Saturday, September 29, 2007

9/11 Is Over

Published: September 30, 2007

Not long ago, the satirical newspaper The Onion ran a fake news story that began like this:


Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times

Thomas L. Friedman

“At a well-attended rally in front of his new ground zero headquarters Monday, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani officially announced his plan to run for president of 9/11. ‘My fellow citizens of 9/11, today I will make you a promise,’ said Giuliani during his 18-minute announcement speech in front of a charred and torn American flag. ‘As president of 9/11, I will usher in a bold new 9/11 for all.’ If elected, Giuliani would inherit the duties of current 9/11 President George W. Bush, including making grim facial expressions, seeing the world’s conflicts in terms of good and evil, and carrying a bullhorn at all state functions.”

Like all good satire, the story made me both laugh and cry, because it reflected something so true — how much, since 9/11, we’ve become “The United States of Fighting Terrorism.” Times columnists are not allowed to endorse candidates, but there’s no rule against saying who will not get my vote: I will not vote for any candidate running on 9/11. We don’t need another president of 9/11. We need a president for 9/12. I will only vote for the 9/12 candidate.

What does that mean? This: 9/11 has made us stupid. I honor, and weep for, all those murdered on that day. But our reaction to 9/11 — mine included — has knocked America completely out of balance, and it is time to get things right again.

It is not that I thought we had new enemies that day and now I don’t. Yes, in the wake of 9/11, we need new precautions, new barriers. But we also need our old habits and sense of openness. For me, the candidate of 9/12 is the one who will not only understand who our enemies are, but who we are.

Before 9/11, the world thought America’s slogan was: “Where anything is possible for anybody.” But that is not our global brand anymore. Our government has been exporting fear, not hope: “Give me your tired, your poor and your fingerprints.”

You may think Guantánamo Bay is a prison camp in Cuba for Al Qaeda terrorists. A lot of the world thinks it’s a place we send visitors who don’t give the right answers at immigration. I will not vote for any candidate who is not committed to dismantling Guantánamo Bay and replacing it with a free field hospital for poor Cubans. Guantánamo Bay is the anti-Statue of Liberty.

Roger Dow, president of the Travel Industry Association, told me that the United States has lost millions of overseas visitors since 9/11 — even though the dollar is weak and America is on sale. “Only the U.S. is losing traveler volume among major countries, which is unheard of in today’s world,” Mr. Dow said.

Total business arrivals to the United States fell by 10 percent over the 2004-5 period alone, while the number of business visitors to Europe grew by 8 percent in that time. The travel industry’s recent Discover America Partnership study concluded that “the U.S. entry process has created a climate of fear and frustration that is turning away foreign business and leisure travelers and hurting America’s image abroad.” Those who don’t visit us, don’t know us.

I’d love to see us salvage something decent in Iraq that might help tilt the Middle East onto a more progressive pathway. That was and is necessary to improve our security. But sometimes the necessary is impossible — and we just can’t keep chasing that rainbow this way.

Look at our infrastructure. It’s not just the bridge that fell in my hometown, Minneapolis. Fly from Zurich’s ultramodern airport to La Guardia’s dump. It is like flying from the Jetsons to the Flintstones. I still can’t get uninterrupted cellphone service between my home in Bethesda and my office in D.C. But I recently bought a pocket cellphone at the Beijing airport and immediately called my wife in Bethesda — crystal clear.

I just attended the China clean car conference, where Chinese automakers were boasting that their 2008 cars will meet “Euro 4” — European Union — emissions standards. We used to be the gold standard. We aren’t anymore. Last July, Microsoft, fed up with American restrictions on importing brain talent, opened its newest software development center in Vancouver. That’s in Canada, folks. If Disney World can remain an open, welcoming place, with increased but invisible security, why can’t America?

We can’t afford to keep being this stupid! We have got to get our groove back. We need a president who will unite us around a common purpose, not a common enemy. Al Qaeda is about 9/11. We are about 9/12, we are about the Fourth of July — which is why I hope that anyone who runs on the 9/11 platform gets trounced.

Lead, Follow or Move Aside

By Thomas L. Friedman

Getting our national climate regulations in order is necessary, but it will not be sufficient to move China.

China today is entering a really delicate phase on the climate-energy issue - the phase I like to call "The Wal-Mart environmental moment." I wish the same could be said of America and President Bush.

The "Wal-Mart environmental moment" starts with the C.E.O. adopting a green branding strategy as a purely defensive, public relations, marketing move. Then an accident happens - someone in the shipping department takes it seriously and comes up with a new way to package the latest product and saves $100,000. This gets the attention of the C.E.O., who turns to his P.R. adviser and says, "Well, isn't that interesting? Get me a sustainability expert. Let's do this some more."

The company then hires a sustainability officer, and he starts showing how green design, manufacturing and materials can save money in other areas. Then the really smart C.E.O.'s realize they have to become their own C.E.O. - chief energy officer - and they start demanding that energy efficiency become core to everything the company does, from how its employees travel to how its products are manufactured.

That is the transition that Lee Scott, Wal-Mart's C.E.O., has presided over in the past few years.

Last July, Mr. Scott was visiting a Wal-Mart in Las Vegas on a day when the temperature was more than 100 degrees. He happened to notice that a Wal-Mart staple - inexpensive Styrofoam coolers - were not being promoted by the store's associates. As Andrew Ruben, Wal-Mart's vice president for sustainability, told me: "Lee walked into the store and said, 'It's 105 degrees. Why aren't we selling any coolers?' The associates said, 'We don't want to sell Styrofoam coolers because of their impact on the environment.' So Lee called us afterwards and said: 'We're going to have to figure this out.' By that he meant innovation of a different kind of cooler" that doesn't come from petroleum-based Styrofoam, which is not biodegradable and usually not recycled.

Wal-Mart on Monday also announced a partnership with the Carbon Disclosure Project (C.D.P.) to measure the amount of energy used to create products throughout its supply chain - many of which come from China.

Said C.D.P. Chief Executive Paul Dickinson: "Wal-Mart will encourage its suppliers to measure and manage their greenhouse gas emissions, and ultimately reduce the total carbon footprint of Wal-Mart's indirect emissions. We look forward to other global corporations following Wal-Mart's lead."

China's leadership is not where Lee Scott is yet. Chinese officials still put their highest priority on growing G.D.P. - their bottom line. But for the first time, the costs of this breakneck growth are becoming so obvious on China's air, glaciers and rivers that the leadership asked for briefings on global warming. Many Chinese mayors are looking to get clean-technology industries - like wind turbines and solar - started in their cities.

At such a key time, if the U.S. government adopted a real carbon-reducing strategy, as California and Wal-Mart have, rather than the obfuscations of the Bush team, it would have a huge impact on China and only trigger more innovation in America.

Mr. Bush will be convening his climate photo op - oops, I mean "conference" - in Washington tomorrow, which will include Chinese and Indian officials. But, as Rob Watson, the C.E.O. of EcoTech International, which works on environmental issues in China put it: "The Chinese are not going to take anything we say seriously if we don't set an example ourselves."

avid Moskovitz, who directs the Regulatory Assistance Project, a nonprofit that helps promote green policies in China, was even more blunt: "The most frequent and difficult question we get in China with every policy initiative we put forward is: 'If it is so good, why aren't you doing it?' It's hard to answer - and somewhat embarrassing. So we point to good examples that some American states, or cities, or companies are implementing - but not to the federal government. We can't point to America."

Too bad. "It was America which put environmentalism on the world's agenda in the 1970s and

'80s," recalled Glenn Prickett, a senior vice president for Conservation International. "But since then, somehow, the wealthiest and most powerful country on the planet has gone to the back of the line."

Leadership is about "follow me" not "after you." Getting our national climate regulations in order is necessary, but it will not be sufficient to move China. We have to show them what Wal-Mart is showing its competitors - that green is not just right for the world, it is better, more profitable, more healthy, more innovative, more efficient, more successful. If Wal-Mart can lead, and California can lead, why can't America?

The Threat to Israel's Existence

By Beila Rabinowitz and William Mayer

September 23, 2007 - San Francisco, CA - PipeLineNews.org - Dr. Daniel Pipes, Director of the Middle East Forum, delivered the inaugural lecture to the "Jewish Learning Academy" at the Lubavitch Center of Bucks County PA on September 12th. The talk was entitled, "The Threat to Israel's Existence - Why it's back what it means."

Pipes began his talk by referring to the signing of the Oslo Accords 14 years ago, of the sense that Israel had been accepted by its Arab neighbors and as a result, the war was ending.

He continued, saying that now voices "from far and near are now coming out against the existence of Israel" and that the opposition takes "two forms, the crude and the polite." He defined the crude as "the more obvious" such as Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's calls for the elimination of the Jewish state which he observed was " perhaps unprecedented…[that]…a head of state actually call for the destruction of another country."

According to Dr. Pipes it was the "polite ones," despite their rhetoric, which set in play a process which includes "declaring jihad to liberate Jerusalem as Arafat did…Maps that do not show Israel…demands of the Palestinian right of return…[and]…The one state solution i.e. no more Zionism."

Dr. Pipes also noted that "such calls were not limited to Arabs and Muslims" and cited London Mayor Ken Livingstone's comment that "the creation of Israel was a mistake" as but one example. He emphasized that partisan differences were irrelevant in this debate, declaring that those, "who believed in the continued existence of the state of Israel" were essentially on the same side.

He also reiterated his belief that deterrence was the most prudent policy for Israel to follow and that the decision to pursue other means of peacemaking – namely negotiation - had been a strategic mistake.

He gave a short history of how Israel had spent 45 years convincing the enemy that they had lost and that the country was "here to stay." He summed this up as "Don't you dare attack me because I will hit you ten times harder - stay away, give up, don't bother me."

Pipes said that as Israel "tired" of this policy, it had in 1993 embarked upon a campaign of appeasement, giving its enemies money and land while making concessions in the mistaken hope they would be satisfied and give up their desire to destroy the Jewish State.

Dr. Pipes criticized the Oslo Accords, the "Road Map" to peace and the Quartet approach [the U.S., UN, EU and Russia as brokers] as "follies," explaining that "it was a war and each side had war goals" and the only way for Israel to win and defeat the Palestinians was for "their will to be crushed."

Dr. Pipes concluded that if the Palestinian issue is definitively and militarily decided by Israel, the entire region will benefit; with the Palestinians then being forced to turn to constructive endeavors, others in the region would then give up their attempts to eliminate Israel as well.

©1999-2007 PipeLineNews.org LLC, Beila Rabinowitz, William Mayer, all rights reserved.

The folly of 'Islamic economics

Though few in the West have noticed the phenomenon, a significant and rapidly growing amount of money is now being managed in accord with Islamic law, the Shariah. According to one study, "by the end of 2005, more than 300 institutions in over 65 jurisdictions were managing assets worth around US$700-billion to US$1-trillion in a Shariah compatible manner."

Islamic economics increasingly has become a force to contend with burgeoning portfolios of oil exporters and multiplying Islamic financial instruments (such as interest-free mortgages and profit-sharing sukuk bonds). But what does it all amount to? Can Shariah-compliant instruments challenge the existing international financial order? Would an Islamic economic regime, as one enthusiast claims, really help end injustice by ensuring "the state's provision for the well-being of all people"?

To understand this system, the ideal place to start is Islam and Mammon, a brilliant book by Timur Kuran, written when he held the Saudi-sponsored position of King Faisal Professor of Islamic Thought and Culture at the University of Southern California.

Now teaching at Duke University, Kuran finds that Islamic economics does not go back to the time of Muhammad, but is in fact an "invented tradition" that emerged in the 1940s in India. The notion of an economics discipline "that is distinctly and selfconsciously Islamic is very new." Even the most learned Muslims a century ago would have been dumbfounded by the "Islamic economics."

The idea was primarily the brainchild of a South Asian Islamist intellectual, Abul-Ala Mawdudi (1903-79), for whom Islamic economics served as a mechanism to achieve many goals: to minimize relations with non-Muslims, strengthen the collective sense of Muslim identity, extend Islam into a new area of human activity, and modernize without Westernizing.

As an academic discipline, Islamic economics took off during the mid-1960s; it acquired institutional heft during the oil boom of the 1970s, when the Saudis and other Muslim oil exporters, for the first time possessing substantial sums of money, signed on to the project.

Proponents of Islamic economics assert that the prevailing capitalist order has failed and that Islam offers the remedy. To assess the latter assertion, Kuran scrutinizes the actual functioning of Islamic economics, focusing on its three main claims: that it has abolished interest on money, achieved economic equality, and established a superior business ethic. On all three counts, he finds it a total failure.

"Nowhere has interest been purged from economic transactions, and nowhere does economic Islamization enjoy mass support," he writes. Exotic and complex profit-loss sharing techniques such as ijara, mudaraba, murabaha and musharaka all involve thinly disguised payments of interest. Banks claiming to be Islamic in fact "look more like other modern financial institutions than like anything in Islam's heritage."

In brief, there is almost nothing Islamic about Islamic banking-- which goes far to explain how Citibank and other major Western financial institutions host far larger ostensibly Islam-compliant deposits than do specifically Islamic banks.

"Nowhere," Kuran writes, has the goal of reducing inequality by imposition of the zakat tax (a form of tithing) succeeded. Indeed, the author finds this tax "does not necessarily transfer resources to the poor; it may transfer resources away from them." Worse, in Malaysia, zakat taxation, supposedly intended to help the poor, instead appears to serve as "a convenient pretext for advancing broad Islamic objectives and for lining the pockets of religious officials."

In the final analysis, Kuran dismisses the whole concept of Islamic economics. "There is no distinctly Islamic way to build a ship, or defend a territory, or cure an epidemic, or forecast the weather," so why money? He concludes that the significance of Islamic economics lies not in the economy but in identity and religion. The scheme "has promoted the spread of anti-modern ? currents of thought all across the Islamic world. It has also fostered an environment conducive to Islamist militancy."

Indeed, the conceit behind Islamic economics possibly contributes to global economic instability by "hindering institutional social reforms necessary for healthy economic development." In particular, were Muslims truly forbidden not to pay or charge interest, they would be relegated "to the fringes of the international economy."

In short, Islamic economics has trivial economic import, but poses a substantial political danger.

- Daniel Pipes

Sadie Belly Dance

sweet belly dance preformed by Arabs

Habibi Ya Ainy-Fatima Serin

Afghan troops killed in bus bomb

Aid workers freed in Afghanistan




An ICRC staff member, right, stands with the Taliban as he is being released in Wardak province [Reuters]

Four employees of the Red Cross have been freed in Afghanistan, after being captured four days ago.
The four - two Afghans, one from Myanmar and one from Macedonia - are back in Kabul, according to an AFP photographer at the office of the International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC) in the capital.




They were freed "after being seized by an armed group in Wardak province," the ICRC had said in a statement that made no reference to the Taliban.
However, a Taliban spokesman had confirmed earlier on Saturday that they had "mistakenly" kidnapped the aid workers.







Franz Rauchenstein, deputy head of the ICRC delegation in Kabul, said: "The unconditional release of our four colleagues is a great relief to us and their families."

Suicide attack

Meanwhile, at least 31 people have died after a bomb tore through a bus carrying Afghan soldiers in the country's capital, Kabul.

The explosion on Saturday morning, carried out by a suicide bomber in army uniform, split the bus in two.

The Taliban said it carried out the attack, and told Al Jazeera it was carried out by a 28-year-old suicide bomber.
The health and defence ministries have said that most of the dead were military personnel, going to work at the defence ministry, but several civilians were also killed.

The blast shattered nearby shop windows in the residential suburb.

Sayed Mohammad Amin Fatemi, the public health minister, said: "At this time I can tell you that 31, almost all of them military personnel, have been martyred."

In video

Watch Farid Barsoum's report on the Taliban's combat weaponry

Fatemi also said that 17 of the wounded were in a critical condition.

Easy target

The attacker detonated explosives strapped to his body as he approached the bus, the ministry said in a statement.

Al Jazeera's Alan Fisher in Kabul reported that the blast was so loud it could be heard across the city.

Fisher said: "This was a very busy intersection. The bus was travelling through the town, picking up army personnel from a number of checkpoints."

He also said that the Taliban targets the Afghan army and police because it is easier to reach them than foreign forces operating in the country. The Taliban says it will continue to target them.

Hamid Karzai, the president, called for "stronger vigour" worldwide after this latest bombing.

Karzai said: "It was an act of extreme cowardice on the part of those that committed it. The person who did this was against humanity, and against Islam."

The attack is the deadliest in Kabul since an explosion on a police bus in June that killed as many as 35 people.

Carnage

Mohammad Azim, a police officer at the scene, said: "For 10 or 15 seconds, it was like an atom bomb - fire, smoke and dust everywhere," Azim said.
People gather at the blast site
as a clear up operation starts [Reuters]
Sulahdin, an army officer at the scene who goes by one name, said there were more than 50 people on the bus at the time of the explosion.

One witness, Ahmad Jaweed, told Al Jazeera that he saw several corpses belonging to military personnel being removed from the site, along with local residents.

Television pictures had also showed soldiers being pulled from the wreckage.

Some of the dead were still in their seats.

Month of 'operations'

Zabihullah Mujahed, a Taliban spokesman, said the attack was part of Operation Nasrat (Triumph), a military campaign launched during the holy month of Ramadan.

There have been more than 100 suicide attacks in Afghanistan this year, many blamed on the Taliban.

While most attacks occur in remote areas in the south and east of Afghanistan, there have been a series of blasts inside Kabul this year.

This attack was the first inside the heavily patrolled capital since a suicide bomb struck a Nato armoured vehicle on September 21, killing a French soldier and wounding several Afghans


Source: Al Jazeera and Agencies

Morocco grants official status to relief agency

That means in addition to private funds, ADRA Morocco can also receive public funding.

With the financial boost, ADRA Morocco officials plan to expand preexisting literacy, health and education projects in the country, as well as strengthen regional economic development and emergency response efforts.

"ADRA's work will change completely now," said Michael Reich, country director for ADRA Morocco. "This will allow us to become a strong partner for development and humanitarian aid in this country with so many underestimated needs."

"Having the registration officially confirmed and documented is an important step forward in making ADRA Morocco a fully professional and well governed partner in the ADRA network," said Joerg Fehr, director for ADRA's Euro-Africa regional office in Switzerland.

Fehr added that full partnership among regional ADRA offices was essential to the success of development and relief projects in Morocco.

ADRA's presence in Morocco began in the mid-1980s. Today, the country is among 125 around the world where the agency provides community development and emergency management.

-Alarabonline-

Friday, September 28, 2007

It's Not 'Star Wars'

Energy's Future: Robert Hefner says natural gas offers a bridge to a squeaky-clean 'hydrogen economy.'


By Fareed Zakaria
Newsweek

Oct. 1, 2007 issue - Before Robert A. Hefner came along, many people assumed natural gas was limited in its quantity and uses. But since its founding in 1959, Hefner's company GHK alone has discovered more than 3 trillion cubic feet of natural gas around the world. The company also pioneered the technology now used by all major companies in the United States to reach deep, high-pressure wells. Hefner recently spoke with NEWSWEEK's Fareed Zakaria about why he thinks natural gas needs to be central to any strategy to transition beyond fossil fuels. Excerpts:

ZAKARIA: Natural gas is plentiful and clean, but when you add up the costs of exploration, storage and delivery, it's also expensive.
HEFNER: When the pollution costs of coal are included, like health costs and acid rain, the cost of natural-gas-generated electricity is actually less than coal. For transport, it costs less than gasoline. Over 5 million vehicles around the world run on natural gas.

How would you factor external costs into the price of coal? Do you want a tax on "bad energy" and a subsidy for the good stuff?
Coal and oil have become by far America's largest energy problems. Together, they produce about 80 percent of our CO2 emissions, and our addiction to foreign oil creates very large problems and risks. So I believe we should phase in taxes on coal and oil and oil products—say, over the next five years, so everyone has the chance to adapt. Our principal energy solutions are natural gas, solar, wind and efficiency; policy should encourage their use. One more thought on policy: as we phase in consumption taxes on coal and oil, we should recycle the revenue to eliminate payroll taxes and lower income and capital taxes. Philosophically, I believe it is much better to tax consumption that is creating great costs and risks to society than to tax labor and capital that we want to grow and flourish.

Could you use the grid that pipes gas into people's homes to deliver natural gas as fuel for cars?
America has a very undervalued asset in the million-mile pipeline grid that delivers natural gas to towns and cities, and directly to over 60 million American homes. You can put a small compressor appliance in your garage and fuel your automobile every night from the natural gas that is already connected to your house. Natural gas is also an excellent fuel to generate electricity. Prior to the Fuel Use Act in 1978 that prohibited the use of natural gas for power generation, Oklahoma generated over 80 percent of its electricity with natural gas. Today about 85 percent of Singapore's electricity is generated by natural gas, and they are headed toward 100 percent.

Why aren't we moving faster toward a natural-gas economy?
Two reasons. First, natural gas has never had a political lobby, so there's never been policy to foster the development of natural gas. For most of the last 100 years natural gas has been an underappreciated byproduct of the oil industry. Also, oil companies have deliberately underestimated supplies. In the 1970s, Big Oil convinced Congress that we were running out of natural gas. Exxon testified that the United States had about 300 trillion cubic feet of natural-gas supplies remaining, and it wouldn't be long before schools and offices that relied on natural gas would be closed.

What are the actual numbers?
At the time the Fuel Use Act was being debated, my estimates were that the U.S. had 1,500 to 2,000 trillion cubic feet of natural gas remaining. My estimates were called irresponsible, but the big oil companies were wrong. We have produced 585 trillion subsequent to that time, and today most estimators believe that we have at least 1,500 to 2,000 trillion remaining. At today's rate of consumption, that leaves [America] a 70- to 100-year supply.

What does the future of energy look like? Can we move to an entirely natural-gas-generated economy?
Fifty years from now we will have developed a new energy infrastructure that is many times more efficient, largely through natural gas, solar and wind-powered electric generation, hydrogen fuel cells in the transportation sector and massive increases in end-use efficiency. We will then be entering the hydrogen economy as a result of a transition that began with natural gas.

The hydrogen economy?
An economy powered by hydrogen gas released from seawater by electrical current, produced by solar or wind generation. Although this process of electrolysis has been known and used for over 100 years, it is not commercial for our economy today. We have already powered automobiles, boats, airplanes and towns on hydrogen, so we know we can do it. And it's 100 percent clean. It is not as if it is some "Star Wars" technology. Somewhere in the second half of this century, civilization will have finally achieved an energy system that can power its economic growth on an environmentally stabilized Earth. The hydrogen economy should be civilization's energy endgame.

this article is from newsweek by fareed Zakaria

The story of Cat Stevens' conversion to Islam


He marked the seventies with his unforgettable melodies and topped the charts for more than a decade, Cat Stevens stopped abruptly an exceptional musical career to the deep regret of millions of fans worldwide.


Cat Stevens who changed his name to Youssef Islam didn’t stop singing out of lack of inspiration but rather due to the fact that, he at last, found his own path by converting to Islam. This is the story with his new faith.

He says” I was born to a Christian family which revered money and did the same, I felt in admiration for singers to the extent that I made of them my supreme god , then decided to become one of them. I ended up by becoming one of the biggest Pop stars, and media made of me an icon, bigger than life itself and will live forever.”

Stevens further added” When day I felt sick and was admitted to hospital, there I had enough time to contemplate and think about things. My conclusion was that we are only a body, and all and all I was only working to satisfy my biological needs. The illness was a god send I opened up my eyes. Once I left the hospital I made inquiries through readings and concluded that Man was a combination of a body and soul.”

“My quest for truth continued in parallel with my artistic career , till the day when a friend of mine who came back from a trip in the East and told that he found serenity inside a mosque which he didn’t in a church, which led me to shift my interest to that religion and bought a translated Koran. At last I found answers to my questions: Who I am?, where I come from ? and what is my goal in Life?. Through my several readings of this holy book, I concluded that there is only one god with whom we can communicate directly without any interference.”

This how Cat Stevens converted to Islam .

Agencies
from echoroukonline

Belly dancer will shake to ... Led Zeppelin?

Chester — Sarah and the Kashmir Dancers will perform with Swan Song, a Led Zepplin/Bad Company tribute band, on Friday, Sept. 28, at Bodles Opera House in Chester.

Many of Led Zeppelin songs have a Middle Eastern influence and rhythms. Hossam Ramzy, an Egyptian and percussionist, accompanied Led Zeppelin on some of their albums.

Sarah Bell of Sarah and the Kashmir Dancers is director of the Caravan Dancers. She teaches dance classes and performs in Orange, Dutchess, and Westchester counties. She has taught and given lectures on the history of Middle Eastern Dance and Culture at Orange Community College, Dutchess Community College, Marist College, Ulster Community College, Ulster Boces, and Vassar College.

Doors will open at 6:30 p.m. Admission is $15. Food and a cash bar will be available. The show starts at 8:30 p.m.


For more information call 469-4595 or visit www.bodles.com.

Thinking Like an Arab by by Alan Caruba

Thinking Like an Arab by by Alan Caruba: "Thinking Like an Arab"

14 terrorism suspects at Guantánamo get right to ask for lawyers

Fourteen so-called "high value" terrorism suspects at the military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, have been offered the right to ask for attorneys, the Defense Department said Friday.

"Like all other detainees at Guantánamo, the high-value detainees have the opportunity to contest" their status as "enemy combatants," said Commander J. D. Gordon, a Defense Department spokesman.

The prisoners include Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks. Neither he nor the others had access to lawyers while they were being held in secret CIA prisons for various lengths of time, nor since they were transferred from CIA custody to Guantánamo a year ago.

Each had what the government called personal representatives when their cases were brought before review boards in a series of hearings since March to determine if they could be classified as enemy combatants. Each was later given that classification, which the Bush administration says allowed it to hold them indefinitely and prosecute them at military tribunals.

When the Pentagon first opened the prison at Guantánamo Bay in 2002, terrorism suspects were held there incommunicado. Their names were not released and they were not allowed attorneys. But a series of court challenges has forced the Pentagon to change rules, including allowing them to have lawyers, starting two years ago.


Saudi Asks Israel to Abandon Barrier as a Gesture to Arabs

Published: September 27, 2007

Israel should stop work on a security barrier in and along the West Bank and halt settlement activity there as a good-will gesture to assure Arab states that it is serious about comprehensive peace talks, Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister said yesterday.

The minister, Prince Saud al-Faisal, stopped short of making his demand a condition for Arab attendance at a planned Middle East peace conference. And he said that in recent days, he had become encouraged about the prospects for the conference, which the United States is to sponsor in November. But he would not promise that Saudi Arabia would attend, a major Israeli objective.

His comments, after a meeting between Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and top officials from the gulf Arab states on the outskirts of the United Nations General Assembly here, forecast the tough road ahead for the Bush administration in trying to forge a comprehensive Middle East peace in the last months of President Bush’s term.

Saudi Arabia and America’s other Arab allies have insisted that the conference tackle the so-called final status issues that have bedeviled negotiators since 1979. They include the status of Jerusalem, the fate of Palestinian refugees who fled their homes or were forced out, the dismantling of Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, and the borders of an eventual Palestinian state.

Bush administration officials say that they are also pushing Israel hard to put the big issues on the table, but acknowledge that Prime Minister Ehud Olmert of Israel needs something in return: Arab, and especially Saudi, diplomatic recognition of Israel.

During a briefing for reporters yesterday, Prince Saud raised another potentially sticky issue for the Bush administration as it seeks progress on a peace proposal: the Islamic group Hamas, which the United States and Israel view as a terrorist organization but which controls Gaza, home to 1.4 million Palestinians.

After Hamas’s violent takeover of Gaza, the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, kicked Hamas out of the national unity government that Hamas formed in February with Mr. Abbas’s Fatah party. The ejection was applauded by the United States and Israel, which have refused to deal with Hamas.

But Prince Saud said that for any peace deal between Israelis and Palestinians to work, Hamas must be brought into another national unity government with Fatah. He said that if the international community had accepted the Palestinian national unity government in February, when Saudi Arabia brokered an accord establishing the government, Hamas might have eventually renounced violence against Israel. He called that “water under the bridge now,” but added that Saudi Arabia still wanted to establish another national unity government between Hamas and Fatah.

“You have to,” he said. “Peace can not be made by one man or by half a people.”

But compromise on Hamas is not likely from the Bush administration, which has characterized the battle against the group as a fight between moderates and extremists.

The Middle East peace conference has dominated the behind-the-scenes wheeling and dealing in meetings on the outskirts of the General Assembly. President Bush, by publicly announcing the peace conference two months ago, gave high-level attention to an issue that critics said his administration had ignored for six years.

But now, some analysts say, that attention has raised expectations, putting the administration in the position of having to produce something tangible.

“Failure is not an option,” Ms. Rice told Arab officials at a meeting this week, quoting a line from “Apollo 13,” one of her favorite movies.

Prince Saud repeated that line at his briefing with reporters. He also said that the conference would be pointless if Syria did not attend. Ms. Rice said earlier that the United States planned to invite Syria.

“You know the old saying,” Prince Saud joked, “that there can be no war without Egypt and no peace without Syria.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/27/world/middleeast/27diplo.html?ref=world

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Dean Obeidallah on "Comics Unleashed"

Dean Obeidallah on The View

dean obeidallah

Aron Kader - Axis of Evil

Axis of Evil Comedy - Dean Obeidallah

Maz Jobrani on the American show

Maz Jobrani - Persians and Arabs

Maz Jobrani - Persians and Arabs

Maz Jobrani - Axis of Evil Comedy - Gas prices

Ahmed Ahmed on Bridges TV

Aron Kader

Maz Jobrani

May the farce be with you

Living in a post-Sept. 11 world can be tough when you have Middle Eastern roots, especially if you're part of a comedy tour dubbed the "Axis of Evil."

Try to explain that to airport security.

But Aron Kader, Maz Jobrani and Ahmed Ahmed -the men behind this Middle Eastern-American comic outfit - can laugh with reckless abandon at the trials they've faced. Though it's usually Ahmed that gets the worst of it when he's at the airport.

He shares his name with a terrorist who uses "Ahmed" as one of many aliases, Kader said. It can often lead to mistaken identity.

"Ahmed has this joke that there's some terrorist out there going, 'I'm not this funny comedian!," Kader said in his best Middle Eastern impression by phone from California.

The American-born comics, of the Axis of Evil Comedy Tour, will perform at the Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Joining the show will be New York comedian Dean Obeidallah.

The humorous bunch said their profession, as well as their lives, changed after the terrorist attack on the nation six years ago - mainly for the better.

Kader, Jobrani and Ahmed were working together in Los Angeles for about eight months in a show called "Arabian Nights" when the attacks occurred. The terrorist event made many Americans distant to those of Middle Eastern descent, so the trio decided to approach stand-up comedy with caution.

"It was kind of a shock," said Kader, of 9/11. "We didn't know what to do on stage. The older comics started talking about it. We just backed off."

When they started performing their routines again, full of Middle Eastern humor, they were surprised at the audience's response.

"It was a whole different reaction - it was like night and day," said Kader, who was raised in Washington, D.C., by his Palestinian father and Mormon mother. "They were curious, interested. They wanted to know where we were coming from, what we thought about it."

For 37-year-old Obeidallah, a former lawyer turned comic, the experience of Sept. 11 helped him embrace his father's heritage.

"I went to bed on Sept. 10 a white guy and woke up Sept. 11 an Arab," the New Jersey native said by phone from New York.

He loves every aspect of his Middle Eastern and Italian background, right down to his name.

"People think it's hard to have a Muslim last name," Obeidallah said. "But I'm immune from identity theft."

Speaking of names, the comic said he was pleased to get a hurricane named after him this year - Hurricane Dean.

"I found myself rooting for the hurricane," he said. "Not that I wanted it to cause destruction, but to compete with my friends if they had a hurricane named after them."

You'll never hear a Middle Eastern name being used to identify a hurricane, especially if the storm was bound to cause havoc and destruction on American shores, Obeidallah said.

"Those kind of things are not going to help (Middle Eastern-Americans)," he joked.

After Sept. 11, Obeidallah found himself defending his heritage through stand-up comedy to those who stereotyped it.

"I just got tired of people talking," said the comedian, who worked with "Axis of Evil" during their "Arabian Nights" days. "It's just wrong. As an American you have a sense of what justice and fairness is. (Sept. 11) really changed my life."

The comics, whose idols include Richard Pryor and Jon Stewart, also share their thoughts on relationships, sports, immigration, social commentary and politics during their performance.

President George W. Bush's antics have been great fodder, they said.

As of last week, the comedy troupe was waiting to hear if the sketch comedy pilot,"The Watch List," was picked up by a television network. The show, which was co-created by Obeidallah and Max Brooks, would be the first of its kind to feature a Middle Eastern-American cast.

"It's something the American public is wanting to see," Kadar believes. "They're ready to laugh with us."

Of course, the Middle East has a long way to go in that respect, but it's slowly getting there, Kadar said.

"They do like comedy but it's not a very show-businessy type of place," he said of the region. "I think that they need to laugh."

What: Axis of Evil Comedy Tour, featuring Aron Kader, Ahmed Ahmed, Maz Jobrani, Dean Obeidallah and others

When: 7:30 p.m. Friday

Where: Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center, 1010 North W.C. MacInnes Place, Tampa

Tickets: $28.25-$38.25

Information: (813) 229-7827 What: Axis of Evil Comedy Tour featuring Aron Kader, Ahmed Ahmed, Maz Jobrani, Dean Obeidallah and others.

When: 7:30 p.m. Friday

Where: Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center, 1010 North W.C. MacInnes Place, Tampa

Tickets: $28.25-$38.25

Information: (813) 229-7827

MAY THE FARCE BE WITH YOU

What: "Laughter on the 23rd Floor," Golden Apple Dinner Theatre, through Nov. 18

Why: This quirky show, about a group of comedy writers behind the scenes of a 1950s variety show, sounds too hilarious to pass up. It's a comic farce based on Neil Simon's early career as a TV writer.

January, features writer, loves a quirky cast.

January Holmes

1

"Gem of the Ocean"

This play by August Wilson is the first of a 10-play cycle that chronicles the African-American experience through each decade of the 1900s. Plays through Oct. 7 at American Stage Theatre Company, St. Petersburg; $22-$35

2

"Menopause the Musical"

A hilarious look at "the change" through the eyes of four women at Bloomingdale's, with lyrics set to the tunes of 1960s and '70s rock songs. Plays through Sept. 30 at Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center, Tampa. Tickets: $39.50

The Herald recommends these stage productions:

LOOKING AHEAD

Here are two shows to look for this season:

1

"Noises Off"

This comedy takes a back stage look at the antics of an old English touring company. Opens Oct. 4 at Manatee Players, Bradenton. Tickets: $11-$23. Information: 748-5875.

2

"Second Time Around"

Lovers over 20 years ago meet again by chance and relive memories both sad and funny. Opens Oct. 11 at Island Players, Anna Maria. Tickets: $15. Information: 778-3755.


from http://www.bradenton.com/entertainment/story/155925.html

May the farce be with you

Living in a post-Sept. 11 world can be tough when you have Middle Eastern roots, especially if you're part of a comedy tour dubbed the "Axis of Evil."

Try to explain that to airport security.

But Aron Kader, Maz Jobrani and Ahmed Ahmed -the men behind this Middle Eastern-American comic outfit - can laugh with reckless abandon at the trials they've faced. Though it's usually Ahmed that gets the worst of it when he's at the airport.

He shares his name with a terrorist who uses "Ahmed" as one of many aliases, Kader said. It can often lead to mistaken identity.

"Ahmed has this joke that there's some terrorist out there going, 'I'm not this funny comedian!," Kader said in his best Middle Eastern impression by phone from California.

The American-born comics, of the Axis of Evil Comedy Tour, will perform at the Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Joining the show will be New York comedian Dean Obeidallah.

The humorous bunch said their profession, as well as their lives, changed after the terrorist attack on the nation six years ago - mainly for the better.

Kader, Jobrani and Ahmed were working together in Los Angeles for about eight months in a show called "Arabian Nights" when the attacks occurred. The terrorist event made many Americans distant to those of Middle Eastern descent, so the trio decided to approach stand-up comedy with caution.

"It was kind of a shock," said Kader, of 9/11. "We didn't know what to do on stage. The older comics started talking about it. We just backed off."

When they started performing their routines again, full of Middle Eastern humor, they were surprised at the audience's response.

"It was a whole different reaction - it was like night and day," said Kader, who was raised in Washington, D.C., by his Palestinian father and Mormon mother. "They were curious, interested. They wanted to know where we were coming from, what we thought about it."

For 37-year-old Obeidallah, a former lawyer turned comic, the experience of Sept. 11 helped him embrace his father's heritage.

"I went to bed on Sept. 10 a white guy and woke up Sept. 11 an Arab," the New Jersey native said by phone from New York.

He loves every aspect of his Middle Eastern and Italian background, right down to his name.

"People think it's hard to have a Muslim last name," Obeidallah said. "But I'm immune from identity theft."

Speaking of names, the comic said he was pleased to get a hurricane named after him this year - Hurricane Dean.

"I found myself rooting for the hurricane," he said. "Not that I wanted it to cause destruction, but to compete with my friends if they had a hurricane named after them."

You'll never hear a Middle Eastern name being used to identify a hurricane, especially if the storm was bound to cause havoc and destruction on American shores, Obeidallah said.

"Those kind of things are not going to help (Middle Eastern-Americans)," he joked.

After Sept. 11, Obeidallah found himself defending his heritage through stand-up comedy to those who stereotyped it.

"I just got tired of people talking," said the comedian, who worked with "Axis of Evil" during their "Arabian Nights" days. "It's just wrong. As an American you have a sense of what justice and fairness is. (Sept. 11) really changed my life."

The comics, whose idols include Richard Pryor and Jon Stewart, also share their thoughts on relationships, sports, immigration, social commentary and politics during their performance.

President George W. Bush's antics have been great fodder, they said.

As of last week, the comedy troupe was waiting to hear if the sketch comedy pilot,"The Watch List," was picked up by a television network. The show, which was co-created by Obeidallah and Max Brooks, would be the first of its kind to feature a Middle Eastern-American cast.

"It's something the American public is wanting to see," Kadar believes. "They're ready to laugh with us."

Of course, the Middle East has a long way to go in that respect, but it's slowly getting there, Kadar said.

"They do like comedy but it's not a very show-businessy type of place," he said of the region. "I think that they need to laugh."

What: Axis of Evil Comedy Tour, featuring Aron Kader, Ahmed Ahmed, Maz Jobrani, Dean Obeidallah and others

When: 7:30 p.m. Friday

Where: Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center, 1010 North W.C. MacInnes Place, Tampa

Tickets: $28.25-$38.25

Information: (813) 229-7827 What: Axis of Evil Comedy Tour featuring Aron Kader, Ahmed Ahmed, Maz Jobrani, Dean Obeidallah and others.

When: 7:30 p.m. Friday

Where: Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center, 1010 North W.C. MacInnes Place, Tampa

Tickets: $28.25-$38.25

Information: (813) 229-7827

MAY THE FARCE BE WITH YOU

What: "Laughter on the 23rd Floor," Golden Apple Dinner Theatre, through Nov. 18

Why: This quirky show, about a group of comedy writers behind the scenes of a 1950s variety show, sounds too hilarious to pass up. It's a comic farce based on Neil Simon's early career as a TV writer.

January, features writer, loves a quirky cast.

January Holmes

1

"Gem of the Ocean"

This play by August Wilson is the first of a 10-play cycle that chronicles the African-American experience through each decade of the 1900s. Plays through Oct. 7 at American Stage Theatre Company, St. Petersburg; $22-$35

2

"Menopause the Musical"

A hilarious look at "the change" through the eyes of four women at Bloomingdale's, with lyrics set to the tunes of 1960s and '70s rock songs. Plays through Sept. 30 at Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center, Tampa. Tickets: $39.50

The Herald recommends these stage productions:

LOOKING AHEAD

Here are two shows to look for this season:

1

"Noises Off"

This comedy takes a back stage look at the antics of an old English touring company. Opens Oct. 4 at Manatee Players, Bradenton. Tickets: $11-$23. Information: 748-5875.

2

"Second Time Around"

Lovers over 20 years ago meet again by chance and relive memories both sad and funny. Opens Oct. 11 at Island Players, Anna Maria. Tickets: $15. Information: 778-3755.


from http://www.bradenton.com/entertainment/story/155925.html

Saudi Asks Israel to Abandon Barrier as a Gesture to Arabs - New York Times

Saudi Asks Israel to Abandon Barrier as a Gesture to Arabs - New York Times

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Arab states named as more corrupt

An anti-corruption group says three Arab states are among a dozen worldwide where corruption has seen a significant increase in the past year.

The Arab nations named by Transparency International were Jordan and the Gulf states of Bahrain and Oman.

The Arab countries with the least perceived corruption were Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

Places with a history of civil conflict - such as Burma, Iraq and Somalia - were rated the worst for corruption.

Doing Business

The survey ranked 180 countries on a scale of one to 10 based on the perceptions of business people and analysts.

The best were Denmark, Finland and New Zealand.

Bahrain was 46th with a score of five out of 10, while Jordan and Oman both scored 4.7 to be equal 53rd.

Last year's rankings gave Bahrain a score of 5.7 (36th position), Oman 5.4 (39th position) and Jordan 5.3 (40th position).

Scores below five indicate "serious" perceived levels of corruption, the agency said, while scores below three reflect "rampant" corruption.

Separately, the Word Bank's annual Doing Business report put Egypt at the top of the list of reformers who had cut red tape and improved trading conditions.

Cairo greatly improved its position with reforms in five of the 10 areas studied by the report, the bank said.

It had slashed minimum capital requirements from E£50,000 ($8,950) to E£1,000 and halved the time and cost of start-ups.

It also cut property registration fees, and set up one-stop shops for traders at the ports, and cut import and export times.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/7014797.stm

Published: 2007/09/26 17:55:41 GMT

Iran: US is world's real threat

The American and Israeli delegations were not in chamber to hear Ahmadinejad's speech [AFP]
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president, has accused the US of being the world's "real threat" and defended his country's nuclear programme.

In a 40-minute speech to the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, Ahmadinejad accused Washington and its allies of carrying out human rights abuses.

He said: "Human rights are being extensively violated by certain powers, especially by those who pretend to be their exclusive advocates.

"Setting up secret prisons, abducting persons, trials and secret punishments without any regard to due process ... have become commonplace."

'Rights sacrificed'

"The rights and dignity of the American people are also being sacrificed for the selfish desires of those holding power," he added.


Your Views

"The countries that feel threatened ... should prepare for defence, and even counterattack"

Adolfo Talpalar, Stockholm, Sweden

Send us your views
Ahmadinejad also used his speech to say the issue of Iran's nuclear programme was "closed" and should be handled by the UN nuclear watchdog.

Without specifically naming them, he accused Washington and its allies of bullying Iran - which they say is trying to develop nuclear weapons - and putting pressure on the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) for their own purposes.

Ahmadinejad said: "Fortunately, the IAEA has recently tried to regain its legal role as supporter of the rights of its members while supervising nuclear activities.

"Today, because of the resistance of the Iranian nation, the issue is back to the agency, and I officially announce that in our opinion the nuclear issue of Iran is now closed and has turned into an ordinary agency matter," he said, adding Iran was prepared to have "constructive talks with all parties".

US silent

Addressing the General Assembly earlier in the session George Bush, the US president, made little reference to Iran.

Instead, both Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, and Nicholas Sarkozy, the French president, sought to increase pressure on the Islamic republic, saying they would not accept a nuclear-armed Iran.

Merkel, said: "if Iran were to acquire the nuclear bomb, the consequences would be disastrous."

Sarkozy told the session: "Iran is entitled to nuclear power for civilian purposes, but to allow Iran to acquire nuclear weapon is an unacceptable risk to the stability of the region and the stability of the world."

Iraq invasion criticised

Ahmadinejad also used his speech to criticise the US-led invasion of Iraq, which he said was "occupied under the pretext of overthrowing the dictator and the existence of weapons of mass destruction".

He criticised the UN Security Council for being an exclusive club answerable to no one, saying that those in power were in the "sunset of their times".

He also voiced support for the Palestinians, saying: "The Palestinian people have been displaced or are under heavy military pressure, economic siege or are incarcerated under abhorrent conditions.

"The occupiers are protected and praised, while the innocent Palestinians are subjected to political, military and propaganda onslaughts."

Neither the US nor the Israeli delegation stayed to listen to the Iranian leader's speech.

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/FB085194-ABDC-4D1C-82C4-8F24FAAFA8CC.htm

Sunday, September 23, 2007

New York Arab American Comedy Festival - Home - www.arabcomedy.org

New York Arab American Comedy Festival - Home - www.arabcomedy.org

Ibn Duraid

IBN DURAID [Abu Bakr Mahommed ibn ul-Hasan ibn Duraid ul-Azdi] (837-934), Arabian poet and philologist, was born at Basra of south Arabian stock. At his native place he was trained under various teachers, but fled in 871 to Oman at the time Basra was attacked by the negroes, known as the Zanj, under Muhallabi. After living twelve years in Oman he went to Persia, and, under the protection of the governor, `Abdallah ibn Mahommed ibn Mikal, and his son, Ismail, wrote his chief works. In 920 he went to Bagdad, where he received a pension from the caliph Moqtadir.

The Magsura, a poem in praise of Ibn Mikal and his son, has been edited by A. Haitsma (1773) E. Scheidius (1786) and N. Boyesen (1828). Various commentaries on the poem exist in MS. (cf. C. Brockelmann, Gesch. der ar. Lit., i. 211 ff., Weimar, 1898). The Jamhara fi-1-Lugha is a large dictionary written in Persian but not printed. Another work is the Kitab ul-Ishtigaq (" Book of Etymology"), edited by F. Wiistenfeld (Gottingen, 1854); it was written in opposition to the anti-Arabian party to show the etymological connexion of the Arabian tribal names. (G. W. T.)
http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Ibn_Duraid

Belly dancing skills stay sharp

Jane Copeland teaches four levels of Oriental Dance, also known as Raks-as-Sharqi in Arabic and belly dance in Western countries.

Its movements are thousands of years old and based on traditional folk dance. Although Copeland has been teaching for more than 34 years, her enthusiasm still spills over to her students.

Belly dancing, she says, helps women become more aware and accepting of their bodies, and builds confidence that translates to other areas of life.

Staff Photographer

Zarifa (Jane Copeland) has been a belly dancer and teacher for over 34 years. She teaches 4 levels of Orental Dance (Raks-as-Sharqi in Arabic) that is called belly dance in the United States and other western countries.

Video: Jane Copeland dances


Saturday, September 22, 2007

Muslim Arabs in Australia

Did you know that one-fourth of Australia’s population is foreign born ? Such a situation can cause some tense dynamics between the « locals » and the newcomers. And if you are familiar with the beach culture, the dynamics can become especially nasty.

In December of 2005, a group of Arab youths attacked two lifeguards at Cronulia Beach, Sydney. No one knows why they did it. Assuming the attacks were racially motivated, some Australians violently retaliated. According to a Feb. 2, 2007 article in « BBC News, » « In the minds of many protesters, the [Arab] youths had attacked an almost sacred Australian icon-the Surf Life Saving clubs, a bastion of White, Anglo-Saxon, working class traditions and values. »

Fortunately the issue was resolved through a compromise-18 Muslim youths were trained to be lifeguards, something that was once « unthinkable » according to the same article. An Australian clothing designer broke down one last wall that would have prevented Muslim women from joining this exclusive club-with the « burqini, » women’s swim wear that allows Muslims to retain their traditional modesty.

Pray that as cultural walls fall down in Australia, between the White majority and the Muslim minority, that another wall will also fall-the wall that separates Arab Muslims from Jesus as savior. Pray that Christian Lebanese Arabs will share the glories of Christ with their Muslim neighbors.-KC

Colossians 4:17

« See to it that you complete the work you have received in the Lord. »

Paul’s words, addressed to one Christian worker, are also applicable to today’s church. God aims at closure, finishing the task of world evangelization. The job may sometimes seem too large for us to complete, but God intends that it will be finished. When He declared to Abraham that « in you shall all the peoples of the earth be blessed, » He indicated that the task would be completed-all the families of the earth would hear. Today, as never before, we have the knowledge of what the completion of the task may involve.

Father, fill our minds and hearts with faith so that we may press on to finish the work You have given us.

© GPD

http://www.spcm.org/Journal/spip.php?breve1738

Arabs slam West's double standards

Arabs slam West's double standards
Sat, 22 Sep 2007 19:02:24
Source: Xinhua
The representatives of Arab nations at the IAEA conference have criticized western countries' double standard approach to the NPT.

Delegates of Arab countries, including Egypt, Syria and Iraq, said the televised remarks by Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in which he admitted that Israel possessed nuclear weapons, have had a negative impact on peace, security and stability in the Middle East.

Israel's nuclear activities have gone beyond the control of the UN atomic watchdog and undermined the non-proliferation regime, they said.

Some countries have provided a political shield for Israel by applying a double standard to the issues of regional security and nuclear non-proliferation, said the Arab delegates.

The conference failed to pass a resolution on Israel's nuclear weapons program due to opposition from the United States and other western countries.

CS/HGH/RE

http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=24159§ionid=351020202

Losing hearts and minds

It is virtually axiomatic that the major trends of US policy in the Middle East today are directly linked to the aftermath of 11 September, 2001. The war against terrorism, the invasion of Afghanistan, the occupation of Iraq, the policies of regime change and promoting democratisation in the Arab world have shaped the political scenery of the Middle East and have led the US to become the major player in one of the world's tensest and most trouble-ridden regions. Has this superpower succeeded, in the course of the past six years, in safeguarding its interests and eliminating what it regards as its main potential threats? Otherwise put, in political-strategic terms, is Washington better off today in the Middle East than it was before September 2001?

There is no need to recapitulate the developments during this period to determine that the balance sheet of gains and losses clearly shows that the threats to American interests are much graver and more diverse than they were before 2001. Indeed, for the first time since the collapse of the Soviet Union in the beginning of the 1990s there has emerged a regional axis, lead by Iran, antagonistic towards the US and keen to defy the American enterprise for regional and international hegemony.

No less dismal a failure is the Bush administration's attempt, in the aftermath of September 2001, to reshape Arab public opinion of the US and of US policy in the Middle East through the exercise of so-called instruments of "soft power". The energetic public diplomacy programme, as epitomised by the establishment of Al-Hurra, or "Freedom TV", and Sawa Radio using native Arabic speakers, fell a long way short of winning the battle for the hearts and minds of the Arab people. Recent opinion polls, many conducted by American research centres, reveal that these television and radio stations attracted only a smattering of Arab audiences and that from Morocco to Bahrain, Arab opinion of US policy is more negative than ever.

In large part this failure of public diplomacy is the product of an inappropriately designed approach, based almost exclusively as it was on the concept that governed Washington's media and propaganda campaign targeting the socialist bloc during the Cold War. Whether out of naiveté or pure ignorance, the architects of this project ignored the fundamental difference between the people of Eastern Europe, the majority of whom were fascinated by the Western way of life and who would tune into Radio Free Europe and seize whatever opportunities they could to read American and Western European publications, in spite of the considerable risks they faced in their police states, and the people of the Arab world who, when thinking about America, are concerned above all about American policies towards the Middle East and who regard these policies as hostile to Arab rights and causes and relentlessly biased in favour of Israel. Any media directed towards Arab audiences that could not address this concern, simply because it could not alter the facts, was doomed to lack credibility.

But the architects of policies that gave rise to Al-Hurra TV and Sawa Radio overlooked a more glaring difference between socialist Eastern Europe and the Arab world. In Poland and East Germany in the 1970s and 1980s, people had only the choice between their own state-run media and the more enticing state-run media from the West. Arab audiences at the beginning of the 21st century are inundated with choices, not only from land-based broadcasting stations in Cairo, Riyadh and Amman, but also from satellite networks. Al-Hurra and Sawa could not even begin to compete on the open airwaves with such much more attractive and sophisticated stations as Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiya.

But there is also a technical reason for this failure. As though it was not a difficult enough task to improve the image of the US in the Arab world at a time when this superpower has forces occupying an Arab country that is undergoing horrifying tensions and upheavals, and at a time when it encouraged its Israeli ally to go on the offensive against another Arab country in the hope of altering the map of regional alliances, the American media targeting the Arab world was consistently poorly managed. Programming and the substance of programmes never went beyond the blatantly propagandistic campaign to vindicate American policies. How could it possibly succeed?

The Bush administration lost the battle to win Arab hearts and minds. It is difficult to foresee any reversal of US fortunes any time in the near future.

http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2007/862/sc2.htm

Friday, September 21, 2007

Greatest Botanist and Pharmacist of the Middle Ages: IBN AL-BAITAR

Abu Muhammad Abdallah Ibn Ahmad Ibn al-Baitar Dhiya al-Din al-Malaqi IBN AL-BAITAR IBN AL BAITARIbn Al-Baitar full name (Abu Muhammad Abdallah Ibn Ahmad Ibn al-Baitar Dhiya al-Din al-Malaqi) was one of the greatest scientists of Muslim Spain and was the greatest botanist and pharmacist of the Middle Ages. He was born in the Spanish city of Malaqa (Malaga) towards the end of the 12th century. He learned botany from Abu al-Abbas al-Nabati, a learned botanist, with whom he started collecting plants in and around Spain. In 1219 he left Spain on a plant-collecting expedition and travelled along the northern coast of Africa as far as Asia Minor. The exact modes of his travel (whether by land or sea) are not known, but the major stations he visited include Bugia, Qastantunia (Constantinople), Tunis, Tripoli, Barqa and Adalia. After 1224 he entered the service of al-Kamil, the Egyptian Governor, and was appointed chief herbalist. In 1227 al-Kamil extended his domination to Damascus, and Ibn al-Baitar accompanied him there which provided him an opportunity to collect plants in Syria His researches on plants extended over a vast area: including Arabia and Palestine, which he either visited or managed to collect plants from stations located there. He died in Damascus in 1248.

Ibn Baitar's major contribution, Kitab al-Jami fi al-Adwiya al- Mufrada, is one of the greatest botanical compilations dealing with medicinal plants in Arabic. It enjoyed a high status among botanists up to the 16th century and is a systematic work that embodies earlier works, with due criticism, and adds a great part of original contribution. The encyclopedia comprises some 1,400 different items, largely medicinal plants and vegetables, of which about 200 plants were not known earlier. The book refers to the work of some 150 authors mostly Arabic, and it also quotes about 20 early Greek scientists. It was translated into Latin and published in 1758.

His second monumental treatise Kitab al-Mlughni fi al-Adwiya al-Mufrada is an encyclopedia of medicine. The drugs are listed in accordance with their therapeutical value. Thus, its 20 different chapters deal with the plants bearing significance to diseases of head, ear, eye, etc. On surgical issues he has frequently quoted the famous Muslim surgeon, Abul Qasim Zahrawi. Besides Arabic, Baitar has given Greek and Latin names of the plants, thus facilitating transfer of knowledge.

Ibn Baitar's contributions are characterized by observation, analysis and classification and have exerted a profound influence on Eastern as well as Western botany and medicine. Though the Jami was translated/published late in the western languages as mentioned above, yet many scientists had earlier studied various parts of the book and made several references to it.

Abu Mansur ibn Tahir Al-Baghdadi

Born: about 980 in Baghdad, Iraq
Died: 1037

Al-Baghdadi is sometimes known as Ibn Tahir. His full name is Abu Mansur Abr al-Qahir ibn Tahir ibn Muhammad ibn Abdallah al-Tamini al-Shaffi al-Baghdadi. We can deduce from al-Baghdadi's last two names that he was descended from the Bani Tamim tribe, one of the Sharif tribes of ancient Arabia, and that he belonged to the Madhhab Shafi'i school of religious law. This school of law, one of the four Sunni schools, took its name from the teacher Abu 'Abd Allah as-Shafi'i (767-820) and was based on both the divine law of the Qur'an or Hadith and on human logical reasoning when no divine teachings were given.

We have a few details of al-Baghdadi's life. He was born and brought up in Baghdad but left that city to go to Nishapur (sometimes written Neyshabur in English) in the Tus region of northeastern Iran. He did not go to Nishapur alone, but was accompanied by his father who must have been a man of considerable wealth, for al-Baghdadi, without any apparent income himself, was able to spend a great deal of money on supporting scholarship and men of learning.

At this time Nishapur was, like the whole of the region around it, a place where there was little political stability as various tribes and religious groups fought with each other. When riots broke out in Nishapur, al-Baghdadi decided that he required a more peaceful place to continue his life as an academic so he moved to Asfirayin. This town was quieter and al-Baghdadi was able to teach and study in more peaceful surroundings. He was certainly considered as one of the great teachers of his time and the people of Nishapur were sad to lose the great scholar from their city.

In Asfirayin, al-Baghdadi taught for many years in the mosque. Always having sufficient wealth, he took no payment for his teachings, devoting his life to the pursuit of learning and teaching for its own sake. His writings were mainly concerned with theology, as we must assume were his teachings. However, he wrote at least two books on mathematics.

One, Kitab fi'l-misaha, is relatively unimportant. It is concerned with the measurement of lengths, areas and volumes. The second is, however, a work of major importance in the history of mathematics. This treatise, al-Takmila fi'l-Hisab, is a work in which al-Baghdadi considers different systems of arithmetic. These systems derive from counting on the fingers, the sexagesimal system, and the arithmetic of the Indian numerals and fractions. He also considers the arithmetic of irrational numbers and business arithmetic. In this work al-Baghdadi stresses the benefits of each of the systems but seems to favour the Indian numerals.

Several important results in number theory appear in the al-Takmila as do comments which allow us to obtain information on certain texts of al-Khwarizmi which are now lost. We shall discuss the number theory results in more detail below, but first let us comment on the light which the al-Takmila sheds on the problem of why Renaissance mathematicians were divided into "abacists" and "algorists" and exactly what is captured by these two names. It seems clear that those using Indian numerals used an abacus and were then called "abacists". The "algorists" followed the methods of al-Khwarizmi's lost work which, contrary to what was originally thought, is not a work on Indian numerals but rather a work on finger counting methods. This becomes clear from the references to the lost work by al-Baghdadi.

Let us now consider the number theory in al-Takmila. Al-Baghdadi gives an interesting discussion of abundant numbers, deficient numbers, perfect numbers and equivalent numbers. Suppose that, in modern notation, S(n) denotes the sum of the aliquot parts of n, that is the sum of its proper quotients. First al-Baghdadi defines perfect numbers (those number n with S(n) = n), abundant numbers (those number n with S(n) > n), and deficient numbers (those number n with S(n) < n). Of course these properties of numbers had been studied by the ancient Greeks. Al-Baghdadi gives some elementary results and then states that 945 is the smallest odd abundant number, a result usually attributed to Bachet in the early 17th century.

Nicomachus had made claims about perfect numbers in around 100 AD which were accepted, seemingly without question, in Europe up to the 16th century. However, al-Baghdadi knew that certain claims made by Nicomachus were false. Al-Baghdadi wrote (see for example [2] or [3]):-

He who affirms that there is only one perfect number in each power of 10 is wrong; there is no perfect number between ten thousand and one hundred thousand. He who affirms that all perfect numbers end with the figure 6 or 8 are right.

Next al-Baghdadi goes on to define equivalent numbers, and appears to be the first to study them. Two numbers m and n are called equivalent if S(m) = S(n). He then considers the problem: given k, find m, n with S(m) = S(n) = k. The method he gives is a pretty one. He then gives the example k = 57, obtaining S(159) = 57 and S(559) = 57. However, he missed 703, for S(703) = 57 as well.

The results that al-Baghdadi gives on amicable numbers are only a slight variations on results given earlier by Thabit ibn Qurra. In modern notation, m and n are amicable if S(n) = m, and S(m) = n. Thabit ibn Qurra's theorem is as follows: for n > 1, let pn = 3.2n -1 and qn = 9.22n-1 -1. Then if pn-1, pn, and qn are prime, then a = 2npn-1pn and b = 2nqn are amicable numbers while a is abundant and b is deficient.

Article by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson

Israel, America and Arab Delusions

by Daniel Pipes
Commentary
March 1991

In mid-January 1991, as the first bombs began to fall on Iraq, Saddam Husayn and his partisans offered two strikingly contrary interpretations of their war with the U.S.-led alliance. Sometimes-especially when justifying their own gratuitous missile attack on Israel-they present the conflict as a great conspiracy hatched by Zionists and executed by their American stooge. "This war that is being waged against us is a Zionist war," Saddam Husayn told a television interviewer at the end of January, "only here Zionism is fighting us through American blood." But when Baghdad wants to paint President Bush as the "arch-Satan" in the White House, Israel then shriveled into America's "evil cat's-paw." Obviously, only one of these characterizations of Israel can be true: either it steers Washington's Middle East policy or it serves American imperial interests-but not both.

Similar contradictions have been forwarded since the beginning of the Persian Gulf crisis. On 24 June 1990, just over a month before the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, a Baghdad newspaper complained that the U.S. government merely echoes decisions made in Israel, that it lacks an "independent policy" on the Arab-Israeli conflict. Then, just four days later, on 28 June, another Baghdad daily proposed exactly the opposite thesis, proclaiming that the U.S. has for decades "used the Zionist entity as a tool to safeguard its interests in the region."

The Iraqis are not alone in espousing these contradictory positions. Gamal Abdel Nasser, the charismatic Egyptian leader, used to declare that, if not for British help, the idea of a Zionist state would have remained a "madman's fantasy." At the same time, he subscribed to an extreme form of Jewish conspiracy theory: "three hundred Zionists, each of whom knows all the others, govern the fate of the European continent." His successor, Anwar as-Sadat likewise could describe Israel as Washington's "gendarme" in the Middle East, while on other occasions maintaining that American policy puts "Israel's interests before those of the United States herself."

The Syrian government of Hafiz al-Asad also contradicts itself on relations between the U.S. and Israel. When ties to Moscow are strong, Damascus stresses the dangers of imperialist plots and variously derides Israel as "a U.S. base," America's "big stick," and "a mere U.S. aircraft carrier." In contrast, when Damascus seeks to improve relations with Washington, it blames "world Jewry" for subverting American policy. "The United States does not have a policy of its own in the Middle East," but blindly follows directives issued in Tel Aviv.

Likewise, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) cannot make up its mind. "The Zionist entity," PLO chairman Yasir 'Arafat announced in April 1990, "represents the head of the body of hostile world forces inside the Arab nation; its role is to protect the interests of those forces." But Hani al-Hasan, a top 'Arafat aide, claims that the United States "is governed by the Zionist lobby."

Do Arabs, then, see Israel as the forward bastion of Western interests or the covert power behind Western decision making? Logic requires that either Washington tells Jerusalem what to do or Jerusalem bullies Washington. Yet many Muslims-Arabs and Iranians (though few Turks) - seem to sense no contradiction between these two cherished visions of Israel. They merrily exist side-by-side-even in the same individual and in the same speech-without so much as a hint of intellectual strain or inconsistency.

Middle Eastern perceptions of Israel's place in the world have profound significance for the Arab conflict with Israel, and so repay careful analysis. That they are so starkly contradictory suggests that, even after a century of the Zionist enterprise, the Muslim peoples still have not settled on a way to understand it. This fact has many implications for Israel, and for the United States.

An Imperialist Conspiracy . . . ?

The notion that Zionism serves as a tool of the Western powers is an old one, going back at least as far as Abdülhamit II, the Ottoman king between 1876 and 1909. His was a reasonable idea: after all, St. Petersburg looked after the interests of Armenians living in his realm, Paris sponsored the Maronites, and London was allied with the Druze; so why not assume the Jews, or the Zionists, were sponsored too? The trouble was that this assumption happened not to be true. Nevertheless, the idea persisted: during the Mandatory period (1918-47), endorsement by the British of a Jewish national home in Palestine was interpreted primarily by Muslims as a way for London to protect the Suez Canal and the route to India. With India's independence in 1947, the emphasis shifted somewhat, to the maintenance of British commerce in the Middle East. According to Egypt's Muslim Brethren, the British assembled "thousands of vagabonds and aliens, bloodsuckers and pimps, and said to them, 'Take for yourselves a national home called Israel.'" Later, when the U.S. government replaced Britain as chief culprit, Washington was held responsible for the establishment of Israel. Mu'ammar al-Qadhdhafi of Libya has flatly asserted that "the United States created Israel," supplying it with the weapons and intelligence Israelis need to kill Arabs.

Why did British and American imperialists want Israel to exist? Arabs have a rich assortment of answers to the question. Ash-Sha'b, a leftist Egyptian newspaper, portrays Israel as a branch-office of the Central Intelligence Agency, one which requires CIA "approval and support" before taking almost any step. Ahmad Jibril (leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command) dubs Israel "America's Mideast aircraft carrier." Khalid al-Hasan, another PLO leader sees Israel as "something like a conglomerate-General Motors, for example."

And what functions does this intelligence office/aircraft carrier/multinational corporation serve? To jeopardize whatever it may be the speaker holds most dear. Thus, for Nasser, the Pan-Arab leader, Israel endangered Pan-Arab nationalism. His 1962 Charter of National Action dubbed Israel "the tool of imperialism" and "a whip in their hands to fight the struggling Arabs." In 1968 the PLO was still under Nasser's influence, so its Covenant accused Israel of being "a geographic base for world imperialism placed strategically in the midst of the Arab homeland to combat the hopes of the Arab nation for liberation, amity and progress."

For Nasser's confidant, Mohamed Heikal, Israel's main role was to control the oil trade. He held in 1964 that "the flow of Arab oil is one of the important factors in the establishment of Israel on the soil of the Arabs." Shortly afterward, Yahya Hamuda, 'Arafat's predecessor as head of the PLO, portrayed Israel as "an instrument of American imperialist colonialism which seeks to appropriate our oil."

Dependencia theorists-who see Western wealth deriving from the exploitation of poor countries-see Israel as a U.S. instrument to prevent Arabs from developing an independent economy, thereby breaking their ties of servitude to the West.

For fundamentalist Muslims, Israel is a vehicle to suppress true Islam. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (1902?89) held that Israel had "penetrated all the economic, military, and political affairs" of Iran with the intention to "annihilate Islam." Hizbullah, the pro-Iranian Lebanese group, characterizes Israel as the "American spearhead in our Islamic world" and (along with that other devil, the shah of Iran) one of the "two watchdogs of American imperialism." Hamas, the Palestinian fundamentalist group, accuses the Jews of trying to "liquidate Islam."

For Saddam Husayn, Americans deploy Israel to prevent the Arabs from becoming a powerful and modern nation. Its smear campaigns (which turn innocent research centers into weapons factories), export controls, and military aggression are all designed to keep the Arabs backward.

Israel is also accused of serving a number of other purposes. Edward Said of Columbia University, one of the PLO's unofficial spokesman in the United States, calls Israel "a device for holding Islam-and later the Soviet Union, or communism-at bay." Others point to Israel's alleged part in fomenting counter-revolutionary activities and acting as a center for a psychological warfare. Its very existence is seen as forcing the Arabs to invest in war rather than economic development, as diverting their attention from domestic issues, and as providing the reactionaries with the means to stay in power. In their most paranoid moments, some Arabs even worry about genocide.

Curiously, there is also a recessive view in which Israel in regarded not as an instrument of imperialism but as its victim-a place to which a people not wanted in Christian Europe was expelled. Yasir 'Arafat's father is quoted as observing in the late 1940s, "What is going on is colonialism. It is not the Jews. This is a game of high stakes." Salah Khalaf held that the British engaged in all sorts of dirty tricks in Palestine in the 1940s, like attacking both Arabs and Jews, thereby inciting them to armed clashes, to prolong their presence in the mandate.

This line of thinking inspires some of the wildest speculations of all. Muhammad Mahdi at-Tajir, a United Arab Emirates ambassador to Great Britain, once explained to a British writer: "It is not the Jews who created the state [of Israel]. It is an invention of their enemies, especially the British. When you wanted to get rid of them because you were afraid they would rule Britain, you put the idea in their head of creating a homeland." And this from an ambassador to the Court of St. James's! Qadhdhafi took the notion one step further, calling the creation of Israel "a big international conspiracy against the Jews." Addressing the Jews, he warned them that the Europeans "want to get rid of you and throw you in Palestine for the Arabs to eliminate you some day." To avoid this fate, Qadhdhafi urged Israelis to "leave Palestine immediately and return to [your] own countries."

To be sure, the notion of Jews as victims has never enjoyed a wide following among Muslims, possibly because it is much less useful than portraying Israel as a monstrous and all-powerful agent of imperialism. This latter view deepens hatred for the enemy, inflates the threat he poses, stimulates xenophobia, and rallies citizens to the government. It turns Israel from a parochial Middle East concern into a global problem, universalizing the Arab cause. It makes the Arabs' defeats that much more palatable; how can they beat an Israel enjoying British and American support?

Depending on their strategy toward Israel, Arab leaders under the sway of the imperialist myth conceive of Washington either as their principal nemesis or as the way to a solution. Those who plan militarily to destroy Israel are implacably hostile to the United States. To Qadhdhafi, Washington is "the bitter enemy until doomsday"; Asad deems it "the main enemy of the Arab nation"; and Baghdad Radio's Voice of the PLO chimes in with "the major enemy . . . both in the past and in the present." But Arab leaders intent on dealing diplomatically with Israel draw the opposite conclusion; if Washington makes the key decisions, they had better cultivate it. Sadat and 'Arafat followed this course in the hope that the Americans would compel Israel to do their bidding.

Whether it casts the U.S. government as enemy or ally, the imperialist theory causes Arab leaders to focus too much on the United States and too little on Israel. With the single exception of 1957 (when President Eisenhower compelled the Israelis to evacuate the Sinai Peninsula), the expectation of American pressure on Israel has invariably been disappointed. Still, the illusion lives on that the Americans might again, as 'Arafat puts it, "do what Eisenhower did." Sadat thought that Americans held "99 percent of the cards" but eventually discovered that he had to negotiate with Menachem Begin, not Jimmy Carter. Alexander Haig was considered pro-Israel; therefore, when he resigned as secretary of state in June 1982, the PLO was elated. One of 'Arafat's aides even acknowledged, "I felt as if we had won the war that night." But as the next few months showed, he was wholly mistaken.

Too little attention to Israel leads the Arabs into serious blunders. Nasser concentrated so intently on extruding American influence from the Middle East, he virtually ignored the effect of his actions on Israel; this partially explains how he blundered into the Six Day War. Similarly, leaders of the intifada on the West Bank and Gaza Strip designed their insurrection to win the sympathy of Western television audiences, and did not realize the damage this did to their cause among the Israeli electorate.

If Israel is merely Washington's pawn, a cherished slogan has to be discarded-that the Jewish lobby drives American policy. Surprisingly, Arab leaders do sometimes draw this conclusion. Deputy Prime Minister Khaddam of Syria put it clearly in 1981: "There is a deep and organic link between the United States and Israel. We are under no illusions about this. The link is not due to the 'Zionist lobby' in the United States but to the fact that it is the only friend of the United States in the area and because it represents a major base for protecting U.S. interests." In a remarkable statement eight years later, Yasir 'Arafat echoed this outlook. The Kuwaiti News Agency paraphrased him expressing the belief that "the Israeli public wants peace but the PLO's major problem is with the U.S. Administration, noting that it's the U.S. and not Israel that determines the American policy in the region, dismissing as baseless the myth of the Zionist lobby in the United States."

But, of course, this is not the only point of view.

. . . Or a Jewish One?

The alternate school of thought stipulates a Jewish conspiracy to take over the world, possibly under the direction of the (fictive) Elders of Zion whose tentacles reach deep into London, Washington, and other Western capitals. In this version of the conspiracy mania, Americans do not use Israelis but instead are their dupes. And this explains an enduring Arab mystification-why the U.S. government seems to favor 4 million Jews over 150 million Arabs. Syria's Khaddam articulated this puzzlement in 1980: "What has Israel given the United States? Obviously, nothing, neither oil nor money. The reverse is true. Israel takes everything from the United States. At a time when the Arabs provide the United States with oil, money, and political support, what is the result? U.S. aid to Israel." The power of the Jewish conspiracy myth lies precisely in its explaining this enigma.

In a 1944 broadcast on Nazi-controlled Radio Berlin, the Palestinian leader Amin al-Husayni noted the strong support for Zionism found in the U.S. Congress. His comment: "No one ever thought that 140,000,000 Americans would become tools in Jewish hands." The same notion remained common in the post-war years. At the United Nations debate on the partition of Palestine, Faris al-Khuri, dean of the Arab diplomats, held that although Zionists formed only one-thirtieth of the U.S. population, "they have extended their influence into all circles." He warned Americans to "be careful for the future which awaits them." Writing about U.S. politics in his 1951 book, From Here We Learn, the Egyptian thinker Muhammad al-Ghazali asserted that "the rudder of higher politics is in the hands of the Jews." Post-war suspicion of Jewish power was so strong, recalls Miles Copeland, the late CIA operative, that American diplomacy in the Arab world during the period 1947-52 consisted largely of trying "to convince the various Foreign Offices that our Government was not under the control of the Zionists." Mawdudi, the pre-eminent fundamentalist Muslim of Pakistan, asserted that Jews rule the United States like the jinn rule mankind.

Rana Kabbani is a sophisticated Syrian woman who lived in Washington and studied at Georgetown University; the novelist Salman Rushdie praised her study, Europe's Myths of Orient, as "an important, fierce and judicious book"; married to the British journalist Patrick Seale and living in London, she has been described in Mother Jones as having "star quality: beauty, brains, and a social position." And what did this highly intelligent woman learn during her years in proximity to the institutions of American power? That the simple prejudices bandied about in her homeland are valid. "Every Arab believes that American policy towards the Middle East is made in Tel Aviv, but to discover that this was indeed the case, and not mere paranoia, was a great shock."

Governments repeat this charge too. "U.S. policy toward the Arabs," declared the Iraqi first deputy prime minister, Taha Yasin Ramadan, "is drawn up by Zionist circles." King al-Husayn of Jordan has publicly blamed the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the pro-Israel lobby, for wrong-headed American policies in the Middle East. Syrian radio has argued that Israeli power in Washington results from "the Zionists' gold and dollars." According to it, "the Zionists financed election campaigns [of senators], gave them their racist votes, and continued to provide them with bribes to raise their hands whenever a decision desired by the Zionists needed to be made." And as if that were not enough, the Israeli government "slips dollars into their pockets."

Predictably, Henry Kissinger's Jewish background was interpreted as a mechanism for Israeli control over the American body politic. As Foreign Minister Isma'il Fahmy of Egypt put it, Kissinger "was in fact always acting on behalf of Israel." If ever he dared disagree with the Israeli government, it "brought him quickly into line."

Middle Eastern leaders sometimes portray Israel as a threat not merely to them but to all of humanity. Asad (who to this day shelters Adolf Eichmann's secretary, SS captain Alois Brunner, the leading Nazi fugitive now alive) has described the Zionists as "invaders who are threatening not just the Arab nation but the entire human race." Likewise, senior Palestine Liberation Organization figures portray themselves doing battle on behalf of all humanity. Amal, the moderate Shi'i movement in Lebanon, calls Zionism a continuing danger "to the whole of humanity." And the charter of the fundamentalist Palestinian group, Hamas, cites The Protocols of the Elders of Zion by name and frequently reflects the message of that fraudulent text:

The enemies . . . have labored to amass astounding and influential material wealth, which has been exploited to realize their dream. They have used their wealth to gain control of the world media, news agencies, the press, broadcasting stations, etc. . . . They were behind the French revolution and the Communist revolution. . . . They instigated World War I. . . . They caused World War II. . . . It was they who gave the instructions to establish the United Nations and the Security Council to replace the League of Nations, in order to rule over the world through them.
Taking this argument one step further, some Arabs argue that they must save the West from Zionist clutches. Saddam Husayn once declared that Arab strength vis-à-vis Israel "not only will help liberate ourselves, but . . . will liberate others in the West from the weight of the Zionist pressure they are subjected to." Once this is achieved, writes Kamil Yusuf al-Hajj, "the West would be in our grasp rather than the Zionists' . . . and the fabulous powers of the West would be within our reach instead of the Zionists'."

Fears of a grand Zionist plot tends to discourage diplomacy. If Washington is a pawn of Jerusalem, there is not much point expecting anything from Americans. Instead, leftists look to Moscow and fundamentalist Muslims renounce both great powers, feeling so much fear of Israel they cannot even imagine making peace with it.

Patterns

Three points bears noting. First, each of these two themes contains a kernel of truth. The great powers now and then have expected to benefit from Israel. As early as 1840, British foreign minister Lord Palmerston, wrote that the return of the Jewish people to Palestine would serve to check "any future evil designs of Mehemet Ali [the ruler of Egypt] or his successor." The Balfour Declaration did endorse a national home in Palestine for the Jewish people. The U.S. government formed a strategic partnership with Israel in the 1980s. But all this has to be put in context. Palmerston's ideas were stillborn; London quickly regretted the Balfour Declaration; and American support for Israel comes much less from putative imperialists (such as business interests or the military) than from those who feel moral or spiritual ties with the Jewish state.

Conversely, it is also true that Jews play an impressively large role in Western life. The great Zionist leader Chaim Weizmann had access to the highest circles of British officialdom, while AIPAC has rightly been called "perhaps the most effective pressure group in Washington." Still, the idea of a Zionist plot rests on the faulty premise that Jews are the only Westerners favoring strong ties to Israel; in fact, of course, this "special relationship" draws on many sources-theological, moral, political, and strategic-and enjoys wide support among the Christian majority. Americans have consistently viewed good relations with Israel as an important aspect of U.S. foreign policy. Indeed, while the U.S. public is skeptical about foreign aid in principle, a review of forty years of history shows that "most Americans strongly support" economic and military aid to Israel. Conspiracy theorists tend to ignore these inconvenient details.

Second, myths about relations between Israel and the United States are not the only myths about Israel rampant in the Muslim world; many in the Middle East are also of two minds about Israel and the USSR. While Khalid Baqdash, leader of the Syrian Communist Party since 1936, holds that "world Jewry is ranged against the Soviet Union." To the contrary, an Egyptian daily maintains that "only the U.S.S.R. has derived benefit" from the establishment of Israel. These examples, which can be multiplied many times, show the depth of confusion about Israel.

Having it two contradictory ways at once brings The Protocols of the Elders of Zion and Hitler to mind. They portray Jews on the one hand as capitalists and middlemen who steal from the workers, and also as socialists who threaten the bankers. Here is Hitler in 1922: "Moses Kohn on the one side encourages his [employers'] association to refuse the worker's demands, while his brother Isaac in the factory incites the masses [to strike]." Just as no one seems to note the inconsistency of these claims, so is it possible for Middle East leaders, decade after decade, to make diametrically opposed statements about Israel and the United States.

Third, neither the imperialist or the Zionist interpretation is original to the Middle East; both come from Europe. The notion of Israel as a tool of imperialism goes back to Vladimir Ilyich Lenin and the early Bolshevik state. A Soviet document from July 1919 called Zionism "one of the branches of the imperialist counter-revolution," an idea subsequently repeated ad nauseum by the Soviet propaganda apparatus. Leonid Brezhnev told the Egyptian ambassador in 1967 that "Israel by itself was nothing. It existed for its existence on American aid, and the reason why the Americans kept Israel alive was because they wanted the oil of the Middle East. . . . The Americans could not themselves attack the Arab nation, but they could attack through Israel."

As for the notion of Israel as part of a Jewish world plot, it derives from Nazi ideology. As early as the mid-1920s, Adolf Hitler wrote in Mein Kampf of his suspicions about the Zionists' ultimate goals: "They do not think at all of establishing a Jewish state in Palestine to live in it someday; rather, they want a central organization for their international world cheating, withdrawn from others' reach-a refuge for convicted dregs and a college for aspiring swindlers." Already in the mid-1930s, Edward Atiyah writes, Palestinian Arabs "lapped up Fascist and Nazi lies. They saw the Zionists as the sinister world-menace of the Nazi legend, and England as a puppet power in their clutches." Many Arab leaders-including such intellectuals as Michel 'Aflaq, Shakib Arslan, and Sati' al-Husri, and politicians such as Anwar as-Sadat and Rashid 'Ali al-Gilani-also adopted this outlook.

In brief, Middle East politicians still today routinely echo the ideas of Lenin and Hitler, the men who initiated this century's most appalling political experiments.

Explaining the Paradox

The "special relationship" between the United States and Israel mystifies Arabs and Iranians. As Muslims, they fail to understand the emotional resonance of a common Bible and a host of Judeo-Christian features. As Middle Easterners, they cannot see beyond the clash of nationalisms to comprehend shared interests between countries. As citizens of authoritarian states, they miss the importance of personal, cultural, and political bonds between free peoples. Perplexed by an alliance that makes no sense, Arab observers fall back on conspiratorial explanations.

The two conspiracies share parallel premises. Both dismiss disagreements between Jerusalem and Washington as charades to fool the gullible. Both postulate lock-step agreement between the two sides, and that in turn rules out independent decisionmaking. Instead, Both see a hidden agenda, whether imperialist or Zionist. Both take a basic truth and distort it beyond recognition, transforming self-evident mutual influence into terrifying manipulation. Both twist the essential balance of the U.S.-Israel relationship into something skewed. Only one of the two parties makes decisions and the other takes orders. One is the ventriloquist, the other the dummy- it may not be clear which is which, but the fundamental relationship is absolutely certain.

At this point the theories converge, the double conspiracy becomes one, and exact roles hardly matter. Americans and Israelis are working together to rule the world, so who cares which of them is dominant, which is subservient? Not being able to discern their real roles only makes the alliance that much more sinister.

Ultimately, the U.S.-Israel alliance transcends either country to become a single malevolent entity. Saddam Husayn sees "the essence of the conspiracy" lying in the convergence of U.S. efforts to dominate the world and Israeli desires to create a Greater Israel. The two forces meld in his mind, and he refers to "America, together with Zionism, or Zionism, together with America-or any of these two alternatives" as variants of the same thing. The first military communiqué from Iraq on 17 January 1991 referred to criminal aggression carried out by "the treasonous Zionist-American enemy"; the fourth announced that "Israel and the United States are one and the same."

Here is Radio Damascus on the subject: the bond "between Israel and the United States" it pronounced in 1986, "makes Israel a U.S. tool directed against national liberation movements in the region, and also makes U.S. foreign policy a tool for implementing Israeli policy." Even Sadat, who studied the U.S.-Israeli nexus at first hand, came close to accepting this view. "Israel," he wrote in his memoirs, "had come to assume the role of the only 'power' guarding U.S. interests in the Middle East. This was a role chosen by Israel herself, or even chosen for her by the United States." Taha Yasin Ramadan came up with an even more enigmatic formulation, referring to "Israel's protégés-who created and nurtured it." The two sides are so involved in conspiracies, they can no longer be separated from each other.

The key to this thinking lies in two fantasies. (1) The Jews' economic power permits them to run American foreign policy and (2) this power is used for imperialist ends. It then follows that (3) the Zionists run U.S. policy and Washington depends heavily on Israel. Or, more succinctly: Jews rule America; Israel serves as part of their mechanism for world control. Of course, this train of thought assumes that both Lenin's and Hitler's ideas are correct-a rare combination in the West but commonplace in the Middle East.

Implications

Belief in an imperialist plot enhances American influence in the Middle East while fears of Zionist conspiracy diminish it. Hence, from the point of view of American interests, the imperialist conspiracy is preferable to the Zionist one. American politicians could do worse than remind Middle Eastern leaders of U.S. influence in Jerusalem.

From an Israeli point of view, which is less bad depends on political outlook. Israelis who hope eventually to reach a diplomatic solution with their Arab enemies clearly want Washington's imagined role to be as great as possible-even if that means bringing uncomfortable diplomatic pressures to bear on themselves. But Israelis who have given up on diplomacy may well prefer the Arabs to go it alone or even go through Moscow. Labor might point to services rendered for the U.S. military and intelligence services; contrarily, Likud might boast of its prowess in the halls of Congress.

But Israel's real interest lies in undoing distorted perceptions of the U.S.-Israeli relationship, for these prevent Muslims from treating it as a normal country. As either pawn or puppeteer, Israel lacks ordinary state interests. Whether used by or using the United States, it is connected to something too large to fit the Middle East; whether seen as an outpost of imperialism or as the headquarters of a conspiracy, the Jewish state becomes part of something too threatening to accommodate. As Saad El-Shazly, a former Egyptian army chief of staff, put it: "Because of its imperial role-its birth and being as an avowed outpost of European power in the heart of the Arab world-Israel cannot come to terms with its neighbours. The only relationship Israel can have with the Arabs is that of denial, conquest, and subjugation."

All this recalls the old demonization of Jews in Europe. And just as that demonization caused pogroms and culminated in the Nazi holocaust, so there is a parallel danger when the Jewish state is made a menace to all humanity. Only when Israel comes to be regarded as a state like any other is there a chance that its neighbors will deal with it in accordance with conventional diplomatic norms. There is little prospect of this happening soon, however. Wild claims about ties between the United States and Israel are not a fringe phenomenon in the Muslim Middle East but-as we have seen-integral to the fabric of its mainstream political life.

Still, it is important that American diplomats and politicians take every opportunity to disabuse their Arab counterparts of the idea that U.S.-Israeli relations are anything more than they appear to be. From time to time, American leaders do precisely this. For example, in a recent meeting with five U.S. senators, President Saddam Husayn of Iraq repeatedly alluded to "a large-scale campaign" in the West against Iraq. He went out of his way to goad the senators: "Is the control of the Zionist trend over you so great that it deprives you of your humanity? Has patriotism in those [Western] countries become so weak that they no longer can say what is right and what is wrong?" After listening to a barrage of such assertions, Senator Alan Simpson (Republican of Wyoming) replied: "There is no conspiracy by the U.S. government, or in England or Israel, to attack this country."

Superfluous as it may seem, this sort of reply needs to be made, and then repeated. Eventually it may pay off. Anwar as-Sadat credited his own enlightenment to just such persuasion. "My talks with Dr. Kissinger convinced me," he explained, "that he rejects the simplistic notion of some of your strategists who see-or saw-Israel as the American gendarme in this part of the world." The reiteration of such plain truths may not by itself lead other Middle East leaders to emulate Sadat in making peace with the Jewish state but breaking the Arabs' delusion about America and Israel is essential if they are ever to move in that direction.