Archive for the 'World Politics' Category



06
Jun

No Room for Moderation in the War on Terror

“Let’s assume for a minute that everything we’ve heard so far about the foiled Toronto terror attacks is true as reported …”

Canada’s perceived immunity from terrorist threats (FLQ Crisis notwithstanding) came crashing to the ground last week, as 17 suspects spread around Kingston and the Greater Toronto area were arrested for planning to blow up several targets around Southern Ontario. Led by 43-year old Qayyum Abdul Jamal, the group was apprehended after attempting to import 3 tonnes of ammonium nitrate and other assorted firearms for terrorist activities. The 12 adults (Abdelhaleen, Qayyum Abdul Jamal , Fahim Ahmad, Zakaria Amara, Asad Ansari, Shareef. Mohammed Dirie, Yasim Abdi Mohamed, Jahmaal James, Amin Mohamed Durrani, Saad Khalid Abdul Shakur and Ahmad Mustafa Ghany) are in court facing a variety of charges while the youths (who cannot be named) are still being held. Suspected terrorist targets include the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa and the CSIS Office on Front Street in Toronto. Because the amount of fertilizer purchased was roughly three times what was used in the Oklahoma bombings, collateral damages would likely have been very high.

And so ends our delusion about not being involved in “Bush’s war”.

Canadian moderates –ever weary of the right’s endless battle cries- no longer have the luxury of dismissing the war on terror as a Christian crusade or war for oil. While business interests and Evangelical fundamentalism no doubt factor in the zeal of some war proponents, this war –as seen through our enemies’ eyes- is ideological at its core. Western affiliation aside, Al Qaeda’s targets are fairly indiscriminate: the 9/11 bombers apparently had few qualms about attacking a large building that contained business interests from all over the world – including their homelands. Similarly, the British bombers who attacked the London Underground were well aware of the diversity among their targets – a war weary city whose casualties surely included people heavily opposed to military intervention in Afghanistan and Iraq.

As the next planned target, Canada has reached a turning point. Our nation is no longer on the sideline playing quiet cheerleader, nor is our military presence in Afghanistan being labeled “peacekeeping” or some other palatable euphemism. The role of the political moderate in the war against terror should be to make sure this war –though defensive in nature- is nonetheless waged in a focused and ethical manner:

  • Actively monitoring and reporting suspicious activities or behavior within the Muslim community is necessary; terrorizing and intimidating Muslim communities is unacceptable
  • Supporting our troops overseas is fundamental to boost national morale; excusing criminal behavior by troops should be avoided
  • Supporting the right of Israel -permanently on the front lines of this “culture war”- to self-defense against militant Palestinian attacks falls under basic ethics; Support for expansionist or apartheid policies under such pretenses should be shunned.
  • Allowing police and national security officials more legal freedom for [targeted] surveillance and interrogation may be a [short-term] necessary evil; Allowing police and the government trample our basic rights to free speech and freedom of information under the guise of “security” would be both ironic and tragic

Most of all we must not lose sight of who our enemies are. These enemies cross all geographic, racial, cultural and age barriers. While all would refer to themselves as “Muslims”, their actions ultimately harm more Muslims than any other identifiable group. Similarly, the Islamacist rarely distinguishes demographic differences or political adversity among his/her prey. We are all “evil Westerners”.

Canada as a whole must help defeat Islamism, rather than merely copy and invert it. The ideal response to Western society can provide to those who would deny us our freedoms and (relative) tolerance is simply to exercise those freedoms with even greater zeal. Most of all, regular Canadians/Americans/Brits must be vigilant against fundamentalists among us who may seize the opportunity unleash their own totalitarian agendas amid growing insecurity.


What Others Had to Say:

  • Steve Janke pondered the RCMP’s claims concerning the size of the reported bomb, based on the often-reported 3 tonnes of ammonium nitrate: “Using the 94% ratio and the size of the overall bomb, and ignoring the RCMP stated amount of ammonium nitrate used, the Oklahoma bomb used 4700 pounds of ammonium nitrate, or 2.1 metric tons. That means the size of the bomb being imagined by the Toronto terrorists was somewhat larger than the Oklahoma bomb, but not as large as suggested at the news conference. Closer to 50% larger, and not 200% larger.”
  • Red Tory is highly skeptical of the notion that “freedom” is what’s under attack. “Such naïve sentiments have since been a cornerstone of faith for right-wing ideologues and a mixed bag of others from across the political spectrum that refuse to acknowledge the obvious connection between radical Islamic terrorism and the long, dark history of self-serving American foreign policy in the Middle East. Whether through ignorance or obduracy, they remain willfully blind to the historical fact that America has in the past toppled legitimate governments, propped up brutally repressive dictatorships, and even condoned mass murder and atrocities in order to facilitate its own “national security interests” in the region.”
18
Apr

Hamas and The Anglosphere’s Trump Card

Hamas’ graduation from militant group to democratically-elected government struck a serious blow to the prospect of peace in the Middle East. Aside from the obvious risk to Israel, the Anglosphere (Britain, USA, Canada, etc) was faced with a particularly delicate situation: the involved countries have been the dominant force in recent peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian territories. Was it more dangerous to legitimize a group synonymous with terrorism than it was to ignore the democratic will of people being wooed towards secular democracy? The decision was swift and unmistakable - Hamas would not be recognized.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper was the first international leader to condemn Hamas, throwing his support unconditionally behind Israel. The U.S. followed suit of course and once again North America dismissed itself from any potential role as a mediator in the conflict. Showing a little more foresight, Russia received the democratically-elected government as a legitimate political body, albeit with some strong warning about conduct.

To be sure, Hamas hasn’t helped its case for diplomatic legitimacy. Though the Palestinian organization has an official ceasefire with Israel, it has not ceased condemning the existence of the Jewish state. Islamic Jihad’s recent suicide attack in Tel Aviv was declared legitimate by the Hamas government:

We think that this operation … is a direct result of the policy of the occupation and the brutal aggression and siege committed against our people
-Khaled Abu Helal (spokesman, Interior Ministry)

Hardly the words of a government interested in building a Palestinian state capable of living peacefully alongside its neighbours. As most of the international community demands nothing less, Hamas will have few public supporters.

However, it was the withdrawal of funding that the USA and friends hoped would cripple Hamas into irrelevance (or negoatiation). For awhile it did seem that the funding cut would bankrupt the Palestinian Authority. Then it happened:

The government of the Islamic republic invites all countries to help the Palestinian government and nation, and announces the allocation of 50 million dollars to help the Palestinian government and people
-Manouchehr Mottaki, Iranian Foreign Minister

Perhaps Iranian assistance to Hamas was predictable, but then America was sideswiped by one of its few allies in the region:

Staunch U.S. ally Qatar said on Monday it would give $50 million in aid to the Palestinian Authority despite calls from Washington and European Union to halt funding unless the Hamas-led government recognizes Israel. The Gulf Arab state, which hosted the command center for the U.S. military in the 2003 Iraq war, said the aid decision “stems from Qatar’s support for the Palestinian people”.
-Reuters Report (April 17, 2006)

    So what really was accomplished by cutting off aid to the Palestinian Government?

  • Hamas no longer has any reason to listen to the West, given it must now function financially without Western aid
  • Iran will continue to emerge as a power of importance by providing official “aid” to legitimately elected governments (that just happens to support terrorist activities beneficial to Iran’s geopolitical strategy)
  • Mahmoud Abbas is a sitting duck in Palestinian government and may sink further into irrelevance

Could the Anglosphere’s one-sided approach to mediation have finally backfired? Without holding a serious trump card on the magnitude of financial dependency against the disfavored camp, the Anglosphere has been reduced to a mere client of one side rather than the mutually dominant force that could have compelled a peace agreement between two stubborn foes.

10
Apr

Iraqi Terror - Direct to Google Video

The MSM (mainstream media) has done a generally sound job of concealing the violent reality of the war on terror. Thank goodness for Google video. It seems someone has posted a promotional / recruiting video for the Islamic Army in Iraq (IAI), one of the “resistance” groups in Iraq. Like Al Qaeda, the IAI considers democracy to be incompatible with Islam and aims to expel all foreign troops from Iraq. Violence is the Army’s main modus operandi, and civilian targets are fair game. The group is responsible for several executions, including Italian journalist / Red Cross worker Enzo Baldoni and American contractor Ronald Schulz. The Islamic Army later denounced Baldoni as a spy during a recent Al-Jazeera Interview. (it’s likely that Baldoni’s death was retaliation for the enthusiasm of embattled Premier Silvio Berlusconi)

The promotional video consists mainly of IAI militants blowing up US and British targets, mixed with intermittent interviews. There is a rather disturbing scene with a small child trying to lift an AK-47, to say nothing of the scenes featuring burning civilians/combatants.

The titles and audio are in Arabic of course, but the visuals still adequately convey that Islamist threat is real, and the combatants rarely distinguish Western builders from Western destroyers.

IAI01.jpg

IAI02.jpg

IAI03.jpg

It’s not clear how long this will stay up so do view it hastily (click images)!!

23
Mar

Afghanistan Needs to Show and Prove for Abdul Rahman

Abdul Rahman could be a dead man in approximately 2 months time. After being turned in by his own parents, who have publicly declared their shame over his actions, the renegade Afghan must either atone for his crime or be declared mentally incompetent in order to avoid a court-sanctioned execution.

What was Rahman’s crime? He became a Christian.

During a preliminary hearing, Rahman explained to the judge that he converted from Islam (practiced by over 99% of the Afghan population) 15 years ago while helping Afghan refugees in Pakistan. It is not known why his family suddenly decided to turn him in but there is obviously no statute of limitations on converting from Islam, which amounts to apostasy under Sharia Law (which is still part of Afghanistan’s legal code) and is punishable by death.

Capital punishment for Christian converts will hardly play well with Evangelicals in the West, who to date have been among the war’s greatest proponents. Already, Dubya is getting heat for his lackluster initial response, and if the dissent intensifies Bush could find even more voices joining the increasingly Republican chorus of war-weary Americans. After all, what has truly been accomplished in the “liberated” states if religious freedom can be so easily and publicly trampled despite a 3-year military presence?

Perhaps this is the first true test of George W Bush’s political and social reorganization of the Middle East. Far beyond simply battling terrorism, America has jumped with both feet into the nation-building business. For Afghanistan, this has included a enticing a persistent international military presence, building schools that admit women, shutting down opium production facilities and most importantly propping up Hamid Karzai, the West-friendly moderate who will be remembered as Afghanistan’s first democratically elected president since the fall of the Taliban. Karzai is going to be key in demonstrating the viability of the American democratic model: Bush cannot use military force to overrun a court decision in a nation America supposedly liberated 3 years ago. Exerting heavy political pressure on the Afghans is equally unwise, as it gives the impression of a sham democracy. Instead, the solution must be born of Afghan initiative. Karzai has at least one very important card to play – under the United Nations, Afghanistan was one of the 48 member states to adopt the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The Declaration’s view on religious freedom is clear:

Article 18.
“Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.”
-UN Declaration of Human Rights

Karzai’s value as an ally against the war on terror must be questioned if he does not at attempt to use this premise to directly or indirectly influence Rahman’s freedom (the declaration is not legally binding). As of writing this post, the Afghanstian government has staunchly declared not to interfere with the court decision; the government’s strongest words have been reserved for German politicians who proposed withdrawing troops in protest of Abdul Rahman’s execution. Hardly inspiring.

Although international officials have gone on record stating that Rahman’s execution is doubtful, his fate is still subject to more speculation than an Iraqi dinar. Now is the time for Hamid Karzai and the Afghanistan government to openly show support for religious freedom and move to alter any laws that stand in obstruction of that goal. Having Rahman declared incompetent may spare his life, but that alone is simply not good enough.

01
Mar

(Guest Column) Can Canada Remain Neutral?

Given the current global environment and uproar over recently published and re-published cartoons, I find myself appreciating life in Canada more than ever. A bastion of peaceful harmony, in which all people are welcome to live and celebrate their unique cultural traditions. We have ‘official’ multi-cultural policies that celebrate and promote this. One can argue that this has become our ‘culture’ and really is in no need of any government sponsorship. This reality is more than evident in our major urban centres, and as long as the common value of mutual tolerance and respect is maintained, the system works fine. What would happen if our pre-multicultural national commitments ever conflicted with this ‘live and let live’ neutral attitude. The thought occurred to me that we are not technically a neutral country. As a standing member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) since WWII, we as a nation-state would be obligated to defend any attacks upon some of the very nations whose flags are being burned around the Muslim world.

Is it inconceivable to imagine further escalation of this tension? After all, actions usually beget reactions. European nationalism had been on the decline since Jeorg Haider and Jean Marie Le Pen first made headlines over a decade ago. I am sure the ‘mainstream’ secular Europeans are intent on defending secularism against Islam, just as they did and continue to do against the Vatican. No doubt the long standing xenophobic elements in Europe will try and pounce on this collective mood, to raise their political stock.

And what will Canada do if the festering anger and economic dysfunction within much of the Muslim world results in some coordinated terrorist attacks against certain European Allies? Are we as a nation even psychologically prepared to deal with such attacks and the mass celebrations likely to follow? In true Canadian spirit, we would likely find a way to maintain the moral position and continue to follow the mantra of fighting international terrorism. But what if such an attack was state sponsored or condoned? Would Canada be prepared to engage any radical Middle Eastern country that attacked a fellow NATO member through terrorist strikes? Perhaps we should do more to diffuse the situation now in the great tradition of Canadian Diplomacy. Today’s interconnected world was established largely under a Western post WWII paradigm - in which Canada’s place was clearly defined. What will happen if a radicalized Muslim world wants to change the rules?

26
Feb

(Guest Column) Much Ado About Nothing?

On September 30, 2005, Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten published a series of cartoons unfavourably depicting Islamic religious figure, the Prophet Muhammad. Depicting the Prophet Muhammad in any way, shape or form is condemned in Islamic practice. The initial printing went largely unnoticed. On January 10, 2006, a Norwegian news publication became the first of many European publications to reprint the cartoons which followed suit February 1. Reaction among Muslims was vehement and violent.

On January 26, Saudi Arabia became the first Islamic nation to recall its ambassador to Denmark. January 30, Palestinian gunmen raided the EU’s Gaza offices demanding an apology. On January 31, the Jyllands-Posten apologized for offending the Islamic community, shortly thereafter, the Danish Prime Minister condemned demonizing any religious or cultural group. This, however, did little to prevent further uproar. Danish dairy company Arla, among others, has seen its profits plummet due to boycotts. Protestors in Syria besieged Danish and Norwegian foreign embassies February 4. The following day the same happened to the Danish embassy in Beirut.

Opinions on the cartoons are varied. Various European and North American newspapers have expressed support for free speech and secular democracy. Others have expressed dismay at the insensitivity of publishing what could be construed as hate literature. Extremists throughout the world have called for, “Death to Denmark,” and for the “hand that drew to be severed.” Who is in the right?

The issue is especially contentious in the wake of rioting that rocked Paris in the fall of 2005. Members of France’s sizable Muslim community were largely responsible for the rioting. This, of course, in addition to talk among the OECD of sanctions against Iran, a Hamas victory in Palestinian elections with Ariel Sharon in a coma and an American occupation in Iraq. One need not be reminded of the events of September 11, 2001, or the American “War on Terror”.

This is only the latest event in a long-standing historical divide between Europeans, Christian, secular or otherwise, and Middle Eastern Muslims. In fact, this conflict dates at least to 635, when Islamic troops under caliph Abu Bakr seized Demascus and defeated the Byzantine Empire at the Battle of Yarmuk. This was the first of many in a long series of battles between Byzantine and Islamic forces, culminating in the conquest of Constantinople and its conversion to Istanbul in 1473 at the hands of the Ottoman Turks. At least nine crusades resulted from this period of conflict.

The Ottoman Empire persisted until 1922, frequently sparring with the neighbouring Austro-Hungarian Empire which lasted until it lost World War I. In the 1820s France, Great Britain and Russia intervened militarily on behalf of Greeks struggling for independence from the Ottoman Turks. Not the first or last time such an alliance of European powers confronted the Ottomans. The Spanish inquisition, founded in 1478, was largely a tool to unite the kingdoms of Aragon and Castile under a single religious banner following years of Islamic dominion in the region. Europe owes much of its modern day political character to opposition of Muslim religious and political forces.

Conflict meant exposure, and increased involvement with Eastern powers meant a reintroduction of classical thought into western European society. These events precipitated the European Renaissance and the development of humanist philosophy. Conflict also meant trade. Trade meant an injection of capital and technology, such as the Arab sail-building and navigation techniques that allowed the Portuguese to round the Cape of Good Hope, Columbus to reach the Caribbean and Magellan to circumnavigate the globe. As the European locus widened, humanism developed into individualism and secularism and eventually the Scientific Revolution of the 17th century. By the end of the 18th century Enlightenment ideas such as secularism and democracy took hold across the European continent through revolution and reform.

Modernist notions of progress paved the way for industrialization. Throughout the 19th century a clear gap developed between the industrial imperial powers, concentrated in Europe, and the rest of the world. The 20th century changed little. The end of World War I established the United States of America as an industrial power on the world stage, and placed a great deal of the Middle East under European control by mandate of the League of Nations. The end of World War II saw the US and the USSR rise to global dominance poised to do battle in a grand ideological conflict. In addition, Allied action created the state of Israel. Through two world wars and the creation of modern day states such as Iran, Iraq, Syria and Egypt, Europeans and Americans found themselves altering the political character of the Middle East.

The creation of Israel, possibly the single most divisive political issue in the world today, spurred immediate military violence and drew the lines upon which modern day ideological warfare would be fought. Terrorism became a watch word in the West because of Yasser Arafat and the PLO and events such as the massacre of 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics. Growing industrialization meant that the Middle East also possessed a highly valued commodity, oil. High crude prices in 1960 created American and European pressure to create the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, a worldwide pricing regulatory body. The Yom Kippur War of 1967 led Arab members of OPEC to create their own overlapping Organization of Arab Petroleum Producing Countries.

The Middle East, trapped between Eastern and Western Europe, was of utmost strategic importance to both major Cold War powers. Americans and Russians frequently tested their arms in Israeli and Egyptian conflicts. Brits and Americans installed successive regimes in both Iran and Iraq and backed these regimes in conflicts against one another. The Cuban Missile crisis ended in a Russian pledge to remove weapons from Turkey. The Russian invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 preceeded the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and, with American funding and training, created the Osama Bin Laden of today.

Which brings us to September 11. To invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. To bombings in Spain and Britain. To riots in France. To Danish cartoons. Back to today. Back to the question of who is in the right. Is this a conflict of ideas? Of religions? Of cultures? Of politics? Of history? It is all of these, to be sure. Who is in the right? Not the bigots who publish hate literature in European newspapers. Certainly not the reactionaries who incite violence among fellow Muslims.

Who is in the right? Those in the right are those who recognize the commonalities of their respective cultures who share so much history. Those who realize that the highest ideals are love, compassion and understanding, according to Jesus Christ, the Prophet Muhmmad, Spinoza, John Stuart Mill, Immanuel Kant and Jean-Paul Sartre. If Danes are entitled to publish disrespectful cartoons, disrespected Muslims are entitled to react. Muslims, to be sure, have a great deal to be angry with the Western world about. If by one’s reaction, however, one serves only to further alienate and anger, one does Muhammad injustice in more ways than one. Hatred is a vice in any language, religion or culture.

——————

This column was reprinted with permission from the author. Dashmaster will be collaborating with myself and others on a new website called “With Good Reason”, scheduled to be launched March 2006. More details are forthcoming.
-Cynapse

24
Feb

(Guest Column) Gangs of the World – And Offensive Cartoons

Why is the controversy from a few satirical pseudo-humourous cartoons by the obscure Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten still news?

Perhaps the answer does not lie within the powder keg of today’s angry Muslim world, but rather in the nature of human behaviour itself.

Is it an insult to any religion, including Islam, if a non-believer says or draws something out of ignorance? How about atheistic conviction? In some ways, being offended insinuates that everyone must accept an imposed set of moral values (as defined by a given religious belief system).

The growing tension can be traced to the following point of conflict: different groups may have different moral values. And some groups feel their values are supreme.

However, this over-simplification belies the complexity of the violent reactions around the world. Why are we seeing churches, flags and embassies burned? Do Muslims genuinely feel they are under attack? Is the existence of non-religious secular societies a threat to any religious theocracy? The answer is probably yes to the latter two questions.

Belligerence is a characteristic that you can find in many places and on many levels. In nature, certain creatures are left alone because would be attackers know the consequences of a confrontation. A great example is the skunk – size advantage does not alleviate the fear of having several days of tomato juice baths. Belligerence is effective.

To see how collective destructive behaviour is a product of the human experience, we need look no further than a typical schoolyard bullying episode. Gradually increasing the scale, there are many (too many) cases of ‘groups’ feeling and acting out aggression towards other groups. Yugoslavia in the 1990’s, Sudan today, the American experience with Native, African, and immigrant Americans, L.A gang wars, and gun violence in any major city where one group of youth has to make a ‘statement’ against another.

Does Islam promote belligerence? As with Christianity, Islam was at least partly spread with the sword, but proselytizing through force (in the name of any religion) has likely seen its heyday. That said, if we isolate the passion behind mass collective feelings, we can deduce a pattern. Large-scale violence for a cause (religious, or ideological) is nothing new. Has the Muslim world collectively decided that violence and terror somehow is an effective deterrent against competing cultural ideologies? Is this a defensive strategy? I am certain that the majority does not engage in violence or terror, but it is likely that mainstream attitudes do hold sympathy, or at least understanding for it.

Can we get any insights from other ‘competing’ cultures? Unlike previous iterations of international communism during the Cold War, China doesn’t seem to see the existence of democratic countries as a threat. Is belligerence simply not a character of the Chinese culture? Or have the Chinese strategically adopted elements of capitalism in order to maximize their national benefit?

In general, communists worldwide have given up on the idea of international revolution. Let’s hope cooler head prevail in the current Muslim world. Should the tide of violence and intolerance toward secularism continue, we may be witnessing the onset of a new Cold War between ‘East and West’. If this is the case, let’s hope that the inevitable global rise in nuclear proliferation does not cross paths with religious-based fanatical terrorism.

Unlike the conflict with the Soviet Union, it is hard to imagine any stability coming from Mutually Assured Destruction. Deterrence is irrelevant when actors are genuinely convinced of their righteous place in the afterlife.

The fundamental boundary between church and state is still being defined in much of the world, particularly the Muslim world. Until such basic issues are resolved, we are speaking different languages, and we will continue with competing cultures.

—————————

This column was reprinted with permission from the author. NewsJunkie will be collaborating with myself and others on a new website called “With Good Reason”, scheduled to be launched March 2006. More details are forthcoming.
-Cynapse




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