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Bin Laden's Terrorism Isn't About the Palestinians By Dennis Ross |
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Bin Laden's Terrorism Isn't About the Palestinians
By Dennis Ross
WASHINGTON -- In 1990, Saddam Hussein claimed that he had invaded Kuwait to help the
Palestinians. He understood that he was isolated and needed to link his invasion to a
cause that might appear legitimate. While his claim was absurd on its face, the United
States had to fight the linkage argument as it put together the coalition against Iraq in
1990.
At that time the first intifada created enormous tensions in the region; many complained
that the United States, as Israel's main ally and benefactor, was perpetuating Israeli
occupation. Some of our allies argued that if Arabs were to join the coalition against
Iraq, the United States needed to organize an international conference to settle the
Arab-Israeli conflict. The Bush administration wisely refused to link the two issues.
In an echo of 1990, Osama bin Laden tried, in his videotaped message this week, to make
the same linkage, tying his actions to the cause of Palestine, declaring, "America
will not live in peace before peace reigns in Palestine." Much like Saddam Hussein,
he is trying to gain legitimacy by implying that his attack on America was about the
plight of the Palestinians.
He is no more credible than Mr. Hussein was. His Al Qaeda network did not attack America
because of the absence of peace in the Middle East. It had obviously begun planning its
terrorist attack last year - even as peace talks were progressing. Had we succeeded in
2000, when I thought a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was possible, the
plans for the attack would undoubtedly have been accelerated, not stopped.
Peace in the Middle East would not make Osama Bin Laden and his and other terror networks
disappear. Nor would it affect their determination to attack our civilization and
modernity itself.
Does that mean pursuing Middle East peace is not important now? Of course not. It is
clearly in our interest to stabilize the Middle East. But terror and those who carry it
out are going to be a threat whether or not peace becomes possible again between
Palestinians and Israelis.
Countries like Saudi Arabia and Egypt were well aware that Saddam Hussein's effort to
eradicate the nation of Kuwait was a threat to them and could not be linked to any other
issue. Today those countries support our current efforts, at least tacitly, because they
understand that Mr. bin Laden's network is capable of committing atrocities against them
on the level of those against the United States. Their support is not a favor to us; it is
an act of self-defense.
Still, a different climate in the Middle East would make cooperation with us easier. Our
Arab allies would feel less defensive about their ties to us if anger and frustration over
the Palestinian situation were not so pronounced in the Arab world.
The question is whether the international effort against terrorism will itself force a
change in the conflict in the Middle East. If we are to stand any chance of ending the war
between Palestinians and Israelis, Yasir Arafat must feel that he now has to make a
choice. Not surprisingly, the attacks on Sept. 11 did force him to respond. He feared
being lumped in with Osama bin Laden. He saw his cause, the cause of Palestine, being
discredited by terror. He knew that he could not allow himself to be positioned in one
place and the international community in another. His initial call for a cease-fire and
the steps that followed were promising.
But as he approached the threshold of harder steps - arresting the bomb makers, for
example - he again retreated into inaction. Indeed, the more he came to believe that he
was needed for the coalition, the less he seemed to feel the need to act. This, too, is
not surprising, since his strategy is always to avoid hard choices unless he is compelled
to make them.
But he cannot avoid action for long. He cannot afford for Osama bin Laden to become the
champion of the Palestinian movement. The consequences for him internationally and
domestically would be devastating. Mr. Arafat can never satisfy those who want to follow
Mr. bin Laden. He understands that. And he understands as well that when Hamas and Islamic
Jihad rally their supporters for Mr. bin Laden, they target his leadership as much as they
target the United States. In the past, when Arafat moved against Hamas and Islamic Jihad,
it was not because of what they did to Israel, but because of what he feared they might do
to him. That is the reason he is cracking down seriously on the pro-bin Laden
demonstrations now.
At a moment when his own interests argue for a crackdown, international pressure could be
decisive in getting him to arrest those who plan and carry out terror attacks against
Israel. The Israelis could then reciprocate and match his actions with a relaxation of
their policies. The United States still needs to work to stabilize the region and, in
time, to help create a negotiation process. Sept. 11 does not change that. Defusing the
conflict in the Middle East remains as important as ever, but it need not be done for the
sake of forging a coalition against terror.
Dennis Ross, envoy to the Middle East in the Clinton administration, is a fellow at
Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
© The New York Times, October 12, 2001.
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