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A Time to Value Our World of Worry
By Shibley Telhami
Los Angeles Times
January 2, 2002
I watched our two
children, ages 6 and 8, play with their presents by the
Christmas tree with infectious excitement. But, for the
first time since they were born, I could barely hide my
worries for the new year.
Certainly, I worried about the vulnerability that the
horror of Sept. 11 brought and about the sobering turn in
the economy. But I had deeper fears: Will my generation
fail our children by making the wrong decisions? Three
concerns in particular soured my holiday mood.
First, I worried about the quick reversal from a sense of
unprecedented vulnerability to a sense of unequaled
strength after the military success in Afghanistan. There
is something healing about this turnaround. But what
concerns me is the wild swings in mood that may be carried
to extremes. As a student of U.S. foreign policy, I am
well aware of pushing isolationism to the tragic extreme
in the case of Pearl Harbor and interventionism to its
painful end in Vietnam. These swings usually took a
generation. But in today's world and with the absence of
constraints, they can take place in a matter of months.
Already, one hears talk of the wonders of modern weapons
that can do so much without jeopardizing many American
lives, and there are voices calling for more ambitious
missions, carried out alone if necessary.
In particular, I worry about war with Iraq. Ultimately the
U.S. has the power to prevail, but weapons of mass
destruction almost certainly would be used by Iraq in any
war to topple its government. We know it has chemical,
biological and possibly radiological weapons. We know
Saddam Hussein is ruthless enough to use them. One thing
has prevented him from using them: his own survival. Go
after him and he will surely use them.
There is a big difference between madness and
ruthlessness, and Hussein is guilty of the second but not
the first. That's why it is perplexing to hear that we can
live with the damage of war now because it will be worse
if he acquires nuclear weapons. We should do all we can to
prevent him from acquiring such weapons, but if he does,
he can be deterred because the man and his regime want to
survive. Why is it that most of Iraq's neighbors who have
to bear the consequences of Hussein's ruthlessness oppose
such a war, while we propose it for their sakes?
Second, I feel grateful for our capacity to strike at the
merchants of death, the Osama bin Ladens of the world. But
I fear that in our apparent quick success we are ignoring
a painful reality: Terrorism has a "supply side" and a
"demand side," and unless we address both we will not
remove the threat.
Terrorists are often politically ambitious individuals,
but they succeed in large part because they can exploit
public despair, which allows them to find ready recruits,
to raise funds and to play to public opinion. If one
supplier is destroyed, others will try to exploit the
demand. The most horrifying aspect of the September
attacks is how easy it is to commit terror in today's
world if you have people willing to die.
The demand side is not so much driven by poverty or
inequality, although on the extreme ends these are
factors. Two words capture public demand better:
humiliation and hopelessness. If our military actions
succeed in destroying one supplier of terror but in the
process increase public humiliation and hopelessness,
other suppliers will surely try to exploit the demand.
The military side of the campaign on terror is necessary
but insufficient for winning the war. If we spend a
fraction of the energies we now use on the military
campaign to address the political sources of humiliation
and hopelessness, such as the Arab-Israeli conflict, we
would stand a far better chance of winning. Although I see
the terror suppliers on the defensive today, public
humiliation and helplessness in the Middle East are on the
increase.
Third, I am concerned about the sanctity of our nation's
principles. I raise my two children to be egalitarian and
proud Americans. I remind them that, at the end of the
day, they must be able to look themselves in the mirror. I
want them to be strong and to succeed but not through a
route that will change them in the process. I want our
country to be a model to which people aspire, to be
powerful enough to defeat its enemies but also strong
enough to be compassionate, to be driven by the values
that make it great but never to forget that the ends, no
matter how noble, cannot justify any means.
May my generation possess the wisdom to overcome the pain
of Sept. 11 and its new sense of power. Let us not take
shortcuts on civil liberties at home and on compassion
abroad, and may we succeed without losing what we stand
for.
Shibley Telhami is the
Anwar Sadat Professor of Peace and Development at the
University of Maryland and senior fellow at the Brookings
Institution.
Copyright © 2002,
Los Angeles Times
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