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September
27, 2001
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Manipulating
emotions in a time of tragedy
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A
tangled skein of lies
ONCE
the lion makes his kill and has his fill, the hyenas feast on the
remains. Should we be surprised at those who howl that the blame
for the World Trade Center murders falls squarely on the United
States itself? ‘‘The Americans are racists!’’ ‘‘The United States
is suffering for fifty years of prejudice against the Palestinians!’’
‘‘The western media are biased!’’ ‘‘There is a pogrom against Arabs,
Muslims, and Asians in America!’’
Somewhere
in Hell, Joseph Goebbels is applauding the children of his heart.
He perfected the Nazi tactic of the ‘Big Lie’, of ‘throw enough
mud, and some of it is sure to stick’. The pupils cannot better
the master, but they can try to emulate him.
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Far
from discouraging US involvement in Pakistan, we should welcome
it. The presence of US troops there will give Islamic militants
a new avenue to achieve ‘martyrdom’
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Where
should we begin unravelling this tangled skein of lies? Could we
begin by taking a closer look at our own moral credentials, our
right to sit in judgement? On October 31, 1984, a murder was committed
in Delhi. In the next week, three thousand innocent Sikhs paid with
their lives in India’s capital. More died elsewhere.
On
September 11, 2001, over six thousand people were murdered. The
killers were Asians, and they slew in the name of Islam. Yet, not
a single Muslim has been chased and hacked down by irate mobs. A
single man, a Sikh, was slain, mistaken for one of bin Laden’s followers.
Within hours, the president of the United States warned his fellow
citizens not to take the law into their own hands. Compare this
with the utterances of the then Indian prime minister on the massacres
of 1984: ‘‘When a great tree falls, surely the earth beneath shall
shake a little!’’
What
of the alleged ‘bias’ in the American media? The ‘proof’ is the
fact that they have been giving out the names, origins, and motivation
of the assassins who hijacked the four passenger jets. Cub reporters
are taught, or were in my day, that the essentials of our trade
are summed up in six words: Who, what, where, when, why, how. The
FBI released the names of nineteen hijackers — Khalid Al-Midhar,
Mohamed Atta, and the others in the roll of infamy. These are Muslim
names, and the men were using passports from various Arabic nations.
It would have been contemptible journalism had the media not reported
this.
If,
however, you are looking for a genuine case of media ‘manipulation’,
look no farther than Arafat. In the West Bank city of Nablus, an
Associated Press Television News photographer who captured a macabre
celebratory rally was threatened by the Tanzim, military arm of
Arafat’s Al Fateh group. When informed, Ahmed Abdel Rahman, Arafat’s
cabinet secretary, said the Palestinian Authority ‘‘cannot guarantee
the life’’ of the cameraman if his film was broadcast.
How
many Indian media channels gave this episode — one of many such
Palestinian attacks on the media — the attention it deserved? It
is so much easier, isn’t it, to flay Israel!
But
why should I blame my brethren of the media? For half a century,
even the professionals in the Indian Foreign Office have insisted
on seeing West Asia through blinkers. We persist in thinking of
‘friends’ instead of of ‘interests’. (Individuals have friends and
enemies; nations have interests, most of which do not change with
every ministerial reshuffle — or military coup.)
Another
myopic habit is to define ‘success’ or ’failure’ by using Pakistan
as the sole measure. Anything that benefits Pakistan is seen as
a setback for India, and vice-versa. Coming down to specifics, has
General Musharraf really pulled off a coup by joining the American
‘war on terrorism’?
Pakistan’s
CEO does not seem to think so. Speaking off the record to opinion-makers,
he had complained, ‘‘India ne poora khel bigad diya! (India
has spoilt the whole game)’’— presumably by offering to cooperate
against militancy — leaving Pakistan no choice but to follow suit.
Later, I was stunned to hear Musharraf publicly justify his decision
by citing the Treaty of Hudaibiyah as well as an earlier pact with
the Jews of Medina.
These
events from the early years of Islam hold a special resonance for
Muslims. They were covenants made with non-Muslims to get some breathing
space for the new religion. By mentioning them, Musharraf was saying
two things. One, he was indicating that any agreement is likely
to be nothing but temporary. Two, he was implicitly identifying
Americans as either Jews or pagans — both loaded terms today! Pakistan’s
‘cooperation’ with the US is, as Musharraf rudely expressed it,
nothing better than ‘‘the lesser of two evils’’.
Far
from discouraging American involvement in Pakistan, India should
welcome it. The presence of American troops in Pakistan will give
Islamic militants a different avenue to achieve ‘martyrdom’. It
will cut off the terrorist highway from Afghanistan to India, or
at least put a few stumbling blocks on the way.
What
about financial aid to Pakistan? Musharraf wants US $30 billion.
In the past decade, Pakistan’s elite stashed $35 billion in foreign
banks — irrespective of how much the US gives, most of this money
will end up in Switzerland, the Cayman Islands, or some other tax
haven. (Not that Pakistan is likely to get all it wants given the
recession in the US.)
Writing
off old debts, another of Musharraf’s demands, will do little to
jump start the Pakistani economy. Here is an instance of the mess
that country is in: scarcely 1 per cent of the people pay income-tax.
Twice as many Pakistanis are drug-addicts as are tax payers.
Even
the Pentagon’s insistence on secrecy could benefit India. Pakistan
is giving visas by the bushel to journalists. With no battles to
report, they will justify their expense-accounts by reporting on
the internal conditions in Pakistan itself. More power to them!
In
1990, during ’Operation Desert Storm’, Saddam Hussein fired Scuds
at Israeli cities in an attempt to draw the Jewish state into the
conflict. Eleven years later, Musharraf lobs verbal missiles at
India in a desperate bid to divert his furious compatriots. Israel
wasn’t provoked, and nor should we be.
Understand
Musharraf’s demand that India ‘‘lay off!’’ for what it is — a childish
snarl. The poor man is being forced to strangle his Taliban brethren;
the least we can do is to make some soothing sounds occasionally
as ‘‘the accused turns approver’’.
The
attacks of September 11, 2001 were epochal events. As the US president
put it: ‘‘Now we will see who our friends really are.’’ Shouldn’t
India’s Foreign Office, if not our professional America-baiters,
make a similar calculation?
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