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Imperial perspectives
by Edward
Said
The great modern empires
have never been held together only by military power but by what
activates that power, puts it to use and then reinforces it with daily
practices of domination, conviction, and authority. Britain ruled the
vast territories of India with only a few thousand colonial officers and
a few more thousand troops, many of them Indian. France did the same in
North Africa and Indochina, the Dutch in Indonesia, the Portuguese and
Belgians in Africa. The key element is imperial perspective, that way of
looking at a distant foreign reality by subordinating it to one's gaze,
constructing its history from one's own point of view, seeing its people
as subjects whose fate is to be decided not by them but by what distant
administrators think is best for them. From such willful perspectives
actual ideas develop, including the theory that imperialism is a benign
and necessary thing. In one of the most perceptive comments ever made
about the conceptual glue that binds empires together, the remarkable
Anglo-Polish novelist Joseph Conrad wrote that "the conquest of the
earth, which mostly means the taking it away from those who have a
different complexion and or slightly flatter noses than ourselves, is
not a pretty thing when you look into it too much. What redeems it is
the idea only. An idea at the back of it; not a sentimental pretence but
an idea; and an unselfish believe in the idea -- something you can set
up, and bow down before, and offer a sacrifice to."
For a while this worked, as
many colonial leaders thought mistakenly that cooperating with the
imperial authority was the only way. But since the dialectic between the
imperial perspective and the local one is inevitably adversarial and
impermanent, at some later point the conflict between ruler and ruled
becomes uncontainable and breaks out into all-out colonial war, as
happened in Algeria and India.
We are still quite a long way
from that moment in American rule over the Arab and Muslim world. At least
since World War II American strategic interest there has been to secure
(and to ever more closely control) readily accessible supplies of
plentiful oil and, second, to guarantee at enormous cost the strength and
regional domination of Israel over any and all of its neighbours.
Every empire, including
America's, regularly tells itself and the world that it is unlike all
other empires, and that it has a mission certainly not to plunder and
control but to educate and liberate the peoples and places it rules
directly or indirectly. Yet these ideas are not shared by the people who
live there, whose views are in many cases directly opposite. Nevertheless,
this hasn't prevented the whole apparatus of American information, policy,
and decision-making about the Arab/Islamic world from imposing its
perspectives not just on Arabs and Muslims but on Americans, whose sources
of information about the Arabs and Islam are woefully, indeed tragically,
inadequate.
American diplomacy has been
permanently impaired by a systematic attack conducted by the Israeli lobby
on what are called Arabists. Of the 150,000 American troops in Iraq today,
scarcely more than a handful know Arabic. David Ignatius makes this point
in an excellent piece on 14 July entitled "Washington is Paying for its
Lack of Arabists", (http:// www.dailystar.com.lb/opinion/14_07_03_b.asp)
in which he quotes Francis Fukuyama as saying that the trouble is that "Arabists
not only take on the cause of the Arabs but also the Arabs' tendency for
self- delusion."
In this country knowledge of
Arabic, and some sympathetic acquaintance with the vast Arab cultural
tradition, have been made to seem a threat to Israel. The media runs the
vilest racist stereotypes about Arabs (see for example a Hitlerian piece
by Cynthia Ozick in the Wall Street Journal on 30 June in which she
speaks of Palestinians as having "traduced the life force, cultism raised
to a sinister spiritualism", words that would be entirely in place at the
Nuremberg rallies).
Several generations of
Americans have come to see the Arab world mainly as a dangerous place,
where terrorism and religious fanaticism are spawned, and where a
gratuitous anti-Americanism is mischievously inculcated in the young by
badly- intentioned clerics who are anti-democratic and virulently
anti-Semitic. Ignorance is directly translated into knowledge in such
cases. What isn't always noticed is that when a leader there emerges whom
"we" like -- eg the Shah of Iran or Anwar El-Sadat -- Americans assume
that he is a courageous visionary who has done things for "us" or "our"
way, not because he has understood the game of imperial power, which is to
survive by humouring the regnant authority, but because he has been moved
by principles that we share. Almost a quarter of a century after his
assassination, Anwar El-Sadat is, it is not an exaggeration to say, a
forgotten and unpopular man because most Egyptians regard him as having
served America first, not Egypt. The same is true about the Shah. The
distortions of imperial perspectives produce further distortions in Middle
Eastern society that prolong suffering and induce extreme forms of
resistance and political self- assertion.
This is particularly true of
the Palestinians, who are now considered to have reformed themselves by
allowing Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) rather than the much excoriated Arafat
as their leader. But that is a matter of imperial interpretation, not of
actual reality. Both Israel and the US regard Arafat as standing in the
way of an imposed settlement on the Palestinians that will obliterate all
their past claims, and that will represent Israel's final victory over
what some Israelis have called its "original sin", which was to have
destroyed Palestinian society in 1948 and to have dispossessed the nation
of Palestinians, who remain stateless or under occupation, until today.
Never mind that Arafat, whom I have criticised for years and years in the
Arabic and Western media, is still universally regarded as the Palestinian
leader both because he was legally elected in 1996 and because he has
acquired a legitimacy that no other Palestinian approaches, least of all
Abu Mazen, a bureaucrat and long time subordinate to Arafat who does not
have any popular support at all.
Moreover, there is now an
independent and coherent Palestinian opposition (the Independent National
Initiative) to both Arafat's rule and to the Islamists, but this gets no
attention because Americans and the Israelis wish for a compliant
interlocutor who is in no position to give us trouble. As to whether any
such arrangement can work, that is put off to another day. This is the
shortsightedness, indeed the blindness and the arrogance, of the imperial
gaze. Much the same pattern is repeated in the American view of Iraq,
Saudi Arabia, Egypt and all the others. The trouble with these views are
that they are so incompetent and ideological; they provide Americans not
with ideas about Arabs and Muslims, but rather with the way they would
like Arabs and Muslims to be. For a great and enormously wealthy country
to be producing the kind of mismanaged, poorly prepared and incredibly
incompetent occupation of Iraq that is taking place today is a travesty,
on intellectual grounds, and how a moderately intelligent bureaucrat like
Paul Wolfowitz could be running policies of such colossal incompetence
and, at the same time, convincing people that he knows what he is doing,
boggles the mind.
Underlying this particular
imperial perspective is a long-standing Orientalist view that will not
permit the Arabs as a people to exercise their right to national
self-determination. They are thought of as different, incapable of logic,
unable to tell the truth, fundamentally disruptive and murderous. Since
Napoleon's invasion of Egypt in 1798, there has been an uninterrupted
imperial presence based on these premises throughout the Arab world,
producing untold misery -- and some benefits it is true -- for a huge
majority of the people. But so accustomed have we become to the
blandishments of US advisers like Bernard Lewis and Fouad Ajami, who have
directed their venom against the Arabs in every possible way, that we
somehow think that what we do is the correct thing because that's the way
the Arabs are. That this happens also to be an Israeli dogma shared
uncritically by the neo-cons who are at the heart of the Bush
administration simply adds fuel to the fire. And so we are in for many
more years of turmoil and misery in an area of the world where the main
problem is, to put it as plainly as possible, US power. But at what cost,
and to what end?
Source:
by courtesy & © 2003 Al-Ahram weekly & Edward Said
by the same author:
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