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You Cannot Put Out Fire With Flames

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  • You Cannot Put Out Fire With Flames

    YOU CANNOT PUT OUT FIRE WITH FLAMES
    by Amjad Atallah

    The Washington Note
    April 6, 2009 Monday 5:09 PM EST

    President Obama quoted this Turkish aphorism toward the end of his
    27 minute speech before the Turkish Parliament. It was, in essence,
    a summation of his rejection of the policies of the previous eight
    years. The president emphasized provided a comprehensive overview of
    Middle East and Caucus politics that showed us a little bit of how
    he views the conflicts in the region.

    And perhaps of more lasting import, Obama noted that the US is not
    and will not ever be at war with Islam, finally laying to rest the
    bastardization of the conflict of civilizations thesis promoted by
    so many neo-cons.

    The President didn't only rely on metaphors - he offered a concrete
    analysis of conflict from Cyprus and Israel/Palestine in the west
    to Nagarno-Karabakh and Pakistan in the east. And he admitted US
    weaknesses before he gently chided his hosts on their own.

    First a little about that last point. Everyone hates hypocrisy -
    children are particularly good at noticing it in adults. Nations tend
    to be like that too. The President seemed to grasp that in his speech
    without letting anyone off the hook.

    It has always seemed hypocritical in many nations around the world
    for the US to criticize a lack of democracy in one country while
    embracing it in another. Hard to criticize Turkey for not coming to
    terms with the 1915 killing of Armenians without admitting that the
    US has not come to terms with the full horrors of slavery and of the
    annihilation of native American nations.

    On conflicts, the President tied, perhaps unconsciously, four ethnic
    conflicts over territory: Kurdish activity in Turkey and Iraq, the
    Armenian-Azeri ethnic dispute in Nagarno-Karabakh, Cypriot talks
    to re-unite the country into a "bi-communal federation" (as the
    president put it), and the US effort to partition Israeli control
    over both its own state and the Palestinian territory into two states
    "Israel and Palestine."

    On this last ethnic/territorial conflict in particular, the President
    seemed to want to do what few in his administration have so far been
    willing to - put an exclamation point on the differences between US
    and international interests and those in Israel who want to maintain
    the occupation.

    He made a point of sounding fair - "The United States strongly supports
    the goal of two states, Israel and Palestine, living side by side in
    peace and security," he said. "Both Israelis and Palestinians must
    take the steps that are necessary to build confidence. Both must live
    up to the commitments they have made."

    But he also used the future tense - noting that the creation of two
    states is a goal that "I will actively pursue." For those who have
    noted the lack of a new implementation policy so far, that may have
    offered hope that one will be announced soon.

    The President also tied in his now standard outreach to Iran
    emphasizing that Iran had a choice between seeking a weapon or
    economic integration. As the Financial Times noted today, this may
    be part of a shift in emphasis to preventing Iran's weaponizing of
    its nuclear program rather than attempts to freeze its industrial
    (including nuclear) development.

    On Iraq, he noted that the US was leaving soon and that everyone had
    to help to make sure that Iraq was secure and united (but he pointedly
    did not comment on how democratic it would have to be).

    On al-Qaeda, he noted Turkey's help in Afghanistan and emphasized
    the necessity of preventing the terrorist group a "safe haven" in
    Pakistan or Afghanistan.

    This was not Obama 's "Muslim speech" we are told. But it was a good
    (and maybe precedent making?) speech to give in the Muslim country
    that has most entrenched its ties with the West while maintaining an
    Islamist modernizing government.

    It was a pleasant juxtaposition with the embarrassing performance in
    Doha last week of the Arab League which applauded itself on feting
    Sudan's indicted president Omar al-Bashir.
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