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Views > October 1, 2004

The Right Choice for Terror

By Salim Muwakkil

President George Bush is “the best recruiting sergeant ever for al Qaeda,” said Sir Ivor Roberts, the British ambassador to Italy, at a closed conference of British and Italian diplomats. According to the September 21 edition of the British-based Guardian, Roberts let the comment slip during a discussion on which candidate Europeans would back if they voted in U.S. elections. Most would vote John Kerry, Roberts said, but “if anyone is ready to celebrate the eventual reelection of Bush, it’s al Qaeda.”

The British government of Tony Blair understandably condemned Roberts’ remarks. But among many international observers, his off-the-cuff comments have become conventional wisdom.

And that should be no surprise: The Bush administration’s religion-laced war on terrorism is precisely the kind of campaign radical Islamists have long accused the West of conducting. The “war of the civilizations” theme evoked by neoconservative ideologues and other Bush partisans neatly mirrors the vision of Osama bin Laden and his fellow Islamists.

That’s one reason recent remarks from various Republican functionaries suggesting terrorists would prefer a Kerry victory ring so hollow and seem so calculated to inject fear into the electorate.

The latest politician to play the terrorist card was House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.), who last week warned that al Qaeda would seek to influence the election and said it would prefer “somebody who would file a lawsuit with the World Court or something, rather than respond with troops.”

Hastert was speaking at an event featuring Vice President Dick Cheney, who struck a similar theme a week earlier when he said terrorists would hit the nation again “if we make the wrong choice” in the election. The speaker and vice president are clearly trying to scare undecided voters off the fence.

Their fear-infected message boils down to this: Democrats are too weak to stand up to terrorists.

The GOP’s chest-thumping rhetoric exemplifies its low-road appeal to the U.S. electorate. Republican strategists apparently believe fear is their best ally, and they have a point: A fearful electorate is more likely to vote for Bush’s swashbuckling, testosteronian foreign policy.

But by trudging down this low road, the GOP opens itself to the much more plausible argument that Bush is Osama’s choice. And by ramping up the fear quotient, the Bush partisans actually provoke the question of whether the administration’s unilateral militarism has made U.S. citizens safer.

As Ambassador Roberts’ comments made clear, Islamists who make up the ranks of al Qaeda and similar groups are much more likely to welcome four more polarizing years of the bellicose Bushites.

In his recently published book Imperial Hubris: Why the West is Losing the War on Terror, a senior U.S. intelligence official (under the pen name Anonymous) said the invasion of Iraq has played right into Osama bin Laden’s hands by inflaming the Islamic world and enhancing the appeal of his beliefs. “I’m very sure they can’t have a better administration for them than the one they have now,” the author told the Guardian in a June 19 interview about the book.

Anonymous is hardly alone in that view. The British-based International Institute for Strategic Studies also reported last year that the war in Iraq has swollen the ranks of al Qaeda and galvanized the Islamic militant group.

And this June, 27 former diplomats and Foreign Service officers formed a bipartisan group called Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change to urge the ouster of a Bush regime it said was unable to handle the responsibilities of global leadership. “Our security has been weakened,” the group wrote. “Never in the two and a quarter centuries of our history has the United States been so isolated among the nations, so broadly feared and distrusted.”

Charles W. Freeman Jr., a former U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia and a member of the group, told reporters at a Washington news conference, “I think we will in time come to be very ashamed of this period in history and of the role some people in the administration played in setting the tone and setting the rules.”

But we don’t feel that shame, yet. And the Bush administration seems determined to give us more to be ashamed of: its arrogant, extrajudicial unilateralism is feeding the perception that we are targeting the Islamic world for conquest.

Salim Muwakkil is a senior editor of In These Times, where he has worked since 1983. He is currently a Crime and Communities Media Fellow of the Open Society Institute, examining the impact of ex-inmates and gang leaders in leadership positions in the black community.

More information about Salim Muwakkil
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  • Reader Comments

    In my view, this was an excellent piece of journalism that unfortunately will not be seen in the corporate controlled media. The only way I can think of to get these ideas across to a wider audience is to e-mail this article to all of my friends, Hopefully they will all do likewise. There are alot of people out there that just don’t know that the wool is being pulled over their eyes, so I feel that it’s my job to reach as many people as I can. I just can’t sit back and watch while my country is being taken out from under me. Any other ideas coming from this forum are welcome. Let’s get some real input, and possibly some real solutions.

    Posted by Dr.D on Oct 1, 2004 at 8:30 AM

    Interestingly, the world’s opinion of our current administration barely came up, and Bush’s disdain of world opinion is and has been obvious.
    It has become common knoweldge that many of our alies are hoping for Kerry to win this and if I recall correctly something like 80% of those polled outside of this country want Kerry to win.
    If the first debate is any indication of which of the two men is the more presidential and capable of dealing with the compexities of the world then the world community can be a little more optimistic that they as well as we will get a leader that will once again bring intellegent policies to the table.

    Posted by BAM on Oct 1, 2004 at 11:17 AM

    The Debate:
    Must admit that I did not watch the entire programme; however I did watch enough to convinced myself that Kerry is finally looking like Presidential material.
    At some point during the night I had to get up with my dog. While was attending to her needs, I watched PBS and was amazed at comments regarding the debate. One would think that PBS would be non-partisan but this is not so. I suppose that it is understandable when we realise that the bulk of their money comes from Monsanto, ADM and a number of oil companies.
    Mr. Kerry still has an uphill battle.

    twain

    Posted by twain on Oct 1, 2004 at 5:48 PM

    I was fortunate to be awake through the entire debate and have a clear opinion of what I had witnessed without any post debate analysis influencing my thought.
    Some of the commentary I’m reading and hearing is amazing and only proves that the human mind is a complex and bewildering organ, and we lay-people can’t possibly presume to understand the nerotransmitter activity that is within a pundits of a disinterested citizen’s brain.
    The spinmiesters tell us what we just saw and attempt to actually affect our own powers of reasoning. And apparently they suceed to a large extent.
    The last message indites PBS for reasons that I’m not intirely sure of and the writer admitted that they didn’t even pay attention to the debate and thought Kerry had an uphill battle. Well, yea, Kerry has an uphill battle to convince people that aren’t paying attention in the first place and second if the person doesn’t want to be informed you can’t inform them!
    I’m suspicious however that the person tuned into PBS and thought that they were being biased. How was this supposed bias displayed? Perhaps they should have changed the channel to FOX or another station not owned by some Co. that he could have some complaint about. Is there any?

    Posted by BAM on Oct 1, 2004 at 10:06 PM

    Bam:
    Please forgive me; I was not trying to be obscure but I lack your power of articulation.
    The PBS spokesman was approxiamately forty years old, thin faced and with hair which was swept from one side of his head to the other. The hair style seemed to be an attempt to cover baldness.
    The largely one sided reporting by Fox, NBC, ABC and CBS is blatant. Public broadcasting should be non-partisan; unfortunately it must rely on corporate sponsors and there-in lies the rub.
    twain

    Posted by twain on Oct 2, 2004 at 6:25 AM
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