The stalemate in Iraq is
now having its effects in the US. The American people are getting impatient
with the policies of the Bush administration as regards Iraq and the rest
of the Middle East.
The strong resistance offered by Hezbollah to Israeli invasion on Lebanon
is also being viewed by the US public as a gross misjudgment of the situation
by Washington, for which the current administration will have to bear
the brunt.
it is now more than obvious that the US people are uneasy at the Iraq
situation and a change in
the strategy, if not the entire policy, is in the offing.
The daily toll of deaths in suicide bombings in Iraq, is a proof that
with all its formidable fire
power and monopoly of the air and the space, the US is unable to stop
the bloodshed and the drift of the country towards a civil war.
Indeed, the Iraq venture has been a series of disappointments and miscalculations
for the US. Its only success has been deposition and capture of Saddam
Hussain. None of the other objectives has been achieved. The weapons of
mass destruction for which the US declared the war were never found, nor
could the US troops provide peace and security to the people. The democratic
government formed in Baghdad under the aegis of the coalition forces is
too fragile to stand on its own feet without the support and protection
of the occupation troops. And far from consolidating the country, it has
failed to hold together the three major communities in the country - the
Shias, Sunnis and the Kurds. In fact, the differences among the three
segments of the Iraqi polity were never so jarring as now.
In short, the US invasion has given the Iraqi people neither peace nor
freedom and democracy. On the contrary, it has ruined the country's economy
and destroyed the infrastructure. The democracy that has replaced Saddam's
dictatorship is too fragile to face the huge crisis created by the invasion
and virtual civil war that is being fought in Iraqi streets with no end
in sight, f
The US forces can not stay in Iraq forever. They have to leave one day
or the other, the sooner the better. The foreign troops in Iraq are ill
at ease. Many countries who were partners in the coalition, have already
withdrawn their forces. Now the main troops left are those of the US and
the UK. The latter too is under pressure to call back its forces, the
US casualties are also rising. President Bush's popularity graph is sliding
mainly because of the stalemate in Iraq.
Perhaps, the only people who are happy at the US adventure in Iraq are
the Israelis. For them, a big threat to their militaristic designs in
the Middle East has been removed. Iraq cannot pose any challenge to Israel,
nor can it expend any help to the Palestinians in the foreseeable future.
This is one concrete achievement of the US-led invasion of Iraq besides
removal of Saddam Hussain and replacement of his dictatorship with an
elected government.
The Bush administration should now seriously plan strategy for exit from
Iraq - one that should contribute to the peace and security of the region
and provide for rebuilding the economy of that country.
WMC Secretary General urges for more efforts to project
the issue of Al-Quds
Secretary General of World Muslim Congress (Motamar Al-Alam Al-Islami),
Raja Muhammad Zafarul Haq, has stressed the need for more efforts to project
the issue of Al-Quds Al-Sharif in a wide focus to draw world attention
to it.
He was speaking at the International Symposium on Jerusalem was
held in Amman on September 12 under the auspices of the General Islamic
Conference for Jerusalem and the Hashmite Kingdom of Jordan.
Following is the text of his speech:
Excellency
Mr. Abdul Fattah Salah,
Minister and His Majesty’s
Representative and Distinguished
Delegates,
Excellencies,
Let me begin my submissions with our deep appreciation for the sustained
and continous efforts of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan and the General
Islamic Conference for Jerusalem, for not only projecting the truth about
the Islamic Jerusalem but also for protecting its identity as the second
most holiest place in Islamic faith. There is no denying the fact that
the Royalty in the Kingdom has contributed tremendously to the sacred
cause of preserving and promoting the Islamic character of Jerusalem.
Excellency,
We should also recognize that the negative and hostile developments in
this region, during the recent past, have adversely affected the Palestinian
cause in general and the issue of the Islamic character of Jerusalem in
particular. These developments have practically relegated the centrality
of this issue on the backburner. But whatever the circumstances, we can
neither abandon the cause nor reduce our efforts in any manner. Like a
physician, attending a patient redoubles his efforts and re-evaluates
his recipe when he finds that the malady is increasing. Similarly, its
time for us to seriously and in a systematic manner, re-evaluate and analyze
the task before us and the efforts we have put in so far, so as to plan
a new strategy to achieve our goal, avoiding the past weaknesses and faulty
perceptions, including the assessment of the ground situation.
Presently the focus is on other issues in the region and beyond, which
are drawing greater world attention. We have to put in more efforts to
project the issue of Al-Quds Al-Sharif in a wider focus through various
means by not only reiterating our principled stand but also refurbishing
our presentations in the present regional and global context. There is
no dearth of people of goodwill amongst all faiths, all over the world,
we have to coordinate with them.
The main issue of Palestine; i.e. the daily aggressions; the target killing
of innocent people; arrest of elected representatives; economic strangulation
plus a cruel global insensitivity, is really a formidable challenge. There
is a foundation and there is continuity in the Israeli policies.
In a biography of Ben Gurion, Israel’s first Prime Minister Michael
Ben-Zohar, quotes him as stating: “We must use terror, assassination,
intimidation, land confiscation, and the cutting of all social services
to rid the Galilee of its Arab population.”
Yitzhak Rabin’s recollections were cited by The New York Times in
October 1979 where he remembered the following: “We walked outside,
Ben Gurion accompanying us. Allon repeated his question, ‘What is
to be done with the Palestinian population?’ Ben Gurion waved his
hand in gesture which said, ‘Drive them out’.
Professor Ben-Zion Dinur, Israel’s Education Minister in 1954, declared:
“In our country, there is room only for the Jews. We shall say to
the Arabs: Get out! If they don’t agree, if they resist, we shall
drive them out by force”.
Earlier this year, the Israeli attitude towards Arabs especially the Palestinians,
is best summed up by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s declaration, that
“Israeli lives are worth more than Palestinian ones”. On the
other hand, the lack of coordination among the supporting elements of
Palestine issue within and outside Palestine, is also a serious stumbling
block, without removing which, one cannot expect favorable developments
in the near future. The initiative remains on the other side. Despite
all this, we must also keep in mind that whenever there is a challenge,
there are equal, if not more opportunities.
The issue of Islamic Jerusalem has its own entity and personality. I would,
therefore, suggest a small more frequently in charting out a viable and
effective time bound plan of action, as a contribution to the efforts
of the restoration of Jerusalem’s full Islamic status, as well as,
to arrest the erosion of its physical and spiritual entity. Similarly
a delegation of elders can also call on some of the heads of states and
governments to apprise them of the latest position.
I pray to Allah S.W.T. to guide us in our endeavours and grant us the
wisdom and internal solidarity to pursue our objectives with perseverance
needed to achieve our noble goal.”