Iran: Mujtaba Khamenei vows to continue attacks on US bases, keep Hormuz closed    Egypt plans higher government spending on health, education    Edita Food Industries Reports Strong FY2025 Results as Net Profit Jumps 72.6%    Egypt courts Türkiye's Abdi Ibrahim for pharma investment    Egypt launches initiative to facilitate medical treatment for citizens abroad    Dollar edges up to around 52.43 Egyptian pounds in midday trade – 12 March, 2026    Oil prices rise on Thursday    Egypt declares 19-23 March public holiday for Eid al-Fitr    MNT-Halan targets EGP 30bn in securitization, bond issuances in 2026    IEA to release record 400 million barrels of oil to counter Middle East war impact    Cairo, Moscow coordinate at UN Security Council over Middle East escalation    Egypt rejects unilateral Nile actions, Somaliland recognition in talks with US advisor    Egypt prepares to extend Universal Health Insurance to Minya in second phase    New Era Education to Launch Uppingham New Cairo Campus by 2028    Abdelatty chairs inter-ministerial meeting to resolve Egyptian expat concerns    Egypt's Sisi honours martyrs, urges dialogue amid Middle East violence    Egypt reassures western partners, travel advisory levels remain stable    Egypt oversees support for citizens abroad amid regional tensions    Egypt uncovers cache of coloured coffins of Amun chanters in Luxor    Egypt Rejects Allegations of Red Sea Access Trade-Off with Ethiopia for GERD Flexibility    Stage as a Trench: Decoding the Poetics of Resistance in Osama Abdel Latif's 'Theater for Palestine'    Egypt's Irrigation Minister underscores Nile Basin cooperation during South Sudan visit    Egyptian mission uncovers Old Kingdom rock-cut tombs at Qubbet El-Hawa in Aswan    Egypt warns against unilateral measures at Nile Basin ministers' meeting in Juba    Egypt denies reports attributed to industry minister, warns of legal action    Egypt completes restoration of colossal Ramses II statue at Minya temple site    Profile: Hussein Eissa, Egypt's Deputy PM for Economic Affairs    Sisi swears in new Cabinet, emphasises reform, human capital development    Egypt's parliament approves Cabinet reshuffle under Prime Minister Madbouly    Egypt recovers ancient statue head linked to Thutmose III in deal with Netherlands    M squared extends partnership for fifth Saqqara Half Marathon featuring new 21km distance    Egypt Golf Series: Chris Wood clinches dramatic playoff victory at Marassi 1    Finland's Ruuska wins Egypt Golf Series opener with 10-under-par final round    4th Egyptian Women Summit kicks off with focus on STEM, AI    Egypt resolves dispute between top African sports bodies ahead of 2027 African Games    Germany among EU's priciest labour markets – official data    Russia says it's in sync with US, China, Pakistan on Taliban    It's a bit frustrating to draw at home: Real Madrid keeper after Villarreal game    Shoukry reviews with Guterres Egypt's efforts to achieve SDGs, promote human rights    Sudan says countries must cooperate on vaccines    Johnson & Johnson: Second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19    Egypt to tax bloggers, YouTubers    Egypt's FM asserts importance of stability in Libya, holding elections as scheduled    We mustn't lose touch: Muller after Bayern win in Bundesliga    Egypt records 36 new deaths from Covid-19, highest since mid June    Egypt sells $3 bln US-dollar dominated eurobonds    Gamal Hanafy's ceramic exhibition at Gezira Arts Centre is a must go    Italian Institute Director Davide Scalmani presents activities of the Cairo Institute for ITALIANA.IT platform    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.



The logic behind Rice's grin
Published in Al-Ahram Weekly on 12 - 10 - 2006

In its struggle for the regional order it wants, the US is reaching new lows in its deceitful and disingenuous stance towards the Palestinians, writes Ramzy Baroud*
Commencing 3 October, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice journeyed between various Arab capitals, conferred with Arab leaders, then shuttled between Israeli and Palestinian officials, before eventually joining a few of her counterparts in London, 6 October, in a six-nation conference aimed at fanning the flames of hostility against Iran.
Rice, the most faithful foreign policy ambassador of the Bush administration, even before her taking over the State Department, seems hell-bent on reining in Iran, ensuring the failure of the Hamas government, and restructuring the political landscape of Lebanon in a way that would deny Hizbullah the opportunity to capitalise on its astounding military achievements.
One can easily dismiss Rice's attempts as futile, indeed self-defeating. The logic is simple: Rice represents all that is insidious about the Bush regime, one of the most loathed US administrations in the modern history of the Middle East, if not the world. Her visits to the region, despite the official fanfare that often awaits her at Arab capitals, coupled with her disagreeable and untimely grins, are often associated with her government's disastrous foreign policy, political plots and anti-democratic efforts.
Nonetheless, Rice is intelligent enough to deduce such a conclusion. All she has to do is look at caricatures of her in daily newspapers; the gap between her front teeth matures into a dark abyss, her insolent attitude and inconsiderate expectations all turn the former academician into the region's fiend, one that is strongly associated with political instability and disorder.
The fact is, Rice couldn't care less about Arab public opinion, nor any other public opinion for that matter. Her definition of democratic transformation hardly resembles the people's collective desire. She simply stands at odds with the people's aspirations for greater freedom and change, and undoubtedly she knows it.
Her declaration, following Israel's devastating war on Lebanon in July 2006, that time had arrived for a "New Middle East", and her full backing of the Israeli military adventure, earned her "enemy of the people" status that towers far beyond that of former secretary of state Madeline Albright.
Rice's incessant attempts to chastise and sanction Iran -- while leaving all other options open -- for allegedly striving to obtain nuclear capabilities for the purpose of manufacturing weapons of mass destruction while turning a blind eye to Israel's full-functioning mass killing capabilities, made her but another double-faced foreign policy hypocrite.
Even her promise, made during her 4 October joint press conference with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, that the US will "redouble" its efforts to help starving Palestinians, was quickly snubbed by Palestinian media and by a mass rally held in Gaza two days after her visit to the West Bank. Palestinians understand well that the purpose of her visit was to support President Abbas's disgruntled faction, Fatah, against Hamas, now the ruling party. In the span of three days prior to her visit, 10 Palestinians were killed in clashes between the two groups. Fatah continues to infuse chaos, rendering the government inoperative and paving the way for a presidential decree to abolish it, while Hamas is fighting to retain control of what it perceives rightfully as its political achievement resulting from the democratic choice of the Palestinian people during the January elections.
The greatest irony in Rice's visit is that it cemented anti- democratic forces in the region. The democratisation of the Middle East seemed, at least for a few months, the Bush administration's winning ticket out of Iraq. It was the only possible pretence that would relieve the administration of its failure to uncover Iraq's non-existing weapons of mass destruction. That delusion quickly vanished when Hamas came to power, riding the same democracy wave stirred by the Americans, and opening up the horizon for aspiring Arab opposition groups, Islamic or any other, to push against once seemingly immovable Arab regimes and their entrenched elites and patrons.
Now Rice is back, pushing to abort the same democratic process that her boss alleged to champion. Recall that in his Middle East "vision" speech of 24 June 2002, President Bush considered free and fair elections in the Palestinian territories as key to the success of what was later termed the roadmap peace initiative.
Rice's problems are much greater than that of her personal image and chances of likeability. The Israeli military failure in Lebanon had ruled out, at least for a while longer, the desire of her government's warmongers, the pro-Israeli lobby in Washington and the Israeli government to challenge Iran militarily. That setback has empowered both Syria and Iran to challenge the Bush administration more candidly than ever, with Iran calling the American bluff regarding war.
For now, the core of the American Middle East battle is focussed on Palestine. If Palestinian democracy prevails, withstanding intense Israel-American-Palestinian pressure, then US foreign policy will suffer its greatest loss yet, whose outcome will reverberate across the region. The Palestinian democratic experience thus must fail, even if the price is politically backing embattled President Abbas and his fractious followers, equally desperate not to lose this decisive battle against Hamas.
Rice's visit to the region was neither intended to "reinvigorate" the peace process nor to support the voice of "moderation" in the region. It was meant to ensure the fortitude of her allies and secure and extend the collective punishment of the Palestinian people until they repent and throw out their democratically elected government, a scenario that was tried with success in Nicaragua in the 1970s, though at a very high price.
Unfortunately, the Palestinian president and his henchmen, joined by various Arab governments and European states, are in unison with Rice's iniquitous objectives, thus giving her good reason to mendaciously grin.
* The writer is an Arab-American journalist.


Clic here to read the story from its source.