X-Message-Number: 17586 From: "john grigg" <> Subject: The attack as seen by the foreign press Date: Sun, 16 Sep 2001 21:51:37 I thought this would give a little extra insight. John Date: Sat, 15 Sep 2001 00:19:33 -0700 From: "Technotranscendence" <> [add to address book] [add to spam block list] Subject: TERRORISTS TARGET AMERICA: Perspectives from the Foreign Press TERRORISTS TARGET AMERICA: Perspectives from the Foreign Press from http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/News/NewsPress091401.htm The quality of much foreign commentary, not for the first time, exceeds that of our "mainstream" press. Simon Jenkins warned in The Times of London (September 12): Those critical of NATO bombing might offer America more sympathy if NATO had offered sympathy for the hundreds of civilian deaths from its missiles and cluster bombs far from home. US generals openly demanded the bombing of civilian targets in Belgrade and Baghdad, to "break the will" of local people. Is that not what the perpetrators of yesterday's outrage might say? Here we tread warily. Sponsoring the state of Israel led America into a prolonged and senseless hostility to the cause of the dispossessed Palestinians. The financing of anti-Soviet warlords in Afghanistan in the 1980s armed and galvanised terrorist groups, including Osama bin Laden and others behind the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Centre . . . The message of yesterday's incident is that, for all its horror, it does not and must not be allowed to matter. It is a human disaster, an outrage, an atrocity, an unleashing of the madness of which the world will never be rid. But it is not politically significant. It does not tilt the balance of world power one inch. It is not an act of war. America's leadership of the West is not diminished by it. The cause of democracy is not damaged, unless we choose to let it be damaged. The London Guardian opined (9/13): Pounding Afghanistan into dust with cruise missiles and long-range bombers might make Americans feel better about the Manhattan horror. But such cathartic vengeance would do nothing to curb the menace of transnational terrorism.... Truly, there are no limits, if the United States were to take this path, turning from world cop to global hitman. But nor is there much rationality in such an approach.... No, these are the dangerous counsels of anger and thwarted power, urging Mr. Bush to lash out wildly. They should be ignored. The war on terrorism will not be won that way. Military action, especially a NATO assault, must be the option of the last resort. Writing in the same paper on September 14, Jonathan Friedland said that Tuesday's killers have struck a blow against globalisation more potent even than their toppling of the twin totems of the World Trade Centre. Faith in easy, safe, jet travel--so crucial to shrinking our world--has vanished . . . Whatever happens next, that act has won one success already. It has made Americans, and everyone else, fear their own world. The London Independent (9/13): While we in Britain clearly "stand shoulder to shoulder with our American friends" in their shock and their dread and in their determination to do what they can to avert further atrocities, we should see the nature of President Bush's response before identifying ourselves too closely with what might all too easily become a counterproductive thirst for revenge. . . . No one doubts the need for tighter security or for military action against identifiable threats, but Tuesday's barbarities exposed the extent to which U.S. policy towards the threat from 'rogue states' was misdirected. The obsession with a technological fix, the 'son of Star Wars' missile shield, has distracted attention from dealing with the religious and ideological basis of low-tech terrorism. The Financial Times editorialized (9/12): Mr. Bush should also review his policy towards the Middle East. . . . The administration's hands-off approach and its tolerance of . . . Sharon's hardline has encouraged extremists across the region looking for any excuse to demonize Americans. In Athens, Eleftherotypia said (9/12): The United States leadership must realize that the best reaction is that of democratization of the world order, respect for international law, abandonment of arbitrary behavior or the law of the sheriff. The answer to terrorism is always more democracy for all the peoples of the planet. In Toronto, Rick Salutin opined in The Globe and Mail (9/14): Once it's been shown to be doable, it becomes redoable, with relative ease. Except for one item, harder to duplicate and on which it all depends: the willingness of those involved to kill themselves. This is what marks these attacks as 21st century rather than 20th . . . Bizarrely, the rise of fundamentalist religion as a political factor in many parts of the world owes something to American policy. The U.S. chose to nurture Islamic fundamentalism in Afghanistan in the 1980s, to undermine Soviet control there; in the course of which it worked with, armed and trained--Osama bin Laden! In a similar way, Israel chose to encourage fundamentalism among Palestinians to undermine secular left-wing forces. In Iceland Morgunbladid commented (9/12): It is possible that the horrible events yesterday will lead to louder demands in the United States for the Bush administration to revaluate their Middle East policies. In Portugal, the influential daily P blico opined (9/12): This proves that the United States, if it wants to survive in this new world of wars waged on the battlefields of the purest terror, not only must better understand the real weight of the conflicts with which it is dealing (the Middle East in particular), but also agree to cooperation with the other democracies in order to restore a minimum of human dignity in a world where barbarism threatens to rule. Jean-Marie Colombani commented in a front-page editorial in Le Monde (9/13): The reality is that we have a world without counterweight, physically unbalanced and therefore dangerous, because it lacks the balance of multipolarity. . . . The future, which is etched in blood, already points to two clear consequences that have to do with alliances: it is the end of a strategy based solely against Russia. Russia will become Washington's main ally. It may also be the end of an alliance, which the United States established with the Islamic Sunni regimes, such as those of Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. Serge July held in left-of-center Liberation (9/13): The United States is dying to counterattack. But here again it will be limited by the dangerous liaisons it has woven with Islamic movements since the war in Afghanistan. Michel Schifres opined in right-of-center Le Figaro (9/13): Changes will result from this attack: first, the United States will need to reorient its secret service surveillance to political issues as opposed to economic issues. And it will have to stop "playing" with Islamic extremists and stop closing its eyes to the regimes that harbor terrorists. Werner Burchardt commented on German national radio station Deutschlandfunk (9/12): The "massive retaliatory strike" which Washington announced does not bode well. We Germans, who owe so much to the Americans after the end of WW II, should keep a critical distance to the United States and prevent it from making mistakes. Maksim Yusin remarked in Moscow's Izvestiya (9/13): Differences among civilizations are not in what politicians say. They are in how ordinary people act in a crisis. The moment of truth has put everything in its place. No matter how much some of our politicians speak of a "strategic partnership" and near-friendship with Saddam, Qaddafi and Iran's ayatollahs, the world knows now with whom we really are--as people bring flowers to U.S. diplomatic missions in Moscow and other Russian cities. Also in Russia, Vremya commented: The Americans should review their military doctrine. Now is the time for them to think about what makes anti-American sentiment so strong in the world, why the Great Satan is hated so much, and if the late Senator William Fulbright was right about the "arrogance of power." Aleksandr Frolov stated in Sovetskaya Rossiya (9/13): Early commentaries clearly overdid it, speaking about an "unprecedented" event. All commentators suddenly "forgot" about precedents such as Dresden, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Vietnam, and Yugoslavia, all set by America. People remember that. Even so, if the attack is retribution, it is unjust. It has missed those who are really responsible for the war that has been going on in the world for the past 50 years. Jerusalem Post editorialized (9/13): The free world must recognize that it is in a war of self-defense whose goal is victory. The concept of a war against terrorism is meaningless without the goal of removing terrorist regimes. . . . A war against terrorism that avoids the issue of regime change in countries such as Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan cannot be won, because it has not even really been joined. Israeli daily Ha'aretz commented (9/12): The price America has paid and pays for its is done in the name of all freedom-loving countries, including Israel, which are not ready to bow their heads before extremists who enlist God to justify their murderous activities. Yediot Aharonot wrote (9/12): For almost one year, Israel has withstood a cruel terrorist offensive on its own. Israel's sometimes excessive responses have been greatly criticized in the world and have been met by a good deal of misunderstanding and a lack of empathy. The New York and Washington scenes will now open the eyes of many people. . . . The U.S., Britain, France and other Western countries will now do their moral stocktaking as to what they did or did not do to eliminate terrorism and to contain it.... We, the Israelis, will tell them sorrowfully and with a feeling of a shared fate: "We told you so." Jerusalem Post editorialized (9/12): We are sickened, once again, by scenes of Palestinians dancing in the streets, this time celebrating the deaths of Americans. We have trouble fathoming the hatred directed at us, so we can only imagine the bafflement and pain of Americans attempting to contemplate the baseless hatred directed at them. . . . Until now, the democracies have fiddled with and indulged the states where terrorism has been cultivated and grown. In Tel Aviv Hatzofe wrote (9/12): The determination that has not been seen thus far in the war against fundamentalist terrorism will now be activated. Simply because there is no other choice. What happened yesterday is unlike any terrorism we have been through. Mohammad Subeihi wrote in Al-Arab Al-Yawm (9/12): We also realize that the American people, now fallen to grief, will find the chance to review its administrations' policy that has made the U.S. a target for terrorist organizations that are increasingly growing inside and outside America. Israel's Arabic language daily Al-Ittihad held (9/12): In order to fight terrorism, one needs to look for its background . . . and its causes. The U.S. administration should stand in front of the mirror and ask itself questions about organized state terrorism it has carried out against Cuba, Libya, the Iraqi people and many others. [It should consider] its crimes in support of Israeli terrorism against Palestinians. On the West Bank the semi-official Al-Hayat Al-Jadida opined (9/13): It is absolutely not in the Palestinian interest to express any complacency [regarding the attacks on America]. Those ignorant few, who did that, do not represent our public opinion. In fact such an ignorant behavior might have happened in other parts of the world, but, unfortunately, the cameras did not reach them and the media did not really care about those. . . . We are victims of terrorism, and victims should stick together. We and the Americans share the same grief. Pro-Palestinian Authority Al-Ayyam opined (9/13): The Palestinians and the Americans find themselves in the same boat. The American officials in the White House have been showing understanding to the attacks perpetrated by the Jewish State. . . . It is not clear that, having the Americans suffer from what the Palestinians have been through for the last year, such an understanding can continue. Al-Quds editorialized (9/13): The irony of the situation is that Israel is exploiting what is going on in the United States to claim that it stands behind America in its fight against terrorism. This is a twisted logic, considering that Israel is an occupying country that is oppressing the Palestinian people. It is important that the United States realize the big difference between the American case and the Israeli case. Jeddah-based Saudi daily Al-Bilad remarked (9/13): Until now, the key beneficiary of yesterday's horrible catastrophe against the American people is Israel. The independent South China Morning Post of Hong Kong noted (9/13): It would be opportune for the U.S. to take a realistic look at its relationship with the rest of the world. . . . If the U.S. is to continue to exercise its global role, it is important that besides handing out retribution to those involved in the terrorist attacks it also pays attention to the causes for this resentment and to try and understand it. The security of the US cannot rest solely on the power of its armed forces. It also needs a new diplomacy to reach out to those who feel alienated from a US-led global order. Chinese-language Hong Kong daily Wen Wei Po wrote in its editorial (9/13): Terrorist activities are basically related to U.S. hegemonism in its dealing with world affairs. In South Korea pro-government Hankyoreh Shinmun editorialized (9/13): Given that the U.S. has been under fire from the international community for its power-based, arrogant attitude, the Americans need to take this incident as an opportunity to reflect on whether they have encouraged this desperate and hostile terrorism. In India the centrist daily Pioneer asserted (9/13): Osama bin Laden's Frankensteinian entity was largely created by none else than the CIA to counter the Soviet occupation troops in Afghanistan.... the U.S. spent more than $600 million in this operation, which has now come back to haunt America with its worst nightmare. This is the link that U.S. policy makers need to understand before they embark on any retribution in the form of retaliatory attacks. Pakistan and Taliban are the creation of U.S. foreign and military policies that have now backfired, creating in the process enemies of humanity like. An op-ed by Irshad Ahmed Haqqani in the leading Pakistani daily Jang stressed (9/13): Not a single media commentary from the United States has hinted at a critical appreciation of the country's foreign policy. Only one statement is being repeated, that the terrorism against America will be responded to and the terrorists will be crushed. Michele Ouimet judged in the lead editorial in Montreal's La Presse (9/13): Of course Americans' anger is legitimate and a lot of innocent people were killed. . . . But American sanctions also kill. More slowly, more subtly, unspectacularly . . . and they especially hit the innocent civilians. We wrote yesterday about the impact of economic sanctions on Iraq. They succeeded in agitating new hatred against America but also killed--at least 3,000 children a month, according to UNICEF. Innocent populations have nothing to do with extremist terrorist groups . . . and they shouldn't have to pay the price of the retaliation. Columnist Susan Riley wrote in the Ottawa Citizen (9/12): As for Canada: Our best protection may be distancing ourselves a little more explicitly from U.S. foreign policy . . . Faced with the random brutality unleashed on ordinary Americans yesterday, it is hard not to think: Thank God, I live in Canada. We are safe because of our relative harmlessness, more than our virtue. In Brazil O Estado de Sao Paulo Paris correspondent Giles Lapouge asked (9/13): Wasn't Osama bin Laden cynically trained by the CIA? Wasn't he chosen by the United States as an essential element in the fight against the Soviets? Wasn't it the United States that produced this devil? It took lots of time for the United States to realize what everyone knew from the very beginning. Folha de S. Paulo columnist Marcelo Coelho judged (9/13): A brutal, simultaneous, unexpected, cowardly attack will serve for that the immense U.S. military power to be used without the supposed good manners of a civilized nation. The problem is that so far the bombings and terror actions carried out by the U.S. had remote adversaries, and distant justifications. How many thousand children died in the bombings against Iraq? How many civilian targets were hit due to 'technical failure' in Serbia? How can one condemn terrorism after having used napalm in Vietnam? Not to mention Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Of course I prefer Bush to bin Laden, as well as the Republicans to Taliban. But we should not think whether it is better to bomb Manhattan or destroy Kabul. . . . I deplore the American victims, not that the Pentagon was hit. An editorial in Mexico City's La Jornada states (9/13): It is important to remember that regardless of the reasons for the criminal attacks in New York and in Washington, it is a matter of U.S. domestic and foreign policy, and that the Mexican people have nothing to do with them. Monterrey's leading El Norte ran commentary by a former Mexican diplomat (9/13): There will also be a witch-hunt. . . . And if you think that being a Mexican makes you safe, let me tell you that in some U.S. intelligence circles, Mexico is not only considered a dangerous source of drug trafficking but also of terrorism, with special concentration on the Mexican states of Chiapas, Oaxaca and Guerrero, which may harbor terrorist cells capable of bombing banks, ambushing and sabotaging anything that has a U.S. profile. _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp Rate This Message: http://www.cryonet.org/cgi-bin/rate.cgi?msg=17586