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CAIRO: Waiting For Obama

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  • CAIRO: Waiting For Obama

    WAITING FOR OBAMA

    Al-Ahram Weekly
    http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2009/942/op2.htm
    April 10 2009
    Egypt

    Reaching out to the Muslim world from Turkey, Barack Obama skilfully
    built bridges destroyed by his predecessor, though the real work in
    US deeds lies ahead, writes Ayman El-Amir*

    By his visit to Turkey, US President Barack Obama has come as close
    to the seething Middle East scene as he possibly could without
    catching the heat. President Obama's first business in a tall order
    of priorities was to contain the massive damage wreaked by eight
    years of the Bush administration's policies on US-Turkish relations
    and on the wider Middle East region. While trying to repair the
    damage and re- establish ties with a key NATO ally and a symbolic
    gateway to the Muslim world, the US president was unlikely to get too
    close for comfort to substantive critical issues beyond broad policy
    statements. He has shown goodwill and put out feelers to gauge the
    problems of the Middle East from the perspective of an independent
    ally that straddles East and West. Obama is grooming Turkey, with
    its diverse regional relations, as a credible mediator for engaging
    partners in intractable Middle East problems.

    Turkey is well positioned to play a positive role in the Middle
    East. It has many friends and virtually no enemies in the region. It
    opposed the invasion of Iraq in 2003 and, by a vote of parliament,
    denied US and British troops access to Incirlik air base facilities
    for staging that invasion. This had shamed some Arab countries
    that gave land, air and sea passage to the invading Anglo-American
    troops. Now the US needs Turkish bases to facilitate the planned
    military withdrawal from Iraq. Turkey has also contributed some troops
    to NATO forces in Afghanistan, which is a focus issue for President
    Obama. Turkey is also the southernmost NATO outpost and an aspiring
    candidate for European Union membership. Should it play its hand
    successfully in Middle Eastern affairs, including the problems of
    terrorism, illegal immigration and the Arab-Israeli conflict, which
    are of keen interest to Europe, it could add invaluable credentials
    to its bid for EU membership.

    It could possibly override French President Nicolas Sarkozy's
    opposition that is based on religious-racial grounds. Above all, Obama
    sent a clear message to the estimated 1.5 billion Muslims throughout
    the world that the US "is not at war with Islam" -- a policy that the
    Bush administration did not seem to articulate in words nor formulate
    into action since the events of 11 September 2001.

    In his statement to the Turkish parliament, Obama lauded Turkey as
    "a strong, vibrant, secular democracy -- a republic that commands
    the respect of the US and the rest of the world". He could not have
    made these statements so openly in any other Middle Eastern country
    without having his hosts secretly squirming in their seats. By holding
    up Turkey as a model partner, Obama was sending out a strong signal
    to other Middle East countries which are ruled by either theocratic or
    autocratic regimes. While affirming the positive, Obama is not unaware
    of the difficulties that complicate the Middle East situation. For
    his reiterated strong commitment to a two-state solution to the
    Arab-Israeli conflict, US Middle East policy faces a radical right-wing
    Israeli government, a divided Arab world with narrow-minded leaders,
    a Palestinian movement in conflict, a hard-healing Iraq, an adamant
    Iran that is suspicious of US invitations for engagement and medieval
    ruling regimes that choke the Arab people. Even Turkey itself is
    not free of some lurking problems. Whether it is the threat of the
    terrorist wing of the Kurdistan Workers' Party or the conspiring
    military of which 86 members are on trial for planning a military
    coup against the elected government of the Justice and Development
    Party. Indeed, Turkey is not fully "the stable democracy" that the
    US president praised. On another front, President Obama skilfully
    skirted the Armenian genocide issue by establishing a discreet parallel
    between dark events in the history of the US -- the slavery era --
    and the Armenian legacy of the Ottoman Empire.

    Obama conceded that he came to Turkey, the last leg of his European
    tour, with a message of conciliation towards the Islamic world. It was
    a message well-delivered and well-received but, as usual, the devil is
    in the detail. The anti-Muslim hostility reared by the ugly legacy of
    George W Bush needs to be reversed, primarily within the US itself and
    in the conduct of policy with Muslim nations. Turkey could help soften
    up the tone and substance between the two sides. Building bridges of
    mutual trust could help ease confrontational attitudes. But whatever
    initiative Turkey could undertake would require US leverage. Turkey's
    mediation between Syria and Israel for a settlement of the occupied
    Golan Heights issue seems to have reached a dead-end with the rise
    of the new Israeli government that has excluded, in the words of its
    fundamentalist foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, withdrawal from
    the occupied Syrian territory. Obama may have well been directing
    his remarks to that government when he declared his strong support
    for the establishment of a Palestinian state living side by side in
    peace with Israel. The Netanyahu government does not foresee a two
    state solution but rather an "economic solution" for the Palestinians
    -- a way to wiggle out of a political settlement that recognises the
    rights of the Palestinians to statehood. At the time President Obama
    is recommitting US policy to a just and lasting settlement of the
    Middle East conflict, a new Israeli government is bent on pushing
    the peace process back into a bottomless abyss.

    Another key issue that Obama shares with Turkey, his European allies
    and the rest of the world is how to combat terrorism -- a worldwide
    scourge. However, to combat terrorism it has to be put in the proper
    perspective. Israel confused the issue of the anti- occupation struggle
    of the Palestinians, lumped it together with terrorism and sold it
    to a mediocre George Bush. The fact is that Muslims do not get out
    of the wrong side of the bed every day thinking who they are going
    to blow up next. Obama and his White House team will have to analyse
    the root-causes of terrorism; not to find justifications, but to
    better understand the phenomenon and thus help reverse it. There is
    no military solution to violence, whether in Palestine, Pakistan or
    Afghanistan. It does not help either to support state terrorism by
    Israel -- with an overkill response -- on the pretext that "it has
    the right to defend itself."

    Obama's most serious challenge, perhaps, is pressuring autocratic
    regimes of the region that use chameleonic tactics to perpetuate
    themselves in power and resist overwhelming popular demand for
    change. In a region where the urge for change is pushing against a
    wall of iron-fist dictatorships, the confrontation is explosive and
    could spill over into large-scale violence. The environment provides
    fertile ground for sowing the seeds of hatred and terrorism. The Bush
    administration either turned a blind eye or endorsed false pretences
    of reform that went nowhere. The region is volatile and the sectarian
    politics the US invasion introduced in Iraq has recently begun to
    bear poisonous fruit.

    In a world that is still smarting from the global financial crisis that
    has left no nation untouched, it is refreshing to have a different
    president like Barack Obama reaching out to the Muslim "enemies" of
    George W Bush. His message to the new Ottomans of the Middle East
    that it is "business unusual" is worth pursuing with action. For,
    unlike Waiting for Godot, Obama does come.

    * The writer is former Al-Ahram correspondent in Washington, DC. He
    also served as director of United Nations Radio and Television in
    New York.
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