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  • You have met the enemy, and he is you

    Asia Times, Hong Kong
    June 28 2004

    You have met the enemy, and he is you

    Disaster seemingly will attend the power transition in Iraq. Official
    Washington has already reverted to its ancient traditions, in
    particular the sacrificial rite of assigning blame. Within the George
    W Bush camp, one hears that it was Secretary of State Colin Powell's
    fault for appointing L Paul Bremer as civil administrator in Iraq, or
    Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld's fault for slighting the professional
    military, or National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice's fault for
    not coordinating between the hostile camps on either side of the
    Potomac.

    It is a queer sort of disaster, to be sure. World stock markets are
    rising, the price of oil is falling, and the exchange rate of the
    dollar barely flutters in the crosswinds. Is it possible that markets
    have judged matters better than the pundits? Perhaps it is no
    disaster at all, except for the ideologues who argued that America's
    political model could be exported and assembled in Iraq like so much
    prefabricated housing. A generation ago, American satirist Walter
    Kelly amended Commodore Perry's 1813 dispatch "We have met the enemy
    and he is ours" to read, "We have met the enemy and he is us."

    By the same token, one might say to the peoples of Mesopotamia: "You
    have met the enemy, and he is you." Sunni, Shi'ite and Kurd have one
    thing in common: they all eschew the American "melting pot" model of
    democracy. They are determined to pursue their own tragic destinies
    instead.

    Last year, when American forces confounded the skeptics and swept
    northward to Baghdad, I warned that it was no triumph (George W Bush,
    tragic character," Nov 25, 2003). Neither does the present impasse
    make a disaster. Despite American policy, and despite America's
    enemies, the tragedy will unfold at its own pace. Iraq was not to be
    saved in the first place (Will Iraq survive the Iraqi resistance? Dec
    23, 2003). America once produced leaders who recognized tragedy when
    it confronted them; Abraham Lincoln's second inaugural address
    portrayed the terrible Civil War of 1861-1865 as redress for the sin
    of slavery. Lincoln did not expect a favorable reception for his
    view, and he was right. Although the words of the inaugural are
    carved on the wall of Lincoln's memorial, they are as obscure to the
    Washingtonians of today as hieroglyphs to sightseers in Egypt.

    America's 42nd president cannot grasp that Americans comprise a tiny
    minority who fled the tragedy of the nations. Those who remained in
    the old country chose a tragic destiny. "Men are not flattered by
    being shown that there has been a difference of purpose between the
    Almighty and them," Lincoln wrote shortly after his second inaugural.
    In full denial, the Bush cabinet remains captive to the fixed idea of
    Middle Eastern democracy. Bush's critics spin silly conspiracy
    theories about America's "real" intentions (grabbing oilfields,
    turning Israel into a regional superpower, and so forth).

    The kingpin of conspiracy theorists, Seymour Hersh of The New Yorker,
    sees an Israeli conspiracy behind the emergence of an independent
    Kurdistan. In his dispatch of June 28, Hersh quoted a Turkish
    official: "From Mexico to Russia, everybody will claim that the
    United States had a secret agenda in Iraq: you came there to break up
    Iraq." Why should Washington care what Mexico thinks? And why should
    Russia object to making the Turks miserable, especially if it
    tightens the vice around the rebel Chechnyans?

    One should learn more about the Kurds before portraying them as
    puppets in anyone's plot. If Aeschylus had scripted the tragedy of
    peoples rather than heroes, the Kurds would have been at the top of
    his list. In 1915, the "Young Turk" Ottoman government enlisted Kurds
    to exterminate a million and a half Armenians during 1915-1923. More
    Armenians died at Kurdish than Turkish hands. As their reward, the
    Turkish government allowed Kurds to resettle the portion of Eastern
    Anatolia then known as Western Armenia, that is, after killing or
    driving out the entire Armenian population. That is why Kurds now
    comprise a majority of the inhabitants of the former western Armenia,
    and pose a continuing strategic threat to Turkey. I do not mean to
    fault the Kurds; the neutral Swiss spent half a millennium earning
    their keep as Europe's mercenaries. Small peoples do not survive by
    being squeamish.

    One is tempted to think, "If the Kurds killed Armenians for land in
    Eastern Anatolia, a fortiori they will kill Arabs for oil in Mosul."
    But the Kurds are fighting for something much greater, namely their
    slim chance of escaping the great extinction of the peoples. "Unlike
    animals, human beings require more than progeny: they require progeny
    who remember them," I wrote on August 31, 2001, just before the
    suicide attacks on New York and Washington (Internet stocks and the
    failure of youth culture.) "Frequently, ethnic groups will die rather
    than abandon their way of life. Native Americans often chose to fight
    to the point of their own extinction rather than accept assimilation,
    because assimilation implied abandoning both their past and their
    future. Historic tragedy occurs on the grand scale when economic or
    strategic circumstances undercut the material conditions of life of a
    people, which nonetheless cannot accept assimilation into another
    culture. That is when entire peoples fight to the death."

    Tara Welat, a prominent Kurdish nationalist, cited my essay last
    April 7 in a report on the Kurdish website www.kurdmedia.com: "There
    are competing claims concerning the will of oppressed nations to
    survive. One view holds that by reason of their oppression, peoples
    who are under constant pressure to assimilate eventually lose their
    will to survive as a distinct people. They may live on a physical
    existence, but eventually, they can no longer defend what makes them
    unique. For evidence, contenders of such a view cite the fact that in
    the last century 2,000 distinct ethnic groups have disappeared. The
    other view maintains that people not only seek progeny but progeny
    who remember them and to this end, humans will fight to the bitter
    end to defend their way of life and to resist assimilation."

    Welat adds, "... While as a whole, the Kurdish people have survived,
    for some Kurds, the temptation of assimilation has been all too
    powerful ... There are also other ideologies - aside from the
    nationalist ideologies imposed on the Kurds by their colonizers -
    namely Islam and socialism, which the Kurds have been willing to
    accept, mostly at the expense of their Kurdish identity ... I believe
    that there is among the Kurds, enough people who love freedom for
    itself and who will struggle for it obstinately until the Kurds enjoy
    self-rule."

    Welat makes clear why American policy must fail. The Kurds understand
    from the inside, as it were, precisely what America is about, and
    will have none of it: "As more and more countries become 'melting
    pots', where cultures and identities are merged into a 'mosaic',
    attempts to assimilate the Kurds will increasingly come under the
    guise of democracy. Just as Alexis de Tocqueville wrote in 1835 upon
    his visit to America, we can confidently claim that 'a great
    democratic revolution is taking place among us'. This revolution has
    swept through America and the West and it is now bursting through the
    gates of the Middle East."

    Welat adds, "The argument of democracy tailored by the ruling regimes
    to address the Kurds goes something like this: Why do you ask for
    special rights or autonomy (or heaven forbid, independence) when we
    can live as equals and brothers, with full freedoms, under one
    (centralized) democratic state ... We must question a conception of
    democracy that is limited to creating a centralized state and which
    will ultimately push for the homogeneity of its citizens."

    America will not succeed in assimilating the Kurds; a people who
    consider Islam yet another foreign ideology imposed on them will not
    worship de Tocqueville. As its policy crumbles in the region, the
    Bush administration will ally with such forces as the Kurds - and the
    tragedy will proceed to its next act.
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