nothing even when
they can see the country being led into disaster. The opposition party not only does not
oppose, it does not propose alternatives either because it has no ideas or
because lacks confidence in those it has been too timid to advance. This is not just a political problem; it is a
systemic breakdown in American democracy.
What can and
must be done in these circumstances?
None of you would be here at this late hour of the day if you did not
care deeply about the issues I have been discussing. I appeal to you. Those of you who are
Arabs, lend us your ideas for how to lead ourselves out of the dilemmas we now
face. Those of you
who are American, speak out. Reaffirm
your patriotism by restoring life to our democracy!
When the need
for mutual understanding is greatest, the support for those who attempt to
promote it paradoxically often seems to be least. Organizations like our hosts today, the
National Council on US-Arab Relations, or the Middle East Institute and my own
Middle East Policy Council, require ongoing financial support to continue our
work. But such support has never been
less generously given than now. Each of
these organizations plays a different role in raising policy issues for public
debate, in questioning the conventional wisdom, and in educating the American
public to Middle East realities that would
otherwise never come to their attention.
There are clear divisions of labor and little duplication of effort
amongst these and other organizations involved in Middle
East affairs. I close with
the plea that, if you care about a better informed American policy debate and
about rebuilding US-Arab relations, you make a much-needed financial
contribution to the National Council or another organization of your choice.
Thank you.