Issue: 2.10 | October 1, 2001 | by:
Fouad Ajami
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A Thwarted Civilization We should be under no illusions about our struggle against Osama bin Laden
and the cultists and terrorists arrayed around him. Although we control the sea
lanes and skies of that Arab-Muslim world, he appears to hold sway over the
streets of a thwarted civilization, one that sees him as an avenger for the sad,
cruel lot that has been its fate in recent years. A terrible war was fought between rulers and Islamists; the regimes in
Algeria, Tunisia, and Egypt won, but the insurgents took to the road, and vowed
to return as triumphant conquerors after the dynasties and the despots were
sacked. Rich, famous, free and young, bin Laden taunts the rulers of a silent,
frightened Arab world seething with resentments of every kind. He and his
lieutenants cannot overthrow the Arab ruling order, so they have turned their
resentments on us. Consider the three men who taunted us in the video that came our way on Oct.
7, courtesy of the Qatari satellite channel, Al- Hazeera. In it, bin Laden is
flanked by two lieutenants. The older one, a man of 50 years, is an Egyptian
physician, Dr. Ayman al- Zawahiri, a sworn enemy of the regime of Hosni Mubarak.
Twenty years ago, he had been picked up in the dragnet that followed the
assassination of Anwar Sadat. He was tortured, and imprisoned for three years.
He drifted to Pakistan, then made his way to the Sudan and Afghanistan, and took
to the life of terror. The younger man, spokesman for bin Laden, is a Kuwaiti theocratic activist by
the name of Sleiman Abu Gheith, who hails from a quaint, stable principality,
with generous welfare subsidies and an American trip-wire to protect it against
a predatory Saddam. Abu Gheith had been an employee of the Kuwaiti state, an
imam of a government-sponsored mosque, and a teacher of Islamic studies. Those
who know him tell of a man who had become fanatical in his view of Islam's role
in political and social life. A foul wind had been blowing in Arab lands. The rulers had snuffed out
endless rebellions and the populace had succumbed to a malignant, sullen
silence. It prayed and waited for the rulers' demise. It dreamt of an avenger
and a band of merciless followers who would do for it what it could not do for
itself. It is no mystery that reporters from Arab shores tell us of affluent men and
women, some with years of education in American universities behind them,
celebrating the cruel deed of Mohamed Atta and his hijackers. The cult of the
bandit taunting the powerful has always been seductive in broken societies. Bin
Laden and Zawahiri and Abu Gheith and Atta did not descend from the sky: They
are the angry sons of a failed Arab generation. They are direct heirs of two
generations of Arabs that have seen all the high dreams of Asr al Nahda (the era
of enlightenment and secular nationalism) issue in sterility, dictatorship and
misery. The secular fathers begot this strange breed of holy warriors. A
suffocating hate separates the ruler from the ruled in Arab lands. The former
own those lands, they have closed up the universe, and their dominion stretches
as far as the eye can see. Their scions stand at the ready to claim the good
things of the earth. Imagine the way Arabs read the ascendancy of the sons of
the dictators of Syria, Egypt and Iraq in public life; a trick has been played
on them. Under their eyes, the republics have metamorphosed into monarchies in
all but name. Alone, in God's broad lands, it seems to them, they are to be
excluded from a share of today's democratic inheritance. The rulers can't
deliver to us these sullen, resentful populations and- shrewd men--the rulers
know it. They have ducked for cover as America blew in asking them to choose
between the terrorists' world and ours. We were "walk-ons" in this political and generational struggle playing out in
Araby. America and Americans have a hard time coming to terms with those
unfathomable furies of a distant, impenetrable world. In truth, Atta struck at
us because he could not take down Mr. Mubarak's world, because in the burdened,
crowded land of the Egyptian dictator there is very little offered younger
Egyptians save for the steady narcotic of anti- Americanism and anti-Zionism.
The attack on the North Tower of the World Trade Center was Atta's "rite of
passage." In the same vein, bin Laden and Abu Gheith can't sack the dynastic order of
the Gulf. (Were they to do so, they would replace it with a cruel reign of
terror that would make the yuppies of Jeddah who have been whispering sweet
things in the ears of foreign reporters about bin Laden yearn for the days of Al
Saud). So the avengers come our way. Our shadow, faint and mediated through
hated rulers and middlemen, has fallen across their world. They struck at the
shadow, but it is the order that reigns in their lands that fuels their
righteousness. And it is the sense of approval they see in the eyes of ordinary
men and women in their societies that tells them to press on. The military
campaign against bin Laden is prosecuted, and will surely be won, by the U.S.
But the redemption of the Arab political condition, and the weaning of that
world away from its ruinous habits and temptations, are matters for the Arabs
themselves. A darkness, a long winter, has descended on the Arabs. Nothing grows in the
middle between an authoritarian political order and populations given to
perennial flings with dictators, abandoned to their most malignant hatreds.
Something is amiss in an Arab world that besieges American embassies for visas
and at the same time celebrates America's calamities. Something has gone
terribly wrong in a world where young men strap themselves with explosives, only
to be hailed as "martyrs" and avengers. No military campaign by a foreign power
can give modern-day Arabs a way out of the cruel, blind alley of their own
history. |
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Mr. Ajami, author of "The Dream Palace of the Arabs" (Vintage, 1999), teaches at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. Copyright © 2001 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
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