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Will the real Mid-East terrorist please stand up?
Message Board > Controversy and Quarantine > Will the real Mid-East terrorist please stand up?
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Lordpatch
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http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/article_2835.shtml

�And when He had opened the �Fourth Seal�, I heard the voice of the �Fourth Beast� say Come. And I looked and behold a PALE HORSE; and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell (Hades) followed with him. And power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with the sword, and with Hunger and with Death, and with the Beasts of the Earth.� -Revelations 6:7-8

�A million Arabs are not worth one Jewish fingernail,� declared Rabbi Yaacov Perin Feb. 27, 1994, as he eulogized New York-born doctor Baruch Goldstein, who sneaked into a Hebron mosque in Jerusalem during Jummah (Friday Prayers) on Feb. 25 and murdered 29 Muslim men, women and children who were praying.

What is really at the root of the Israeli attacks in the West Bank and now southern Lebanon? What is at the root of the terrorism of a militarily superior country, backed by the number one military power on earth, and then cries victim when retaliation comes against their aggression?


full article:

http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/article_2835.shtml - Tue, 8 Aug 2006 7:12am
Lordpatch
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New Orientalism's 'barbarians' and 'outlaws'

By Alastair Crooke

The Daily Star
5 September 2006

http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=5&
article_id=75230

It's unconscious. It slips out almost inadvertently. It is not
deliberate but, rather, a reflex: an Israeli commentator discusses
options for clearing Hizbullah from the area south of the Litani
River in the context of the war in Lebanon. After reviewing the
options he adds, in an almost despairing note, that probably
whatever Israel does, almost certainly a "Hizbullah terrorist will
pop up somewhere on the back of a donkey with a rocket."

The imagery is clear, but paradoxical. Clear because his report
implies a grudging and bemused respect for a foe that unexpectedly
is not being crushed by the Israeli onslaught (as every Western and
Israeli analyst had assumed), paradoxical, because whatever the
force that was frustrating this mighty military machine, it was
certainly something more than "a man on a donkey." Why the donkey?
Because this foremost proponent of modern asymmetrical guerrilla
warfare - Hizbullah - must nevertheless somehow be associated with
obscurantism, with a reaction against Western modernity and a desire
for a return to a pre-modern age. It's just how we see things.

Edward Said rightly identified this Western unconscious prejudice as
"Orientalism." He suggested that the West sees the Orient as that
mysterious "Other" that eludes rational analysis. Western academics
and observers continue to see the Orient, and to define it, in polar
opposites: We in the West are rational, the Orient is violent and
inexplicable; we are moderate, they are extreme; we practice good
administration, they live under oppression and tyranny.

This flawed Western analysis is entirely self-serving: The language
of Orientalism, Edward Said noted, was a construct of power. For the
previous 300 years, Europeans have regarded the Treaty of Westphalia
(an agreement that shattered the Christian "caliphate" in secular
nation states) as laying the foundations of modernity. The
separation of church and state, the belief in the inevitability of
progress through science, a faith in reason as a solution of social
problems, everything that we think of as the "Enlightenment" ideal,
became our mantra however much European reality differed from this
ideal.

The Enlightenment grew from a simple concept to become,
irretrievably, a synonym for "modernity" itself; the Orient became
its antithesis. The ideals we believe are reflected in the
Enlightenment became the device that allowed us to use the language
of European modernity not only as a tool to "domesticate" the Orient
but also as an interpretative template from which to offer a
critique of the Orient's "backwardness." The Enlightenment mindset
of European modernity became sedimented in Western thinking at the
same time that it served Western colonial and economic interests.

In the years since Edward Said published his classic, the West has
elevated Orientalism into something more serious: an inexorable
self-fulfilling reality. The global "war on terror" has allowed
Western leaders to cast "our" struggle as one for civilization
itself - "we" have values, they have none, we want to spread
democracy, they hate our freedoms. The West is now defined by its
opposition to terrorism and as a defender of civilization. The war
on terrorism has transformed orientalism, from a European-based
vision of modernity that could be used to "domesticate"
non-Europeans, into a program that establishes a frontier between
"Civilization" and "the new Barbarism". http://www.dailystar.com.lb


The new "Orientalism" offers us new political tools. Since the "new
barbarians" live outside of civilization, civilized rules no longer
apply to them: if "they" win elections they can still not be part of
"us" - office holders and parliamentarians can be abducted and
interned without a murmur; members of "barbarian" movements can be
arrested and taken away for imprisonment and torture in other
countries, and barbarian leaders, whether or not legitimately
elected, can be assassinated at the pleasure of Western leaders.
They "abduct" us, we "arrest" them.

The underpinning of our worldview is based on our idea of what
constitutes the legitimate use of power - and, therefore, on the use
of violence. It is the bedrock of the Enlightenment. Violence
practiced by the nation state is legitimate; violence used by
non-state actors is a threat to civilization and the existing world
order. The barbarians do not have resistance movements, they are not
for liberation, and they are not fighting oppression. To admit so is
to admit that we are oppressors, and that cannot be. They are not
fighting for their homes: they are "unauthorized armed groups."

Non-state actors who use violence - defined now as "terrorists" in
the new lexicon of the Bush-Blair world view - face a double
proscription: Not only are they outside of civilization and
undeserving of having civilized standards applied to them (such as
respect toward elected representatives), they are excluded from
international law too. Their challenge to "our" Westphalian rules on
the use of violence permits us to cast them as barbarians and
outlaws. Nor are we constrained by our own rules of war in the
military struggle to be waged against them. Why are we bombing them?
Because they don't have our values.

As these "Others" - these barbarians - find themselves isolated and
excluded from civilization, as well as from the safeguards of
international law, they respond by assuming the characteristics we
attribute to them. If we do not apply civilized standards to them,
and use unrestrained military force against them, is it any wonder
that they respond in kind? And so this "new Orientalism" becomes
self-fulfilling: Since their violence is "terrorism" and our
violence is "self-defense," we propound a reasonable solution - we
get to keep our guns, but they must disarm.

Alastair Crooke is a founder and director of Conflicts Forum. He was
formerly an EU mediator who facilitated a number of cease-fires with
Islamist movements. This text is reprinted with permission from
bitterlemons-international.org, where it first appeared. - Tue, 5 Sep 2006 6:44pm
Lordpatch
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Meet the Carlye Group: How the Bush family profits from endless war

WATCH IT AT: http://www.brasscheck.com/videos/911/9118.html - Tue, 5 Sep 2006 6:46pm
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