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Russian military leaders have expressed concern about US plans
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limited by possibilities for a strategic imbalance? Is this just SDI
all over again?
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almarst-2001
- 11:54am Sep 17, 2001 EST (#9286
of 9289)
BLACK TUESDAY: THE VIEW FROM ISLAMABAD by Pervez Hoodbhoy
Samuel Huntington's evil desire for a clash between civilizations
may well come true after Tuesday's terror attacks. The crack that
divided Muslims everywhere from the rest of the world is no longer a
crack. It is a gulf, that if not bridged, will surely destroy both.
For much of the world, it was the indescribable savagery of
seeing jet-loads of innocent human beings piloted into buildings
filled with other innocent human beings. It was the sheer horror of
watching people jump from the 80th floor of the collapsing World
Trade Centre rather than be consumed by the inferno inside. Yes, it
is true that many Muslims also saw it exactly this way, and felt the
searing agony no less sharply. The heads of states of Muslim
countries, Saddam Hussein excepted, condemned the attacks. Leaders
of Muslim communities in the US, Canada, Britain, Europe, and
Australia have made impassioned denunciations and pleaded for the
need to distinguish between ordinary Muslims and extremists.
But the pretence that reality goes no further must be abandoned
because this merely obfuscates facts and slows down the search for
solutions. One would like to dismiss televised images showing
Palestinian expressions of joy as unrepresentative, reflective only
of the crass political immaturity of a handful. But this may be
wishful thinking. Similarly, Pakistan Television, operating under
strict control of the government, is attempting to portray a nation
united in condemnation of the attack. Here too, the truth lies
elsewhere, as I learn from students at my university here in
Islamabad, from conversations with people in the streets, and from
the Urdu press. A friend tells me that crowds gathered around public
TV sets at Islamabad airport had cheered as the WTC came crashing
down. It makes one feel sick from inside.
A bizarre new world awaits us, where old rules of social and
political behavior have broken down and new ones are yet to defined.
Catapulted into a situation of darkness and horror by the
extraordinary force of events, as rational human beings we must
urgently formulate a response that is moral, and not based upon
considerations of power and practicality. This requires beginning
with a clearly defined moral supposition - the fundamental equality
of all human beings. It also requires that we must proceed according
to a definite sequence of steps, the order of which is not
interchangeable.
Before all else, Black Tuesday's mass murder must be condemned in
the harshest possible terms without qualification or condition,
without seeking causes or reasons that may even remotely be used to
justify it, and without regard for the national identity of the
victims or the perpetrators. The demented, suicidical, fury of the
attackers led to heinous acts of indiscriminate and wholesale murder
that have changed the world for the worse. A moral position must
begin with unequivocal condemnation, the absence of which could
eliminate even the language by which people can communicate.
Analysis comes second, but it is just as essential. No
"terrorist" gene is known to exist or is likely to be found.
Therefore, surely the attackers, and their supporters, who were all
presumably born normal, were afflicted by something that caused
their metamorphosis from normal human beings capable of gentleness
and affection into desperate, maddened, fiends with nothing but
murder in their hearts and minds. What was that?
Tragically, CNN and the US media have so far made little attempt
to understand this affliction. The cost for this omission, if it is
to stay this way, cannot be anything but terrible. What we have seen
is probably the first of similar tragedies that may come to define
the 21st century as the century of terror. There is much claptrap
about "fighting terrorism" and billions are lik
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