Hi.  Still restricted, but hopeful folks at earthlink are back at work and
will soon ok bulk emailing.
Meanwhile, here's a realistic, thoughtful analysis from long-time
correspondent and resident in the
middle East and too rare a speaker in the U.S., Robert Fisk. 
 
 From: Abie Dawjee [mailto:abie=rain.org...@mail70.us4.mcsv.net] 
The RAIN Newsletter (23-12-12)
 
 
<blocked::http://rain.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=8c08f97b142bb05db019
d489b&id=ea74732355&e=b0842707b4>
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/a-word-of-advice-about-the-middl
e-east--weve-reached-the-tipping-point-with-cliches-8430495.html
 
Robert Fisk: A word of advice about the Middle East - we've reached the
'tipping point' with cliches 
You've got to be careful when Syria's rebels are perpetually "closing in"
 
The Independent Sunday 23 December 2012
 
Remember the days when we thought Egypt's path to democracy was a done deal?
Western-trained Mohamed Morsi had invited the people to come and meet him in
Hosni Mubarak's former presidential palace, the old military toffs in the
"Supreme Council of the Armed Forces" had been pensioned off and the
International Monetary Fund was waiting to bestow some of those cruel
deprivations upon Egypt that would ready it for our financial benevolence.
How happy the Middle East optimists were by mid-2012.
 
Next door, Libya produced a victory for nice, pro-Western secularist Mahmoud
Jibril, promising freedom, stability, a new home for the West in one of the
Arab world's most fecund oil producers. It was a place where even US
diplomats could wander around virtually unprotected.
 
Tunisia may have an Islamist party running its government, but it was a
"moderate" administration - in other words, we thought it would do what we
wanted - while the Saudis and the Bahraini autocracy, with the purse-lipped
support of Messrs Obama and Cameron, quietly suppressed what was left of the
Shia uprising which threatened to remind us all that democracy was not
really welcome among the wealthiest Arab states. Democracy was for the poor.
Closing in
 
So, too, in Syria. By the spring of last year, the Western commentariat was
writing off Bashar al-Assad. He did not deserve "to live on this earth",
according to French Foreign Secretary Laurent Fabius. He must "step down",
"step aside". His regime had only weeks to go, perhaps only days. This was
the "tipping point".
Then by summer, when the "tipping point" had come and gone, we were told
that Assad was about to use gas "against his own people". Or that his
supplies of chemical weapons might "fall into the wrong hands" (the "right
hands" still presumably being Assad's).
 
Syria's rebels were always "closing in" - on Homs, then Damascus, then
Aleppo, then Damascus again. The West supported the rebels. Money and guns
aplenty came from Qatar and Saudi Arabia, moral support from Obama, Clinton,
the pathetic Hague, Hollande, the whole factory of goodness - until,
inevitably, it turned out that the rebels contained rather a lot of
Salafists, executioners, sectarian killers and, in one case, a teenage
head-chopper who behaved rather like the ruthless regime they were fighting.
The factory had to put some of its machinery into reverse. The US still
supported the good, secular rebels but now regarded the horrible Salafist
rebels as a "terrorist organisation".
 
And poor old Lebanon, needless to say, was about to explode into civil war
for the second time in less than 40 years, this time because Syria's
violence was "spilling over" into its neighbour's territory.
 
Wasn't Lebanon's sectarian make up the same as Syria's? Wasn't the Lebanese
Hezbollah an ally of Assad? Weren't the Sunnis of Lebanon supporting the
Syrian rebels? All true. But the Lebanese did not oblige the overpaid
"think-tank" bores and journos and "experts" because, assaulted as they were
by Syria's intelligence killers, they were too intelligent and well-educated
to return to the midden of 1975-1990. Iran, of course, was about to be
bombed because it was - or was not yet - manufacturing nuclear weapons, or
might - or could - manufacture nuclear weapons in a month, or a year, or a
decade from now.
 
Terror
 
Obama might not bomb Iran, he didn't really want to, but - wait for it -
"all options" were "on the table". And so, of course, with Israel, which
wanted to bomb Iran because it might, or could, manufacture nuclear weapons
or was in the process of doing so, or might have them in six months, or a
year, or several years' time but - again - "all options" were "on the
table". Netanyahu's "window of opportunity" would last, we were told, until
the US presidential election. And so this nonsense continued until... well,
until the US presidential election, by which time we were warned again that
Iran was producing, or might, or could produce a nuclear weapon.
 
Israel also threatened Lebanon because the Hezbollah had thousands of
missiles and threatened Gaza because the Palestinians had thousands of
missiles. And many were the Israeli journalists - along with their American
clones - who prepared their readers for these two wars against "terror". In
the event, Lebanon remained unbombed while a highly unsatisfactory conflict
(from Israel's point of view) broke out between Israel and Hamas which ended
when Morsi - the West's avuncular ally - persuaded the Palestinians to abide
by a ceasefire, which Netanyahu then mournfully accepted. He thus boosted
the prestige of Khaled Meshal who subsequently announced that Palestine must
exist all the way from the River Jordan to the sea. In other words, no more
Israel. Just as the soon-to-be resigned Foreign Minister of Israel, Avigdor
Lieberman, and his chums had been saying for a very long time that Israel
must exist between the sea and the River Jordan. In other words, no more
Palestine. It was left to the courageous - and very ageing - Israeli Uri
Avnery to point out that if both had their wish, only an open grave would
exist between the river and the sea.
 
A defunct language
 
So at year's end, friendly, cuddly Mohamed Morsi was playing Mubarak and
hoovering up any old dictatorial powers available to him while a very dodgy
constitution was ram-rodded on to the secular population of the land, whose
Muslim and Christian people Morsi had all along promised to serve. In Libya,
of course, the US turned out to have more enemies than it thought; the
ambassador was murdered by - and the jury must remain out on this despite
the obfuscations of Clinton - an al-Qa'ida-type militia.
 
Indeed, al-Qa'ida itself - politically bankrupt by the time of Osama bin
Laden's murder by a US military assassination squad in 2011 - was virtually
written off by the White House in advance of the Obama re-election. But the
ghostly desperadoes of Wahabism acquired that habit so beloved of movie
monsters; they began to recreate themselves in different form in different
lands. Mali replaced Afghanistan, just as Libya replaced Yemen and just as
Syria replaced Iraq.
 
A word of advice, therefore, for Middle East potentates, dictators, Western
poseurs, television presenters and journos. Do not use the following words
or expressions in 2013: moderate, democracy, step down, step aside, tipping
point, falling into the wrong hands, closing in, spilling over, options on
the table or - terror, terror, terror, terror. Too much to hope for? You
bet. We'll even get another load of cliches from the goodness factory to
replace those that have already served their purpose.
____________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________
  _____  

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