By Rami G. Khouri
I
had a particularly enlightening and depressing day last week as a student of
American democracy and Arab-Israeli diplomacy. I know better now why most Arabs
have totally given up on expecting anything positive or fair to emerge from the
United States when it comes to the Middle East. Democracy is a great and noble
venture and a most utilitarian governance system; but it also has a dark and
ugly side that is very visible in the U.S. these days.
My
day started out while I was reading The New York Times on the flight from
Boston to Philadelphia, including a front page article that noted, “The growing
influence of Islamists in Libya raises hard questions about the ultimate
character of the government and society that will rise in the place of Col.
Muammar Gaddafi’s autocracy.”
In
what has become nearly the norm in American journalism and that of some other
Western societies, even among quality media, wildly vague, unattributed and
mostly unsubstantiated assertions are made about Arab or Islamic societies that
include pessimistic expectations about what might result from the current
revolts. Will Islamists take over? Will we have another Iran? Will democratic
Arabs threaten Israel and badmouth the U.S.? Will the democratic moment wither
away to be replaced by the authoritarianism that Arabs seem to know best?
Such
attitudes reflect prevailing concerns, biases, fears, assumptions and
preconceptions among some quarters across the U.S., without really subjecting the
issues to any sort of rigorous intellectual or even professional journalistic
scrutiny. This trend has been with us since the Arab Awakening started last
December, and reflects not only Western fears and prejudices, but also some
lingering Orientalism and a bit of racism here and there.
My
second lesson in the vagaries in democracy – at least as practiced in the
United States – occurred later that same day when I attended a city council
meeting in Philadelphia. I went to hear the discussion about a resolution –
which passed, as expected – strongly supporting U.S. Senate Resolution 185 that
denounces the Palestinian request for United Nations recognition of statehood,
threatens the Palestinians with American financial aid cutoffs, attacks Hamas
in every possible manner, and generally repeats a litany of pro-Israel,
anti-Palestinian positions that come right out of the Israeli lobby handbook of
distortions, exaggerations and general hysteria.
There
was good news and bad news here, though, because the frenzied rush by the
Philadelphia city council to suddenly take a very one-sided position on a
foreign policy issue that is beyond the mandate of the council was somewhat
offset by several other factors. The fact that this issue was discussed in
public was a sign that times are changing to some extent, because this
pro-Israel position would normally pass without any discussion. The council’s
public comments period saw half a dozen pro-Israel speakers, including the
local Israeli consul-general, recite the usual arguments that held up very
badly when assessed against the facts of the situation, but went over very well
in the American political system in which Israeli views hold sway over any
other argument – including the arguments in favor of the American national
interest, it seems. But a handful of Americans (church officials, an
Arab-American activist, a Jewish-American activist) also spoke up against the
resolution, explaining why it was factually wrong, politically imbalanced, and
diplomatically tendentious.
Lobbying
by these and other people forced the council to vote on the resolution (instead
of unanimously approving it, as was the case with other less contentious issues
that day); and in the end two city council members voted against it, one
abstained, and the others approved.
I
left the chamber realizing that little has changed or will change in the U.S.
vis-à-vis the severe pro-Israel bias on Arab-Israeli issues, partly because
pro-Israel lobbies operate very effectively at local levels across the country,
as well as through Washington-based institutions like registered lobbyists and
think tanks. Yet forcing a vote, airing opposing views, and having three
council members not vote for the resolution were small but meaningful signs of
how serious activism and moral courage to speak out can have some impact in the
U.S., however limited.
My
conclusion at the end of the day was that the struggle for justice, fairness
and equal rights in Israel and Palestine will not be won or even seriously
nudged forward in the United States, where the structural biases for Zionist
zealotry are too deeply entrenched.
This
has also been a useful refresher course for me – 40 years after living and
attending university in the United States – on why American democracy is not a
useful model for the Arab world. I understand better now why Palestinians are
taking their battle for statehood to the U.N. and defying the U.S. and its
threats and blackmail; and why so many newly democratizing Arab societies are
asking Americans offering money, advice and assistance on democratic
state-building to stay home for now.
It’s
amazing how much you can learn in America about democracy’s strengths and
weaknesses in a day, traveling between the wellsprings of America’s imperfect
democracy in Boston and Philadelphia.
This commentary was published in the Daily Star on 17/09/2011
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