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POETRYETC 2001

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Subject:

Re: from Salon

From:

"david.bircumshaw" <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Poetryetc provides a venue for a dialogue relating to poetry and poetics <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Fri, 30 Nov 2001 17:39:13 -0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (619 lines)

Well, Frederick, I understand a belief in free speech is fundamental to US
values, and that right then surely extends to other countries, even
Australia and Britain.

Many of us, you know, aren't simplistic opponents of the war, we're
+concerned+ about what's going on. I don't know why I'm bothering saying
this, my opinions have no influence in the political world, nor do I know
why you've forwarded that message to a poetry list.


David Bircumshaw

Leicester, England

Home Page

A Chide's Alphabet

Painting Without Numbers

www.paintstuff.20m.com/index.htm

http://homepage.ntlworld.com/david.bircumshaw/index.htm
----- Original Message -----
From: "Frederick Pollack" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Friday, November 30, 2001 4:53 PM
Subject: from Salon


> America the scapegoat
> An Australian woman who has made New York her home fires back at the
> smug U.S.-bashers in Europe and her native land.
>
> - - - - - - - - - - - -
> By Meera Atkinson
>
> Nov. 30, 2001 | It was five days after the attacks. My husband and I had
> fled Manhattan for his brother's place upstate to escape the acrid air
> and collect our shattered nerves. I was still having trouble eating and
> sleeping, and I'd brought my passport along, just in case World War III
> broke out overnight and I decided to slip across the border into Canada
> and fly home to Australia.
>
> I was not one of the stoic New Yorkers. In fact, I was not even a New
> Yorker. But when I got an e-mail forwarded to me by a friend in London,
> I was upset on behalf of all 8 million of them.
>
> The e-mail, written by a Chinese man, was an angry tirade against
> America and on behalf of Afghanistan and world peace,
> written in incongruently inflammatory language. The words "I don't give
> a shit," referring to the terrorist attacks and the suffering
> of Americans, stand out in my mind. The writer said that America had
> brought the attacks upon itself with its foreign policy, that
> Americans were soft and spoiled, that it was high time they got a taste
> of their own medicine.
>
> I responded by telling my friend I'd found the piece nasty and
> offensive, and requested that she not send any more of the same
> ilk. I received a haughty reply stating that she and her friends were
> merely engaged in a rigorous international discussion, the
> implication being that there was something wrong with me, that I lacked
> the intellectual mettle to participate. I didn't know it
> then, but it was the first of many skirmishes to come. While flags sold
> by the millions and Americans spoke of their newfound
> sense of unity, I found myself at first divided and torn between
> cultures -- and then, increasingly, alienated from my own.
>
> When I was 20 and living in Sydney, my ardent lifelong love affair with
> American culture -- partly born out of my youthful
> desire to escape what felt at the time like a suffocating, isolated
> island -- crystallized into an intense obsession with New York
> City. A few years later Australia grew on me, and my fantasies of living
> in New York faded into a nostalgic whimsy. But when I
> met and fell in love with a New Yorker, I found myself dreaming of New
> York again. While I waited for my fiancé's visa to
> come through I watched "Sex and the City" and tried to picture myself in
> its scenes.
>
> Moving to New York also meant moving to America. I remember watching the
> news the day the USS Cole was bombed, the
> feeling of dread it raised in me, the sense of foreboding. I remember
> commenting to my father that Americans didn't realize how
> hated they were, and that one day it would all blow up. I remember
> phoning my then long-distance fiancé and expressing my
> fears of life in New York, of violent crime, and of living in a
> hemisphere beset by war. I remember the self-possessed calm in
> his reassurance that no one would be foolish enough to attack America
> itself, and the thin relief with which I tried to believe him.
>
> Looking back now, I realize that our differing views of this potential
> arose partly out of geography. Australia and New Zealand
> are the most isolated "Western" countries on the planet. It is a
> distance that affords a uniquely clear outlook. At the same time
> this isolation casts a shadow of parochialism. The combination can
> result in a tendency to judge other nations and world events
> harshly and simply. It is this tendency with which I have been wrangling
> these past weeks.
>
> I arrived in New York in December last year, and we married soon
> afterward. I was just feeling that I had finally arrived, and
> the beginnings of a bond with the city, when the planes flew into the
> towers, the Pentagon, and a sunny Pennsylvania field. The
> entire world was in shock, reeling with grief, gripped by fear, and
> overwhelmed by the psychic shift heralded by the "new
> reality." In the days following the attack I seemed to be in tune with
> my Australian friends back home, except that I was
> traumatized, having gone through it firsthand, or at least from the
> madness of the Empire State Building midtown. I shared my
> friends' concern that America might lash out in a bloodlust of
> retaliation. I recoiled from the American desire for revenge
> confirmed in polls. I agreed that the attacks were a wakeup call that
> demanded America reexamine its role in the Middle East,
> that it was an opportunity for America to own up to some of its more
> undeniable mistakes and wrongdoings and make amends.
>
> But as the weeks passed and we all began to process the ordeal, review
> our history, and come to terms with the post-attack
> world and the war on terrorism, I became aware of an unsettling division
> -- between those who find America a convenient
> scapegoat and those who do not.
>
> Polls will tell you that the majority of people in Australia and other
> Western, allied nations support America's war on terrorism.
> Many of those heartily support the commitment of their own troops. But
> what the polls don't tell you is that there is a sizable
> and extremely vocal minority who don't, and that beyond even this there
> is and has been, for as far back as I can remember, a
> palpable anger and hostility toward the U.S. in general. This minority
> is not confined to university campuses but stretches across
> a broad spectrum of society. Of course there is the "foreign policy is
> not a popularity contest" standard by which to measure
> this opposition, but if Sept. 11 and the "new reality" have taught us
> anything, it is that the hatred much of the world feels toward
> the U.S. can no longer be ignored.
>
> That largely impoverished, uneducated and oppressed nations hate America
> is more or less understandable. Some of these
> nations are ruled by American-backed undemocratic and highly corrupt
> governments, and most of them have lived for
> generations with the riches of the modern world in view but out of
> reach, informed only by a government-controlled media.
> Anti-American sentiment in the Middle East is easy to fathom. But why
> does this hatred manifest itself in countries like
> Australia, Britain and France -- affluent nations that have much more in
> common with America than Middle Eastern and Third
> World nations?
>
> In my recent dialogue with Australian family and friends, some
> predictable reasons have been given. One aunt declared that
> Australians' critical view of Americans dates back to World War II, when
> American troops were seen as "oversexed,
> overpaid, and over there." An Australian expat posting on the Web site
> Australians Abroad agreed. "My grandparents hated
> the Yanks and would tell stories of the Yanks coming into Brisbane on
> R&R and yelling out to the Diggers who were leaving on
> another train that they'd 'take care of their women for them,'" he said,
> before going on to confirm that some of those American
> soldiers did indeed "take care" of the Diggers' women and that a few
> were shot for their troubles. No doubt experiences such
> as these must have helped formed some national opinion, but there are
> just as many stories of camaraderie between Australian
> and American soldiers, and just as many Australians who feel a genuine
> sense of alliance with America. A cousin was quick to
> defend Australia's relationship with the U.S. "We know America would
> come to our aid if needed," she said. "It did when the
> Japanese invaded and Churchill said, 'Let them take it, we can get it
> back later.'" Run-ins during World War II or any other
> time don't account for the pervasive and vicious anti-American sentiment
> that has peaked in the wake of Sept 11.
>
> The ANZUS Treaty, marking the Australia-United States alliance, was
> signed in 1951. The Australian prime minister, John
> Howard, was reportedly the first world leader to offer military support
> in the war on terrorism. Australian troops followed
> America into Korea, Vietnam and the Gulf War. Australia has participated
> in U.S. intelligence gathering consistently since
> World War II. There is therefore a sense that Australia, a relatively
> peaceful nation, has been dragged into America's troubles
> repeatedly. There is a pronounced anger toward the bind our military
> dependence on America presents. But why are some
> Australians so unwilling to acknowledge the rewards of this arrangement?
> Why are they so insistent on casting themselves as
> the hapless weak brother of the big buff bully? It is a clear case of
> risk and reward, and though the risks are real, and the
> dependence frustrating and unempowering, the rewards are great.
>
> The refusal of the anti-American movement in Australia to address them
> is symptomatic of a largely complacent society.
> Australia is a wealthy country with a small population that couldn't
> possibly defend its coastline if it came under serious attack.
> It is a country that pays high taxes but which also enjoys good
> services. It has one of the most comprehensive health and
> welfare programs in the world. Its citizens live with the certainty that
> if they require medical care and cannot afford it, they will
> be given it, that if they reach retirement age without sufficient means
> of support they can draw a comparatively generous
> pension, that if they lose their job they can claim unemployment
> benefits until they find another.
>
> All this is possible because it doesn't have to spend massive amounts of
> money on national defense. Many who were born and
> raised in post-World War II Australia, as I was, have little or no
> appreciation of the need for self-defense. In general
> Australians feel themselves so far removed, so relatively safe in their
> isolation, that they tend to view America as paranoid and
> hysterical when it comes to military defense. In my youth I, too, held
> this view; I indulged in the idealist, utopian fantasy of a
> world with no need for defense, imagining that Australia in particular
> need not concern itself with such unsavory preoccupations.
> My grandparents knew otherwise. I still hope for a future free of
> nuclear threat, for the realized potential of real world peace.
> But if and when it comes, it will come about as a result of a powerful
> organic human revolution. I am fairly sure it will not come
> about by pure fantasy, denial and anti-government jingoism. One thing is
> certain; we are not there yet, and it's not only the U.S.
> that lags behind in this evolution.
>
> The current antiwar, anti-American sentiment in the West is not confined
> to Australia, however. Its voice can be heard right
> across Europe. The London friend who had sent the "I don't give a shit"
> e-mail went on to explain in further exchanges that the
> view of America she shared with many Brits was based on a kaleidoscope
> of grievances. "America's intervention in world
> affairs is often corrupt, abusive and hypocritical. U.S. foreign policy
> is highly destructive and sanctimonious," she declared,
> citing an article published in the Guardian in late September by
> Arundhati Roy as supporting evidence.
>
> This friend, born and raised in a country settled as an English penal
> colony that grew into its own identity by resisting the
> class-based, culturally egotistical tendencies of the motherland,
> patiently explained why British culture was superior to American
> culture, with no visible sense of irony. She actually went so far as to
> make the claim that "We [Brits] are not as hysterical or
> ignorant as the U.S." It's probably accurate to say that the British,
> due to their proximity to Europe and the broader view of
> their media (at least their elite media) are more informed about the
> rest of the world than Americans, but this hardly precludes
> "ignorance" in general. And to claim that the British are less
> hysterical than Americans when the memory of the British reaction
> to Princess Diana's death is still fresh to us all is bold indeed. The
> enormous crowds and mass wailing in London in 1997 was
> far more extreme than New Yorkers' reaction to Sept. 11, and it was not
> three but roughly 4,000 people killed, not by
> accident, but by mass murder.
>
> My London friend opened her litany of complaints with the perception of
> a U.S. public deluded by a pure-hype
> propaganda-machine media, and went on to cite America's military
> presence in Saudi Arabia, its conduct of the Gulf War, its
> responsibility for the starvation deaths of 100,000 Iraqi children as a
> result of economic sanctions (I've always wondered why
> this popular statistic only cites children, as if adults don't starve,
> or matter), and all the other well-known sins of America
> committed in the name of oil security. She climaxed with the widespread
> complaint against U.S. support of Israel, wound down
> with accusations of free-trade blackmail and two-faced global emissions
> policies, and finished with a description of the U.S.-led
> war on terrorism as a typical American aggression bound to add fuel to
> the fire.
>
> In other discussions, a Canadian friend living in Australia wrote with
> absolute conviction that America's military action in
> Afghanistan was motivated solely by a desire for revenge and punishment,
> that self-defense "has nothing whatsoever to do with
> it." Someone else told me I sounded "like an American" simply because I
> questioned the caustic tone of the many recent
> anti-American letters to two major Australian newspapers. This same
> person attached to their message an article that posed the
> theory that America's war in Afghanistan is all about oil in the Caspian
> Sea, along with the heavy-handed Arundhati Roy piece,
> presumably to enlighten me. One letter in the Sydney Morning Herald's
> online edition stood out from the others. It was written
> by a Jewish woman who had gone to a peace march in Sydney's Hyde Park
> staged by the usually cuddly Friends of the Earth.
> She was horrified, she said, to find herself surrounded by a furious
> crowd chanting poisonous slogans against the U.S. and
> Israel. People calling for peace with voices of hate is perhaps the
> ultimate bleak irony of the current antiwar, anti-American
> movement.
>
> There have been other long-distance frictions too numerous to mention.
> Of course some of these criticisms are valid and
> earned, but many are misguided and vulnerable to challenge. Few who cast
> these aspersions seem willing to acknowledge that
> even the most educated and informed among us rarely get the full
> political picture -- and many of those who are the loudest in
> their denunciations have far less than that. Yet even when they lack
> deep knowledge and information, many anti-Americanists
> are all too willing to assume the very worst of America in any given
> conflict, often downright whitewashing the other party.
>
> It's not my aim to embark on an in-depth analysis of these charges or
> the degree to which they stick or don't stick; suffice to
> say that we all know the U.S. is not now, nor has it ever been, perfect.
> This is hard to accept; we don't want our superstars, or
> our superpowers, to be flawed, human, like the rest of us. What bothers
> me most about the anti-American sentiment I've
> encountered is not the criticisms themselves, simplistic as they
> frequently are, but the dogged superciliousness and smugness
> with which they are frequently expressed. There is a lack of real
> recognition of America, for better and for worse, inherent in
> this attitude. And there is an unsettling ease with which the United
> States of America is made the scapegoat for the flawed
> policies of the first world, the failings of some nations of the Third
> World, a library's worth of historical complexities, and the
> guilt of the privileged first-world individual.
>
> It is the fashion, it seems, to hold the U.S. responsible for the
> hardships and struggles of the entire planet, some of which were
> germinating or already had a long history before America's existence.
> For example, many of the problems of the Middle East
> and Third World can be more rightly laid at imperial Britain's doorstep.
> Granted, America has stepped in where Britain stepped
> out, but that doesn't justify holding a New World country solely
> responsible for problems born of the Old World.
>
> Anti-Americanism's broadest complaint is also its most powerful argument
> -- that the U.S. is too wealthy, too materialistic, too
> concerned with its own economic health to the detriment of the world's
> poor. The most powerful nation on the planet runs a
> laissez-faire economic system that dominates global economics. In
> Australia, where capitalism has long been tinged with
> socialism (though this hybrid is much diminished now), America's version
> of capitalism is viewed as ruthless. But if the problem
> is U.S.-led globalization and corporatization, there needs to be some
> acknowledgement of the way the rest of the world is
> participating. Furious finger-pointing at America ignores the option and
> responsibility of nations, communities and individuals to
> resist and protest what they find objectionable. The money in a
> citizen's hand does more voting than we ever get to do in a
> polling booth. Our consumer dollar is, now more than ever, a powerful
> political tool.
>
> Too much anti-Americanism rests on bad faith. A psychological sleight of
> hand makes it possible for the anti-American
> movement across the West to enjoy privileges while avoiding a sense of
> responsibility for them. America has blood on its
> hands: The rest of the world, apparently, does not.
>
> For some years now I have refused to eat at McDonald's and Burger King
> because I object to what I view as the unethical
> corporate practices of U.S. fast food chains. Neither do I buy products
> tested on animals to protest the global animal
> experimentation industry. I know many others who act similarly on their
> principles. But I have never heard of a person who
> refuses to use oil-dependent modes of transportation in adherence to
> their stance against America's oil-driven policies in the
> Middle East. I've met the odd rare individual who refuses to own a car
> because of their concern for the environment, but never
> anyone who boycotts oil across the board -- or even who devotes
> significant time to trying to change oil-friendly governmental
> policies. Why? Because it's a luxury people simply refuse to give up.
> Foregoing a lousy cheeseburger and shopping cruelty-free
> doesn't require a great sacrifice -- to live without using oil in the
> world as it is today would. That people don't wish to make this
> sacrifice is understandable, but that they demonize the U.S. despite
> their dependency on oil that may have been procured in
> association with U.S. policies is somewhat dishonest and hypocritical.
> Righteousness, it turns out, is the drug that soothes the
> fears and frustrations of exiled terrorist gurus and Sydney peaceniks
> alike.
>
> I am more inclined to respect the voice of anti-Americanism when it
> produces more than simplistic critiques and -- at its worst
> -- hate speech. In other words, I am more inclined to respect it when it
> manifests an active rather than a reactive element.
> Unlike classic imperialism achieved by military-led expansion and
> domination, cultural and economic imperialism requires willing
> colonists. It is possible to resist so-called U.S. imperialism, as the
> small community of the Blue Mountains, northwest of
> Sydney, did several years ago when it successfully fought a bitter
> battle against the opening of a McDonald's in its quaint
> historic town. It is possible; it's just that most people would rather
> not bother. Victimhood is more appealing than
> self-responsibility, and when the villain is a big bumbling superpower
> it's an easy play.
>
> Of course, being part of the problem doesn't oblige a person to silence.
> People have a right to be angry with the U.S. and its
> policies when they feel they're immoral, but they also have a
> responsibility to own up to their implicit participation. It's a
> democratic right to voice protest, but it's a matter of personal
> integrity to do so not from the moral comfort of a high horse, but
> while standing on one's own two feet.
>
> Some anti-Americanists already do this, of course. Some, like socialists
> and anarcho-syndicalists, go further and campaign for
> radically different political and economic systems. But looking around
> at the anti-Americanists in my midst I see no home
> garage print-runs of "The Die-Hard Communists Weekly" or grassroots
> kitchen campaign meetings. I see people plucking the
> fruits, and treading the established paths, of capitalism.
>
> And what of the confusions and contradictions of the left wing in the
> first world? In the two or three years preceding the attacks
> of Sept. 11, I received a string of e-mail petitions from alarmed
> feminists and leftists protesting the atrocities committed by the
> Taliban and calling for its brutal regime to be brought down. I signed
> and passed on every one without ever believing the
> petitions would literally achieve that end. It seems that others, though
> adult and educated, did believe in the power of these
> petitions to cause the Taliban to review in full the practices of its
> government. This is the only sense I can make of the
> turnaround of many of these same people, who are now on the front lines
> of the current antiwar movement. Some who were
> aware of conditions in Afghanistan under the Taliban's rule and who
> rallied against the world's complacency became, once
> America set out to topple the Taliban, its most ardent defenders,
> calling for peace at any cost, and casting America as the
> brute.
>
> I understand these people are not really defending the Taliban; rather
> they are expressing concern for the innocent, already
> long-suffering Afghan people, and rightly so. But why the political
> backpedaling? Why oppose the forcible removal of the
> Taliban when they are clearly far too determined and well established to
> be removed by other means? This confusion, born of a
> demand that the sufferings of others be rectified coupled with a refusal
> to tolerate the realities of what is required to achieve that
> change, results in an impossible demand that the U.S. is accused of
> failing to meet again and again.
>
> I came across an explicit example of this when reading an article in
> which a prominent member of a women's rights organization
> publicly retracted a previous statement to the effect that she wished
> someone would forcibly take the Taliban out. Sounding
> somewhat like a small and frightened child, she explained that she
> "didn't really mean it," that it had merely been an expression
> of frustration and not of a real and concrete desire for military
> intervention. That the U.S. military action in Afghanistan and its
> resulting refugee crisis and civilian causalities are painful, even
> tragic, goes without saying. But to believe in a world where
> dangerous people and tyrannical governments miraculously disappear seems
> infantile.
>
> When I asked my French neighbor about the anti-American sentiment in
> France, she said there is a profound sense of "they had
> it coming" among the French left. When I asked her what the roots of
> French anti-American sentiment were she said simply,
> "Envy, jealousy. We think of Americans as arrogant, vain, self-centered.
> It is what France was two centuries ago: the center of
> the world." While I doubt this is all that fuels the anti-American
> sentiment there and across the West, there is likely some plain
> old jealousy in the mix. It's not an envy as tortured and confused at
> that of the Middle East, because we in the West are neither
> as uniformly religious or as economically deprived as the peoples of
> those nations. But it is tempting, it seems, to resent those
> more powerful and dominant, and to rally a reactive cause in response.
>
> Some of this resentment boils down to that most basic of human emotions
> -- hurt feelings. Beyond the "Tall Poppy Syndrome"
> -- the famous Australian pastime of cutting gloating achievement,
> blatant success, and perceived arrogance down to size --
> Australians often feel overlooked by America and Americans. I remember
> feeling angry that I didn't see Australia, a country
> with a fascinating history and political life, covered at all in the
> American media for months following my arrival. Even now I'm
> lucky to catch a passing reference or a feature in a travel section. And
> I've felt personally slighted more than once socially,
> when someone's eyes glazed over upon hearing the word Australia.
> Typically they'd vaguely mention Paul Hogan or kangaroos
> before losing interest completely. This hurt is, I think, a factor in
> the anti-American feelings of many peoples, especially
> Australians who get little attention on the world stage. It's a
> legitimate complaint, but it scarcely justifies the virulent
> condemnations that have emerged after Sept. 11.
>
> Another comment my French neighbor made, recounting how a friend of hers
> in France had exclaimed bitterly on the phone,
> "They have six cases of anthrax and it's the end of the world. What
> about Rwanda?" illustrates another confusion of the left in
> relation to the U.S. -- the damned if you do, damned if you don't
> principle. America is criticized for not being a benevolent
> superpower when it doesn't intervene, and criticized for being the world
> police when it does. It is cast as an abusive cop when
> it steps into conflicts such as Kosovo, or accused of criminal
> negligence when it fails to act, as it did with the genocide in
> Rwanda. The U.S. itself suffers a certain amount of confusion in its
> foreign policy which gives rise to mixed messages, but
> whichever way it goes on any distant conflict the left seems insistent
> on meeting the U.S. with skepticism or conspiracy theories
> of ulterior motives.
>
> Certain factions of the American left are no less virulent. A country,
> particularly a powerful one, needs a mindful and vocal
> conscience, and when it's doing its job, as it did during the Vietnam
> War, it's a vital watchdog. But Sept. 11 seems to have
> reduced even some Americans to sloppy accusations and irrational
> outbursts.
>
> A prime example of this "America is the devil" silliness appeared in the
> Nov. 20 Village Voice. James Ridgeway's "Mondo
> Washington" columns titled "The Ugly American: Bully Spends Billions
> Blasting Nation of Refugees," "The Lost Colony:
> Afghanistan's Huddled Masses" and "Brown Out: U.S. Drops Bigger Bombs on
> Darker People," were the most stunning
> displays of frenzied knee-jerking in the name of journalism I've
> witnessed in a long time. In one short page he managed to hold
> the U.S. government responsible for the deaths of 7 million Afghan
> refugees (most of whom are not even dead), to refer to
> Afghanistan as an American "colony," and to suggest that the use of the
> dreadful "daisy cutter" in the bombing campaign was
> inspired by a racist impulse to "get rid of these nasty tan bugs."
>
> As Christopher Hitchens pointed out in the December Atlantic Monthly,
> some in the American left and other "progressives"
> "have grossly failed to live up to their responsibility to think;
> rather, they are merely reacting, substituting tired slogans for
> thought." Or in Ridgeway's case, hysteria for thought. There's a certain
> laziness involved. It's not necessary to challenge oneself
> and grapple with impossible problems, it's not necessary to read
> extensively across a wide range of views (not only those that
> confirm one's most comfortable and staid thinking and beliefs), or to
> educate oneself on the intricacies of history and geopolitics
> in order to be certain which governments should be held accountable for
> what sufferings, when one can, without going to all this
> trouble, satisfy one's need to assign blame and take the high moral
> ground by making the U.S. accountable for everything, even
> deaths that haven't happened.
>
> After many trans-Pacific and Atlantic conversations I've come to see the
> escalating anti-Americanism as the product of, to
> varying degrees, a tendency toward black and white thinking, a heartfelt
> concern for the suffering of disadvantaged peoples,
> and the denial of our own most rapacious capitalist selves -- as
> projected upon and epitomized by the U.S. The stridency of
> this habit of thought is laced with wishful thinking and is driven by a
> lack of equanimity fostered by the new reach of global
> terrorism. People are afraid. They want to believe that if only America
> had not responded militarily, if only it had seen the error
> of its ways and had met the terrorist demands by pulling out of the
> Middle East, everything would be all right. They would not
> had have to send their troops, they would not have to fear future
> attacks on their own soil, they could go to sleep in the
> knowledge that World War III is an imaginary nightmare rather than a
> present day potential.
>
> It's an understandable conclusion, one I also entertained in the awful
> days following the attacks. The problem with it is that it
> underestimates both America and the terrorists who have declared war on
> it, if in totally different ways. I've been struck by the
> apparent sense of confidence some anti-American westerners have in the
> terrorists. I've even stumbled across a few apologists.
> They seem to hold the view that the terrorists are somehow reasonable in
> their endeavor, that they would surely end the terror if
> they got their way. One Australian, again posting on the "Australians
> Abroad" Web site, stated, "Remember even the fanatics of
> 9 Sept [sic] didn't do this to maximize kill ratio ... hitting a sports
> stadium with gas would have taken out thousands more."
> Apart from the fact that "hitting a sports stadium with gas" is not as
> easily achieved as this poster imagines, it's a preposterous
> notion that the perpetrators of this attack were in any way concerned
> with minimizing civilian casualties. The poster went on to
> argue his point by claiming that the terrorists had chosen "light flight
> loadings" guided by the same noble impulses. Apparently
> the idea that they'd chosen lightly booked flights because it meant less
> chance of passenger resistance and therefore a greater
> chance of success was not familiar to this well-meaning young man. But
> this fantasy of "almost" freedom fighters with an
> "almost" just cause is as prevalent as it is problematic.
>
> What we know about bin Laden and al-Qaida suggests a very different
> potential. The theory that bin Laden's true focus lies in
> leading a fundamentalist Islamic insurgency right across the Muslim
> world seems to have some weight. If that is his mission
> statement, America's abstention from military action and wholesale
> backing out of the Middle East might well have had two
> immediate consequences: an oil crisis and a series of successful
> insurgencies. The world economy would have become unstable,
> and a significant portion of the world would soon be under the rule of
> fiercely repressive Taliban-style governments -- but this
> time with nuclear capabilities. Who knows if they'd stop there? Islam
> has a proud history of expansionism. I suspect that then
> the anti-Americanists -- Australians, English, Europeans, feminists, and
> peaceniks alike -- would have a sudden change of
> heart.
>
> I realize this is a dark and somewhat alarmist scenario. We have no way
> of knowing if it could have happened because
> America did, predictably, attack. And, of course, as the antiwar
> movement would be quick to point out, the U.S.-led action in
> Afghanistan carries its own risk of inciting insurgencies. However, they
> could not proceed as quickly and as smoothly as they
> might have had the U.S. simply withdrawn from the whole region at bin
> Laden's demand. I'm not suggesting that a U.S.
> withdrawal from Saudi Arabia is impossible or undesirable, only that
> there are problems with the assumption that America's
> "understanding" and tolerance of the terrorist cause as stated could or
> would have spared further conflict and escalation.
>
> While many of my friends overseas promote stereotypes of America and
> find affirmation from each other in doing so --
> Americans are blinded by their own inflated self-image, they fall prey
> to their government propaganda mindlessly with no
> self-examination, they revel in their ignorance of other parts of the
> world, etc. -- I see a different America. I see a grieving,
> vulnerable America shocked out of its self-absorption, an America that
> is indeed questioning, debating, and attempting to
> understand the root causes of its predicament, seeking to educate itself
> about Islam and Muslim cultures, seeking to defend
> itself against further attacks. I see an America that has welcomed more
> people from more countries around the globe than any
> other country in the history of mankind. I see an America whose embrace
> of democracy and vision of freedom, however less
> than perfectly realized, beats in every American heart. I see an America
> that deserves compassion in response to its
> misfortunes, and acknowledgement of its virtues and better strivings,
> however often they may fail or produce unforeseen
> consequences. And I see a world that would be less without it.
>
> - - - - - - - - - - - -
>
> About the writer
> Meera Atkinson is an Australian writer
> living in New York.
>

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