From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Fri Aug 30 2002 - 12:46:54 MDT
New Statesman (British leftist magazine) Monday 17th June 2002 
The anti-imperialism of fools By Mick Hume Western leftists find 
themselves in strange company when it comes to the Middle East. 
Are they really happy to line up with neo-Nazis and Islamic 
fundamentalists? ======= Once upon a time, a hundred years or 
so ago, it was fashionable to attack something called "Jewish 
capitalism". August Bebel, a German friend of Karl Marx, 
described this attempt to give anti-Semitism a progressive spin as 
"the socialism of fools". Today's fashion for Israel-bashing seems 
to me to represent a similar foolishness. It is not old-fashioned 
anti-Semitism. But there is a growing tendency to endorse dubious 
ideas under the guise of solidarity with the Palestinians. It is the 
anti-imperialism of fools. Particularly since 11 September, a 
strange-looking global alliance has formed against Israel, 
incorporating Islamic fundamentalists, European neo-Nazis and 
anti-globalists. Many, in all three groups, had previously shown 
little interest in the plight of the Palestinians: the Israeli state has 
become a sort of ersatz America, a symbol of all that they hate 
about contemporary capitalism. For Israeli, read western; and for 
the west, read modernity. What the anti-globalists share above all 
with their newfound fellow-travellers among the Islamic 
fundamentalists is a loss of faith in the modern age and in 
Enlightenment ideas. The spirit of their protests was captured by a 
banner at a recent rally in Berlin: "Civilisation is genocide". Yet, 
despite all the criticisms of America, they end up calling on the 
Great Satan to solve the problems of the world, and particularly of 
the Middle East. The demand of the western activists who visit 
the West Bank is for more international intervention. Back in the 
west, the Palestinian solidarity campaigns demand sanctions 
against the Israeli state and a boycott of Israeli goods. The 
opponents of globalisation want to globalise the Middle East 
conflict; they demand that the US and Europe turn their attention 
away from disciplining Iraq and towards punishing Israel. In 
effect, they end up echoing the call of Robert Cooper, Tony Blair's 
foreign policy adviser, for a new kind of imperialism - the same 
kind of "humanitarian" arrogance that recently prompted the 
British government to say it would send troops to India, although 
the Indian government did not want them. If ever there were an 
area that bears the scars of too much foreign interference, it is the 
Middle East. Conflicts there have been manipulated and 
perpetuated by imperial powers for two centuries. Yet those who 
claim to oppose imperialism now propose even more intervention 
- a "foreign occupation" to stop Israel, in the words of one leading 
radical journalist. Perhaps they would be happy if Palestine ended 
up like Bosnia - a place where ethnic divisions have been set in 
stone by international intervention, and now to be ruled over by 
Paddy Ashdown in his new role as UN high representative (that is 
to say, the colonial governor general). The politics of anti-
imperialism first emerged as a defence of the democratic right to 
self-determination. It rejected the notion that the solutions to a 
society's problems were to be found from without. Today's anti-
imperialism of fools, by contrast, not only endorses imperialist 
intervention, it also appears to oppose anything progressive that 
the west stands for - such as rationalism, universalism, scientific 
experimentation or economic development. (Its advocates are 
happy, however, to use the internet to spread the message; theirs 
is a high-tech primitivism.) The very different tradition of an older 
anti-imperialism was summed up by C L R James: "I denounce 
European colonialism. But I respect the learning and profound 
discoveries of western civilisation." The idea was to free the 
colonial world so that it might reap the benefits of modernity. 
Today, as Kenan Malik points out: "James's defence of 'western 
civilisation' would probably be dismissed as Eurocentric, even 
racist." Anti-globalisation protesters now find themselves in the 
same bed as al-Muhajiroun, "an Islamic movement which exists to 
fulfil the commands of the divine text of the Koran". Its website 
argues that the Potters Bar rail crash and the crisis in the national 
health service were caused by the British government ploughing 
billions into its pro-globalisation and war policies, instead of 
investing in domestic services. Its argument ends not with the 
demand to renationalise the railways, but with an invocation that 
"by the will of Allah, the economies of those countries at war with 
Islam will continue to deteriorate". It is not unusual to find oneself 
with strange bedfellows on particular issues. Politics is not for 
purists, especially where war is concerned. Yet it is striking how 
comfortably many arguments of the anti-globalisation movement 
now seem to fit the arguments of Islamic fundamentalists such as 
al-Muhajiroun - a group which boasts that its outlook "is not 
rational", and reserves its most bitter hatred for "the Jews" who, it 
claims, run much of the world. The issue that brings the anti-
capitalists and Islamists closest is the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. 
Both are quite recent converts to the Palestinian cause. As he 
made efforts to win support in the Islamic world during the 1990s, 
Osama Bin Laden did not mention the plight of the Palestinians at 
all. The anti-globalisation movement is an even later recruit to the 
Palestinian banner. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict now features at 
May Day marches and international summit protests. In April in 
Washington, three separate demonstrations - against the World 
Bank/International Monetary Fund, against the war in Afghanistan 
and against the Israeli occupation - merged into what was reported 
as the biggest pro-Palestinian demonstration in US history, 
involving 75,000 people, according to the police. The 
International Solidarity Movement has sent delegations of western 
protesters to "witness" the Middle East conflict and show 
solidarity with the Palestinians - notably by breaking through an 
Israel Defence Forces blockade to enter the Church of the Nativity 
in Bethlehem. Why should Palestine have suddenly become such a 
cause celebre? Critics now talk of the Israeli state as if it were a 
mini-superpower, given licence by Washington to commit 
genocide against the Palestinians; some have described President 
Bush as "Sharon's poodle". This cartoon version of events grossly 
inflates the power and importance of Israel today. It is ridiculous 
to think that the foreign policy of a global superpower could be 
driven by a tiny state with a population of six million. For 
America (and before that Britain), relations between Jews and 
Arabs have always been negotiable in the wider scheme of things. 
During the cold war, the US generally backed Israel as its 
gendarme, in order to contain the threat (real and imagined) of a 
Soviet-backed Arab nationalism. But we are no longer living in 
1967 or 1973. Arab nationalism has been dead for at least a 
decade. The west has less need of Israel to police the region so 
tightly. More important, in the post-cold war era, the west has lost 
its sense of imperial certainty. This underlying vulnerability is 
revealed most sharply in its relations with the Islamic world. No 
longer able to promote their cherished old notions of racial or 
cultural superiority, the western elites have become increasingly 
defensive. After 11 September, many predicted a full-scale clash 
of civilisations. Yet, far from pursuing a fundamentalist crusade, 
Bush and Blair have emphasised that they are not fighting a war 
against Islam. There have been panics about "Islamophobia" in 
America and Europe. The Italian prime minister, Silvio 
Berlusconi, was denounced for advertising "the superiority of our 
civilisation" over the Islamic world. And a US marines website 
was closed down for making "insensitive" remarks. This must be 
the first war in which it is officially considered illegitimate to hate 
the enemy. The newly defensive mentality within the western 
camp is far removed from America's past belief in its manifest 
destiny. This uncertainty towards Islam has clear implications for 
relations with the Israeli state, long seen as an outpost of the west 
in a hostile Muslim world. Even a right-wing Republican such as 
George Bush now demands that Israel pull out of "occupied 
territories" and calls for the creation of a Palestinian state. Other 
members of Washington's foreign-policy establishment have gone 
further. Zbigniew Brzezinski, former national security adviser to 
President Jimmy Carter, denounced the Israelis as being 
"increasingly like the white supremacist South Africans, viewing 
the Palestinians as a lower form of life". The US still helps to 
bankroll the Israeli state, and there remains a powerful pro-Israeli 
lobby in Congress and the media. But these people now feel 
compelled to make shrill public appeals on Israel's behalf which 
would have been considered unnecessary in the past. Elsewhere in 
the west, a new antagonism towards Israel is more obvious. The 
Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, declares that Israel's current 
offensive falls outside the war against terrorism. The German 
government offers to send peacekeeping troops to separate Arabs 
and Jews (something considered taboo since the Holocaust). And 
in Belgium, a court is attempting to prosecute the Israeli prime 
minister, Ariel Sharon, for "crimes against humanity". The 
immediate reaction from the UN and Europe to the Israeli attacks 
on Jenin revealed a readiness to accept the wilder allegations of 
massacres and mass graves. All this has more to do with western 
uncertainty than with anti-Semitism; the most vehement critics of 
Israel include leading Jewish spokesmen such as the Labour 
backbencher Gerald Kaufman, a veteran Zionist, who has 
condemned Israel as a pariah state and Sharon as a war criminal in 
the House of Commons. Yet Israel is no more a "Nazi" state than 
it ever was. Those who imagine that the violence in Jenin was 
unique in the Israeli-Arab conflict have short memories (or none). 
What is different today is the west's defensiveness about Israeli 
actions. Israel now stands condemned for the kind of actions that 
might once have been condoned tacitly. It is this feeling of 
western vulnerability that has inspired the left and the anti-
globalisation movement. Protesters find it easier to feel morally 
worthy when they are guaranteed to get an apologetic response 
from the authorities. Yet these newfound friends of Palestine do 
not seem to know much about the history of this conflict. Their 
websites and leaflets sloganise about "NaZionists", and how this is 
a war between "racism and justice" (a politically correct way of 
saying "good v evil"). But there is little analysis of the causes. 
Some of the clumsy attempts to incorporate the Middle East into 
the concerns of the anti-globalisation movement border on the 
bizarre. Jose Bove, the French farmer and green activist, sprang to 
global fame when he attacked a McDonald's burger bar with a 
tractor, and wrecked GM crops. Last year, he turned up in a peace 
delegation on the West Bank. This year, he was back again, 
visiting Yasser Arafat's besieged compound at Ramallah. Why? 
Bove told the New Left Review that the Israelis are "putting in 
place - with the support of the World Bank - a series of neoliberal 
measures intended to integrate the Middle East into globalised 
production circuits, through the exploitation of cheap Palestinian 
labour". This is the kind of conspiratorial anti- capitalist-speak 
that we might call globaldegook. Naomi Klein, a critic of both the 
Israeli occupation and globalisation, worries that "every time I log 
on to activist news sites such as indymedia.org . . . I'm confronted 
with a string of Jewish conspiracy theories about 9/11 and 
excerpts from the Protocols of the Elders of Zion". She thinks that 
"the anti-globalisation movement isn't anti-Semitic, it just hasn't 
fully confronted the implications of diving into the Middle East 
conflict". Klein is right. What we are witnessing is not simply a 
resurgence of old-fashioned anti-Semitism: that accusation is most 
often a defensive reaction from Israel's supporters. But the anti-
globalisation movement is "diving into the Middle East conflict" 
blindly, in pursuit of a vague and simplistic moral agenda of its 
own. The delegations of self-styled "internationals" who travel to 
the Middle East to show sympathy for the Palestinians are lauded 
as "the real heroes of today" on solidarity websites. Yet few of 
them would lie down in front of tanks if Israel really were the 
Nazi state they claim. The internationals seem less keen to travel 
to other conflicts, away from the eyes of the world media, where 
they might risk meeting the fate of the international solidarity 
activists killed during the Pinochet coup in Chile. For many 
activists, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict seems to have become a 
convenient outlet for the morbid emotionalism and victim-centred 
culture of our age. A solidarity meeting in London begins with 
people being searched and asked for "passes" (tickets), so that 
they can "experience" what life is like under Israeli occupation. 
Writing in the NS, one "international" announced that, having 
seen a warning shot fired and been woken up by the noisy Israeli 
air force, "I'm beginning to understand what it must be like to be a 
Palestinian." I am beginning to think that this might be the point 
of the exercise for some of these people. Far from offering an 
alternative for the Middle East, these self-indulgent 
demonstrations of western victim culture can only reinforce the 
emotional nihilism that is already rampant in the region - what 
one American commentator calls "the desperado politics of 
victimhood, embraced by Jews and Palestinians alike". Writing 
about the 1979 Iranian revolution, Tariq Ali attacked "the anti-
imperialism of fools" expressed by "useful idiots from the western 
European left", who thought there must be something progressive 
in the Ayatollah, because he overthrew America's stooge, the 
Shah. Many on the western left now express sentiments that are 
just as foolishly misplaced. At least those idiots in Iran had a 
successful popular revolt to get carried away with; many of the 
anti-Israel protesters of today seem content to revel in 
powerlessness. Western society is infected by a powerful sense of 
self-loathing and a rejection of its political, social and economic 
achievements. It was this spirit of self-loathing that led some, of 
the left and right alike, to suggest that America got what it 
deserved on 11 September. Those sentiments are no more 
progressive when aimed against Israel as a symbol of the west 
than when they are directed in irrational campaigns against GM 
crops and the literature of Dead White Males. We may feel 
solidarity with the Palestinians, but that is no reason to endorse 
the anti-imperialism of fools. Populist anti-Israeli rhetoric is 
cheap, but it offers no solutions - especially when it ends with a 
demand for even more western intervention in the affairs of the 
Middle East. The long-suffering peoples of the region deserve 
better than to be used by those looking for somewhere convenient 
to strike sanctimonious poses. 
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