Western
Arms And Islamic Terrorism: An Endless Spiral
Saeed
Naqvi
“Udhar rakeeb, idhar hum bulaye jaat
hain
Ki daana daal ke murghe laraye jaate
hain”
(I am invited, so is my enemy – at the
same time.
Sprinkle some grain in the middle:
and the scene is set for an almighty cockfight)
It would be bad form to describe Saudi
kings as fools, but the temptation is vastly enhanced by the brazenness with
which the Americans dive into Saudi coffers at will and wink at each other.
It turns out that there is a competition
on between the Trump administration and its predecessor, the Obama team, as to
who made greater fool of the Saudis.
Last month, Trump and his cohorts, after
their revelries in Riyadh, announced they had concluded a $110 billion arms
deal with their Saudi allies.
Promptly came a rejoinder from a Clinton
adviser, Bruce Riedel, now a specialist at Brookings, that President Obama sold
the Saudis $112 billion in weapons in 2012 is a single deal negotiated by
Defence Secretary, Bob Gates. He then furnished incontrovertible proof that
Trump was bragging about a Saudi arms wishlist but no real deals had been concluded.
Riedel’s other argument is a real
clincher:
“You will know the Trump deal is real
when Israel begins to ask for a package to keep the Israeli Defence Forces’
qualitative edge preserved.”
What seems to be on its way are a
billion dollars worth of munitions to help the Saudi Air Force to continue its
nearly two year old bombardment of the Arab world’s poorest country – Yemen.
It will take the Saudis millennia to
build a civilization like the one they are destroying in Yemen.
And in this destruction, the US is as
enthusiastic a participant as the Saudis will ever have. In the vanguard of the
US supporters of the Saudi war machine is Republican Senator, John McCain. Thumping
the table he told Al Jazeera, “We are in a war.” Then he clarified, “The Saudis
are in a war in Yemen and they need weapons.” So Americans must provide (sell) these
weapons to the embattled Saudis.
Even though Riedel described the Trump’s
arms deal with Riyadh as “fake news”, Trump continues to cast himself as a
great salesman.
The last time Trump overplayed his
salesmanship was with South Korea. After aggravating tensions with Kim Jong-un
in North Korea, he proceeded to be a defender of South Korean interests by
promising the state of the art missile defence system. Before his altruism
could sink in, he flourished a billion dollar bill for Seoul to pay. The South
Koreans promptly voted an anti American President in Seoul. But it would still be
premature to cast Trump as a latter day Willy Loman in The Death of a Salesman.
Just look at the masterly double dealing he is attempting in Qatar.
Creating confusion, Trump’s patented
style of diplomacy (and salesmanship), is on show in Qatar yet again.
After having blessed Saudi king Salman’s
so called Sunni Armed Front, Trump watched the Saudi-Qatari falling out with
both anger and glee. (Saudi-Qatar antipathy is historic and requires separate treatment.)
Since Trump imagined he had swung a huge
arms deal with the Saudis (since debunked), he felt obliged to call the recalcitrant
Qatar names. He called it “a high level sponsor of terrorism.”
While he was spewing his anti Qatar
expletives, his Defence Secretary, James Mattis was signing a $12 billion arms
deal with his Qatari counterpart, Khalid Al Attiyah. The scene is being set for
a perfect cockfight, as my opening couplet suggests. Egg the Saudi on to break with
Qatar, promptly dispatch Mattis to Doha to squeeze yet another deal with the nervous
Qataris. This would prompt Saudis come running for more arms – and so on.
I have always maintained that Americans,
protected by the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans, will continue to enhance
their dependence on what Eisenhower called the military industrial complex.
Retaliatory consequences of their arms sales
in the form of increased terrorism will be borne by Europe which has land and Mediterranean
Sea links with areas in West Asia most affected by the post 9/11 wars. Manchester
and London Bridge are only the most recent manifestations of terrorism as
revenge.
When I told a senior French official in Paris
recently that terrorism in Europe would be unstoppable so long as Saudis have
the money to buy US, French, and British arms, he shrugged his shoulders. “When
US arms giants Lockheed Martin and Raytheon sign mega deals with the oil rich GCC,
our governments come under pressure from our arms industry which says – please don’t
let us fall behind in the global competition.” It is an endless spiral.
Is “revenge” terrorism in the West different
from terrorism elsewhere? For instance, 150 members of Afghan police, army and foreigners
were killed by suicide bombers outside the German Embassy in Kabul soon after the
Manchester attack. The dynamic here is different. Afghan collaborators with a 16
year old US occupation of Afghanistan are under attack from Taliban, falling back
on Afghan nationalism.
What is common in Islamic terror everywhere
is the technique: suicide bombing.
This genre was patented by Wahabi, Takfiri
thought and will continue until the West lays the blame where it belongs. No Iranian
or Hezbollah or indeed Shia militant has yet been found to be a suicide bomber.
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