George Bisharat - The fallacy of Islamic ‘national suicide’

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Syrian cartoonist Ali Farzat

Written by George Bisharat

A new buzzword is arising from the network of Israeli think tanks and security-oriented academic departments bent on instigating a U.S. attack on Iran: “national suicide.” The term describes a supposed Arab Muslim tradition of politically motivated suicide at the national, not just individual, level. Arab Muslim regimes have purportedly launched ruinous wars they could not have reasonably hoped to win, condemning their nations to destruction.

The notion of an “irrational” and thus untrustworthy Iranian regime has already been widely discussed in the U.S. It is regularly invoked by Sen. John McCain on the stump. The term “national suicide” advances the notion and gives it a patina of academic respectability.

Israeli jurist and former Knesset member Amnon Rubinstein recently editorialized on “national suicide” in the Jerusalem Post. Citing Israeli army Lt. Col. Ari Bar Yossef, Rubinstein offered Saddam Hussein, Yasser Arafat and the Taliban in Afghanistan as exemplars of this new construct. Hussein could have avoided overthrow by giving U.N. arms inspectors free rein to search his country. Arafat, after the failure of the Camp David peace talks, could have continued negotiating but resorted to violence. Finally, the Taliban could have given up Osama bin Laden to the U.S. but instead invited self-destruction. All this because, per Rubinstein, these leaders prefer dying to “negotiating with infidels.”

“National suicide” will soon be an incantation by neoconservative and other pro-Israeli pundits and politicians on the “bomb Iran” bandwagon. Its strategic implications are clear: We can’t trust irrational regimes because they are not deterred by threat of annihilation. Therefore, extraordinary actions — such as preemptive attack — may be not only justified but necessary. It further shifts moral responsibility to the victim. In the “national suicide” formulation, it is the martyr that chooses death, while the actual killers are merely the instrument by which the suicide — or, as the case may be, the destruction of a country — is carried out.

Yet the idea of an Arab Muslim tendency toward self-destruction is wrongheaded and dangerous.

“National suicide” is easier to believe in if you’re willing to lump all Arabs and all Muslims into a single mind-set. For example, the Palestinian national movement under Arafat was staunchly secular; members of the non-Arab Taliban are Islamist extremists. The concept elides the enormous diversity within the Arab and Muslim worlds and ignores the local particularities of their multifarious — and sometimes ideologically opposed — political movements. A hint of these intra-regional tensions was displayed in Bin Laden’s recent audiotape denouncing Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah.

What of the supposed examples of “national suicide”? In fact, Hussein allowed U.N. inspectors relatively unfettered access to his country — belatedly, to be sure, and under pressure from the international community. But by then the neoconservative push for war had already reached inevitability — the facts be damned.

Arafat, for his part, continued negotiating after Camp David in Taba and never chose to ignite the second intifada. The uprising was sparked by Ariel Sharon’s provocative visit to the Al Aqsa mosque and was fueled by Palestinians’ sense of betrayal over a peace process that brought no peace but doubled the number of Israeli settlers on their land. The “Arafat chose violence” canard was rejected by the Mitchell report. Ami Ayalon, former head of Israel’s Shin Bet security service, concluded: “Yasser Arafat neither prepared nor triggered the intifada.”

Finally, if members of the Taliban committed suicide, they are an uncommonly vigorous corpse. They are still hanging tough and continue to resist the U.S. on the battlefield.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is a convenient whipping boy. He has frequently predicted Israel’s eventual demise, and yet — accurately translated — he has not threatened it with offensive attack. Nor does he command the country’s armed forces.

Israel, with an estimated 100 to 200 nuclear warheads, should fear no existential threat from Iran. But Iran is a source of inspiration and material support to Hezbollah and Hamas, two forces that harass Israel and impede its regional hegemony. Israel’s local challenges are insufficient to justify a U.S. strike on Iran — thus the need to gin up “national suicide” and the specter of nuclear Armageddon.

Iran is a nation of 70 million people, many of them discontented with their government’s performance. Nothing would unite and rally them around the current regime better than a foreign attack.

We dearly need sobriety and responsible conduct in our relations with Iran and the broader Middle East. We do not need another reckless venture impelled by fanciful terms and politically motivated spin.

George Bisharat is a professor at Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco and writes frequently on law and politics in the Middle East.

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2 Comments on “George Bisharat - The fallacy of Islamic ‘national suicide’”

  • 10 June, 2008, 22:10

    .

    Just as an addendum to the above accurate article - with the minor dissent with Dr. Bisharat’s following partial statement: “many of them discontented with their governmentâ��s performance” since the validity of such an observation depends on whom one talks to; Iran today is in its worst throes of ‘bipolar disorder’ and one cannot easily make such a statement indirectly implying a national consensus since just as many also support their government - the following letter to editor was sent to Tehran Times yesterday.

    I would also further add that while accurate, this statement of Dr. Bisharat implies an ‘un-prefered’ regime: “Nothing would unite and rally them around the current regime better than a foreign attack.” It is neither for Dr. Bisharat, nor for anyone else in the world to imply which regime is a prefered regime in any country and which isn’t except for the peoples who live there. Otherwise, how is one any different from the ‘Hectoring Hegemons’ who do the same, just more overtly and monumentally more criminally?

    .
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    Letter to Editor, Tehran Times

    California, United States. Monday June 09, 2008. 4:37 PM

    Your report of June 10, 2008, noted the following statement from Iran’s top leadership:

    ‘ â��Surely the United States’ dreams about Iraq will not come true,â�� Ayatollah Khamenei stated in a meeting with visiting Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. ‘

    Certainly Iran and Iraq are both besieged by tremendous difficulties and hardships, with a possible nuclear holocaust of Iran lurking in the shadows of contrived pretexts. The minimum that both the Iranian and Iraqi leadership can demonstrate in their public pronouncements is that they understand the grotesque behind the scenes reality. The above statement betrays such a lack of perception. What does the respected Ayatollah mean that â��Surely the United States’ dreams about Iraq will not come true,â��? They have already come true! The raping of Mesopotamia, destroying the DNA of its ancient peoples, and bombing all of Iraq back to pre-historic times from whence it cannot even reclaim clean non-Uranium laden drinking water, is the meaning of â��Mission Accomplishedâ��! In order to understand what lies behind the visible puppet-shows, one has to trace the un-subtle strings back to the un-hidden puppet-masters and to their blatant tortuous ideologies of conquests of constructing â��Revolutionary Timesâ�� which will lead to a) half the destruction of humanity as we know it, and b) a new world order of a single world government located in Zionistan with the rest of the world subservient to it. Perhaps the respected Ayatollah understands this all too well. And perhaps he does not. In the latter event, as noted in this previous letter to editor which was not published by Tehran Times (http://humanbeingsfirst.blogspot.com/2008/05/letter-tehrantimes-cia-terror-network.html), he and the rest of Iranian leadership do a great disservice to the people of Iran who are today poised at the brink of nuclear annihilation. The least these leaders can do is to comprehend, and publicly betray their apprehension, of the grave dangers Iran faces today that can create a far worse fate for its ancient and proud peoples than the one that has been so devilishly constructed for the Iraqis! Please also see Project Humanbeingsfirst’s report â��Heads-up warning to the American Peoples â�� Nuclear attack on Iran appears imminent!â�� http://humanbeingsfirst.blogspot.com/2008/03/warningamerica-nuking-iran-imminent.html.

    Zahir Ebrahim
    Project Humanbeingsfirst.org

    http://humanbeingsfirst.blogspot.com/2008/05/letter-tehrantimes-cia-terror-network.html

    .

  • kimmy
    12 June, 2008, 5:25

    As far as I can tell, the US is war mongering to make sure that they are getting oil.
    They are treating Islam as their enemies, even though they are not saying so.
    From my readings of Iran. WTF is Bush thinking. WTF is Olmert thinking.
    If either country attacks Iran the world is screwed.
    Humanity is more important than politics. Religion and people’s views are more important than politics.
    This has come down to the fortunate 500. These are the richest 500 people in the world who control everything. Not the politicians or the people. These people only want control. They are the chosen ones. Money is their mantra. Lives mean nothing to them. Money means everything.
    Remove their control and we can all live in peace because we will be able to not be puppets of them.