At the reception desk of the
War-Against-Terror Coalition, there lies an application form for new
partners. After stating his name, country and function (king / president /
emir / dictator / tyrant), the applicant is invited to answer the
question: "Do you have local opponents that you wish to have branded as
terrorists and dealt with accordingly?"
Nearly all the applicants so far have
answered this question with great enthusiasm. Vladimir Putin designated
the Chechnyian rebels, Spain mentioned the Basque ETA, Turkey the Kurds,
India the Kashmiris, just to mention a few of a long list. In short, every
potentate, big and small, pointed a finger at the people he oppresses,
hoping that the United States will help him get rid of their war of
liberation. "Send in the big bombers," they beg, "and blow these miserable
terrorist bandits sky-high!"
All this might remind students of history
of events nearly 200 years ago. After the downfall of Napoleon, the tyrant
who promoted liberty throughout Europe, the rulers of the continent
decided to set up an insurmountable wall to any further aspirations of
national and social liberation. "All this nonsense about democracy,
freedom, equality and constitutions has to stop once and for all," they
told each other.
And so in 1815 the Czar of all the
Russians, the Emperor of Austria and the King of Prussia signed an
agreement, which they called the Holy Alliance, to institute the rule of
God in Europe. Abusing the name of the mild and vaguely socialist rabbi
from Nazareth, they created in reality a international mafia of the Iron
Fist. Wherever an oppressed people dared to raise its head in rebellion,
all the rulers of Europe would band together, one for all and all for one,
to help their threatened colleague. The Russians, for example, sent troops
to squash the Hungarian and Italian rebellions against Austria; the secret
services of all cooperated against the socialists and anarchists.
Almost all the rulers of the continent
joined the Alliance, as did England in practice, without doing so
formally. The Pope, vicar of Christ, did not, and neither did the Ottoman
Sultan, who, not being a devout Christian, had to oppress his many peoples
without outside help.
Henry Kissinger, one of the modern admirers
of the alliance and its major statesman, the Austrian Prince Metternich,
credits it with maintaining order in Europe for many decades. Less
morally-handicapped historians might point out that this unholy
coming-together of reactionary princes held up the progress of Europe
throughout the 19th century, denying liberty to many peoples
and allowing narrow-minded kings and aristocrats to hold on to their
privileges against far more productive and forward looking social forces.
Nothing very holy about that.
Under the umbrella of the War Against
Terror, a new Holy Alliance is in the making. George W. Bush is now the
supreme judge who decides who is a terrorist and who is not, as once a
mayor of Vienna decided who is a Jew. (Karl Lueger, who was elected in
1897 on an anti-Semitic platform, once cheered a Viennese team at a
football match against Hungarians. Told that the Viennese team is Jewish,
he answered: "What the hell, it’s I who decides who is a Jew!")
The inherent danger of this development is
that the new alliance will hold up the most needed reform of the 21st
century: the narrowing of the gap between North and South, the rich and
the poor nations. The abominable outrages of Osama bin Laden and his ilk
may be seen, in times to come, as the first manifestation of the coming
fight of the teeming billions of deprived and oppressed members of mankind
against the privileged few, who almost literally drown in their own fat.
The timely recognition of this problem and a determined efforts to deal
with it, while there still is time, may prevent an imminent world-wide
disaster. Fighting for the unlimited Western hegemony and monopoly of the
world’s riches, camouflaged as anti-terrorism, will lead to a world-wide
catastrophe in the future.
In the meantime, George W. and his
advisors, female and male, will have to decide whether Arafat is a
terrorist or an ally in the new equation. Ariel Sharon, an unofficial
("Don’t call me, I’ll call you") member of the coalition, insists that he,
like Putin, has the right to call his enemies terrorists, so that he can
bomb the Palestinians back to the stone-age and lock them up in some
disconnected Bantustans.
The Pentagon and Condoleeza Rice agree, the
State Department doesn’t. The national interests of the United States
clearly point to the recognition of Palestine as a corner-stone of peace
and stability in the Middle East. Domestic politics points in the opposite
direction.
It remains to be seen whether Kissinger’s
dictum that "Israel has no foreign policy, only a domestic one" applies to
the United States, too.