Originally posted by: tcsenter
Can you offer any evidence -- i.e., a link or other verifiable source -- that the U.N. sanctions were "fueling hatred for the West among Muslim populations" and served as a "rallying cry for terrorist recruiters" to a significant extent, and more importantly, to a greater extent than our invasion? Yes, I understand you claim this is true. Please document this claim with evidence.
Bowfinger takes issue with my claim that the 'suffering of Iraqi children due to UN sanctions' was hardening opposition and fueling hatred for the United States and Britain among Muslim populations, enthusiastically assisted by all US-haters alike (be they radical Islamic Clerics or M.I.T. Linguists). Questioning its validity,
Bowfinger wants "proof".
Now to someone who has been following World Affairs, particularly issues surrounding International Terrorism, this is akin to taking issue with the statement that the earth is round, questioning its validity, and wanting proof. Next I suppose
Bowfinger is going to question the validity and demand proof that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and US military presence in Saudi Arabia has been fueling hatred for the West? Perhaps
Bowfinger's shocking ignorance of World Affairs prevents him from even knowing why we have a military presence in Saudi Arabia and the relevance it has to the Iraq issue?
In what cave would someone have to be living for the past five or six years to be so terribly ignorant of World Affairs? What the hell have they been doing with their time? And if they were that uninformed, shouldn't they refrain from venturing into a discussion about which they apparently know so little?
Whatever, here I go again, the sucker that I am, having to spend
my valuable time and energies proving to the obscenely ignorant that the earth is round....
Bowfinger, you'll forgive me if I fall well short of meeting your burden of 'documenting my claim with evidence (i.e. link or other verifiable source)'. I'm only going to toss you a few bones, selected excerpts from only a
scant few sources. I'll also highlight the important parts for your benefit (cuz I'm helpful like that), and with a lot of help from God Almighty Himself, maybe you'll get a clue.
"Explaining Arab Anger", BBC News (September 2001):
Although there are many other issues, Washington's enabling alliance with Israel may be the biggest element in the Arab and Muslim anger, hatred and despair which are focused on America.
Other aspects of the impact of America's massive global power on the region also add in to the bitterness felt by many ordinary people...include:
- While Gulf Arabs might have applauded the US-led war against Iraq,
the subsequent sanctions regime has punished the Iraqi people while Saddam continues to build palaces. There is a widespread feeling that the Americans have never been serious about unseating Saddam.
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"Saddam winning propaganda war", BBC News (March 2000):
The United Nations Secretary-General has warned that the international community is in danger of losing the propaganda war with Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein
over who is responsible for the suffering of the Iraqi people.
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"Why does U.S. loathe Iraq so much?" by Linda McQuaig
Discussion of the so-called "root causes" of terrorism is still pretty much off-limits, risking the charge of being unsympathetic to 9/11 victims. Instead, we're encouraged to keep our gaze fixed on the evil that lurks in parts of the world where people wear those odd, loose-fitting garments. U.S. brutality abroad is the elephant in the room from which we're supposed to politely divert our gaze.
So, for instance, anyone who's turned on a TV in the last year knows about Saddam's gassing of the Kurds. Less well known is the death of some 1.5 million Iraqis - including, according to the U.N., 500,000 children - caused by the economic sanctions which Washington strong-armed the U.N. Security Council to adopt and maintain since 1991.
These sorts of details are well-known in the Middle East, where claims of U.S. benevolence and respect for human rights have long been treated with skepticism. Watching their children die as a result of American actions, Iraqis might well ask: Why do they hate us so?
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"Twin fireballs turn up heat on Arab talks", The Guardian-UK (March 2001):
Palestine has almost always been the raison d'être of Arab summitry and it will again head the agenda when the leaders of 22 Arab states convene here tomorrow. Iraq is on the agenda too. President Saddam Hussein will not be there, but he will cast a baleful and divisive shadow on the event.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict on one hand,
Iraq and the Gulf on the other, constitute the two great zones of Middle East crisis. "There is a clear and present danger", the former US ambassador to the UN, Richard Holbrooke, warned recently, "that the most dangerous situation in the world today - the Middle East and Iraq - could metastasise into a single fireball."
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"US puts squeeze on Israel amid fears over propaganda battle", The Guardian-UK (October 2001):
The US is to make a determined effort to force Israel to enter into peace negotiations with the Palestinians, fearing that the west is in danger of losing the propaganda war with Osama bin Laden.
In an attempt to address
one of the main Muslim grievances, President, George Bush will use all the financial and political muscle at his disposal to push the Israelis and Palestinians to the negotiating table.
Bin Laden electrified parts of the Muslim world within hours of the first bombs landing on Afghanistan by releasing a video in which he tried to polarise the conflict between the west and Islam, focusing especially on the Israeli-Palestinian crisis.
A senior aide to Mr Blair conceded that the broadcast had found a receptive audience in the Middle East.
[My note: what are the other two 'main grievances' Bin Laden cited?]
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"To Prevent Terrorism, U.S. Foreign Policy Must Change", Alternet.com (September 2001):
In the Middle East, there is much hatred for our government's support for Israel's illegal occupation of Palestinian territory. We are also seen as the major force behind various corrupt, dictatorial Arab governments, such as the feudal monarchy of Saudi Arabia.
And the U.S.-led sanctions and bombing in Iraq have also aroused deep resentments.
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"Scenes from Iraq", Anthony Arnove:
The sanctions have affected the poor, the elderly, the sick, the young, and even the once relatively well-off middle class. But they have not hurt the rich, those with foreign business connections or profiting off the black market created by the embargo, or those in power. In fact, they have strengthened the regime of Saddam Hussein and the Baathist Party by weakening the population, further militarizing the state, and
creating a nationalist rally effect among people angry at the U.S. government and its allies for the impact of the 1991 Gulf War, the ongoing bombing of Iraq, and the sanctions.
But many are speaking up about the human rights tragedy in Iraq, joining a growing international chorus against the sanctions.
In late March 2000, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan admitted,
"We are in danger of losing the argument or propaganda war - if we haven?t lost it already - about who is responsible for this situation, President Saddam Hussein or the United Nations." Annan added, "We are accused of causing suffering to an entire population."
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"U.S. Policy Toward Political Islam", Foreign Policy in Focus (September 2001):
Another factor
fueling radical Islamic movements has been the perceived U.S. culpability in the deaths of Muslim civilians. From Washington's initial failure to respond to the Serbian slaughter of Bosnian Muslims to
the sanctions against Iraq to the support of Israeli repression against Palestinian and Lebanese civilians, U.S. foreign policy has laid itself open to this accusation.
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"Reaping the whirlwind: Terrorism in the US" By George Galloway:
The vast majority of those attending were non-violent religious people, well mindful of the total Islamic injunction against the targeting of civilians in times of conflict.
But many were brimful of bitterness at the US role in the world, especially its responsibility for the slaughter of the innocents in Iraq - more than a million dead, most of them children - through sanctions and almost constant bombardment, along with the diplomatic financial and military blank cheque drawn on the US government and in the hands of Ariel Sharon.
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"The Roots of Rage", Newsweek (October 2001):
Elsewhere, they look at American policy in the region as cynically geared to US oil interests, supporting thugs and tyrants without any hesitation.
Finally, the bombing and isolation of Iraq have become fodder for daily attacks on the United States. While many in the Arab world do not like Saddam Hussein, they believe that the United States has chosen a particularly inhuman method of fighting him - a method that is starving an entire nation.
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"Why do they hate us?" by Peter Ford, The Christian Science Monitor (September 2001):
Rather, they say, a mood of resentment toward America and its behavior around the world has become so commonplace in their countries that it was bound to breed hostility, and even hatred.
And the buttons that Mr. bin Laden pushes in his statements and interviews - the injustice done to the Palestinians,
the cruelty of continued sanctions against Iraq, the presence of US troops in Saudi Arabia, the repressive and corrupt nature of US-backed Gulf governments - win a good deal of popular sympathy.
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"Roots of Rage", Time Magazine:
America's detractors complain that the U.S. is impervious not only to Arab rights but also to Arab suffering. If the Palestinians are Exhibit A,
the Iraqis are Exhibit B. While most Arabs detest Saddam for his own brand of brutality and arrogance, they don't understand why the U.S. continues to insist, 10 years after the Iraqis were forced out of Kuwait, on
worldwide sanctions that are devastating the Iraqi people. According to the U.N., some 5,000 Iraqi children die every month of malnutrition and disease because of the sanctions.
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Interview with Michael Doran, Assistant Professor of Near East Studies. Princeton Weekly Bulletin, January 14, 2002, Vol. 91, No. 13:
Since the attacks on Sept. 11, many people have said that U.S. foreign policy has contributed to the despair of the Arab world. Would these attacks still have occurred if there were no settlements in the West Bank or Gaza Strip? If there were no U.S. sanctions on Iraq? If the U.S. had no military presence in Saudi Arabia?
In a sense, you are asking the question, "What are the primary sources of the anti-Americanism that Al Qaeda is tapping into?" This is the most hotly debated issue in Middle Eastern studies today. My guess is that most academic experts on the region would answer that
the three issues you mention are in fact the heart of the matter.
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"Why the U.S. is losing the propaganda war" By Eric Boehlert, Salon Magazine (October 2001):
While the Wall Street Journal labeled bin Laden's Sunday taped message as "rambling," and MSNBC's Brian Williams dismissed it as "blowhard rhetoric," the communication went over in much of the Middle East as a coherent list of firmly held grievances against the United States; its strong support of Israel in its battle with Palestinians,
its continued sanctions against Iraq and its military presence in the Muslim holy land of Saudi Arabia.
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"Suspicious minds" By Eric Boehlert, Salon Magazine (October 2001):
Similar concerns were raised 10 years ago during the Gulf War. Skeptics suggested an Islamic backlash at home could mushroom and threaten the stability of moderate Arab regimes that chose to cooperate with America. Instead, the coalition held together and the war itself proved to be a brief one.
But events since Operation Desert Storm have only hardened Arab distrust of the United States. Among the growing list of grievances, Toensing points to
continued sanctions against the people of Iraq. Many Muslims, he says, blame widespread Iraqi malnutrition on the sanctions.
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"It's called genocide", Al-Ahram Weekly Issue No. 489 (July 2000):
Dennis Halliday, former UN humanitarian coordinator in Iraq, says the word "genocide" best describes the situation in Iraq 10 years after the United Nations imposed economic sanctions following the country's 1990 invasion of Kuwait. "In fact, the UN Security Council is sustaining sanctions that are killing about 7,000 Iraqi children each month and they know that.
That is intentional; that is genocide."
At a two-hour seminar at the Egyptian Press Syndicate, Halliday, who resigned in 1998 in protest against the sanctions, said that before they were imposed the biggest problem for healthcare services in Iraq was overweight children. "Today, the average weight of newborns is two-and-a-half kilos, an indication of famine."
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"Jihad Against Jews and Crusaders", Statement of the World Islamic Front (fatwa):
No one argues today about three facts that are known to everyone; we will list them, in order to remind everyone:
First, for over seven years the United States has been occupying the lands of Islam in the holiest of places, the Arabian Peninsula, plundering its riches, dictating to its rulers, humiliating its people, terrorizing its neighbors, and turning its bases in the Peninsula into a spearhead through which to fight the neighboring Muslim peoples.
If some people have in the past argued about the fact of the occupation, all the people of the Peninsula have now acknowledged it. The best proof of this is the Americans' continuing aggression against the Iraqi people using the Peninsula as a staging post, even though all its rulers are against their territories being used to that end, but they are helpless.
Second, despite the great devastation inflicted on the Iraqi people by the crusader-Zionist alliance, and despite the huge number of those killed, which has exceeded 1 million... despite all this, the Americans are once against trying to repeat the horrific massacres, as though they are not content with the protracted blockade imposed after the ferocious war or the fragmentation and devastation.
On that basis, and in compliance with Allah's order, we issue the following fatwa to all Muslims:
The ruling to kill the Americans and their allies -- civilians and military -- is an individual duty for every Muslim who can do it in any country in which it is possible to do it, in order to liberate the al-Aqsa Mosque and the holy mosque [Mecca] from their grip, and in order for their armies to move out of all the lands of Islam, defeated and unable to threaten any Muslim.
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end scant documentation proving the earth is round-----------
Having dispensed with that business, why would anyone who clearly demonstrates such grotesque ignorance of the entire Middle East issue as
BOWFINGER nonetheless pretend as though they are competent to make an informed judgement about US policy? Amazing!
I will answer your other question when I get the time to prove that the earth revolves around the sun.
And the next time you attempt to carry this discussion into another thread, I make you this promise: After I am through completely humiliating you here, I will created a new thread in every forum entitled
"Bowfinger's total humiliation at the hands of tcsenter" with the aim of attracting an additional 10,000 AT Forum members to witness the spectacle of your obscene ignorance and humiliation who otherwise wouldn't have been following along. Bet on it.