Updated: 2012-10-09 16:55
By Han Dongping ( chinadaily.com.cn)
President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, speaking at
the United Nations General Assembly, recently condemned the recent
demonstrations and protests against the US in the Middle East and
elsewhere. It seems that both President Obama and Secretary
US meddling is causing surge in extremism
Clinton
still don’t get it.
Yes, there are extremists in this world. But it takes more than
extremists to hold such large scale demonstrations and protests against
the US presence in the Middle East. US leaders are blinded by their own
arrogance. And as result, they can’t see the connections between these
demonstrations and its foreign policies toward third world countries and
their involvement in other countries’ internal affairs.
During his speech at the UN General Assembly, Obama also defended
freedom of speech to justify his government’s refusal to ban the
internet movie The Innocence of the Muslim. Yes, freedom of speech is a
fundamental right that the American Constitution endows in its citizens.
But freedom of speech is not limitless. One needs to exercise one’s
freedom of speech wisely and prudently.
To defend the American freedom of speech amid wide spread
demonstrations and protests by the Muslim population in the world is
sheer American arrogance.
President Obama, in his speech to the UN, also vowed to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
This is yet another example of American arrogance. The US was the
first to develop nuclear weapons, and was the only country to use
nuclear weapons against another country.
The US developed ten plans to attack the former Soviet Union between 1945 and 1949.
The US only gave up its plans after the USSR acquired its own nuclear bombs in 1949.
Before China developed its nuclear bombs in 1964, the US threatened
to use nuclear weapons against China eight times. Many countries have
found it necessary to develop nuclear weapons solely because if they do
not have them, they would forever have to face threats by those
countries that do have them. Today, there are close to twenty countries
that officially and unofficially have nuclear weapons.
The US needs to explain to the world why some countries can have nuclear weapons, and why other countries cannot have them.
Why it is reasonable for the US and its allies to have them, while at
the same time, it is unacceptable for other countries to have them? How
can the US and the UN preach the ideals of fairness for all countries,
while still advocating this exclusionary measure? Does the moral
principle of fairness to all mean anything in the UN General Assembly?
The devastating destruction caused by the US Invasion of Iraq, by its
fighting in Afghanistan and Pakistan, by the American involvement in
Libya and Syria is the real reason behind the mass protests that are
occurring around the world, and not the existence of extremists.
The people in the Muslim world have felt and seen the impact of US foreign policy and military action.
It can be argued that it is exactly US foreign policy and military
action in the Muslim world that has generated the phenomenon of so
called extremists. It is time for US leaders to pause and reflect.
Why do Muslims hold such strong anti-US sentiments? Who are these extremists?
And why do they feel so strongly about this issue that many are
willing to sacrifice their lives for its cause? The US has military
bases in more than 120 countries, and stations over four hundred
thousand troops on foreign soil.
The US does this in the name of national security. Apparently, these
military bases and large scale military spending have not made Americans
any more secure. Since Sept 11, 2001, Americans have constantly been
under the threat of terrorist attacks overseas and at home.
Libya’s Deputy Prime Minister was quoted as saying that he was
surprised to see the scale of CIA operations in Libya when he saw the
large number of Americans that had to be evacuated at the airport when
Ambassador Stevens and his bodyguards were killed.
The huge amounts of money that the US has spent on its military in
the past 60 years has not necessarily equated to a level of security you
might otherwise expect from such a large military budget. On the
contrary the biggest effect of such a large military budget has been its
negative effects on the US domestic infrastructure and the well-being
of its own people.
One former Chinese leader said before that every time the American
government builds an overseas military base, it ties a knot around its
own neck, and in the end, it would strangle itself.
It is really tragic that the US government cannot see this for
themselves, and continue to involve itself with other countries’
internal affairs, and continues to build more military bases overseas.
These overseas military bases and CIA operations messing with other
countries’ internal affairs are not only a big burden for the US
government and the American people, but it also generates anti-American
sentiment around the world as demonstrated by the recent demonstrations
and protests.
The US should not forget that Iran has become one of the deadly
enemies of the US exactly because of the CIA’s involvement in Iran’s
internal affairs and its support for the Shah of Iran at the expense of
its people.
It is time for the US to have a general discussion about why there
has been such anti-US sentiment around the world. It is time for the
American people to see that military muscle does not necessarily
generate security for the US. But goodwill toward other people can.
The author is a Professor of Warren Wilson College in the US.