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Put Middle East Terror in Global
Perspective
By Shibley Telhami
Baltimore Sun
February 17, 2002
As the war on terrorism moves
beyond al-Qaida, it is clear that the American focus
remains almost entirely on the Middle East. Every group
mentioned by President Bush in his State of the Union
address was from the Arab and Muslim world. And the two
Middle Eastern members of the "axis of evil," Iran and
Iraq, were cited for being sponsors of terror, but not
for being behind al-Qaida's operations. Understandably,
the horror committed by al-Qaida, and the threat that it
still poses, have focused our attention on the Middle
East. But it is a mistake to imagine that the global
terrorism problem beyond al-Qaida is primarily Middle
Eastern.
There is too much terrorism in the Middle East and we
must seek to reduce it, but it must be put in global
perspective. Consider our own government's reports on
global terrorism. In the five years preceding the
tragedy of September 11th, the Middle East was not the
leading region in the number of terrorist incidents or
in the number of casualties from terrorism. Moreover,
while the terrorist trend in the Middle East moved
downward every single year, it moved upward in other
regions, including Africa, Asia and Latin America. By
the year 2000, the Middle East had the fewest incidents
of terrorism of any region around the globe, except for
North America. In terms of images of large-scale horror
against innocent civilians in the 1990s, it is helpful
to remember that some of the most tragic and ruthless
bloodshed took place in the heart of Europe, in the
former Yugoslavia. In Africa, the Rwanda genocide will
haunt our memory for ever.
As for terrorism against American targets, as defined by
the State Department, the Middle East consistently
accounted for less than 7% of all global attacks aimed
at American targets, reaching a low of less than 2% in
the year 2000.
The world at large understands that our war with al-Qaida
is just; this is a group that has inflicted such horror
on America, displayed such skill and global reach, and
declared a War on the United States, giving the United
States a right to respond that no one can deny. Beyond
al-Qaida, however, we must not give justification to
anger in the Middle East that the US targets only that
region even as we must work to reduce terror in that
region.
The data cited above also points to another likely
relationship: the decline of Middle East terror in the
late 1990s was highly correlated with a hopeful
Arab-Israeli peace process that many believed was likely
to end in agreements between Israel and the Arab
states. And since the collapse of these negotiations,
there has been a dramatic upsurge in terrorist incidents
within the region--al-Qaida aside.
That there is a relationship between hopelessness and
violence broadly, and between Middle Eastern terrorism
and the Arab-Israeli conflict more specifically, is
accepted by almost everyone around the world. In a
global survey, conducted last December by the Pew
Research Center, majorities in every corner of earth
believed that a resolution of that conflict would reduce
terrorism.
And yet, our strategy for now seems to be entirely
focused on the "supply side" of terrorism. One
certainly must confront the merchants of death, who
exploit hopelessness for their own ends, and who hijack
causes in which they may not even believe. But this
does not change the fact that there is a "demand side"
to terrorism which enables terror groups to recruit more
members, raise more funds, and appeal to public
opinion. As the Israelis have found in the West Bank
and Gaza, destroying one supplier of terror will not
work if in the process one increases the despair and
humiliation and thus the demand side, which could
quickly be exploited by other aspiring suppliers.
The danger in appearing to focus our broader war on
terrorism, beyond al-Qaida, primarily on the Middle East
and only on the "supply side" is three-fold: First, it
is unlikely to work unless we have a simultaneous
strategy to address the demand side by alleviating
hardship and projecting hope; second, in our appearance
to be targeting primarily Arabs and Muslims despite the
cited global trends, we reinforce their deep fears about
us; and, third, we would transform what are complex and
deep-rooted regional conflicts into ones involving the
United States, and turn more of the anger toward us.
In the face of last September's tragedy, President Bush
moved prudently to prevent the crisis from turning into
a clash of civilization with Arab and Muslim countries.
Now comes the hard part: avoiding the slippery slope
that can lead to such a clash despite the best
intentions.
Shibley Telhami is a professor of government and politics
at the University of Maryland and non-resident senior
fellow at the Brookings Institution. His newest book
(co-edited with Michael Barnett) is "Identity and Foreign
Policy in the Middle East."
Copyright © 2002, The
Baltimore Sun
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