Foreign Affairs November / December 2001
The Sentry's Solitude
By Fouad Ajami
Fouad Ajami is Majid Khadduri Professor of Middle Eastern Studies
at the School for Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins
University. His most recent book is The Dream Palace of the Arabs.
PAX AMERICANA IN THE ARAB WORLD
From one end of the Arab world to the other, the drumbeats of
anti-Americanism had been steady. But the drummers could hardly have
known what was to come. The magnitude of the horror that befell the
United States on Tuesday, September 11, 2001, appeared for a moment
to embarrass and silence the drummers. The American imperium in the
Arab-Muslim world hatched a monster. In a cruel irony, a new
administration known for its relative lack of interest in that region was to
be pulled into a world that has both beckoned America and bloodied it.
History never repeats itself, but when Secretary of State Colin Powell
came forth to assure the nation that an international coalition against
terrorism was in the offing, Americans recalled when Powell had risen to
fame. "First, we're going to cut it off, then we're going to kill it," he had
said of the Iraqi army in 1991. There had been another coalition then, and
Pax Americana had set off to the Arab world on a triumphant campaign.
But those Islamic domains have since worked their way and their will on
the American victory of a decade ago. The political earth has shifted in that
world. The decade was about the "blowback" of the war. Primacy begot
its nemesis.
America's Arab interlocutors have said that the region's political stability
would have held had the United States imposed a settlement of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict -- and that the rancid anti-Americanism now
evident in the Arab world has been called up by the fury of the second
intifada that erupted in September 2000. But these claims misread the
political world. Long before the second intifada, when Yasir Arafat was
still making his way from political exile to the embrace of Pax Americana,
there was a deadly trail of anti-American terror. Its perpetrators paid no
heed to the Palestinian question. What they thought of Arafat and the
metamorphosis that made him a pillar of President Clinton's Middle East
policy is easy to construe.
The terror was steady, and its geography and targets bespoke
resourcefulness and audacity. The first attack, the 1993 truck bombing of
the World Trade Center, was inspired by the Egyptian cleric Sheikh Omar
Abdel Rahman. For the United States, this fiery preacher was a peculiar
guest: he had come to bilad al-Kufr (the lands of unbelief) to continue his
war against the secular regime of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. The
sheikh had already been implicated in the 1981 murder of Mubarak's
predecessor, Anwar al-Sadat. The young assassins had sought religious
guidance from him -- a writ for tyrannicide. He had provided it but
retained a measure of ambiguity, and Egypt let him leave the country. He
had no knowledge of English and did not need it; there were disciples and
interpreters aplenty around him. An American imperium had incorporated
Egypt into its order of things, which gave the sheikh a connection to the
distant power.
The preacher could not overturn the entrenched regime in his land. But
there was steady traffic between the United States and Egypt, and the
armed Islamist insurgency that bedeviled Cairo inspired him. He would be
an Ayatollah Khomeini for his followers, destined to return from the West
to establish an Islamic state. In the preacher's mind, the world was simple.
The dictatorial regime at home would collapse once he snapped its lifeline
to America. American culture was of little interest to him. Rather, the
United States was a place from which he could hound his country's rulers.
Over time, Abdel Rahman's quest was denied. Egypt rode out the Islamist
insurgency after a terrible drawn-out fight that pushed the country to the
brink. The sheikh ended up in an American prison. But he had lit the fuse.
The 1993 attack on the World Trade Center that he launched was a mere
dress rehearsal for the calamity of September 11, 2001. Abdel Rahman
had shown the way -- and the future.
There were new Muslim communities in America and Europe; there was
also money and freedom to move about. The geography of political Islam
had been redrawn. When Ayatollah Khomeini took on American power,
there had been talk of a pan-Islamic brigade. But the Iranian
revolutionaries were ultimately concerned with their own nation-state. And
they were lambs compared with the holy warriors to come. Today's
warriors have been cut loose from the traditional world. Some of the
leaders -- the Afghan Arabs -- had become restless after the Afghan war.
They were insurrectionists caught in no man's land, on the run from their
homelands but never at home in the West. In Tunisia, Egypt, and Algeria,
tenacious Islamist movements were put down. In Saudi Arabia, a milder
Islamist challenge was contained. The counterinsurgencies had been
effective, so the extremists turned up in the West. There, liberal norms
gave them shelter, and these men would rise to fight another day.
The extremists acquired modern means: frequent flyer miles, aviation and
computer skills, and ease in Western cities. They hated the United States,
Germany, and France but were nonetheless drawn to them. They exalted
tradition and faith, but their traditions could no longer give them a world.
Islam's explosive demography had spilled into the West. The militant
Islamists were on the move. The security services in their home countries
were unsentimental, showing no tolerance for heroics. Men like Abdel
Rahman and Osama bin Ladin offered this breed of unsettled men a
theology of holy terror and the means to live the plotter's life. Bin Ladin
was possessed of wealth and high birth, the heir of a merchant dynasty.
This gave him an aura: a Che Guevara of the Islamic world, bucking the
mighty and getting away with it. A seam ran between America and the
Islamic world. The new men found their niche, their targets, and their
sympathizers across that seam. They were sure of America's culpability for
the growing misery in their lands. They were sure that the regimes in Saudi
Arabia and Egypt would fall if only they could force the United States to
cast its allies adrift.
NOT IN MY BACKYARD
Terror shadowed the American presence in the Middle East throughout
the 1990s: two bombings in Saudi Arabia, one in Riyadh in November of
1995, and the other on the Khobar Towers near Dhahran in June of 1996;
bombings of the U.S. embassies in Tanzania and Kenya in 1998; the
daring attack on the U.S.S. Cole in Yemen in October 2000. The U.S.
presence in the Persian Gulf was under assault.
In this trail of terror, symbol and opportunity were rolled together -- the
physical damage alongside a political and cultural message. These attacks
were meant for a watchful crowd in a media age. Dhahran had been a
creature of the U.S. presence in Saudi Arabia ever since American oil
prospectors turned up in the 1930s and built that city in the American
image. But the world had changed. It was in Dhahran, in the 1990s, that
the crews monitoring the no-fly zone over Iraq were stationed. The attack
against Dhahran was an obvious blow against the alliance between the
United States and Saudi Arabia. The realm would not disintegrate; Beirut
had not come to Arabia. But the assailants -- suspected to be an Iranian
operation that enlisted the participation of Saudi Shi`a -- had delivered the
blow and the message. The foreigner's presence in Arabia was contested.
A radical Islamist opposition had emerged, putting forth a fierce,
redemptive Islam at odds with the state's conservative religion.
The ulama (clergy) had done well under the Saud dynasty. They were the
dynasty's partners in upholding an order where obedience to the rulers
was given religious sanction. No ambitious modernist utopia had been
unleashed on them as it had in Gamal Abdel al-Nasser's Egypt and Iran
under the Pahlavis. Still, the state could not appease the new breed of
activists who had stepped forth after the Gulf War to hound the rulers over
internal governance and their ties to American power. In place of their
rulers' conservative edifice, these new salvationists proposed a radical
order free from foreign entanglements. These activists were careful to
refrain from calling for the outright destruction of the House of Saud. But
sedition was in the air in the mid-1990s, and the elements of the new
utopia were easy to discern. The Shi`a minority in the eastern province
would be decimated and the Saudi liberals molded on the campuses of
California and Texas would be swept aside in a zealous, frenzied
campaign. Traffic with the infidels would be brought to an end, and those
dreaded satellite dishes bringing the West's cultural "pollution" would be
taken down. But for this to pass, the roots of the American presence in
Arabia would have to be extirpated -- and the Americans driven from the
country.
The new unrest, avowedly religious, stemmed from the austerity that came
to Saudi Arabia after Desert Storm. If the rulers could not subsidize as
generously as they had in the past, the foreigner and his schemes and
overcharges must be to blame. The dissidents were not cultists but men of
their society, half-learned in Western sources and trends, picking foreign
sources to illustrate the subjugation that America held in store for Arabia.
Pamphleteering had come into the realm, and rebellion proved contagious.
A dissident steps out of the shadows, then respectable critics, then others
come forth. Xenophobic men were now agitating against the "crusaders"
who had come to stay. "This has been a bigger calamity than I had
expected, bigger than any threat the Arabian Peninsula had faced since
God Almighty created it," wrote the religious scholar Safar al-Hawali, a
master practitioner of the paranoid style in politics. The Americans, he
warned, had come to dominate Arabia and unleash on it the West's
dreaded morals.
Saudi Arabia had been free of the anticolonial complex seen in states such
as Algeria, Egypt, Syria, and Iraq. But the simplicity of that
Arabian-American encounter now belonged to the past. A fatwa (Islamic
decree) of the senior religious jurist in the realm, Sheikh Abdelaziz ibn Baz,
gave away the hazards of the U.S. presence in Arabia. Ibn Baz declared
the Khobar bombing a "transgression against the teachings of Islam." The
damage to lives and property befell many people, "Muslims and others
alike," he wrote. These "non-Muslims" had been granted a pledge of
safety. The sheikh found enough scripture and tradition to see a cruel end
for those who pulled off the "criminal act." There was a saying attributed to
the Prophet Muhammad: "He who killed an ally will never know the smell
of paradise." And there was God's word in the Koran: "Those that make
war against Allah and his apostle and spread disorder in the land shall be
put to death or crucified or have their hands and feet cut off on alternate
sides; or be banished from the country. They shall be held to shame in this
world and sternly punished in the next." The sheikh permitted himself a
drapery of decency. There was no need to specify the identity of the
victims or acknowledge that the Americans were in the land. There had
remained in the jurist some scruples and restraints of the faith.
In ibn Baz's world, faith was about order and a dread of anarchy. But in
the shadows, a different version of the faith was being sharpened as a
weapon of war. Two years later, bin Ladin issued an incendiary fatwa of
his own -- a call for murder and holy warfare that was interpreted in these
pages by the historian Bernard Lewis. Never mind that by the faith's
strictures and practice, bin Ladin had no standing to issue religious
decrees. He had grabbed the faith and called on Muslims to kill
"Americans and their allies ... in any country in which it is possible to do
so." A sacred realm apart, Arabia had been overrun by Americans, bin
Ladin said. "For more than seven years the United States has been
occupying the lands of Islam in the holiest of its territories, Arabia,
plundering its riches, overwhelming its rulers, humiliating its people,
threatening its neighbors, and using its peninsula as a spearhead to fight the
neighboring Islamic peoples." Xenophobia of a murderous kind had been
dressed up in religious garb.
INTO THE SHADOWS
The attack on the Cole on October 12, 2000, was a case apart. Two men
in a skiff crippled the Cole as it docked in Aden to refuel. Witnesses say
that the assailants, who perished with their victims, were standing erect at
the time of the blast, as if in some kind of salute. The United States
controlled the sea lanes of that world, but the nemesis that stalked it on
those shores lay beyond America's reach. "The attack on the U.S.S. Cole
... demonstrated a seam in the fabric of efforts to protect our forces,
namely transit forces," a military commission said. But the official language
could not describe or name the furies at play.
The attack on the Cole illuminated the U.S. security dilemma in the Persian
Gulf. For the U.S. Navy, Yemen had not been a particularly easy or
friendly setting. It had taken a ride with Saddam Hussein during the Gulf
War. In 1994, a brutal war had been fought in Yemen between north and
south, along lines of ideology and tribalism. The troubles of Yemen were
bottomless. The government was barely in control of its territory and
coastline. Aden was a place of drifters and smugglers. Moreover, the
suspected paymaster of anti-American terror, bin Ladin, had ancestral
roots in Hadramawt, the southeastern part of Yemen, and he had many
sympathizers there.
It would have been prudent to look at Yemen and Aden with a jaundiced
eye. But by early 1999, American ships had begun calling there. U.S.
officials had no brilliant options south of the Suez Canal, they would later
concede. The ports of call in Sudan, Somalia, Djibouti, and Eritrea were
places where the "threat conditions" were high, perhaps worse than in
Yemen. The United States had a privileged position in Saudi Arabia, but
there had been trouble there as well for U.S. forces: the terrorist attacks in
1995 and 1996, which took 24 American lives. American commanders
and planners knew the hazards of Yemen, but the U.S. Navy had taken a
chance on the country. Terrorists moved through Yemen at will, but
American military planners could not find ideal refueling conditions in a
region of great volatility. This was the imperial predicament put in stark,
cruel terms.
John Burns of The New York Times sent a dispatch of unusual clarity
from Aden about the Cole and the response on the ground to the terrible
deed. In Yemen, the reporter saw "a halting, half-expressed sense of
astonishment, sometimes of satisfaction and even pleasure, that a mighty
power, the United States, should have its Navy humbled by two Arab men
in a motorized skiff." Such was imperial presence, the Pax Americana in
Arab and Muslim lands.
There were men in the shadows pulling off spectacular deeds. But they fed
off a free-floating anti-Americanism that blows at will and knows no
bounds, among Islamists and secularists alike. For the crowds in Karachi,
Cairo, and Amman, the great power could never get it right. A world
lacking the tools and the political space for free inquiry fell back on
anti-Americanism. "I talk to my daughter-in-law so my neighbor can hear
me," goes an Arabic maxim. In the fury with which the intellectual and
political class railed against the United States and Israel, the agitated were
speaking to and of their own rulers. Sly and cunning men, the rulers knew
and understood the game. There would be no open embrace of America,
and no public defense of it. They would stay a step ahead of the crowd
and give the public the safety valve it needed. The more pro-American the
regime, the more anti-American the political class and the political tumult.
The United States could grant generous aid to the Egyptian state, but there
would be no dampening of the anti-American fury of the Egyptian political
class. Its leading state-backed dailies crackled with the wildest theories of
U.S.-Israeli conspiracies against their country.
On September 11, 2001, there was an unmistakable sense of glee and
little sorrow among upper-class Egyptians for the distant power -- only
satisfaction that America had gotten its comeuppance. After nearly three
decades of American solicitude of Egypt, after the steady traffic between
the two lands, there were no genuine friends for America to be found in a
curiously hostile, disgruntled land.
Egyptians have long been dissatisfied with their country's economic and
military performance, a pain born of the gap between Egypt's exalted idea
of itself and the poverty and foreign dependence that have marked its
modern history. The rage against Israel and the United States stems from
that history of lament and frustration. So much of Egypt's life lies beyond
the scrutiny and the reach of its newspapers and pundits -- the ruler's
ways, the authoritarian state, the matter of succession to Mubarak, the
joint military exercises with U.S. and Egyptian forces, and so on. The
animus toward America and Israel gives away the frustration of a polity
raging against the hard, disillusioning limits of its political life.
In the same vein, Jordan's enlightened, fragile monarchy was bound to the
United States by the strategic ties that a skilled King Hussein had nurtured
for decades. But a mood of anger and seething radicalism had settled on
Jordan. The country was increasingly poorer, and the fault line between
Palestinians and East Bankers was a steady source of mutual suspicion. If
the rulers made peace with Israel, "civil society" and the professional
syndicates would spurn it. Even though the late king had deep ties with the
distant imperial power, the country would remain unreconciled to this
pro-American stance. Jordan would be richer, it was loudly proclaimed, if
only the sanctions on Iraq had been lifted, if only the place had been left to
gravitate into Iraq's economic orbit. Jordan's new king, Abdullah II, could
roll out the red carpet for Powell when the general turned up in Jordan
recently on a visit that had the distinct sense of a victory lap by a soldier
revisiting his early triumph. But the throngs were there with placards, and
banners were aloft branding the visitor a "war criminal." This kind of fury a
distant power can never overcome. Policy can never speak to wrath. Step
into the thicket (as Bill Clinton did in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict) and the
foreign power is damned for its reach. Step back, as George W. Bush did
in the first months of his presidency, and Pax Americana is charged with
abdication and indifference.
THE SIEGE
The power secured during Desert Storm was destined not to last. The
United States could not indefinitely quarantine Iraq. It was idle to think that
the broad coalition cobbled together during an unusually perilous moment
in 1990-91 would stand as a permanent arrangement. The demographic
and economic weight of Iraq and Iran meant that those countries were
bound to reassert themselves. The United States had done well in the
Persian Gulf by Iraq's brazen revisionism and the Iranian Revolution's
assault on its neighboring states. It had been able to negotiate the terms of
the U.S. presence -- the positioning of equipment in the oil states, the
establishment of a tripwire in Kuwait, the acceptance of an American
troop presence on the Arabian Peninsula -- at a time when both Iran and
Iraq were on a rampage. Hence the popular concerns that had hindered
the American presence in the Persian Gulf were brushed aside in the
1990s. But this lucky run was bound to come to an end. Iraq steadily
chipped away at the sanctions, which over time were seen as nothing but
an Anglo-American siege of a brutalized Iraqi population.
The campaign against Saddam Hussein had been waged during a unique
moment in Arab politics. Some Muslim jurists in Saudi Arabia and Egypt
even ruled that Saddam had run afoul of Islam's strictures, and that an
alliance with foreign powers to check his aggression and tyranny was
permissible under Islamic law. A part of the Arabian Peninsula that had
hitherto wanted America "over the horizon" was eager to have American
protection against a "brother" who had shredded all the pieties of
pan-Arab solidarity. But the Iraqi dictator hunkered down, outlasting the
foreign power's terrible campaign. He was from the neighborhood and
knew its rules. He worked his way into the local order of things.
The Iraqi ruler knew well the distress that settled on the region after Pax
Americana's swift war. All around Iraq, the region was poorer: oil prices
had slumped, and the war had been expensive for the oil states that
financed it. Oil states suspected they were being overbilled for military
services and for weapons that they could not afford. The war's murky
outcome fed the belief that the thing had been rigged all along, that
Saddam Hussein had been lured into Kuwait by an American green light --
and then kept in power and let off the hook -- so that Pax Americana
would have the pretext for stationing its forces in the region. The Iraqi ruler
then set out to show the hollowness of the hegemony of a disinterested
American imperium.
A crisis in 1996 laid bare the realities for the new imperium. Saddam
Hussein brazenly sent his squads of assassins into the "safe haven" that the
United States had marked out for the Kurds in northern Iraq after Desert
Storm. He sacked that region and executed hundreds who had cast their
fate with American power. America was alone this time around. The two
volleys of Tomahawk missiles fired against Iraqi air-defense installations
had to be launched from U.S. ships in the Persian Gulf and b-52 bombers
that flew in from Guam. No one was fooled by the American response; no
one believed that the foreign power would stay. U.S. officials wrote off
that episode as an internal Kurdish fight, the doings of a fratricidal people.
A subsequent air campaign -- "fire and forget," skeptics dubbed it -- gave
the illusion of resolve and containment. But Clinton did not have his heart
in that fight. He had put his finger to the wind and divined the mood in the
land: there was no public tolerance for a major campaign against Saddam
Hussein.
By the time the Bush administration stepped in, its leaders would find a
checkered landscape. There was their old nemesis in Baghdad, wounded
but not killed. There was a decade of Clintonianism that had invested its
energy in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict but had paid the Persian Gulf scant
attention. There was a pattern of half-hearted responses to terrorist
attacks, pinpricks that fooled no one.
HAVING IT HIS WAY
It was into this witch's brew that Arafat launched the second intifada last
year. In a rare alignment, there had come Arafat's way a U.S. president
keen to do his best and an Israeli soldier-statesman eager to grant the
Palestinian leader all the Israeli body politic could yield -- and then some.
Arafat turned away from what was offered and headed straight back into
his people's familiar history: the maximalism, the inability to read what can
and cannot be had in a world of nations. He would wait for the "Arab
street" to rise up in rebellion and force Pax Americana to redeem his
claims. He would again let play on his people the old dream that they
could have it all, from the river to the sea. He must know better, he must
know the scales of power, it is reasonable to presume. But there still lurks
in the Palestinian and Arab imagination a view, depicted by the Moroccan
historian Abdallah Laroui, that "on a certain day, everything would be
obliterated and instantaneously reconstructed and the new inhabitants
would leave, as if by magic, the land they had despoiled." Arafat knew the
power of this redemptive idea. He must have reasoned that it is safer to
ride that idea, and that there will always be another day and another offer.
For all the fury of this second intifada, a supreme irony hangs over
Palestinian history. In the early 1990s, the Palestinians had nothing to lose.
Pariahs in the Arab councils of power, they made their best historical
decision -- the peace of Oslo -- only when they broke with the
maximalism of their political tradition. It was then that they crossed from
Arab politics into internal Israeli politics and, courtesy of Israel, into the
orbit of Pax Americana. Their recent return into inter-Arab politics was the
resumption of an old, failed history.
Better the fire of an insurrection than the risks of reconciling his people to a
peace he had not prepared them for: this was Arafat's way. This is why he
spurned the offer at Camp David in the summer of 2000. "Yasir Arafat
rode home on a white horse" from Camp David, said one of his aides,
Nabil Shaath. He had shown that he "still cared about Jerusalem and the
refugees." He had stood up, so Shaath said, to the combined pressure of
the Americans and the Israelis. A creature of his time and his world, Arafat
had come into his own amid the recriminations that followed the Arab
defeat in 1948. Palestine had become an Arab shame, and the hunt for
demons and sacrificial lambs would shape Arab politics for many years.
A temporizer and a trimmer, Arafat did not have it in him to tell the 1948
refugees in Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan that they were no more likely to
find political satisfaction than were the Jews of Alexandria, Fez, Baghdad,
and Beirut who were banished from Arab lands following Israel's
statehood. He lit the fuse of this second intifada in the hope that others
would put out the flame. He had become a player in Israeli politics, and
there came to him this peculiar satisfaction that he could topple Israeli
prime ministers, wait them out, and force an outside diplomatic intervention
that would tip the scales in his favor. He could not give his people a decent
public order and employ and train the young, but he could launch a war in
the streets that would break Israel's economic momentum and rob it of the
normalcy brought by the peace of Oslo.
Arafat had waited for rain, but on September 11, 2001, there had come
the floods. "This is a new kind of war, a new kind of battlefield, and the
United States will need the help of Arab and Muslim countries," chief
Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat announced. The Palestinian issue, he
added, was "certainly one of the reasons" for the attacks against the
United States. An American-led brigade against terrorism was being
assembled. America was set to embark on another expedition into
Arab-Muslim domains, and Arafat fell back on the old consolation that
Arab assets would be traded on his people's behalf. A dowry would have
to be offered to the Arab participants in this brigade: a U.S.-imposed
settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. A cover would be needed for
Arab regimes nervous about riding with the foreigner's posse, and it stood
to reason that Arafat would claim that he could provide that kind of cover.
The terror that hit America sprang from entirely different sources. The
plotters had been in American flight schools long before the "suicide
martyrs" and the "children of the stones" had answered Arafat's call for an
intifada. But the Palestinian leader and his lieutenants eagerly claimed that
the fire raging in their midst had inspired the anti-American terror. A
decade earlier, the Palestinians had hailed Saddam Hussein's bid for
primacy in the Persian Gulf. Nonetheless, they had been given a claim on
the peace -- a role at the Madrid Conference of October 1991 and a
solicitous U.S. policy. American diplomacy had arrived in the nick of time;
the first intifada had burned out and degenerated into a hunt for demons
and "collaborators." A similar fate lies in wait for the second intifada. It is
reasonable to assume that Arafat expects rescue of a similar kind from the
new American drive into Arab and Muslim lands.
No veto over national policies there will be given to Arafat. The states will
cut their own deals. In the best of worlds, Pax Americana is doomed to a
measure of solitude in the Middle East. This time around, the American
predicament is particularly acute. Deep down, the Arab regimes feel that
the threat of political Islam to their own turfs has been checked, and that
no good can come out of an explicit public alliance with an American
campaign in their midst. Foreign powers come and go, and there is very
little protection they can provide against the wrath of an angry crowd. It is
a peculiarity of the Arab-Islamic political culture that a ruler's
authoritarianism is more permissible than his identification with Western
powers -- think of the fates of Sadat and of the Pahlavis of Iran.
Ride with the foreigners at your own risk, the region's history has taught.
Syria's dictator, Hafiz al-Assad, died a natural death at a ripe old age, and
his life could be seen as a kind of success. He never set foot on American
soil and had stayed within his world. In contrast, the flamboyant Sadat
courted foreign countries and came to a solitary, cruel end; his land barely
grieved for him. A foreign power that stands sentry in that world cannot
spare its local allies the retribution of those who brand them
"collaborators" and betrayers of the faith. A coalition is in the offing,
America has come calling, urging the region's rulers to "choose sides."
What these rulers truly dread has come to pass: they might have to make
fateful choices under the gaze of populations in the throes of a malignant
anti-Americanism. The ways of that world being what they are, the United
States will get more cooperation from the ministers of interior and the
secret services than it will from the foreign ministers and the diplomatic
interlocutors. There will be allies in the shadows, but in broad daylight the
rulers will mostly keep their distance. Pakistan's ruler, Pervez Musharraf,
has made a brave choice. The rulers all around must be reading a good
deal of their worries into his attempt to stay the course and keep his
country intact.
A broad coalition may give America the comfort that it is not alone in the
Muslim world. A strike against Afghanistan is the easiest of things -- far
away from the troubles in the Persian Gulf and Egypt, from the head of the
trail in Arab lands. The Taliban are the Khmer Rouge of this era and thus
easy to deal with. The frustrations to come lie in the more ambiguous and
impenetrable realms of the Arab world. Those were not Afghans who flew
into those towers of glass and steel and crashed into the Pentagon. They
were from the Arab world, where anti-Americanism is fierce, where terror
works with the hidden winks that men and women make at the
perpetrators of the grimmest of deeds.
BRAVE OLD WORLD
"When those planes flew into those buildings, the luck of America ran out,"
Leon Wieseltier recently wrote in The New Republic. The 1990s were a
lucky decade, a fool's paradise. But we had not arrived at the end of
history, not by a long shot. Markets had not annulled historical passions,
and a high-tech world's electronic age had not yet dawned. So in
thwarted, resentful societies there was satisfaction on September 11 that
the American bull run and the triumphalism that had awed the world had
been battered, that there was soot and ruin in New York's streets. We
know better now. Pax Americana is there to stay in the oil lands and in
Israeli-Palestinian matters. No large-scale retreat from those zones of
American primacy can be contemplated. American hegemony is sure to
hold -- and so, too, the resistance to it, the uneasy mix in those lands of
the need for the foreigner's order, and the urge to lash out against it, to use
it and rail against it all the same.
There is now the distinct thunder of war. The first war of the twenty-first
century is to be fought not so far from where the last inconclusive war of
the twentieth century was waged against Iraq. The war will not be easy for
America in those lands. The setting will test it in ways it has not been
tested before. There will be regimes asking for indulgence for their own
terrible fights against Islamists and for logistical support. There will be
rulers offering the bait of secrets that their security services have
accumulated through means at odds with American norms. Conversely,
friends and sympathizers of terror will pass themselves off as
constitutionalists and men and women of the "civil society." They will find
shelter behind pluralist norms while aiding and abetting the forces of terror.
There will be chameleons good at posing as America's friends but never
turning up when needed. There will be one way of speaking to Americans,
and another of letting one's population know that words are merely a
pretense. There will step forth informers, hustlers of every shade, offering
to guide the foreign power through the minefields and alleyways. America,
which once held the world at a distance, will have to be willing to stick
around eastern lands. It is both heartbreaking and ironic that so
quintessentially American a figure as George W. Bush -- a man who grew
up in Midland, Texas, far removed from the complications of foreign
places -- must be the one to take his country on a journey into so alien, so
difficult, a world.