Was
Osama Right?
Islamists always believed the U.S. was weak.
Recent political
trends won't change their view.
(Portuguese text)
BY BERNARD
LEWIS
During the Cold
War, two things came to be known and generally recognized
in the Middle East concerning the two rival superpowers.
If you did anything to annoy the Russians, punishment
would be swift and dire. If you said or did anything
against the Americans, not only would there be no
punishment; there might even be some possibility
of reward, as the usual anxious procession of diplomats
and politicians, journalists and scholars and miscellaneous
others came with their usual pleading inquiries:
"What have we done to offend you?
What can we do
to put it right?"
A few examples may
suffice. During the troubles in Lebanon in the 1970s
and '80s, there were many attacks on American installations
and individuals--notably the attack on the Marine
barracks in Beirut in 1983, followed by a prompt
withdrawal, and a whole series of kidnappings of
Americans, both official and private, as well as
of Europeans. There was
only one attack on Soviet citizens, when one diplomat
was killed and several others kidnapped. The Soviet
response through their local agents was swift, and
directed against the family of the leader of the
kidnappers. The kidnapped Russians were promptly
released, and after that there were no attacks on
Soviet citizens or installations throughout the
period of the Lebanese troubles.
These different responses
evoked different treatment. While American policies,
institutions and individuals were subject to unremitting
criticism and sometimes deadly attack, the Soviets
were immune. Their retention of the vast, largely
Muslim colonial empire accumulated by the czars
in Asia passed unnoticed, as did their propaganda
and sometimes action against Muslim beliefs and
institutions.
Most remarkable
of all was the response of the Arab and other Muslim
countries to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
in December 1979.
Washington's handling of the Tehran hostage crisis
assured the Soviets that they had nothing to fear
from the U.S. They already knew that they need not
worry about the Arab and other Muslim governments.
The Soviets already ruled--or misruled--half a dozen
Muslim countries in Asia, without arousing any opposition
or criticism. Initially, their decision and action
to invade and conquer Afghanistan and install a
puppet regime in Kabul went almost unresisted. After
weeks of debate, the U.N. General Assembly finally
was
persuaded to pass a resolution "strongly deploring
the recent armed intervention in Afghanistan."
The words "condemn" and "aggression"
were not used, and the source of the "intervention"
was not named. Even this anodyne resolution was
too much for some of the Arab states. South Yemen
voted no; Algeria and Syria abstained; Libya was
absent; the nonvoting PLO observer to the Assembly
even made a speech defending the Soviets.
One might have expected
that the recently established Organization of the
Islamic Conference would take a tougher line. It
did not. After a month of negotiation and manipulation,
the organization finally held a meeting in Pakistan
to discuss the Afghan question. Two of the Arab
states, South Yemen and Syria, boycotted the meeting.
The representative of the PLO, a full member of
this organization, was present, but abstained from
voting on a resolution critical of the Soviet action;
the Libyan delegate went further,
and used this occasion to denounce the U.S.
The Muslim willingness
to submit to Soviet authority, though widespread,
was not unanimous. The Afghan people, who had successfully
defied the British Empire in its prime, found a
way to resist the Soviet invaders. An organization
known as the Taliban (literally, "the students")
began to organize resistance and even guerilla warfare
against the Soviet occupiers and their puppets.
For this, they were able to attract some support
from the
Muslim world--some grants of money, and growing
numbers of volunteers to fight in the Holy War against
the infidel conqueror. Notable among these was a
group led by a Saudi of Yemeni origin called Osama
bin Laden.
To accomplish their
purpose, they did not disdain to turn to the U.S.
for help, which they got. In the Muslim perception
there has been, since the time of the Prophet, an
ongoing struggle between the two world religions,
Christendom and Islam, for the privilege and opportunity
to bring salvation to the rest of humankind, removing
whatever obstacles there might be in their path.
For a long time, the main enemy was seen, with some
plausibility, as being the West, and some Muslims
were, naturally enough, willing to accept what help
they could get against that enemy. This explains
the widespread support in the Arab countries and
in some other places first for the Third Reich and,
after its collapse, for the Soviet Union. These
were the main enemies of the West, and therefore
natural allies.
Now the situation
had changed. The more immediate, more dangerous
enemy was the Soviet Union, already ruling a number
of Muslim countries, and daily increasing its influence
and presence in others. It was therefore natural
to seek and accept American help. As Osama bin Laden
explained, in this final phase of the millennial
struggle, the world of the unbelievers was divided
between two superpowers. The first task was to deal
with the more deadly and more dangerous of the two,
the Soviet Union. After that, dealing with the pampered
and degenerate Americans would be easy.
We in the Western
world see the defeat and collapse of the Soviet
Union as a Western, more specifically an American,
victory in the Cold War. For Osama bin Laden and
his followers, it was a Muslim victory in a jihad,
and, given the circumstances, this perception does
not lack plausibility. From the writings and the
speeches of Osama bin Laden and his colleagues,
it is clear that they expected this second task,
dealing with America, would be
comparatively simple and easy. This perception was
certainly encouraged and so it seemed, confirmed
by the American response to a whole series of attacks--on
the World Trade Center in New York and on U.S. troops
in Mogadishu in 1993, on the U.S. military office
in Riyadh in 1995, on the American embassies in
Kenya and Tanzania in 1998, on the USS Cole in Yemen
in 2000--all of which evoked only angry words, sometimes
accompanied by the dispatch of expensive missiles
to remote and uninhabited places.
Stage One of the jihad was
to drive the infidels from the lands of Islam; Stage
Two--to bring the war into the enemy camp, and the
attacks of 9/11 were clearly intended to be the
opening salvo of this stage. The response to 9/11,
so completely out of accord with previous American
practice, came as a shock, and it is noteworthy
that there has been no successful attack on American
soil since then. The U.S. actions in Afghanistan
and in Iraq
indicated that there had been a major change in
the U.S., and that some revision of their assessment,
and of the policies based on that assessment, was
necessary.
More recent developments,
and notably the public discourse inside the U.S.,
are persuading increasing numbers of Islamist radicals
that their first assessment was correct after all,
and that they need only to press a little harder
to achieve final victory. It is not yet clear whether
they are right or wrong in this view. If they are
right, the consequences--both for Islam and for
America--will be deep, wide and lasting.
Mr. Lewis, professor
emeritus at Princeton, is the author, most recently,
of "From Babel to Dragomans: Interpreting the
Middle East" (Oxford University Press, 2004).
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