The messenger.
I saw parts of the President's speech at the University of Cairo this past week and I have to say that the symbolism of the event was striking. This man whose personal history embodies a kind of cultural crossroads and an international experience previously unknown in the White House - to see him make reference to historic wrongs so seldom acknowledged by Americans really puts the lie to that old "only Nixon could go to China" conventional wisdom. Sure, the rhetoric was, well, just rhetoric, and even as such carefully balanced and qualified, but just the same... what an odd impression it must have made on an Arab world so accustomed to the condescending ignorance and arrogance of Obama's predecessor. I've got to think they think we're goddamned weird, veering our little electoral pinewood racer from one side of the track to the other (and, doubtless, back again before long). Not hard to see why we're hard to trust.
And yet, through all that swerving, cascading symbolism, the bombs keep falling, the drones keep striking, and the cash keeps flowing to no good ends. It is good to have a president appeal to reason and understanding instead of fear and intimidation, but to do this and not depart from the tactics of oppression will ultimately prove an empty gesture. We cannot proceed from the assumption that animosity towards the west in general and the United States in particular is based largely upon xenophobia and irrational hatred. Obama did touch on the U.S. backed overthrow of Iran's democratically elected government in 1953, but that is only a fragment of our nation's long and sordid involvement in that region. There are concrete reasons for that distrust that stretch back more than just the last eight years.
It's silly to preach to Hamas about making concessions, for instance, when we've been spending billions of dollars a year for decades on the gradual Israeli takeover of that 22% of mandate Palestine that represents the only hope for a viable Palestinian state. And calling Iran out for threatening its neighbors is simply laughable - they are literally surrounded by the burned out ruins of our imperial overreach. It is this, more than a lack of openness, that breeds contempt towards us. That is much of what is being said by people in the Arab countries - good words, now let's see some action. This doesn't sit well with the likes of David Brooks, who describes the Arabs as ready to "sit back" and watch America force concessions out of Israel. But it is the people in Muslim countries in the middle east who have been bearing the brunt of these struggles for the past sixty years. They don't expect anything to come easy. They just want us to stop actively working against them.
Can't blame them, really. Obama's speech was a good start. Now we as a global power have to follow through.
luv u,
jp
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