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Luis Martin
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Ten Things to Know About the Middle East
Stephen Zunes, AlterNet
October 1, 2001

1. Who are the Arabs?


Arab peoples range from the Atlantic coast in northwest Africa to the
Arabian peninsula and north to Syria. They are united by a common
language and culture. Though the vast majority are Muslim, there are also
sizable Christian Arab minorities in Egypt, Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and
Palestine. Originally the inhabitants of the Arabian peninsula, the Arabs
spread their language and culture to the north and west with the
expansion of Islam in the 7th century. There are also Arab minorities in
the Sahel and parts of east Africa, as well as in Iran and Israel. The
Arabs were responsible for great advances in mathematics, astronomy and
other scientific disciplines while Europe was still mired in the Dark
Ages. 


While there is great diversity in skin pigmentation, spoken dialect and
certain customs, there is a common identity which unites Arab people that
has sometimes been reflected in pan-Arab nationalist movements. Despite
substantial political and other differences, many Arabs share a sense
that they are one nation, which has been artificially divided through the
machinations of Western imperialism and which came to dominate the region
with the decline of the Ottoman Empire in the 19th and early 20th
century. There is also a growing Arab diaspora in Europe, North America,
Latin America, West Africa and Australia.


2. Who are the Muslims?


The Islamic faith originated in the Arabian peninsula, based on what are
believed to be divine revelations by God to the prophet Mohammed. Muslims
worship the same God as do Jews and Christians, and share many of the
same prophets and ethical traditions, including respect for innocent
life. Approximately 90 percent of Muslims are of the orthodox or Sunni
tradition; most of the remainder are of the Shi'ite tradition, which
dominate Iran but also has substantial numbers in Iraq, Bahrain, Yemen
and Lebanon. Sunni Islam is nonhierarchical in structure. There is not a
tradition of separation between the faith and state institutions as there
is in the West, though there is an enormous diversity in various Islamic
legal traditions and the degree with which the governments of
predominately Muslim countries rely on religious bases for their rule.


Political movements based on Islam have ranged from left to right, from
nonviolent to violent, from tolerant to chauvinistic. Generally, the more
moderate Islamic movements have developed in countries where there is a
degree of political pluralism in which they could operate openly. There
is a strong tradition of social justice in Islam, which has often led to
conflicts with regimes that are seen to be unjust or unethical. The more
radical movements have tended to arise in countries that have suffered
great social dislocation due to war or inappropriate economic policies
and/or are under autocratic rule.


Most of the world's Muslims are not Arabs. The world's largest Muslim
country, for example, is Indonesia. Other important non-Arab Muslim
countries include Malaysia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran,
Turkey and the five former Soviet republics of Central Asia, as well as
Nigeria and several other black African states. Islam is one of the
fastest growing religions in the world and scores of countries have
substantial Muslim minorities. There are approximately five million
Muslims in the United States.


3. Why is there so much violence and political instability in the Middle
East? 


For most of the past 500 years, the Middle East actually saw less
violence and warfare and more political stability than Europe or most
other regions of the world. It has only been in the last century that the
region has seen such widespread conflict. The roots of the conflict are
similar to those elsewhere in the Third World, and have to do with the
legacy of colonialism, such as artificial political boundaries,
autocratic regimes, militarization, economic inequality and economies
based on the export of raw materials for finished goods. Indeed, the
Middle East has more autocratic regimes, militarization, economic
inequality and the greatest ratio of exports to domestic consumption than
any region in the world.


At the crossroads of three continents and sitting on much of the world's
oil reserves, the region has been subjected to repeated interventions and
conquests by outside powers, resulting in a high level of xenophobia and
suspicion regarding the intentions of Western powers going back as far as
the Crusades. There is nothing in Arab or Islamic culture that promotes
violence or discord; indeed, there is a strong cultural preference for
stability, order and respect for authority. However, adherence to
authority is based on a kind of social contract that assumes a level of
justice which -- if broken by the ruler -- gives the people a right to
challenge it. The word jihad, often translated as "holy war," actually
means "holy struggle," which can sometimes mean an armed struggle
(qital), but also can mean nonviolent action and political work within
the established system.


Terrorism is not primarily a Middle Eastern phenomenon. In terms of
civilian lives lost, Africa has experienced far more terrorism in recent
decades than has the Middle East. Similarly, far more suicide bombings in
recent years have come from Hindu Tamils in Sri Lanka than from Muslim
Arabs in the Middle East. There is also a little-known but impressive
tradition of nonviolent resistance and participatory democracy in some
Middle Eastern countries.


4. Why has the Middle East been the focus of U.S. concern about
international terrorism?


There has been a long history of terrorism -- generally defined as
violence by irregular forces against civilian targets -- in the Middle
East. During Israel's independence struggle in the 1940s, Israeli
terrorists killed hundreds of Palestinian and British civilians; two of
the most notorious terrorist leaders of that period -- Menachem Begin and
Yitzhak Shamir -- later became Israeli prime ministers whose governments
received strong financial, diplomatic and military support from the
United States. Algeria's independence struggle from France in the 1950s
included widespread terrorist attacks against French colonists.
Palestine's ongoing struggle for independence has also included
widespread terrorism against Israeli civilians, during the 1970s through
some of the armed militias of the Palestine Liberation Organization and,
more recently, through radical underground Islamic groups. Terrorism has
also played a role in Algeria's current civil strife, in Lebanon's civil
war and foreign occupations during the 1980s, and for many years in the
Kurdish struggle for independence. Some Middle Eastern governments --
notably Libya, Syria, Sudan, Iraq and Iran -- have in the past had close
links with terrorist organizations. In more recent years, the Al-Qaeda
movement -- a decentralized network of terrorist cells supported by Saudi
exile Osama bin Laden -- has become the major terrorist threat, and is
widely believed to be responsible for the September 11 terrorist attacks
on the United States. Bin Laden himself has been given sanctuary in
Afghanistan, though his personal fortune and widespread network of
supporters has allowed him to be independent on direct financial or
logistical support from any government.


The vast majority of the people in the Middle East deplore terrorism, yet
point out that violence against civilians by governments has generally
surpassed that of terrorists. For example, the Israelis have killed far
more Arab civilians over the decades through using U.S.-supplied
equipment and ordinance than have Arab terrorists killed Israeli
civilians. Similarly, the U.S.-supplied Turkish armed forces have killed
far more Kurdish civilians than have such radical Kurdish groups like the
PKK (the Kurdish acronym for the Kurdistan Workers' Party). Also, in the
eyes of many Middle Easterners, U.S. support for terrorist groups like
the Nicaraguan contras and various right-wing Cuban exile organizations
in recent decades, as well as U.S. air strikes and the U.S.-led sanctions
against Iraq in more recent years, have made the U.S. an unlikely
crusader in the war against terrorism


4. What kind of political systems exist in the Middle East?


There are a variety of political systems in the Middle East. Saudi
Arabia, Oman, Bahrain, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Morocco and
Jordan are all conservative monarchies (in approximate order of absolute
rule). Iraq, Syria and Libya are left-leaning dictatorships, with Iraq
being one of the most totalitarian societies in the world. Egypt and
Tunisia are conservative autocratic republics. Iran is an Islamic
republic with an uneven trend in recent years towards greater political
openness. Sudan and Algeria are under military rulers facing major
insurrections. 


Lebanon, Turkey and Yemen are republics with repressive aspects but some
degree of political pluralism. The only Middle Eastern country with a
strong tradition of parliamentary democracy is Israel, though the
benefits of this political freedom is largely restricted to its Jewish
citizens (the Palestinian Arab minority is generally treated as
second-class citizens and Palestinians in the occupied territories are
subjected to military rule and serious human rights abuses). The largely
autocratic Palestinian Authority has been granted limited autonomy in a
series of non-contiguous enclaves in the West Bank and Gaza Strip
surrounded by Israeli occupation forces.


5. What sort of political alliances exist in the Middle East?


All Arab states, including the Palestinian Authority, belong to the
League of Arab States, which acts as a regional body similar to the
Organization of African Union or the Organization of American States,
which work together on issues of common concern. However, there are
enormous political divisions within Arab countries and other Middle
Eastern states. Turkey is a member of the NATO alliance, closely aligned
with the West and hopes to eventually become part of the European union.
The six conservative monarchies of the Persian Gulf region have formed
the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), from where they pursue joint
strategic and economic interests and promote close ties with the West,
particularly Great Britain (which dominated the smaller sheikdoms in the
late 19th and early 20th century) and, more recently, the United States.


Often a country's alliances are not a reflection of its internal
politics. For example, Saudi Arabia is often referred in the U.S. media
as a "moderate" Arab state, though it is the most oppressive
fundamentalist theocracy in the world today outside of Taliban-ruled
Afghanistan; "moderate," in this case, simply means that it has close
strategic and economic relations with the United States.


Jordan and Egypt are pro-Western, but have been willing to challenge U.S.
policy on occasion. Israel identifies most strongly with the West: most
of its leaders are European-born or have been of European heritage, and
it has diplomatic relations with only a handful of Middle Eastern
countries. Iran alienated most of its neighbors with its threat to expand
its brand of revolutionary Islam to Arab world, though its increasingly
moderate orientation in recent years has led to some cautious
rapprochement. Syria, a former Soviet ally, has been cautiously reaching
out to more conservative Arab governments and with the West; it currently
exerts enormous political influence over Lebanon. Iraq under Saddam
Hussein, Libya under Muammar Qaddafi and Sudan under their military junta
remain isolated from most of other Middle Eastern countries due to a
series of provocative policies, though many of these same countries
oppose the punitive sanctions and air strikes the United States has
inflicted against these countries in recent years.


6. What is the impact of oil in the Middle East?


The major oil producers of the Middle East include Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,
United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Iraq, Iran, Libya and Algeria.
Egypt, Syria, Oman and Yemen have smaller reserves. Most of the major oil
producers of the Middle East are part of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries, or OPEC. (Non-Middle Eastern OPEC members include
Indonesia, Venezuela, Nigeria and other countries.) Much of the world's
oil wealth exists along the Persian Gulf, with particularly large
reserves in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE. About one-quarter of U.S.
oil imports come from the Persian Gulf region; the Gulf supplies European
states and Japan with an even higher percentage of those countries'
energy needs. The imposition of higher fuel efficiency standards and
other conservation measures, along with the increased use of renewable
energy resources for which technologies are already available, could
eliminate U.S. dependence on Middle Eastern oil in a relatively short
period of time. 


The Arab members of OPEC instigated a boycott against the United States
in the fall of 1973 in protest of U.S. support for Israel during the
October Arab-Israeli war, creating the first in a series of energy
shortages. The cartel has had periods of high and low costs for oil,
resulting in great economic instability. Most governments have
historically used their oil wealth to promote social welfare,
particularly countries like Algeria, Libya and Iraq, which professed to a
more socialist orientation. Yet all countries have squandered their
wealth for arms purchases and prestige projects. In general, the influx
of petrodollars has created enormous economic inequality both within
oil-producing states and between oil-rich and oil-poor states as well as
widespread corruption and questionable economic priorities.


7. What is the Israeli-Palestinian conflict about?


The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is essentially over land, with two
peoples claiming historic rights to the geographic Palestine, a small
country in the eastern Mediterranean about the size of New Jersey. The
creation of modern Israel in 1948 was a fulfillment of the goal of the
Jewish nationalist movement, known as Zionism, as large numbers of Jews
migrated to their faith's ancestral homeland from Europe, North Africa
and elsewhere throughout the 20th century. They came into conflict with
the indigenous Palestinian Arab population, which also was struggling for
independence. The 1947 partition plan, which divided the country
approximately in half, resorted in a war which ended in Israel seizing
control of 78 percent of the territory within a year. Most of the
Palestinian population became refugees, in some cases through fleeing the
fighting and in other cases through being forcibly expelled in a policy
of ethnic cleansing. The remaining Palestinian areas -- the West Bank and
Gaza Strip -- came under control of the neighboring Arab states of Jordan
and Egypt, though these areas were also seized by Israel in the 1967 war.



Israel has been colonizing parts of these occupied territories with
Jewish settlers in violation of the Geneva Conventions and UN Security
Council resolutions. Historically, both sides have failed to recognize
the legitimacy of the others' nationalist aspirations, though the
Palestinian leadership finally formally recognized Israel in 1993. The
peace process since then has been over the fate of the West Bank
(including Arab East Jerusalem) and the Gaza Strip, which is the
remaining 22 percent of the Palestine, occupied by Israel since 1967. The
United States plays the dual role of chief mediator of the conflict as
well as the chief financial, military and diplomatic supporter of Israel.
The Palestinians want their own independent state in these territories
and to allow Palestinian refugees the right to return. Israel, backed by
the United States, insists the Palestinians give up large swaths of the
West Bank -- including most of Arab East Jerusalem -- to Israel and to
accept the resettlement of most refugees into other Arab countries. Since
September 2000, there has been widespread rioting by Palestinians against
the ongoing Israeli occupation as well as terrorist bombings within
Israel by extremist Islamic groups. Israeli occupation forces, meanwhile,
have engaged in widespread killings and other human rights abuses in the
occupied territories.


Most Arabs feel a strong sense of solidarity with the Palestinian
struggle, though their governments have tended to manipulate their plight
for their own political gain. Neighboring Arab states have fought several
wars with Israel, though Egypt and Jordan now have peace agreements and
full diplomatic relations with the Jewish state. In addition to much of
the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israel still occupies a part of
southwestern Syria known as the Golan Heights. The threats and hostility
by Arab states towards Israel's very existence has waned over the years.
Full peace and diplomatic recognition would likely come following a full
Israeli withdrawal from its occupied territories.


8. What has been the legacy of the Gulf War?


Virtually every Middle Eastern state opposed the Iraqi invasion and
occupation of Kuwait in 1990, though they were badly divided on the
appropriateness of the U.S.-led Gulf War that followed. Even among
countries that supported the armed liberation of Kuwait, there was
widespread opposition to the deliberate destruction by the United States
of much of Iraq's civilian infrastructure during the war. Even more
controversial has been the enormous humanitarian consequences of the
U.S.-led international sanctions against Iraq in place since the war,
which have resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis,
mostly children, from malnutrition and preventable diseases. The periodic
U.S. air strikes against Iraq also have been controversial, as has the
ongoing U.S. military presence in Saudi Arabia, other Gulf states and in
the Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea. Since Iraq's offensive military
capability was largely destroyed during the Gulf War and during the
subsequent inspections regime, many observers believe that U.S. fears
about Iraq's current military potential are exaggerated, particularly in
light of the quiet U.S. support for Iraq during the 1980s when its
military was at its peak. In many respects, the Gulf War led the oil-rich
GCC states into closer identification with the United States and the West
and less with their fellow Arabs, though there is still some distrust
about U.S. motivations and policies in the Middle East.


9. How has the political situation in Afghanistan evolved and how is it
connected to the Middle East?


Afghanistan, an impoverished landlocked mountainous country, has
traditionally been identified more with Central and South Asia than with
the Middle East. A 1978 coup by communist military officers resulted in a
series of radical social reforms, which were imposed in an autocratic
matter and which resulted in a popular rebellion by a number of armed
Islamic movements. The Soviet Union installed a more compliant communist
regime at the end of 1979, sending in tens of thousands of troops and
instigating a major bombing campaign, resulting in large-scale civilian
casualties and refugee flows. The war lasted for much of the next decade.
The United States sent arms to the Islamic resistance, known as the
mujahadin, largely through neighboring Pakistan, then under the rule of
an ultra-conservative Islamic military dictatorship. Most of the U.S. aid
went to the most radical of the eight different mujahadin factions on the
belief that they would be least likely to reach a negotiated settlement
with the Soviet-backed government and would therefore drag the Soviet
forces down. Volunteers from throughout the Islamic world, including the
young Saudi businessman Osama bin Laden, joined the struggle. The CIA
trained many of these recruits, including Bin Laden and many of his
followers. 


When the Soviets and Afghanistan's communist government were defeated in
1992, a vicious and bloody civil war broke out between the various
mujahadin factions, war lords and ethnic militias. Out of this chaos
emerged the Taliban movement, led by young seminary students from the
refugee camps in Pakistan, educated in ultra-conservative Saudi-funded
schools, which took over 85 percent of the country by 1996 and imposed
long-awaited order and stability, but established a brutal totalitarian
theocracy based on a virulently reactionary and misogynist interpretation
of Islam. The Northern Alliance, consisting of the remnants of various
factions from the civil war in the 1990s, control a small part of the
northeast corner of the country.


10. How have most Middle Eastern governments reacted to the September 11
terrorist attacks and their aftermath?

Virtually every government and the vast majority of their populations
reacted with the same horror and revulsion as did people in the United
States, Europe and elsewhere. Despite scenes shown repeatedly on U.S.
television of some Palestinians celebrating the attacks, the vast
majority of Palestinians also shared in the world's condemnation. If the
United States, in conjunction with local governments, limits its military
response to commando-style operations against suspected terrorist cells,
the U.S. should receive the cooperation and support of most Middle
Eastern countries. If the response is more widespread, based more on
retaliation than self-defense, and ends up killing large numbers of
Muslim civilians, it could create a major anti-American reaction which
would increase support for the terrorists and lessen the likelihood for
the needed cooperation to break up the Al-Qaeda network, which operates
in several Middle Eastern countries.


While few Middle Easterners support bin Laden's methods, the principal
concerns expressed in his manifestoes -- the U.S.'s wrongful support for
Israel and for Arab dictatorships, the disruptive presence of U.S. troops
in Saudi Arabia and the humanitarian impact of the sanctions on Iraq --
are widely supported. Ultimately, a greater understanding of the Middle
East and the concerns of its governments and peoples are necessary before
the United States can feel secure from an angry backlash from the region.



Stephen Zunes is an associate professor of politics and chair of the
Peace & Justice Studies Program at the University of San Francisco. He
serves as a senior policy analyst and Middle East editor for the Foreign
Policy in Focus Project.
-------------------------------------------

Courtesy of the
Carlos Balin~o Institute
Cubans Abroad in Support
of the Homeland & Revolution
 



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