'Clash of civilizations' renewing lives, communities

Category: Morgue

U.S. pipe dream in Pakistan: Is it actually American aid that’s destabilizing the country?

Philadelphia Daily News
May 2009

A FRIEND called from Lahore, Pakistan, and asked if I could put up his family in my home in the Washington, D.C., suburbs.

“Most welcome!” I said. “When are you all coming?”

“As soon as Pakistan begins to collapse!” said Abdul Wahid Qureshi, a retired college professor.

He was responding facetiously to the forecast that Pakistan would “collapse” within “one to six months” from an “extremist takeover” of its institutions made by David Kilcullen, a top adviser to Gen. David Petraeus, chief of the U.S. Central Command.

You can’t blame Pakistanis, beset with myriad problems, for having a little diversion over Americans’ curious words and deeds regarding their country.

I bet many of them were amused by the outcry in Washington calling for a military “defeat” of the Taliban, which has driven Islamabad into war against the guerrilla movement. The war has cost more than 700 lives and driven 1.3 million people from their homes.

The Pakistani army had already tried to defeat the Taliban – but couldn’t. And Pakistani Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani is promising to “flush [them] out” of their Swart area stronghold, not defeat them.

Most Pakistanis know why their government, which had helped create the Taliban and been ambivalent about their recent activities, went to war against them and when it did it.

The government of President Asif Ali Zardari initiated the anti-Taliban offensive on the eve of his visit to the U.S., a trip timed to coincide with the consideration of a substantial Pakistan aid package by the Obama administration and Congress.

With Zardari at his side, President Obama announced his plans to “meet the threat of extremism” in Pakistan “with a positive program of growth and opportunity.” The House Appropriations Committee approved $1 billion in emergency aid to Pakistan, more than half of it economic. A five-year, $7.5 billion aid package was subsequently introduced in Congress, a big chunk of it to fund programs for the public good.

Since 9/11, Pakistan has gotten $12 billion in U.S. assistance. Most of it went to the military, and Obama aides say the Bush administration aid couldn’t halt the Taliban march because it was focused exclusively on the use of the stick.

They believe their use of the carrot will do the trick by winning Pakistanis’ hearts and minds, and thus alienating them from the marauding guerrillas.

This reminds me of a Pakistani student’s prognosis for Islamism that I heard when I was invited to Karachi University to talk about the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

I had asked the student why Islamists had not done well in Pakistan’s parliamentary elections, despite their huge public rallies and strong organizations.

“Islam inspires Muslims on the big issues,” she said, “religious issues, social suppression, foreign invasion . . . issues over which people die and kill. Elections are about building schools, lowering prices, etc., for which people turn to practical politicians.”

I had heard the argument before and concur with it to an extent. I don’t think the administration’s goodies for Pakistan and its courtship of the notoriously corrupt Zardari (with his 19 percent approval rating) would derail the Taliban movement.

Many Pakistanis abhor the Taliban xenophobia and cruelty in their implementation of Islamic law. Yet, as I found out during my two latest trips, most Pakistanis support the Islamists’ struggle to rid Afghanistan of U.S. and NATO forces. It’s a “big issue” for them.

Islamism has long been a feature of Pakistan, which will not “collapse” from a spike in the Taliban’s Islamist ferment. If anything could destabilize it now, it would actually be the current government-Taliban war.

Yet the feckless Zardari government may want to continue the conflict as long as U.S. money keeps flowing. To spare the troubled nation further instability – and me the trouble of putting up the Qureshis! – the Obama administration should explore a new Pakistan strategy, beginning perhaps with an exit strategy from Afghanistan. *

Mustafa Malik, a Washington, D.C.-based columnist, has worked as a journalist and researcher in Pakistan.

The threat to ME peace

Dawn – Editorial
January 27, 2009

THE Obama administration should build on the Israeli and Hamas ceasefires to promote a durable truce between them but realise that Hamas’s survival in the Gaza war has unravelled the basis of the current peace process.

Of the nearly 1,200 Palestinians killed in the war, only about 300 were Hamas fighters. And despite the havoc the Israelis wreaked on Gaza’s infrastructure and economy, they have failed to achieve their main goals: to “topple Hamas” and stop its missiles. Meanwhile, Arab states invited Hamas politburo chief Khaled Meshaal to a summit in Qatar to discuss the Israeli invasion. Responding to Meshaal’s call for a boycott of Israel, Qatar and Mauritania have suspended trade relations with the Jewish state.

The Israeli invasion has sidelined Fatah, the secular Palestinian organisation that the Islamist Hamas has expelled from Gaza and now rules the West Bank. “This is the first time in its history that [Fatah] is neither leading nor participating in the conflict against Israel,” Qadourah Fares, a former member of the Palestinian Legislative Council, told England’s Guardian newspaper.

“The Palestinian people are fighting the occupation, while Fatah is playing the role of the spectator.” Given the growing Palestinian antipathy for Fatah, it may well be that Hamas will replace it as the vanguard of the Palestinian independence movement.Hamas wouldn’t settle for a disarmed Palestine within its pre-1967 borders or renounce the Palestinian refugees’ demand for their return to Israel from where they were driven out in 1948, as Fatah would. Someday somebody will have to work out a peace model that would enable the Palestinians and Jews to share the holy land as they had for centuries before the establishment of the ethnically cleansed Israel. One doesn’t know when and at what cost in terms of the blood spilled.

As an Islamist movement, Hamas is also part of the regional struggle against foreign domination. The Gaza war has bolstered that struggle, which was galvanised by the Afghan-Soviet war of the 1980s. The Soviets’ defeat at the hands of Afghan Mujahideen was “a Eureka moment” for the Islamists, Khurshid Ahmed, a Pakistani Islamic intellectual and politician, told me in Islamabad in October 1989. If Muslim militants could roll back the world’s largest conventional military power, he said, they could one day end the American-Israeli hegemony in West Asia. During research trips in 1991, 1995 and 2007 some of my Islamist interviewees in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates echoed his assessment.

The Arab and Muslim quest for a strategy to challenge Israeli and American domination of the Middle East began right after the Six-Day War of 1967. Israel had defeated the combined armies of Egypt, Syria and Jordan. That drove home to Arabs and Muslims that their postcolonial states could not free Palestine from Israeli occupation or throw off American tutelage over other Muslim societies. A clue to effective “anti-hegemonic” struggle was revealed by the 1983 suicide attack on US military barracks in Lebanon. A single blast by an Islamist militant, which killed 241 American troops, forced the Reagan administration to call off its military intervention in that country.

A string of subsequent Muslim guerrilla successes seemed to confirm the belief that Islamist militants could overcome non-Muslim domination. Among those successes: the expulsion of Israeli forces from southern Lebanon by Hezbollah in 2000, abandonment of US bases in Saudi Arabia in the wake of 9/11, Israel’s retreat from Gaza under Hamas fire in 2005 and Israel’s failure to defeat Hezbollah in the Second Lebanon War of 2006.

People don’t have organic ties to artificially created postcolonial states, which make up most of the Middle East. They have a deeper sense of belonging to their religious and ethnic communities and the urge to fight and die defending them. The Iraqi state’s army of 400,000 crumbled within days of the 2003 US invasion, but Shia and Sunni Islamic guerrillas have forced the world’s only superpower to plan for a retreat from Iraq.

Lebanon has a 61,000-strong army, 60 per cent of it Shia. And the Lebanese state lost all its many military encounters with Israel and no longer has the will to engage the Jewish state militarily. Yet, as mentioned, a couple of thousands of Shia Islamic militants under the Hezbollah banner rolled back the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon and faced down the invading Israeli force in the Second Lebanon War.

The Palestinians’ is the mother of all Muslim anti-hegemonic movements. The passing of the leadership of that struggle to the Islamist Hamas will not only change the goals of the Palestinian struggle but also reinforce Islamist domination of the Muslim anti-hegemonic movements elsewhere.

Successful anti-hegemonic movements have often been propelled by religious upsurge. The American Revolution was spurred by the First Great Awakening (1730-1770). In my native Indian subcontinent, the epic struggle for independent from British colonial rule followed the Khilafat-Non-Cooperation Movement (1920-1924), fuelled by Islamic and Hindu religious fervour. I suspect that US-Israeli hegemony in the Middle East will eventually be eroded by Islamist movements. Among them Hamas which has been chastened by the Gaza war.

BD secularists in Islamic cloak

Dawn
January 8, 2009

`UNPRECEDENTED election!` The headline in the Bengali-language newspaper

Jugantar aptly described Bangladesh`s parliamentary election.

Thanks largely to the deployment of 600,000 security personnel, the voting passed off without violence, which had marred most of the previous elections.

Unprecedented, too, was the level of political consciousness revealed by the Dec 29 event. The voter turnout was a record 87 per cent. In my otherwise blissfully quiet home in the northeastern district of Sylhet, deafening campaign vows, attacks, counterattacks and songs carried over microphones kept me awake until midnight. The Awami League party`s victory was also very impressive. It has captured three-fourths of the 300 parliamentary seats.

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And never before in this South Asian nation were women so excited about an election. In many polling stations in Sylhet, male voters were outnumbered by females, who made up 51 per cent of the country`s 81 million registered voters.

Because of the League`s secular tradition, the party is being courted by the US and India. In return, the League has vowed to fight terrorism in Bangladesh. The League leader Sheikh Hasina, the new prime minister, also has called for an “Asian task force” to combat terrorism throughout the region. One wonders what all this would actually mean for America.

But the most intriguing question of this election was why a society witnessing an Islamic upsurge handed a huge electoral victory to the once staunchly secularist League, while dealing a humiliating defeat to the Jamaat-i-Islami party, which bagged only three seats.

The vote cast by Zulekha, who works for me as a maid, gave a clue. She voted for my old friend A.M. Abdul Muhith, a former finance minister who ran as a League candidate. I asked the mother of seven children why she had preferred the League candidate to his rival, the nominee of the centre-right Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), which is allied with the Jamaat. The illiterate woman said she liked seeing the League leader Hasina on TV “praying at the dargah, the shrine, of the local Muslim saint Shah Jalal. “They are saying,” she added, “Hasina will also give us rice for 10 taka per kilo” — seven cents, instead of the current 19 cents per kilogram.

Hasina had kicked off the League`s election campaign on Dec 11 with prayers at the shrines of three Islamic saints. Earlier, she had performed the Haj pilgrimage. A picture, widely publicised by the League, showed her returning from the Haj in head-to-toe veils and praying with a rosary of big, glittery beads. The League`s election manifesto proposes legislation to bring any “anti-Islamic” laws into conformity with Islam. And most of the party`s candidates appeared to be competing with the Jamaat in using Islamic symbols. One League poster pasted on a tree in my village, Polashpur, warned that those who would vote for “looters, extremists”, meaning candidates from the BNP and Jamaat, “will have to answer to Allah”.

That reminded me of my interview with Hasina`s father, then League leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, 15 months before Bangladesh`s independence from Pakistan in December 1971. Mujib was also facing Islam-oriented parties in an election that would lead to the birth of Bangladesh. “Mind you,” said the would-be father of the nation, reclining on his bed with his head held up awkwardly by his right palm, “Our people are not foolish. They will not trust Islam merchants with government. They are good Muslims … but they don`t want their country and society to be wearing a sherwani.”

Mujib`s first point has been proven true. In Bangladesh, as in many other countries, Muslims prefer not to vote diehard Islamists to power. But he was wrong in assuming that Bangladeshis, 90 per cent of them Muslim, would want Islamic values and idiom rinsed out of their social and political life. Based on his belief in European-style secularism, Mujib gave a constitution that enunciated “secularism, socialism, nationalism and democracy” as Bangladesh`s foundational principles.

League leaders` robustly secularist rhetoric and policies, coupled with the Mujib government`s misrule and corruption, rapidly alienated Bangladeshis. They plunged into a breathtaking campaign to build Islamic institutions mosques; madressahs; Islamic charities, endowments, banks and insurance companies; Islamic publications; and myriad Islamic outreach (da`wa`) campaigns, public forums, retreats and Internet sites.

Between 1975, when the Mujib regime was overthrown in a military coup, and 2000, 13 mosques and five madressahs were built in my native union, or county, against only two new secular high schools. Responding to this surging Islamic tide, the governments that succeeded Mujib`s amended the constitution to drop “secularism” and “socialism” as state principles and declare Bangladesh an “Islamic state.”

Having languished in the political wilderness for two decades, the post-Mujib League realised that adaptation to Islamic culture was a precondition for success in Bangladeshi politics. More and more League leaders and activists began attending prayer congregations, performing pilgrimage to Islamic shrines, supporting Islamic institutions and couching their public rhetoric with Islamic phrases and idiom. The League`s acculturation to Bangladesh`s Islamic values and lifestyle reached a new peak during this election, enabling the party to earn the trust of the largest percentage of voters since Mujib.

Islam wasn`t an issue in this

election. Good government, corruption and price hikes were. The BNP, which had formed the last elected government, had become embroiled in a string of high-profile corruption cases involving, among others, two sons of the party chief, Khaleda Zia. The League ran an effective campaign hammering on BNP corruption and pledging low food prices, adequate power supply, trial of the opponents of Bangladesh`s independence and so forth. These were widely popular, if hard to fulfill, promises, and they have catapulted the party to power.

The Hasina government is likely to go through the motion of an anti-terror campaign, mainly to placate America and India. Bangladesh has long been plagued by Islamist and secularist violence directed against domestic, and occasionally, Indian forces. Even though anti-American sentiments are widespread in this country because of America`s support for Israel and invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan and other reasons, Muslim militants have rarely attacked American targets inside Bangladesh. They could be doing so if America gets involved in a League government campaign against “terrorism”, a label the League often uses to describe its legitimate opposition.

Focus should be on Afghan leadership

The Columbus Dispatch
October 10, 2008

Pakistan is too weak to have repelled recent American ground and air raids on suspected Taliban targets within its borders. It has protested the violations of its sovereignty by its “war on terror” ally and fired what appears to be symbolic shots at some intruding U.S. drones.

Pakistan is too weak to have repelled recent American ground and air raids on suspected Taliban targets within its borders. It has protested the violations of its sovereignty by its “war on terror” ally and fired what appears to be symbolic shots at some intruding U.S. drones.

Meanwhile, in a desperate effort to stave off U.S. incursions, the Pakistani army has launched a bloody campaign against the Taliban in the tribal areas. That threatens the country’s internal security, as signaled by the bombing of Islamabad’s Marriott Hotel, killing scores of people including the Czech ambassador and two U.S. citizens.

Anti-American militancy in Pakistan is diffuse and widespread and can’t be tackled militarily. Yet the next American administration is likely to continue the raids. The Democratic and Republican presidential nominees are committed to ratcheting up the war in Afghanistan, where Pakistani guerrillas attack NATO forces. Barack Obama advocated attacking suspected Taliban hideouts in Pakistan before the Bush administration began doing so. These offensive inroads into Pakistan would, besides threatening Pakistan’s stability, bolster the Taliban movement there.

U.S. officials say the raids are necessary because the Pakistani government is “unable or unwilling” to stop Taliban infiltration into Afghanistan. Actually, there is no shortage of willingness in the new Pakistani government to do America’s bidding. President Asif Ali Zardari has been staunchly pro-American. He owes his big job to the United States. U.S. diplomats John Negroponte and Richard Boucher pressured former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf into immunizing Zardari and his assassinated wife, onetime Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, against a string of corruption charges. That immunity enabled him to stay out of jail and run for president. Top Pakistani army generals, who play decisive roles on war-and-peace issues, also have been steadfastly pro-American, as the United States provides a quarter of the Pakistani army budget.

Nevertheless, the Pakistani government and military are reluctant to launch a sustained crackdown on the Taliban (they engage the guerrillas mainly to placate Washington) because they know it would be counterproductive. As I found out during two trips through Pakistan in the past two years, support for the “Afghan jihad” against NATO forces is widespread among Pakistanis, including those who denounce the Taliban’s violent “Islamization” campaign. Most Pakistanis resent the use of their army against their youths pursuing what they consider a legitimate struggle.

Muhammad Hafeez, chairman of the sociology department at Punjab University in Lahore, echoed a view I heard over and over in Pakistan. He said the Taliban who are fighting NATO troops in Afghanistan “are not terrorists,” as the Americans portray them. “They are mujahedeen [freedom fighters] who are fighting to liberate that country” from NATO occupation.

I wonder how the United Stages would refute Hafeez’s argument after it helped recruit, train and arm Pakistani guerrillas to fight Soviet invaders in Afghanistan in the 1980s. The Pakistani Taliban have been recruiting their anti-NATO fighters mainly from the tribal areas. Expanding what Obama called “the central front” of America’s anti-terror war to Pakistan would succeed only in expanding the Taliban’s support base there. And if American troops have gotten trapped in Iraqi sand, God help them in the Pashtun-inhabited mountains, gorges and forests of Afghanistan and Pakistan.

No invading force, from the ancient Greeks to the Soviets three decades ago, could subdue the indomitable Pashtun. Today’s Pashtun youths, moreover, are far more politically conscious than their forebears, while America’s nerves are more fragile than most of the historic hegemons. I’m afraid terror could prevail on the anti-terror war’s “central front,” unless the goals or the war are redefined.

The United States can’t eliminate even a fraction of the anti-American guerrillas in Afghanistan or Pakistan through military operations. Sooner or later it would need to eliminate the main source of anti-American terrorism in there: the NATO military presence in Afghanistan. To begin the process, Washington should develop a political framework in Afghanistan to shift power from its puppet Hamid Karzai government to one supported by the Pashtun, the largest and most powerful of Afghan tribes that are estranged from the current Afghan power structure.

Pakistani army reluctant to fight Taliban

The Columbus Dispactch
July 5, 2008

Pakistan’s assault last weekend on a militant stronghold in the Khyber tribal area might have been a sop to the Bush administration, fuming over Islamabad’s peace deal with the Taliban. But I doubt that the Pakistani army or government will, or can, rein in anti-NATO guerrillas in Pakistan.

Pakistan’s assault last weekend on a militant stronghold in the Khyber tribal area might have been a sop to the Bush administration, fuming over Islamabad’s peace deal with the Taliban. But I doubt that the Pakistani army or government will, or can, rein in anti-NATO guerrillas in Pakistan.

A Pakistani-Taliban peace deal appears to have bolstered the flow of Pakistani fighters into Afghanistan. Kandahar governor Asadullah Khalid says many of the 56 militants killed in a military operation there were Pakistanis.

The Pakistani army had pushed for the Taliban deal and, what has enraged the Americans even more, its paramilitary troops are reported to be training Taliban guerrillas. Some Pakistani officials say the recent American air strikes that killed 11 of their soldiers were a U.S. warning to their army.

So why is the Pakistani army helping the Taliban? I asked Pakistan’s ambassador to Washington, Husain Haqqani, at a dinner reception in Arlington, Va. The ambassador said he prefered “not to answer this question.” After a pause, he added, “The army operates in Pakistan’s social environment.” I was surprised by the envoy’s effort to explain, rather than deny, his military’s involvement in Taliban activities.

Pakistan’s “social environment” is indeed overwhelmingly supportive of the guerrilla movement to expel NATO troops from Afghanistan. The discredited Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf led the “war on terror” against the Taliban and al-Qaida to gain U.S. support for his military dictatorship. But the current democratically elected government, sensitive to the public opinion, considers it suicidal to do so. Government officials also point out that Musharraf’s military crackdowns against the Taliban have increased the guerrilla group’s popularity and militancy.

During a fall trip through Pakistan, I was told by politicians, scholars and ordinary folks that they didn’t differentiate between NATO and Soviet troops in Afghanistan. Pakistani youths, supported by the CIA and U.S. arms, fought to roll back the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s.

In Islamabad, Sen. M. Enver Baig of the ruling Pakistan People’s Party reminded me that the U.S. government and media called the anti-Soviet guerrillas freedom fighters. He reiterated that the Taliban were resisting “American hegemony,” but that they “don’t hate Americans.”

The Taliban belong mostly to the Pushtun tribes, who make up 42 percent of Afghanistan’s population and nearly 20 percent of Pakistan’s. Pakistan has twice as many Pushtun as there are in Afghanistan. Many Pushtun (used as singular and plural) in Pakistan and Afghanistan resent the boundary, drawn by the British colonial power, that divides them between the two countries.

The Pushtun are known for their hospitality and spirit of independence. Unlike al-Qaida, the Taliban didn’t have an anti-American agenda. Their belief that they had a “duty” to protect their guest Osama bin Laden made them face the catastrophe of the 2001 U.S. invasion. In the Bajaur district of the tribal area, I was told that if President Bush had become the Pushtun’s guest, they would have protected him with their lives.

Similarly, throughout history the Pushtun have shown indomitable valor in beating back invaders, some of them superpowers of their day, such as the Greeks, British and Soviets. Today, most Pakistanis and Afghans believe that the Pushtun will drive NATO forces from Afghanistan as well, and Pakistanis overwhelmingly support their campaign.

Apart from Pakistan’s pro-Taliban social environment, strategic calculations weigh heavily with the Pakistani army, which dominates the management of Islamabad’s Afghan (as well as Kashmiri and nuclear-arms) policy. Army officers resent the warms ties Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s government has with India, Pakistan’s arch adversary. And they believe that because NATO will one day leave Afghanistan, they need to make sure Kabul doesn’t come under the influence of a hostile power, especially India.

The Pakistani army is cultivating the Taliban because it sees them dominating political life in the post-NATO Afghanistan. They ruled Afghanistan from 1996-2001, when Pakistan’s relations with it were the closest ever.

The Pakistani army values Islamabad’s relations with the U.S., but it thinks it can’t ignore Pakistan’s strategic interests in Afghanistan. The army has, however, diminished its support for the Taliban in an effort to placate the Bush administration, hoping, somewhat desperately, that the Americans eventually will realize that they someday will need to bid Afghanistan farewell, but that Pakistan can’t.

Pakistan’s odd dance with the Taliban

The Daily Star – Lebanon
July 1, 2008

As NATO troops face stepped up guerrilla attacks in Afghanistan, Pakistan’s new ambassador to Washington, Husain Haqqani, is trying hard to explain to Americans why his government has tried to make peace with the Pakistani Taliban. That peace deal, despite the army’s confrontation with a senior Pakistani Taliban leader in the past few days, appears to have bolstered the flow of Pakistani fighters into Afghanistan. Kandahar Governor Asadullah Khalid says most of the 56 militants killed in a recent military operation there were Pakistanis.

The Pakistani Army had pushed for the Taliban deal and, more ominously, its paramilitary troops are reported to be training Taliban guerrillas. Some Pakistani officials say the recent American air strikes that killed 11 of their soldiers were a US warning to their army.

So why is the army helping the Taliban? I asked Haqqani at a dinner reception in Arlington, Virginia. The ambassador said he prefers “not to answer this question.” After a pause, he added: “The army operates in Pakistan’s social environment.” I was surprised by the envoy’s effort to explain, rather than deny, his military’s involvement in Taliban activities.

Pakistan’s “social environment” is indeed overwhelmingly supportive of the guerrilla movement to expel NATO troops from Afghanistan. The discredited Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf led the “war on terror” against the Taliban and Al-Qaeda to gain American support for his military rule. But the current democratically elected government, sensitive to public opinion, considers it suicidal to do so. Government officials also point out that Musharraf’s military crackdowns against the Taliban have increased, instead of decreased, the guerrilla group’s popularity and militancy.

During a fall trip through Pakistan, I was told by politicians, scholars and ordinary people that they didn’t differentiate between NATO and Soviet troops in Afghanistan. Pakistani youths, supported by the CIA and American arms, fought to roll back the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s.

In Islamabad, Senator M. Enver Baig of the ruling Pakistan People’s Party reminded me that the US government and media called the anti-Soviet guerrillas “mujahideen” or freedom fighters. He said the Taliban were resisting “American hegemony,” but that they “don’t hate Americans.”

The Taliban are made up mostly of Pashtun, who make up 42 percent of Afghanistan’s population and nearly 20 percent of Pakistan’s. Numerically, Pakistan has twice as many Pashtun as in Afghanistan. Many Pashtun in both Pakistan and Afghanistan resent the boundary, drawn by the British colonial power, that divides them between the two countries.

The Pashtun are known for their infinite hospitality and legendary spirit of independence. Unlike Al-Qaeda, the Taliban didn’t have an anti-American agenda. Their belief that they had a “duty” to protect their guest Osama bin Laden made them face the catastrophe of the 2001 US invasion. In Bajaur tribal agency, I was told that if George W. Bush had become a Pashtun guest, they would have protected him, too, with their lives.

Similarly, throughout history the Pashtun have shown indomitable valor in beating back invaders, some of them superpowers of their day such as the Greeks, British and Soviets. Today most Pakistanis and Afghans believe in their bones that the Pashtun will drive back the NATO forces from Afghanistan as well, and Pakistanis overwhelmingly support their campaign.

Apart from Pakistan’s pro-Taliban social environment, strategic calculations weigh heavily with the Pakistani Army, which dominates the management of Islamabad’s Afghan (as well as Kashmiri and nuclear-arms) policy. Army officers resent Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s warm ties to India, Pakistan’s arch-adversary. And they believe that because NATO will one day be pulling up its stakes from Afghanistan, they need to make sure Kabul doesn’t come under the influence of a hostile power, especially India. The Pakistani Army is cultivating the Taliban because it sees them dominating political life in post-NATO Afghanistan. They ruled Afghanistan during 1996-2001, when Pakistan’s relations with it were the closest ever.

The Pakistani Army values relations with the United States, but it thinks it can’t ignore Pakistan’s strategic interests in Afghanistan. The army has, however, lessened somewhat it support for the Taliban in an effort to placate the Bush administration, hoping, perhaps desperately, that the Americans will eventually realize that they will need some day to bid Afghanistan farewell, but that Pakistan cannot do so.

Muslim Youths in the West: Carving Out a ‘Third Space’

Council for Research in Values and Philosophy
Chapter X in the 2008 publication entitled: ‘Communication across Cultures: The Hermeneutics of Cultures and Religions in a Global Age’

Chapter X
Islam’s Emerging ‘Third Space’ in the West

Whether a full-blown “clash of civilization” is inevitable between Islam and the West, a culture clash in the West between Muslim and local communities has been simmering for a while. It began with the influx of large numbers of Muslim refugees in North America and Western Europe in the mid-twentieth century. And it has deepened after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on American targets, carried out by a group of Muslims riled by U.S. “hegemonic” policies in the Muslim world.

Hundreds of Muslims in the West have been interrogated, detained, kept under surveillance, thrown off aircraft and harassed in many other ways. The Muslim countries of Afghanistan and Iraq have been invaded. Governments suppressing Muslim struggles for independence, political autonomy and human rights have been co-opted into a U.S. “war on terror,” which many Muslims around the world view as a new “crusade” against
Islam. This Western-Islamic clash has heightened Western Muslims’ awareness of their special role as a cultural category whose identity and loyalty straddle the civilizational divide.

In this paper I posit that Western Muslims have been carving out a unique cultural space for themselves, which is facilitated by the “crisis of liberalism” and the consequent erosion of the sovereignty of the nation-states. The new Muslim space, I argue, reflects the evolving meaning of citizenship in the modern state system.

First, I focus on the societal malaise spawned in liberal Western societies by Cartesian rationalism. Secondly, I review the evolution of traditional Islamic cultural patterns and the apparent incongruity of Muslim values and idiom in the Western societies. Finally, I examine the hybridization of new generations of Western Muslims, which appears to endow them with a social role accommodating their dual identities as citizens of Western states and members of the global Muslim community, or the umma.

“Islam and the West” usually point to two different value systems and worldviews that are reflected in the social and political structures of the West and the Muslim world. Freedom of the “rational” individual is the seminal value that supposedly underpins the whole liberal capitalist edifice of the West. The affirmation of the creed reverberated around the world when President George W. Bush characterized 9/11 as an attack on “our freedom” in an effort to rally America and the West behind his war against Afghanistan
and Iraq.

Aristotle advised Alexander to distinguish the Greeks from the barbarians,1 and Montesquieu attributed the glory of Rome to the Romans’ defense of their faith and, among other things, maintenance of a distinction between the plebeians and patricians.2
Maintaining racial and cultural purity has historically been a major concern of many Westerners. Today Samuel Huntington and his ilk have been arguing for the preservation of Western cultural “exceptionalism,” which has been an underlying reason Western governments have tightened their immigration laws.

Actually, though, the liberal political culture is based on what Kant called a “rotten dogmatism,” namely that rationality is the only authentic source of man’s knowledge, and hence freedom and happiness. Philosophers and thinkers have since all but demolished the rationalist argument, which was initiated by Rene Descartes. They point out that belief, intuition and experience are also vital sources of knowledge, happiness and meaning. “The abrasive [Cartesian] processes of human reason,” George McLean has put it succinctly, “omitted existence, person, freedom, culture and creativity.”3

Liberal Western societies could ignore its philosophers and sociologists as long as its sovereign states could guard its capitalist enterprises and quarantine its national cultures from alternative lifestyles and sources of meaning that belie the rationalist myth. But capitalism outgrew the Western state system, and Western business people, professionals, media operatives and everyday citizens began to traverse the globe, confronting non-Western people and lifestyles. Simultaneously, the need for economic expansion brought in non-Western culture groups – many of them Muslim – exposing the rest of Westerners to contrasting values and cultures.

As Hellenistic and Roman civilizations reached their maturity, their citizens also traveled to widely and interacted with diverse cultures. The result in each case was what Peter Berger calls “cognitive contamination” of creeds and beliefs, relativization of values and Weltanschauung and growth of pluralism.4 The Roman creed was relativized by Christianity, which in turn was transformed by its exposure to Enlightenment ideas. In the same way Enlightenment liberalism has been coming unglued from its encounter with other cultures, betraying its flaws and perniciousness.

Gone are the days when American Protestants scorned Catholics and Jews and lynched blacks, and the British treated the Irish as second class citizens and immigrants from their colonies as little better than slaves. Both the United States and Britain today flaunt “multiculturalism,” having conceded equal legal rights to citizens of non-Western racial origins.

Cross-cultural interaction is making the Westerner appreciate the humanity of the cultural “Other” as well as alternative sources of happiness, and meaningful freedom. To the rationalist, individual freedom means absence of barriers to the pursuit of one’s desires. But what does it mean for a high school dropout working two jobs to keep ends meeting, and having no kin or close friends, a condition typical of vast numbers of people in the liberal industrial societies?

The absence of barriers to the pursuit happiness gives man what anthropologists call “negative freedom,” which seldom produces true happiness. “The negative sense of freedom,” explains Richard Khuri, “is that in which we emphasize our freedom to choose, whether among trivial or serious matters, and the opportunity we are given to do so through lack of interference from authorities. The positive sense of freedom is that in which we emphasize the quality of our choice and what we do with the opportunity we are given, the transcendent root of freedom, and freedom itself as meaningful expansiveness in a boundless world.”5

“Positive freedom,” which brings real happiness, comes from man’s relationships with family, community and the spiritual realm. But the industrial society, created by tool-making rationality, has all but destroyed those sources of freedom.

Negative freedom is what we are used to and aspire for in modern industrial democracies. What this kind of freedom amounts to comes through to me when I see a hardworking cashier at my neighborhood Giant department store splurging her meager savings Friday nights at smoke-filled bars looking for dates, most of whom disappoint her. She does not have family or friends around.

She said to me wistfully one day that she enjoyed her Pakistani neighbors who complain of never having a “free moment” as their weekends and evenings are used up in entertaining and visiting relatives and friends and participating in events at the Laurel, Md., mosque.

The automobiles, computers and facilities for good health have failed to enrich Western life with real meaning or fulfillment, which positive freedom could bring. Western modernity, fueled by Cartesian rationalism, has corroded most of the sources of man’s fulfillment, his pursuit of “subjective” values, which, as Kierkegaard would say, enables man to realize his true self.6

ISLAM’S SOJOURN

Islam is the last of the three great Abrahamic faiths, and in a spirit of “reforming” the Judeo-Christian tradition, it prescribed values and norms that would provide the children of Abraham a fulfilling life.

Islam views man as God’s “vice-regent on Earth,” for whom living a good life is a main part of worship. Islam declared that man is individually and directly accountable to God for his deeds 900 years before Martin Luther put out his 95 theses echoing the same message. And it proclaimed equality among all believers regardless of their race or ethnicity 1,400 years before Martin Luther King Jr. dreamed about it on the Washington Mall. The faith preached by the Prophet Muhammad sought to liberate man from the ecclesiastical domination that was being resented in Byzantine and Zoroastrian societies.

Islam sought to diminish tribalism and ethnic strife by setting up the egalitarian social structure of the umma. Initially, the umma was conceived as a pluralist society, a confederation of Muslim and non-Muslim groups in Medina. But eventually it emerged as the colorblind, interethnic community of believers. Muhammad described the umma as “one body, if one part is ill, the whole body feels it.”7 The fundamental value that underpins the umma and its mission is “justice,” which in Islamic parlance means fairness and charity.

The social structure laid out by the Prophet and the values introduced by the new faith began to give way after his death, and umma unity was shattered by a civil war and power struggle. The dispute pitted those who believed that the community should be ruled by whomever it may chose against those who espoused the rule of Muhammad’s descendents. The former account for nearly 90 percent of the world Muslim population and are known as the Sunnis. The latter are called the Shia, and they make up the majority of the populations in Iran, Iraq, Bahrain and Azerbaijan. As Islam spread across the globe, it was further divided into myriad national, ethnic, doctrinal and ideological groups. The umma today is a quilt of countless cultural patches groups draping the globe.

Although Islam calls for the solidarity of all believers, it does recognize Muslim ethnic and cultural diversity. In fact, the Qura’n suggests that Muslims’ attachment to “nations and tribes” endow them with the insight to “know one another” better.8 What Muslim scripture strongly forbids is intergroup feuding.

As the faith spread, its cultural pattern was modified by new social environments even though its basic doctrines and values endured. The umma provides an interesting study of institutional diversity. In some Muslim countries government offices and many businesses shut down during prayer times, and Friday, the Muslim sabbath, is a closed holiday. Most of these societies maintain the segregation of the sexes in public and have proscribed the consumption of alcohol, banned by Islamic scripture.

Other Muslim societies, while observing Friday as the weekly holiday, do not mandate the closing of offices or businesses for prayer. Some of these societies do not tolerate the public consumption of alcohol, others do. Some of them bar women from outdoor activities, others do not. In some other Muslim countries Sunday is observed as the weekly holiday, and consumption of alcohol in public is permitted. The Islamic dress code for men and women, too, varies from region to region.

The genius of Islam lies in its adaptability to the environment, which has enabled it to flourish through history. When the faith was born in Arabia, it adopted the Arabs’ dress code, language, main shrine, and many other institutions. Some of those institutions the Arabs had borrowed from other faiths and cultures. Muslim women’s head covering is a case in point.

According to one theory, the custom was introduced in Persia in the sixth century B.C. by the Achamenian Emperor Cyrus the Great in order to protect the chastity of women. It passed on to the Byzantines from whom the Arabs copied it and eventually gave it religious sanction.9

As Islam began to travel, its original institutions began to change to adapt to local cultures. Again, women’s head covering is a good example. Typically, a Saudi or Afghan woman would cover up her whole head (and often the entire body) to keep any hair from showing. A typical Pakistani woman would throw a thin piece of cloth known as dupatta over her head, which leaves the front one-third of the head exposed. A Bangladeshi Muslim would simply draw the tail end of her saree, originally a Hindu costume, to cover as much of the head as the situation requires her to hide.

Baroness Pola Uddin, a Bangladeshi native who is a member of the British House of Lords, covers her head only on certain social occasions, which include visiting a mosque. “I’d cover my head,” she said, “when I meet my father-in-law and my husband’s older male cousins as a mark of respect.”10 Many educated and working class Muslim women in many countries do not cover their heads at all. Of course Islam’s cultural adaptability has sometimes proved costly. Islamic principles of intra-ethnic brotherhood, for example,
gave way during the post-Prophetic succession struggle, and ethnic and national strife has bedeviled Muslim history. In many societies, especially where Muslims are minorities, many Muslims appear to be culturally assimilated to non-Muslims, and one would wonder if Islam means anything to them. Yet an Islamic worldview, fostered by the concepts of umma and justice, hold them together as communities and nations. Bosnian Muslims, for example, have been among the most secularized in the world. Their forebears used to be Christian Serbs and Croats. Yet in the 1990s tens of thousands of them gave their lives fighting Christian Serbs and Croats to preserve their Muslim identity. The same has been the case with Kosovar Muslims.

The movement for the independence of Bangladesh from the “Islamic republic” of Pakistan was led by a thoroughly secular Muslim elite, who enlisted the support of Hindu-majority India in their struggle against their fellow-believers in Pakistan. But soon after their independence, Bangladeshis overthrew their pro-Indian government, the country’s foreign policy took on an anti-Indian stance and more and more Bangladeshis began to practice the faith or flaunt Islamic cultural symbols. They were alarmed, a well-known
Bangladeshi writer told me, by the twin threat of Indian cultural infiltration and later the U.S. “hegemony” over the Muslim world and began “coming home to Islam.”11

The umma spirit and the search for justice, two of the seminal Islamic concepts, have been continually reinforced by Muslim encounters with other cultures and civilizations, especially the West. The Muslim world has not gone through the type of secularizing revolution as did the post-Enlightenment Europe, and Islam remains the main cultural resource of just about all Muslim societies, regardless of their level of modernization. Hence political and cultural clashes with the “Other” have also reinforced other Islamic values.

Whenever Muslims have faced a political challenge, they have reached for their religious roots — i.e. Islamic symbols and ethical standards — to reinforce their sense of dignity and identity and resist the threat. This is why Muslim anti-colonial struggles fueled Islamic revivalist movements, rejuvenated by the subsequent resistance to U.S. hegemonism in the Muslim world. The political and cultural challenge posed by the West has, to quote Ernest Gellner, “impelled [Muslim] populations in the direction of the formally (theologically) more ‘correct’ Islam.”12 As a result, Gellner adds, “Islam is as strong now as it was a century ago. In some ways it is probably stronger.”13

MIGRATION SAGA

The Islamic revival has so far occurred in premodern or modernizing Muslim societies outside the West. The resurgence is also being felt among many immigrant Muslim communities in the West, nurturing versions of Islamic culture “imported” from non-Western countries. What becomes of Western Islam when Western-born generations of Muslims progressively lose the memories of their forebears’ values and norms incubated in the premodern Muslims societies?

We have noted that Islam has historically proved highly adaptable to local cultural idiom while retaining its basic beliefs and values. But the challenge of adaptation in contemporary West is qualitatively different from those that the faith encountered in the premodern societies.

In premodern or modernizing societies, religion underpins culture, and people – whatever their religious affiliation – identify with religious meanings that they believe are nobler than material goods. Muslims in those societies usually lived separate lives from other faith groups, nurturing their religious institutions and social ties sanctified by Islam.

Muslims’ lifestyles and values in premodern societies they shared with non-Muslims have been different from those of non-Muslims, and interfaith conflicts have been a feature of some such societies. But usually faith groups in those societies have respected each other’s values and customs and left one another alone. Usually, Muslims in mixed premodern societies coexisted with non-Muslims in autonomous communities in relative peace.

Living in modern liberal societies is, however, a different ballgame for most Muslims. Modernity challenges not only their social and cultural norms but their whole Weltanschauung. A Pakistani or Algerian Muslim immigrant to Western Europe or North America is disoriented to find not only his native Islamic attire and etiquette at odds in his host society, but his umma ties with the Iraqis, Palestinians and Kashmiris an aberration, and sometimes treasonous. He, too, has a hard time reconciling with the liberal Western concept of his religious praxis being treated as his personal matter, unrecognized by the state.

The West challenges their cultural identity and outlook, while nonMuslim Eastern societies require just the adaptation of some of their mores and customs. And while Islam can indeed adapt to the West as it has to the East, it is paying more dearly for its Western sojourn than it ever has for crosscultural expansion. Muslims in the West are secularizing fast. I have written elsewhere that the percentage of Western-born Muslims attending the Friday jumua prayer regularly is comparable to West European Christians attending
weekly church services.14

Nevertheless, unlike the earlier major waves of immigrants to Western Europe and North America, Muslims are unlikely to assimilate into the Western Judeo-Christian mainstreams. A host of factors, mostly stemming from the inherent malaise of rationalism, are cushioning them against the assimilationist pull. They include the erosion of national cultures and sovereignty, the need for non-Western labor, expansion and integration of the European Union, globalization of the American political and economic interests, and so on. Assimilation of the cultural Other has, in fact, ceased to be demand
of Western societies where multiculturalism and pluralism are increasingly gaining ground.

Secondly, while European and Hispanic Catholics and Ashkenazi Jews, who made up the bulk of earlier immigrants to the Western countries, have had racial and religious affinity with host societies, Muslims belong to, not only a non-Western faith, but non-white racial stocks. And historically, the pace of assimilation of non-whites into the white Western national mainstreams remains by far the slowest.15

The all-important question remains: On what terms are Muslims likely to live in the West? In other words, what would the Western Muslim cultural pattern look like?

As we have noted the umma was born of migration, and a pluralist collectivity. The saga of migration and pluralist streak endure in the collective Muslim memory, despite the many intolerant stands of the faith. This is why Muslims have been able to adapt to the cultural patterns of all kinds of societies in which they have settled. Notable exceptions were Moorish Iberia and Ottoman Balkans, from where Islam was expunged by resurgent Christianity and nationalism. The West today is more hospitable to the faith, notwithstanding the idiosyncrasies of liberalism.

The rational methods and “cognitive contamination” from interaction with the Other, which are pluralizing Western societies, are also reinforcing pluralism among Western Muslims. Recent research, my own and that of others’, has shown that the second and third generation Western Muslims are increasingly living a “hybrid” lifestyle. Sociologists Steven Vertovec and Alisdair Rogers say “hybrid Islam is sweeping Europe” and is exemplified by young men “wearing sunglasses, baggy trousers, large trainers loosely laced, and a black T-shirt depicting the photo of the earth from space under which appear the words ‘dar al-Islam,’” or the land of Islam.16

When I read their description of the Muslim youth, I wondered if he was describing my son, Jamal! I see this “hybridized” Muslim breed in American malls, campuses and even mosques. These youths participate in the “It’s Academic” contests at schools, play on local football teams, organize seminars on Islam and join rallies protesting the Anglo-U.S. war against Iraq.

The second- and third-generation Western Muslims, notes British sociologist Tariq Modood, “define themselves in terms of multiple national attachments and are comfortable with fluid and plural identities.”17

Their hybridity claims a cultural space that differs from that of social syncretism, as characterized the lifestyles of the offspring of Judeo-Christian immigrants of earlier times. The scions of Catholic and Jewish immigrants to America and different West European countries also participated in their discreet religious and ethnic events and displayed their ancestors’ ethnic symbols. But they also joined local Christian youths at Christmas parties, church events, Saint Patrick’s Day parades and Bastille Day celebrations. This latter set of events is integral to Western national cultures, or “public religion,” to borrow Robert Bellah’s expression. The syncretizing offspring of Western immigrants felt at home with this national creed, which gradually cemented their bonds with the national mainstreams. Syncretism was a prelude to assimilation.

Muslim youths, while participating in many mainstream social events, keep away from those associated with the Jewish or Christian faiths, and often from the “public religion” events specific to the Western civilization. A son or daughter of a Levantine or Maghrebi Muslim immigrant to the United States, for example, would not get excited over the Columbus Day celebration as Christopher Columbus would remind him or her of Western colonization of Muslim lands. A Muslim youth of Pakistani, Indian or Bangladeshi descent may have little interest in a documentary or seminar on Winston Churchill or World War II. The memory of imperial Britain is painful for the offspring of Muslims (and Hindus) of the Indian subcontinent, a former British colony.

The Muslim youths in the West, while participating in Western social, political and economic life, are far from willing to assimilate into Western social mainstreams. Their hybridity signals their preference for a differentiated space in Western societies. The need for such a space is underscored by their unique status as citizens of Western nation-states who are also members of the global umma. Their cultural niche is identical to what Homi Bhaba calls the “third space” in which citizens share their allegiance to their nation-state with their affiliation with one or more international entities.18

Modern nation-states need a new concept of citizenship, not just because of the Muslim affiliation with the umma. As globalization speeds up, a whole web of economic and social relationships are increasingly linking up citizens of nation-states with myriad transnational groups, interests and issues. It all is making, according to Benedict Anderson, our passports “counterfeit.” The passports of Portuguese or Bangladeshi citizens, he says, “tell us little about the loyalty or habitus, but they tell us a great deal about the relative likelihood of their holders being permitted to seek jobs in Milan or
Copenhagen.”19

The same thing can be said of the passport of the executives of American corporations such as MCI, General Electric, AT&T and IBM, whose business outlets and network of employees span the globe. And how authentic is the passport of a British, French or Dutch citizen today? How much of his loyalty stays with his nation state and how much of it has been transferred to the European Union? What does the Serbian citizenship mean to Slobodan Milosevic, who is being tried for war crimes at the European Court of Justice
in The Hague? They are all a hybrid bunch, but their hybridity borders on syncretism because of their common liberal creed and Eurocentric culture.

The hybridity of Muslim youths in the West, more visible as it is because of their creedal and racial distinctiveness, reflects a new concept of citizenship that I believe is evolving from the “crisis of liberalism” in the post-Westphalian Western states.

NOTES

  1. Barker, Ernest (ed), The Politics of Aristotle (New York: Oxford University Press, 1979), p. lix.
  2. Almond, Gabriel A., “The Intellectual History of Civic Culture Concept,” in Gabriel A. Almond and Sidney Verba (eds), The Civic Culture Revisited (London: Sage Publications, 1989), p. 5.
  3. McLean, George F., Ways to God: Personal and Social at the Turn of the Millennia (Washington, D.C.: The Council for Research in Values and Philosophy, 1999), p. 266.
  4. Berger, Peter L., A Far Glory: The Quest for Faith in an Age of Credulity (New York: Anchor Books, 1992), pp. 38-39.
  5. Khuri, Richard K., Freedom, Modernity and Islam: Toward a Creative Synthesis (Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 1998), p.81.
  6. Stumpf, Samuel Enoch, Socrates to Sartre: A History of Philosophy (New York: McGraw Hill Book Co., 1975), p. 467.
  7. Ramadan, Tariq, To Be a European Muslim (Leicester, England: The Islamic Foundation, 1999), p. 158.
  8. The Qura’n, XLIX: 13.
  9. MacKey, Sandra, The Iranians: Persia, Islam and the Soul of a Nation (New York: Dutton, 1996), p. 94.
  10. Author’s interview with Baroness Pola Uddin, the House of Lords, London, November 13, 2000.
  11. Author’s interview with Professor Mahbub Ullah, Dhaka, Bangladesh, July 25, 2003.
  12. Gellner, Ernest, Postmodernism, Reason and Religion (New York: Routledge, 1992), p. 15.
  13. Ibid, p. 5.
  14. Malik, Mustafa, The Umma in the West, to be published.
  15. Alba, Richard D., Ethnic Identity: The Transformation of White America (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1990), pp. 12-13.
  16. Vertovec, Steven and Alisdair Rogers, “Introduction,” in Vertovec, Steven and Alisdair Rogers (eds), Muslim European Youth: Reproducing Ethnicity, Religion, Culture (Aldershot, England: Ashgate, 1998), p. 1.
  17. Modood, Tariq, “Introduction: The Politics of Multiculturalism in New Europe,” in Modood, Tariq and Pnina Werbner (eds), The Politics of Multiculturalism in New Europe: Racism, Identity and Community (London: Zed Books Ltd., 1997), p. 10.
  18. Rutherford, Jonathan, “The Third Space: Interview With Homi Bhaba,” in Jonathan Rutherford (ed), Identity, Community, Culture, Difference (London: Laurence and Wishart, 1990), p. 211.
  19. Anderson, Benedict, “Exodus,” Critical Inquiry, Vol. 20 (Winter 1994), pp. 323-4.

Sunday Forum: Suspected by my country

Pittsburgh Post-Gazzette
May 25, 2008

WASHINGTON — The other day my wife and I headed for New Hampshire to spend the weekend with my in-laws. At the Baltimore-Washington International Airport, Patricia used her e-ticket to get her boarding pass from a self-help computer. But when she keyed in my e-ticket information, a message on the computer screen directed me to the check-in counter.

“I got my boarding pass from that machine but couldn’t get my husband’s!” Pat told a woman behind a Northwest Airlines desk. The clerk checked out my ticket in her computer and said, “You’re on the watch list, sir!”

I had suspected that for five years.

The Northwest employee would not say what I was being watched for but confirmed that the watch list had come from the Department of Homeland Security.

I believe my views on the Palestinian issue and terrorism are the main reasons for my being on the list.

On Jan. 13, 2003, Pat had just summoned me and our two children for dinner in our home in the Washington suburbs when three men appeared at the door. They introduced themselves as “terrorism investigators” from the Homeland Security Department and wanted to talk with me. Alia and Jamal, then teenagers, looked scared, and I sent them to the living room. My wife sat by as the men interrogated me at the kitchen table.

They quizzed me about a host of Muslim intellectuals and activists in the United States, Europe, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan whom I had known or interviewed. Did any of them have ties to Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah or any other “terrorist” groups? I said I did not know and asked the lead interrogator how he would “define terrorism.”

“Well,” he said, “do any of them support the Palestinians?”

My wife’s eyebrows rose.

“Gentlemen,” I said, “I support the Palestinians.”

A Homeland Security terrorism investigator visited me again. He asked me about some of my other Muslim contacts, and even though I had been writing about a variety of issues, he asked my views only on terrorism and Palestinian militant groups. I reiterated that the Palestinian guerrillas were doing what Massachusetts Minutemen had done during the American Revolution: fight for national liberation.

These federal agents could have learned about my meetings with some Muslim activists and academics from published articles in which I had quoted them. But they also quizzed me about those whom I had contacted by phone and e-mail but had not mentioned in any writings. I realized that my phone conversations and e-mails could have been intercepted.

The Homeland Security folks appear to have circulated my profile among airlines. On March 31 I boarded a British Airways flight in Dhaka, Bangladesh, to return to Washington. A flight attendant handed me a lunch packet about 10 minutes before the lunch carts rolled by to serve everyone else. I asked her why she had served me before other passengers. She said mine was a “Muslim meal,” meaning the meat was kosher. I said I did not request a kosher meal and asked how she knew that I was a Muslim.

“I also know,” she whispered, “that you speak four languages!” She scampered away before I could ask about the source of her information.

During international flights, my luggage is held up, apparently for special scrutiny. Since 2003 I have flown out of the United States four times. On every occasion I discovered after disembarking that my luggage had not arrived. It would show up after one to five days, sometimes putting me through the wringer.

Last June 10, for example, I flew to the United Arab Emirates along with a several other U.S. journalists to cover the surge of trade and business in that country. At the Abu Dhabi airport I was the only one of the group whose luggage was missing. It would be delivered five days later, the day before my departure. Meanwhile, I interviewed government ministers and other officials and attended banquets and meetings in the same pair of jeans and short-sleeve shirt that I had worn on the plane. (Every day I was expecting the luggage to arrive by the next fight and therefore didn’t buy new clothing.)

On my return to JFK on June 17, I had to spend nearly half an hour answering questions about where I went, whom I met, what I did, etc., while my companions breezed through without any hassle. I was the only Muslim among the group.

There also have been discernible attempts to provoke me into criticizing Israel and America. Several suspicious characters have contacted me one after another to discuss Palestine/Israel and Muslim militancy. All began by railing against Israel, the Jews and the American policy in the Middle East. Some claimed to be journalists whom I could not track down later.

Then there was the TV “producer” who wanted to retain me as a consultant for a documentary that would “expose” Israeli atrocities in Palestine. I noted that whenever I returned her calls, she would not hear me well or be on another call. A couple of minutes later she would call back and begin blasting Israel’s “state terrorism” and America’s “anti-Muslim” foreign policy. She went through this routine after each of my calls. I realized that she was taping my comments. An Internet search failed to find a documentary she claimed to have produced and stories she claimed to have written for U.S. News and World Report.

One day she called to announce she planned to do a major story on India’s underclass. If she could get the funding for me, would I join her? During the conversation, she reviled Israel’s “crime against humanity” in Gaza. I could imagine my having dinner with her at a Delhi restaurant, while a tape in her handbag recording my defense of Hamas’ right to resist Israeli occupation. I wondered, too, if I would find myself in a secret CIA jail! After the conversation she e-mailed me her picture.

What an attractive blonde!

I asked Pat, who shared my suspicion of her, if I should accompany this pretty “journalist” to India.

“If you do,” my wife warned, “you will be on my watch list!”

Under suspicion, American style

The Daily Star – Lebanon
May 20, 2008

The other day my wife and I headed for New Hampshire to spend the weekend with my in-laws. At the Baltimore-Washington International airport, Patricia used her e-ticket to get her boarding pass from a machine. But when she keyed in my e-ticket information, a message on the computer screen directed me to the check-in counter.

“I got my boarding pass from that machine but couldn’t get my husband’s!” Pat told a woman behind a Northwest Airlines desk. The clerk checked out my ticket in her computer and said, “You’re on the watch list, sir!”

I had suspected that for five years.

The Northwest employee would not say what I was being watched for but confirmed that the watch list had come from the Department of Homeland Security.

I believe my views on the Palestinian issue and terrorism are the main reasons for my being on that list.

On January 13, 2003, Pat had just summoned me and our two children for dinner in our home in the Washington suburbs when three men appeared at the door. They introduced themselves as “terrorism investigators” from Homeland Security and wanted to talk to me. Alia and Jamal, then teenagers, looked scared, and I sent them to the living room. My wife sat by as the men interrogated me at the kitchen table.

They quizzed me about a host of Muslim intellectuals and activists in the United States, Europe and Pakistan whom I had known or interviewed. Did any of them have ties to Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Hizbullah or any other “terrorist” groups? I said I did not know and asked the lead interrogator how he would “define terrorism.”

“Well,” he said, “do any of them support the Palestinians?”

My wife’s eyebrows rose.

“Gentlemen,” I said, “I support the Palestinians.”

A Homeland Security terrorism investigator visited me again. He asked me about some of my other Muslim contacts, and even though I had been writing about a variety of issues, he asked my views only on terrorism and Palestinian militant groups. I reiterated that the Palestinian guerrillas were doing what Massachusetts Minutemen had done during the American Revolution: fighting for national liberation.

These federal agents could have learned about my meetings with some Muslim activists and academics from published articles in which I had quoted them. But they also quizzed me about those whom I had contacted by phone and e-mail but had not mentioned in any writings. I realized that my phone conversations and e-mails could have been intercepted.

Homeland Security appears to have circulated my profile to airlines. This past March 31 I boarded a British Airways flight in Dhaka, Bangladesh, to return to Washington. A flight attendant handed me a lunch packet about 10 minutes before the lunch carts rolled in to serve lunch to everybody else. I asked her why she had served me before other passengers. She said mine was a “Muslim meal,” meaning the meat was kosher. I said I did not request a kosher meal and asked how she knew that I was a Muslim.

“I also know,” she whispered, “that you speak four languages!” She scampered away before I could ask about the source of her information.

During my international flights, my luggage is held up, apparently for special scrutiny. Since 2003 I have flown out of the US four times. On every occasion my luggage arrived one to five days late.

On June 10, 2007, for example, I flew to the United Arab Emirates along with a several other American journalists to cover the surge of trade and business in that country. At Abu Dhabi airport I was the only one of the group whose luggage was missing. It was only delivered five days later, on the eve of my departure. All week I interviewed government ministers and other officials and attended banquets and meetings in the same pair of jeans and short-sleeve shirt in which I had flown in. (As I expected the luggage to arrive by the next fight, I didn’t buy new clothing.)

On my return to New York on June 17 I had to spend 20-25 minutes answering questions about where I went, whom I met, what I did, and more, while my companions breezed through without any hassle. I was the only Muslim among the group.

There have also been discernible attempts to provoke me into criticizing Israel and America. Several suspicious characters have sought me out to discuss Palestine and Israel and Muslim militancy. All began by railing against Israel, the “Jews” and American policy in the Middle East. Some claimed to be journalists whom I could not track down later. Then there was the TV “producer” who wanted to retain me as a consultant for her documentary to “expose” Israeli atrocities in Palestine. Whenever I returned her calls, she would not hear me well or would be on another call. A couple of minutes later she would call back and begin blasting Israel’s “state terrorism” and America’s “anti-Muslim” foreign policy. She went through this routine after each of my calls. I realized that she was probably taping my comments. An Internet search failed to show a documentary she claimed to have produced and stories she claimed to have written for US News and World Report.

One day she called to announce she would have an assignment to do a major story on India’s underclass. If she could get the funding for me, would I join her? During the conversation, she reviled Israel’s “crime against humanity” in Gaza. After the conversation she e-mailed me her photograph. What an attractive blonde, I thought.

I asked my wife, who shared my suspicions of her, if I should accompany this pretty “journalist” to India. “If you do,” my wife warned, “you will be on my watch list!”

Pakistan taking better tack on terror war

The Columbus Dispatch
April 5, 2008

Pakistan’s new prime minister is distancing his government from the U.S.-sponsored war on terrorism that President Pervez Musharraf carried on for six years. In so doing, Yousaf Raza Gilani is reviving a stance typically adopted by Pakistan’s democratic regimes that succeeded pro-American dictatorships.

Pakistan’s new prime minister is distancing his government from the U.S.-sponsored war on terrorism that President Pervez Musharraf carried on for six years. In so doing, Yousaf Raza Gilani is reviving a stance typically adopted by Pakistan’s democratic regimes that succeeded pro-American dictatorships.

“Dictators always supported American policy to make themselves accepted” internationally, Peshawar University anthropologist Jamil Ahmed told me during a recent trip through Pakistan’s tribal areas. “But democracy gives people a sense of pride and makes them resent foreign hegemony.” Their resentment is heightened by America’s support of dictatorships.

The American neoconservatives who argue that democracy is an antidote for anti-Americanism in Muslim societies don’t get this point.

Gilani came into the Pakistani Parliament in 1985 as a protégé of the pro-American military dictator Muhammad Zia ul-Haq. Ditched by the Zia regime, he joined the Pakistan People’s Party, from which he now leads a democratic government. To America’s chagrin, his government has vowed to stop military operations against the Taliban and al-Qaida and engage them in a dialogue.

Gilani’s coalition partner, Nawaz Sharif of the Pakistan Muslim League, was another protégé of Zia’s, under whom he became chief minister of Punjab province. After the dictator’s death in a 1988 plane crash, Sharif switched to democratic politics and was twice elected prime minister. His objection to the war on terrorism is even more forceful than that of the PPP leaders.

“We are dealing with our own people,” Sharif said. “When you have a problem with your own family, you don’t kill your own family. You sit and talk.”

The clash between democratic Pakistani governments and American policy dates to the charismatic leader Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, who had been brought into politics by the leaders of Pakistan’s first military coup d’etat. As the foreign minister of the dictator Mohammad Ayub Khan, Bhutto told me during an interview that “Western democracy is not suited” to Pakistan.

But he plunged into a democratic movement after being fired by Ayub, and once elected prime minister, he vehemently resisted American pressure to abandon Pakistan’s nuclear-arms program. Bhutto and his daughter, the recently assassinated former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, blamed his overthrow and eventual execution by Zia on a conspiracy hatched in the United States.

Musharraf, the current president, had become an international pariah after his 1999 military coup. He jumped on America’s war-on-terrorism bandwagon to gain international legitimacy, but his anti-Taliban campaign has made him a domestic pariah, as well. Polls have shown Osama bin Laden to be more popular than him.

Most Pakistanis, in fact, blame America and Musharraf for the rise of terrorism in Pakistan. “There were no suicide attacks in Pakistan or Afghanistan before the U.S. invasion (of Afghanistan) and Musharraf’s crackdown” on the Taliban and other militants, said Mukhtar Ahmed Ali, executive director of the Center for Peace and Development Initiatives in Islamabad.

It is a good thing that American diplomats John Negroponte and Richard Boucher have engaged the Gilani government in discussions over terrorism. Instead of trying to dictate made-in-America anti-terrorist measures, which proved counterproductive under Musharraf and would not be acceptable to the new government, they should let the Gilani regime try its democratic tools of dialogue and persuasion.

They might work. And America should think twice before coddling the next Pakistani dictator.

MugX
Mustafa Malik, the host and editor of the blog ‘After the Clash,’ worked for more than three decades as a reporter, editor and columnist for American, British and Pakistani newspapers and as a researcher for two American think tanks. He also conducted fieldwork in Western Europe, the Middle East and South Asia on U.S. foreign policy options, the “crisis of liberalism” and Islamic movements. He wrote continually for major U.S. and overseas newspapers and journals.
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