The Real Roots of Arab Anti-Americanism
by Barry Rubin
From Foreign Affairs, November/December
2002
BARRY RUBIN is Director of the Global Research in
International Affairs Center and Editor of the Middle East
Review of international Affairs. His latest books are The
Tragedy of the Middle East and Anti-American
Terrorism-and the Middle East.
DAMN YANKEES
SINCE LAST YEAR'S attacks on New York and
Washington, the conventional wisdom about the motivation behind
such deadly terrorism has gelled. The violence, we are often
told, was a reaction to misguided U.S. policies. For years,
certain American actions-such as the country's support for
Israel and for unpopular, oppressive Arab regimes-had supposedly
produced profound grievances throughout the Middle East. Those
grievances came to a boil over time, and finally spilled over on
September 11. The result was more than 3,000 American deaths.
Although anti-Americanism is genuinely
widespread among Arab governments and peoples, however, there is
something seriously misleading in this account. Arab and Muslim
hatred of the United States is not just, or even mainly, a
response to actual U.S. policies-policies that, if anything,
have been remarkably pro-Arab and pro-Muslim over the years.
Rather, such animus is largely the product of self-interested
manipulation by various groups within Arab society, groups that
use anti-Americanism as a foil to distract public attention from
other, far more serious problem within those societies.
This distinction should have a profound
impact on American policymakers. If Arab anti-Americanism turns
out to be grounded in domestic maneuvering rather than American
misdeeds, neither launching a public relations campaign nor
changing Washington's policies will affect it. In fact, if the
United States tries to prove to the Arab world that its
intentions are nonthreatening, it could end up making matters
even worse. New American attempts at appeasement would only show
radicals in the Middle East that their anti-American strategy
has succeeded and is the best way to win concessions from the
world's sole superpower.
THE BLAME GAME
FOR YEARS NOW, anti-Americanism has served as
a means of last resort by which failed political systems and
movements in the Middle East try to improve their standing. The
United States is blamed for much that is bad in the Arab world,
and it is used as an excuse for political and social oppression
and economic stagnation. By assigning responsibility for their
own shortcomings to Washington, Arab leaders distract their
subjects' attention from the internal weaknesses that are their
real problems. And thus rather than pushing for greater
privatization, equality for women, democracy, civil society,
freedom of speech, due process of law, or other similar
developments sorely needed in the Arab world, the public focuses
instead on hating the United States.
What makes this strategy remarkable, however,
is the reality of past U.S. policy toward the region. Obviously,
the United States, like all countries, has tried to pursue a
foreign policy that accords with its own interests. But the fact
remains that these interests have generally coincided with those
of Arab leaders and peoples. For example, the United States may
have had its own reasons for saving Kuwait from annexation by
Iraq's secular dictatorship in 1991-mainly to preserve cheap
oil. But U.S. policy was still, in effect, pro-Kuwaiti,
pro-Muslim, and pro-Arab. After all, Washington could have used
the war as a pretext to seize Kuwait's oil fields for itself or
demand lower prices or political concessions in exchange for
fighting off Iraq. Instead, U.S. leaders did none of these
things and sought the widest possible support for their actions
among Arabs and Muslims.
When the United States has involved itself in
conflicts in the region, furthermore, it has usually been during
fights pitting moderates against either secular Arab forces or
radical Islamist groups that even most Muslims consider deviant,
if not heretical. And in such conflicts, the United States has
generally backed parties with a strong claim to Arab or Islamic
legitimacy. This trend can be traced back to the 1950s, when
Egypt, Syria, and later Iraq became dictatorships friendly to
Moscow and menaced Jordan, Lebanon, and Saudi Arabia. Even then,
the United States, hoping to demonstrate its sympathy for Arab
nationalism, sought good relations with Egypt's president, Gamal
Abdel Nasser, and prevented his overthrow by the United Kingdom,
France, and Israel in the 1956 Suez war.
Washington maintained its pro-Arab policy
throughout the Cold War, worried that if it antagonized Arab
regimes they would side with the Soviet Union. For this reason,
the United States wooed Egypt, accepted Syria's hegemony over
Lebanon, and did little to punish states that sponsored
terrorism. The United States also became Islam's political
patron in the region, since traditionalist Islam, then
threatened by radical Arab nationalism, was seen as a bulwark
against avowedly secular communism.
Nonetheless, during the Cold War it became
popular to portray U .S. policy as anti-Arab-despite the
evidence to the contrary. Such rhetoric became a convenient way
for radical regimes to establish their own legitimacy and to
brand their moderate opponents as Western puppets. Radical Arab
regimes (whether nationalist or Islamist) also accused
U.S.-backed moderate governments of being antidemocratic or of
ignoring human rights, even though the radical regimes-such as
Libya, Syria, Iraq, and revolutionary Iran-had far worse records
themselves.
Indeed, internal conflicts in the Arab world
have posed impossible dilemmas for U.S. policymakers. When the
United States helps friendly governments such as Egypt's or
Saudi Arabia's, it is accused of sabotaging revolutionary
movements against them. As soon as Washington starts to pressure
Arab governments into improving their positions on democracy or
human rights, however, it is accused of acting in an imperialist
manner-as happened this summer, when the White House threatened
to block any increase in aid to Cairo after Egypt jailed Sa ad
Eddin Ibrahim, a prominent human rights advocate. If Washington
did nothing and friendly regimes were overthrown, the radical
conquerors would be unlikely to show any gratitude for U.S.
neutrality.
All the same, when conflicts in the region
did erupt during the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s pitting Islamists
against more moderate governments, the United States avoided
taking sides. During Iran's 1979 revolution, for example,
although Washington clearly wanted the shah to survive, it
nonetheless restrained him from taking tougher actions to save
his throne. And once the revolution had succeeded, President
Jimmy Carter then sought to conciliate the new Islamist
government. (It was American contact with moderates in the new
regime, in fact, that provoked the seizure of the U. S. embassy
in Tehran in November 1979.) Although the United States did not
want Iran to spread its radical Islamism throughout the Muslim
world, it nonetheless sought the best possible relations with
Tehran in order to minimize its cooperation with Moscow. And
even though relations subsequently soured, Washington has never
seriously tried to overthrow the Islamic government; on the
contrary, it has periodically sought detente with Tehran.
In fact, the only time the United States has
ever become directly involved in a dispute between a government
and Islamist revolutionaries was in Afghanistan during the
Soviet occupation-and in that case, Washington backed the
rebels.
A brief survey of U.S. policy toward the
Middle East, furthermore, reveals just how hard Washington has
tried to win the support of Arabs in particular and Muslims in
general. Consider the following:
In 1973, the United States rescued Egypt at
the end of the Arab-Israeli War by forcing a cease-fire on
Israel. Washington then became Cairo's patron in the 1980s,
providing it with massive arms supplies and aid while asking for
little in return.
The United States also saved Yasir Arafat
from Israel in Beirut in 1982, when Washington arranged safe
passage for the Palestinian leader and pressed Tunisia to give
him sanctuary. Washington's support for Arafat and his Palestine
Liberation Organization overlooked a history of Palestinian
terrorism and anti-Americanism as well as the PLO'S alignment
with the Soviet Union during the Cold War. In the 1990s,
moreover, despite the Palestinians' backing of Iraq during the
Gulf War, the United States became the Palestinians' sponsor in
the peace process with Israel, pushing for an agreement that
would create a Palestinian state with its capital in east
Jerusalem.
Over the years, the United States has also
spent blood and treasure saving Muslims in Afghanistan from the
Soviets; in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia from Iraq; and in Bosnia and
Kosovo from Yugoslavia. It has supported Muslim Pakistan against
India and Muslim Turkey against Greece. Washington has courted
Damascus, even tacitly accepting Syria's control over Lebanon.
The United States supported Arab Iraq against Persian Iran
during the Iran-Iraq War and also refrained from overthrowing
Saddam Hussein after pushing him out of Kuwait in 1991.
For decades, the United States kept its
forces out of the Persian Gulf to avoid offending Arabs and
Muslims there. They entered, in fact, only when invited in to
protect Arab oil tankers against Iran and to save Kuwait from
Iraq. In Somalia, where no vital U .S. interests were at stake,
the United States engaged in a humanitarian effort to help a
Muslim people suffering from anarchy and murderous warlords.
The United States showed moderation when U.S.
oil companies' holdings were nationalized by Saudi Arabia,
Libya, and other countries, and prices rose steeply after 1973;
Washington did not try to overthrow the offending regimes or
force them to lower prices. Nor did it take advantage of the
Soviet Union's demise to dominate the Levant or take revenge
against former Soviet allies there. Similarly, it did not use
its overwhelming military strength to dominate the Persian Gulf
region after 1990 or to force any local regime to change its
policies. And when al Qaeda blew up two U.S. embassies in
eastern Africa in 1998, causing an immense loss of life,
Washington responded with only very limited retaliation.
Finally, since September 11, American leaders have taken pains
to remind the world (and the American public) that Islam and
Arabs are not U.S. enemies.
The overall tally, in fact, is staggering:
during the last half-century, in 11 of 12 major conflicts
between Muslims and non-Muslims, Muslims and secular forces, or
Arabs and non-Arabs, the United States has sided with the former
group.* U.S. backing for Israel has been the sole significant
exception to this rule. Yet what credit has Washington received
for its aid? Arab anti-American radicals have distorted the
record, ignoring all the positive examples and focusing only on
U.S. support for Israel. Even Arab moderates, direct
beneficiaries of U .S. aid, virtually never express gratitude
for benign American measures-or even mention them at all.
AN ENEMY OF CONVENIENCE
WHY HAS the real record been so disregarded
in the Middle East? There are several explanations. First,
whatever the extent of Americans' failure to understand the
region, Middle Easterners' inability to understand the United
States has been greater. Throughout the region, leaders and
movements have always expected Washington to try to conquer them
and wipe out its enemies-since, after all, this is what the
locals would do if they controlled the world's most powerful
country.
Second, it is important to remember how
tightly information is controlled in the Middle East. It is
hardly surprising that the masses, shut off from accurate data
and constantly fed antagonistic views, have grown hostile to the
United States. Those who could present a more accurate picture
of America are discouraged from doing so by peer pressure,
censorship, and fear of being labeled U.S. agents.
Third, Washington's real record is constantly
distorted. The United States, for example, is blamed for the
suffering of Muslims whom it protected in Kosovo and Bosnia.
U.S. humanitarian efforts in Somalia are portrayed as part of an
imperialistic, anti-Muslim campaign defeated by heroic local
resistance.
Fourth, the real nature of the threats from
which the United States protected Arabs is downplayed. Take, for
example, Saddam Hussein, who has started two wars, killed
hundreds of thousands of Muslims and Arabs, looted and
vandalized Kuwait, threatened his neighbors, tortured and
repressed his own people, used chemical weapons against
opponents and civilians, fired missiles against population
centers, and tried to develop nuclear arms so as to dominate the
region. Despite his record, Arabs throughout the Middle East are
constantly told by their leaders that the United States is the
party responsible for Iraq's problems, and that Washington is
the one seeking to dominate the Persian Gulf
Finally, there is the attempt to reduce all
American policy to a single issue: U.S. support for Israel.
Israel's true nature and policies are also distorted as part of
this picture. This latter element is critical to the salience of
the .first in anti-American rhetoric, for if one believes that
Israel is an evil force seeking to dominate the Middle East,
kill Arabs, and destroy Islam, it would follow that one would
view American aid to Israel as a supreme evil. The truth,
however, is that the United States has merely helped Israel
survive efforts from Arab neighbors to remove it from the map.
The U. S.-Israel relationship was in fact quite ambivalent for
most of Israel's first quarter-century of existence, with the
United States generally refusing to supply arms or other aid.
The link only intensified in the face of hostile actions by Arab
states, which aligned themselves with the Soviet Union and
sponsored anti-American terrorism. And despite such hostility,
the U.S. goal has always remained a mutually acceptable peace
agreement between the Arabs and Israel that would ensure good
American relations with both sides.
Radical forces in the Arab world have always
rejected a peaceful solution, however, because they do not want
Israel to survive or the region to become more stable. Such a
result, after all, would undermine the radicals' chances of
seizing power.
As this point suggests, Middle Eastern
radicals have opposed the United States not because it has not
worked hard enough to bring about a just solution to the Arab-
Israeli conflict, but for the opposite reason: because the
radicals want to ensure that Washington fails to do so. This is
why terrorism has always increased whenever it seemed that the
diplomatic pursuit of peace might succeed. Hence Israel's
withdrawal from Lebanon, urged by the United States, was greeted
in the region not as a step toward ending occupation or
achieving peace, but as a sign of weakness and a signal that
Israel's enemies should escalate violence against it. The
September n attacks, meanwhile, were planned at a time when the
peace process seemed closest to success. It is no accident that
Middle Eastern anti-Americanism peaked at the very moment when
the United States was proposing to support the creation of an
independent Palestinian state with its capital in east
Jerusalem.
THE ENEMY YOU LOVE TO HATE
THE BASIC REASON for the prevalence of Arab
anti-Americanism, then, is that it has been such a useful tool
for radical rulers, revolutionary movements, and even moderate
regimes to build domestic support and pursue regional goals with
no significant costs. Indeed, as a strategy, anti-Americanism
seems to offer something for everyone. For radical Islamists,
anti-Americanism has been a way to muster popular favor despite
the fact that all attempts (other than in Iran) to stage a
theocratic revolution have been rejected by the masses and hence
failed. The Islamists have turned instead to fostering
xenophobia, transforming their battle from one among Muslims
into a struggle between Muslims as a whole and heathens who
purportedly hate Islam and seek to destroy Muslims.
As mentioned before, anti-Americanism is
equally useful to oppressive Arab regimes, since it allows them
to deflect attention from their own many failings. Instead of
responding to demands for democracy, human rights, higher living
standards, less corruption and incompetence, or new leadership,
rulers blame America for their own societies' ills and refocus
popular anger against it. Regimes can demand national unity and
shut up reformers in the face of the supposed American "threat."
And by seizing the anti-Americanism card, Arab governments make
sure their opponents will not use it against them.
Hence Egypt and Saudi Arabia have obtained
American weapons and protection over the years but promoted
popular anti-Americanism through government policies and their
state-controlled media. Iraq has used anti-Americanism as a
weapon in its battle to reenter the Arab world, escape
sanctions, and rebuild its military might. If America can be
blamed for murdering Iraqis through sanctions, who will remember
Iraq's seizure of Kuwait?
Iran, meanwhile, uses anti-Americanism to
push for the withdrawal of U.S. forces from the Persian Gulf and
to draw attention from Iran's own major handicaps in the Arab
world: the fact that it is a Shi' a, not Sunni, regime, and
ethnically Persian, not Arab. Anti-Americanism is also a
convenient way for Iranian hard-liners to delegitimize domestic
reformers (by portraying them as U.S. agents). And Syria, for
its part, has used anti-Americanism to distract its population
from the reforms that President Bashar al-Assad promised but
then quickly abandoned.
For Palestinian leaders, anti-Americanism has
functioned as a smoke screen to cover up for their own rejection
of compromise peace offers from Israel and as a way to mobilize
Arab backing. By claiming that U.S.support for Israel is the
cause of anti-Americanism among their populations, furthermore,
Palestinian leaders, along with other Arab politicians, seek to
obtain more U.S. concessions. This strategy also gives these
leaders an excuse for rejecting American policies they disagree
with; Arab leaders can claim their hands are tied by the
passions of their masses (although public sentiment never stops
them from tough action when such leaders feel their own
interests are truly at stake).
Finally, Arab anti-Americanism has proved
useful for others in the Middle East besides politicians. It
allows intellectuals and journalists to vent their anger against
a government-approved target (namely, Washington) rather than
risk criticizing injustices or failures at home. And
anti-Americanism even proves useful for the public itself
Holding the United States responsible for everything wrong in
their lives helps explain how the world works and why life never
seems to improve for them.
SATANIC REVERSES
THERE ARE, of course, legitimate Arab and
Muslim grievances against the United States. But put into
accurate perspective-and compared to the legitimate
anti-American complaints of people in other regions, not to
mention American grievances with Arab states-the level of
violence or hatred such grievances provoke in the Middle East
seems grossly disproportionate. In fact, Arabs and Muslims have
suffered far less from U.S. policies than many other groups or
peoples. Yet virtually none of these other peoples evinces
anything like the level of anti-American sentiment that exists
in the Middle East or commits acts of terrorism against the
United States.
Arabs have particularly little to complain
about when it comes to economic exploitation. Oil-producing
states have reaped great wealth from their product, and U .S.
influence over their economies is limited. It is therefore hard
to argue that Arabs are poor because Americans are rich, nor can
it be claimed that Arab raw materials are sold at low prices in
exchange for high-priced Western industrial goods-a frequent
complaint from countries with only cacao or tin to sell.
Another grievance that has little or no
reality in the Middle East compared to other areas is the
complaint that the United States makes or breaks governments
there. Since the pro-shah Iranian coup of 1953, there has not
been a single case of U.S. covert intervention to change a
Middle Eastern regime. Only in Iraq has the United States made
an attempt to overthrow a government-and so far, not very
effectively.
The fact is that most other countries in the
world-including many in Europe-have an equal or better case for
being angry at the United States than do those in the Middle
East. Yet only there does this hatred take on such an intensive
and popular form. Nowhere else, for example, can one find
popular and governmental support for terrorist attacks against
the United States.
This fact points to one other explanation for
Arab anti-Americanism. Such sentiment is a useful way to
disparage a set of attractive ideas linked to America-such as
political freedom or modernization-that might otherwise take
hold in the region. In this sense, anti-Americanism becomes a
response to globalization and Westernization.
OF MOUSE OR MAN?
ONE FINAL POINT about Arab anti-Americanism
should be mentioned. At its heart, such rage invokes a
contradictory vision of its target. To justify outrage against
the United States, the enemy must be portrayed as a bully. But
to encourage challenges against it, the United States must also
be depicted as a weakling. Revolutionaries and radical states
are frustrated by the fact that too many Arabs and Muslims
already fear the United States or even see its friendship as
desirable. If America is so powerful, why fight it or those it
protects?
To be effective, anti-Americanism must
therefore persuade masses and leaders that the U cited States is
simultaneously horrible and helpless, and that it will not do
anything if it is attacked, ridiculed, or disregarded. Powerless
against their own dictators and dysfunctional polities and
dissatisfied with their societies, every Arab or Muslim may at
least feel it possible to spit on the United States and get away
with it.
Consequently, anti-Americanism is most
encouraged not by a belief that the United States is too tough
but that it is weak, meek, and defeatable. Far from attacking
the United States because it is really a big bully, Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, Saddam Hussein, Osama bin Laden, and others
have urged attacks to prove that the United States was a paper
tiger. Unsurprisingly, these same leaders have made it clear
that, in their view, power-not popularity-is the most important
factor for political success. As Syria's late president, Hafiz
al-Assad, once noted, "It is important to gain respect, rather
than sympathy." Bin Laden has agreed, commenting that people
always back the side that looks strongest. Western weakness in
confronting Hitler, wrote Iraqi Deputy Foreign Minister Nizar
Hamdoon, encouraged Nazi aggression (as well, presumably, as
Saddam Hussein's).
As these comments suggest, it has been the
United States' perceived softness in recent years, rather than
its bullying behavior, that has encouraged the anti-Americans to
act on their beliefs. After the United States failed to respond
aggressively to many terrorist attacks against its citizens,
stood by while Americans were seized as hostages in Iran and
Lebanon, let Saddam Hussein remain in power while letting the
shah fall, pressured its friends and courted its enemies, and
allowed its prized Arab-Israeli peace process be destroyed, why
should anyone have respected its interests or fear its wrath?
Astute Middle Eastern observers have made
much of the United States' post-Vietnam loathing for foreign
adventures. In the 1970s, when many Iranians worried that
Washington would destroy their revolution if it went too far,
Khomeini told them not to worry, saying America "cannot do a
damn thing." And as recently as 1998, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
Khomeini's successor, insisted there was no need to negotiate
with the United States since Tehran had shown that Washington
was too weak to be feared or heeded.
Saddam Hussein has similarly tried to
persuade Arabs and Muslims of U.S. weakness. He has interpreted
U.S. efforts at conciliation as proof that Washington fears
confronting him. By evincing no strong reaction to Iraq's use of
chemical weapons against the Kurds, threats against Israel,
outspoken anti-Americanism, or ultimatum to Kuwait, U.S. policy
helped precipitate a much bigger crisis in August 1990.
In a February 24, 1990, speech to an Arab
summit, Saddam told Arabs that they had three options. They
could give up, wait until Europe was stronger and play it off
against America, or unite behind a strong leader who could
defeat the United States. Americans, he insisted, feared
military confrontations and losses. It had shown "signs of
fatigue, frustration, and hesitation" in Vietnam and Iran and
had quickly run away from Lebanon "when some marines were killed
" by suicide bombers in 1983. Experience had shown, he
concluded, that if Iraq acted boldly, the United States would do
nothing.
These declarations were a way to make the
Arab world forget all the unpleasant lessons of history and
follow a new leader into another dangerous adventure. Saddam got
the result he wanted: the Arab masses cheered, their leaders
jumped on his bandwagon, and the United States stayed out of his
way, at least for the moment. Of course, Saddam was wrong in
thinking he could take over Kuwait and that America would stand
by and do nothing. But he was right enough about the United
States to still be in power today, many years after making that
miscalculation.
Radical Islamists, including bin Laden, spoke
in remarkably similar terms in the 1990s, arguing that direct
strikes against U .S. interests or territory would be met by
American cowardice and trigger Islamist revolution. The quick U
.S. defeat of the Taliban in Afghanistan may have silenced much
of the sympathy for bin Laden in the months since. But
anti-Americanism seems to be at an all-time high.
The final question seems a simple one, but is
perhaps the most difficult to answer: What should Washington do
in the face of this most difficult problem? Given the practical
political benefits that anti-Americanism can provide in the Arab
world, the United States will never persuade its adversaries and
critics that they are simply mistaken in their hatred. Even if
the United States were to pressure Israel, end sanctions on
Iraq, or pull its troops out of the Persian Gulf, Arab
journalists and politicians will not start praising America as a
wonderful friend and noble example. Instead, further concessions
will only encourage even more contempt for the United States and
make the anti-American campaign more attractive.
What, then, should Washington do? U.S.
policymakers should understand that various public relations
efforts, apologies, acts of appeasement, or policy shifts will
not by themselves do away with anti-Americanism. Only when the
systems that manufacture and encourage anti-Americanism fail
will popular opinion also change. In the interim, the most
Washington can do is show the world that the United States is
steadfast in support of its interests and allies. This approach
should include both standing by Israel and maintaining good
relations with moderate Arab states-which should be urged to do
more publicly to justify U .S. support. Steadfastness and
bravery remain the best way to undermine the practical impact of
Arab anti-Americanism.
* Muslim versus non-Muslim
states: Turkey vs. Greece, Bosnia vs. Yugoslavia, Kosovo vs.
Yugoslavia, Pakistan vs. India, Afghans vs. Soviets, and
Azerbaijan vs. Armenia. Arab versus non-Arab states: Iraq vs.
Iran. Muslim states versus secular forces: Saudi Arabia and
other monarchies vs. Egypt, Jordan and other regimes vs. Syria
and Iraq, and Kuwait and Saudi Arabia vs. Iraq.