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With Us or Against Us

Page 35

by Tony Judt


  Party), Collected Works (Tehran: Enteshar Publishing House, 1357

  [1978]), vol. 7, pp. 95–97.

  * * *

  Anti-Americanism in Iran

  205

  33. Ali Shariati, Jahatguiri-ye Tabaghati-ye Eslam (The Class Orientation of

  Islam), Collected Works (Tehran: Enteshar Publishing House, 1358

  [1979]), vol. 13, p. 113.

  34. Ali Shariati, Ba Mokhtabha-ye Ashena (With Familiar Listeners), Collected

  Works (Tehran: Hosseyniye Ershad), vol. 1, pp. 7–8.

  35. For the full account, see Ervand Abrahamian, Radical Islam: The Iranian

  Mojahedin (London: I.B. Tauris, 1989).

  36. Suroosh Irfani, Revolutionary Islam in Iran. Popular Liberation or

  Religious Dictatorship? (London: Zed Books Ltd, 1983), p. 95.

  37. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Sahife-ye Nur (Letters from Light),

  Introduction by Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, 16 vols. (Tehran: Markaz-e

  Madarek-e Farhanghi-ye Enghelab-e Eslami, 1363 [1982]), vol. 1,

  pp. 109–113.

  38. See all the Ayatullah Khomeini’s discourse befor the anticapitulation in

  1964. Sahif-ye Nur, op. cit., pp. 8–102.

  39. Ayatollah Khomeini, Sahife-ye Nur, vol. 1, p. 120.

  40. Ibid., p. 186.

  41. Ibid., p. 207.

  42. Ibid., p. 208.

  43. Ibid.

  44. Philippe Roger, L’Ennemi americain. Généalogie de l’antiamericanisme

  francais (Paris: Le Seuil, 2002).

  * * *

  1 1

  U ncle Sam to the Rescue?

  T he Political Impact of

  A merican Involvement in

  A S E A N S ecurity and Political

  I ssues in the Wake of 9⁄11

  Farish A. Noor

  Introduction: The “Great Game”

  Comes to Southeast Asia

  Never have the armies of the North brought peace, prosperity, or

  democracy to the peoples of Asia, Africa, or Latin America. In the

  future, as in the past five centuries, they can only bring to these peoples

  further servitude, the exploitation of their labour, the expropriation of

  their riches, and the denial of their rights. It is of the utmost importance

  that the progressive forces of the world understand this.

  Samir Amin,

  Arab Political Scientist,

  writing in al-Ahram, May 2003

  Political realities are just as much the result of discursive activity as

  they are rooted in concrete facts and figures. This fact was demon-

  strated most explicitly in the discursive and ideological acrobatics

  performed by the leaders of Western and Southeast Asian countries in

  the immediate aftermath of the terrorist attacks on the United States

  of America on September 11, 2001. To bring home the reality of the

  events that took place thousands of miles away, the Kuala Lumpur

  Commercial Centre (KLCC) twin towers in Malaysia were evacuated

  the following day, after a bomb scare that came just as Malaysians were

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  208

  F arish A. Noor

  coming to terms with the loss of Malaysian workers who were lost or

  killed in the New York attacks. The form and content of Malaysian

  political discourse was subsequently altered on the basis of a simple

  rumor.

  As the events following the aftermath of the attack were broadcast

  all over the world by American media channels like CNN, emotions

  ran high. The paranoia and xenophobia stoked by the media was soon

  echoed by the establishment itself. The American government responded

  with calls for revenge and retribution, and, in the days that followed,

  the president of the United States, George W. Bush, vowed that those

  responsible for the attacks would be made to pay and that America

  will lead the new global “crusade” against terrorism—an unfortunate

  choice of words that only added to the confusion and anxiety of the

  time, and which also shifted the focus of U.S. political rhetoric to a

  radically different register.

  As a result of this discursive shift, the political game-board of Asia

  was reconfigured, with old allies suddenly being designated as “rogue

  states,” while erstwhile adversaries suddenly being bestowed the title

  (by Washington, no less) of “moderate, progressive” Muslim states that

  were allied in the global “war against terror.”

  The discourse of the war against terror soon developed into a

  sophistic discursive economy of its own, replete with both positive sig-

  nifiers (“defenders of peace, freedom and democracy”; the “allied forces

  of good”; the “crusade against terror,” etc.) and negative signifiers

  (“Muslim extremists/fanatics”; the “Axis of Evil,” etc.). Mellifluously

  driving this rhetoric was an internal idea that was—though based

  mainly on unfounded and empirically un-verifiable essentialist notions—

  coherent and logical in its own way. Two neat chains of equivalences

  were drawn: on the one side stood the “forces of good” led by an

  increasingly unilateralist and bellicose United States and its allies, and

  on the other stood the “Axis of Evil” made up of those countries and

  movements that were said to be supportive of the use of terrorism

  against the West.

  In time, the discourse of war against terror was globalized and

  hegemonized—mainly thanks to the dominance of the omnipresent

  American media in Asia—and the logic of the war against terror was

  normalized in both national and international politics in the region.

  The governments of ASEAN, some of which were already engaged in

  internal conflicts against numerous separatist movements in their own

  countries, were the first to put to service the discourse of war against

  terror to further intensify their efforts to eliminate internal dissidents

  and critics. The governments of Malaysia and Indonesia, in turn,

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  Uncle Sam to the Rescue?

  209

  found the best pretext to up the stakes in their own contestation

  against local Islamists from the opposition.

  The war against terror has allowed some of the governments of

  Asia to backtrack on their earlier policies, most notably the govern-

  ment of the Philippines, that had earlier attempted to chart its own

  course by distancing itself from the long arm of Big Brother United

  States and forcing the United States to withdraw its troops and weapons

  facilities from naval and air bases on Filipino soil. A cursory overview

  of recent Asian history will show how the governments of Asia have

  tried to reposition themselves vis-à-vis the United States and their own

  domestic political constituencies in the wake of 9/11.

  Pakistan’s government under General-turned-President Parvez

  Musharraf was brought into the American-led coalition as its most

  problematic and reluctant partner with the use of a somewhat over-

  sized carrot and an overly endowed stick. Promises of economic aid

  and a cancellation of outstanding loans were coupled with threats

  of even more comprehensive sanctions and international isolation

  should the Pakistani government fail to comply with the demands of

  Washington. In time, Islamabad agreed—but not without paying a

  hea
vy price in the form of massive demonstrations and violent protests

  in all the major cities of the country, courtesy of Islamist parties

  like the Jama’at-e Islami (JI) and Jamiat’ul Ulama-e Islam (JUI). To

  compound matters further, Pakistan’s entry into the American-led

  coalition, reluctant though it was, infuriated many senior leaders of

  the armed forces and intelligence services who had been working with

  the Taliban and the numerous Jihadi and Mujahideen groupings in the

  country all along.

  In Indonesia, groups like the Front Pembela Islam and Lashkar

  Jihad were immediately mobilized and took to the streets as soon as

  America announced its unilateral move to confront its foes abroad.

  But like Pakistan, Indonesia was also caught in dire straits of its own.

  The country’s president, Megawati Sukarnoputri flew to Washington

  to discuss the implications of Indonesia’s involvement in the interna-

  tional campaign against Osama bin Laden and the Taliban—though

  it was soon clear that the sensitive matter of Indonesia’s spiraling

  debt problem was also put on the agenda. Realpolitik considerations

  aside, the Islamist parties and movements in Indonesia were less prag-

  matic in their approach to the problem. The Indonesian president

  was warned by the country’s Islamist groups (and members of her

  own government like Hamzah Haz) that any attempt to appease the

  Americans would lead to a backlash at home with heavy political costs

  involved.

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  F arish A. Noor

  The Philippines was likewise forced to deal with a backlash from

  Islamist groups and movements in the troubled Island province

  of Mindanao in the south. Soon after the American response was

  made known to the international community, the Abu Sayyaf group

  renewed its attacks on Filipino government installations and outposts

  all over the province, and a new wave of hostage-taking was soon on

  the way.

  Malaysia was unwittingly dragged into the global campaign that

  followed in the wake of the 9/11 attack. First came the news that

  letters containing anthrax spores that was sent to an address in the

  United States originated from Malaysia. It was later discovered that

  the letters were not, after all, contaminated and that nobody in

  Malaysia was involved. But the FBI’s reports also pointed the finger at

  Malaysia when it was later revealed that Khalid al-Midhar, one of the

  close associates of Osama bin Laden, had met with other associates in

  Malaysia previously in January 2000. Later, a former member of bin

  Laden’s Al Qaeda movement, Jamal Ahmed Al-Fadhl, also told a U.S.

  court that some money was deposited in Malaysia, which Malaysian

  authorities denied.

  Developments in Malaysia—like that in Indonesia and the

  Philippines—soon took their course at an accelerated pace. During

  the U.S.-led attack on Afghanistan in October 2001, the country’s

  biggest Islamist opposition party (the Pan-Malaysian Islamic party,

  PAS) declared its own jihad against the United States and its allies,

  Israel and Britain.1 Loud (though nonviolent) demonstrations outside

  the U.S. and British embassies sent shockwaves across the country,

  and the foreign business community as well as Malaysia’s large non-

  Malay, non-Muslim minority groups were taken aback by PAS’s call

  for jihad against the infidels.

  The situation was exploited to the full by the Mahathir administra-

  tion, which saw it as the best justification for its own policies vis-à-vis

  the local Islamist opposition. Henceforth, the Malaysian government’s

  crackdown on Islamist cells and networks—both real and imagined—

  would receive less criticism from foreign and local observers. By

  presenting itself as the face of “moderate” and “progressive” Islam at

  work, the Mahathir government had managed to outflank the Islamist

  opposition and reposition itself successfully.

  This fact was made all the more clearer when the American trade

  representative, Robert B. Zoellick (who was on a visit to Malaysia and

  the other countries in the region) publicly stated that President Bush

  “was pleased with the support given by Malaysia.”2 The United States

  then extended its thanks to the Mahathir administration for the

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  Uncle Sam to the Rescue?

  211

  support it had shown despite the difficulties it had to face from the

  local opposition (meaning PAS). By then, it was clear that an entente

  cordiale had been struck: neither Malaysia nor the United States was

  prepared to let political differences get in the way of economic neces-

  sity. Trade between the two countries amounted to US$38 billion

  (RM144 billion) a year and America was, after all, Malaysia’s biggest

  trading partner abroad. The American trade representative was also

  careful to mention all the key words that were necessary for the upward

  shift in bilateral relations to register: Zoellick stated that Washington

  viewed Malaysia as an Islamic country which could “serve the others

  as a role model for leadership and economic development,” not only

  for the region but for the rest of the Muslim world as well. As an Islamic

  country, Malaysia was described as “modern,” “progressive,” “liberal,”

  and “tolerant”—precisely the terms that were required to form a pos-

  itive chain of equivalences, which the Mahathir administration was

  looking for.

  The newly improved relationship between Kuala Lumpur and

  Washington was also reflected in the new understanding between the

  two governments. The American trade representative spoke not only

  about economic matters but also raised a number of concerns related

  to security issues. In his meeting with the Malaysian minister for for-

  eign affairs, Syed Hamid Albar, the two men discussed the various

  strategies and tactics that could be used to combat the phenomenon

  of international “Islamic terrorism.” Later, the American Pacific Fleet

  commander in chief, Adm. Dennis Cutler Blair (who was on a tour of

  ASEAN) praised the Malaysian government for its help in the global

  campaign against international terrorism and vowed that Malaysian

  and American armed forces and security services would cooperate

  even more in the future against the threat of terrorist networks and

  that militant cells posed a security threat to both countries.3

  This new understanding would later be cemented when the leaders

  of Malaysia and the United States finally met for the first time (on

  October 20) at the APEC conference held in Shanghai a few weeks

  later. After the meeting between Dr. Mahathir and George W. Bush,

  both men agreed to seek ways and means to combat the threat of inter-

  national terrorism and to increase the level of cooperation in both trade

  and security matters. Needless to say, these moves were strongly con-

  demned by the members of the Islamist opposition in Malaysia, who

  argued that the Mahathir administration had caved in to Washington’s

  demands and was trying to exploit the situation to the full.<
br />
  The 9/11 attacks, thus, had many long-term and far-flung conse-

  quences for Muslim and non-Muslim relations. For the countries in

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  F arish A. Noor

  Asia with sizeable Muslim minorities, it opened up old wounds after

  decades of internal civil conflict, and served as a justification for clamping

  down on local Muslim resistance movements. Worse still, the fear of

  Islamic militancy was exploited by some as a convenient way to whip

  up anti-Muslim sentiment, disguised as part of the now-global “War

  on Terror.” In Southeast Asia, the worst affected countries were the

  Philippines—where fears of renewed militancy on the part of Islamist

  movements in the south were intensified—and Indonesia, which expe-

  rienced its own national tragedy with the bombing of tourist spots in

  Bali that only contributed to the weakening of its tattered economy.

  In an effort to seize the initiative on the issue, Malaysia had played

  host to the leaders of Indonesia, Thailand, and the Philippines—

  Presidents Megawati Sukarnoputri, Thaksin Shinawatra, and Gloria

  Arroyo—who had visited the country to discuss matters of bilateral

  concern, one of which was the problem of Islamist militant networks

  operating in the region. Soon after, the governments of Malaysia,

  Indonesia, and Philippines issued a series of statements to the effect

  that they would, henceforth, be increasing the level of cooperation

  among their intelligence and security services to deal with the problem

  of religious militancy in Southeast Asia.

  In time, however, it became clear to all that behind the scenes was

  the ever-present United States. With ASEAN countries caught in a

  desperate race to attract foreign direct investment (FDI), the govern-

  ments of ASEAN were caught in a race to out-bid each other’s claim

  to be a reliable ally to the United States, and to ensure that their coun-

  tries remained in the good books of Washington and Wall Street. First

  to jump the gun were Singapore, Philippines, and Thailand, with each

  country’s respective leaders categorically stating that they would offer

  whatever help necessary to the United States in its bid to win the war

 

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