Anti-Americanism Is Mostly Hype

June 24th, 2008 Posted By Lftbhndagn.

god-bless-america.jpg

WSJ

By FOUAD AJAMI
June 23, 2008

So America is unloved in Istanbul and Cairo and Karachi: It is an annual ritual, the June release of the Pew global attitudes survey and the laments over the erosion of America’s standing in foreign lands.

We were once loved in Anatolia, but now a mere 12% of Turks have a “favorable view” of the U.S. Only 22% of Egyptians think well of us. Pakistan is crucial to the war on terror, but we can only count on the goodwill of 19% of Pakistanis.

American liberalism is heavily invested in this narrative of U.S. isolation. The Shiites have their annual ritual of 10 days of self-flagellation and penance, but this liberal narrative is ceaseless: The world once loved us, and all Parisians were Americans after 9/11, but thanks to President Bush we have squandered that sympathy.

It is an old trick, the use of foreign narrators and witnesses to speak of one’s home. Montesquieu gave the genre its timeless rendition in his Persian Letters, published in 1721. No one was fooled, these were Parisian letters, and the Persian travelers, Rica and Usbek, mere stand-ins for an author taking stock of his homeland after the death of Louis XIV and the coming of an age of enlightenment and skepticism.

“This King is a great magician. He exerts authority even over the minds of his subjects; he makes them think what he wants,” Rica writes from Paris. “You must not be amazed at what I tell you about this prince: there is another magician, stronger than he. This magician is called the Pope. He will make the King believe that three are only one, or else that the bread one eats is not bread, or that the wine one drinks is not wine, and a thousand other things of the same kind.” Handy witnesses, these Persians.

The Pew survey tells us that some foreign precincts show a landslide victory for Barack Obama. France leads the pack; fully 84% of those following the American campaign are confident Mr. Obama will do the right thing in foreign policy, compared with 33% who say that about John McCain. There are similar results in Germany, and a closer margin in Britain. The populations of Jordan, Turkey and Pakistan have scant if any confidence in either candidate.

The deference of American liberal opinion to the coffeehouses of Istanbul and Amman and Karachi is nothing less than astounding. You would not know from these surveys, of course, that anti-Americanism runs deep in the French intellectual scene, and that French thought about the great power across the Atlantic has long been a jumble of envy and condescension. In the fabled years of the Clinton presidency, long before Guantanamo, the torture narrative and the war in Iraq, American pension funds were, in the French telling, raiding their assets, bringing to their homeland dreaded Anglo-Saxon economics, and the merciless winds of mondialisation (globalization).

I grew up in the Arab world in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and anti-Americanism was the standard political language – even for those pining for American visas and green cards. Precious few took this seriously. The attraction to the glamorous, distant society was too strong in the Beirut of my boyhood.

It is no different today in Egypt or Pakistan. And what people tell pollsters who turn up in their midst with their clipboards? In Hosni Mubarak’s tyranny, anti-Americanism is the permissible safety valve for Egyptians unable to speak of their despot. We stand between Pharaoh and his frustrated people, and the Egyptians railing against America are giving voice to the disappointment that runs through their life and culture. Scapegoating and anti-Americanism are a substitute for a sober assessment of what ails that old, burdened country.

Nor should we listen too closely to the anti-American hysteria that now grips Turkey. That country was once a serious, earnest land. It knew its place in the world as a bridge between Europe and Islam. But of late it has become the “torn country” that the celebrated political scientist Samuel Huntington said it was, its very identity fought over between the old Kemalist elites and the new Islamists.

No Turkish malady is caused by America, and no cure can come courtesy of the Americans. The Turks giving vent to anti-Americanism are doing a parody of Europe: They were led to believe that the Europe spurning them, and turning down their membership in its club, is given to anti-Americanism, so they took to the same fad. Turkish anti-Americanism is no doubt fueled by the resentment within Turkey of the American war in Iraq that gave protection and liberty to the Kurds. No apology is owed the Turks; indeed, it is they who must reconsider their intolerance of minorities. If the Turks were comfortable with the abnormality of Iraq under Saddam Hussein, it is they who have a problem.

And if there is enthusiasm for Barack Obama on foreign shores, his rise to fame and power must be a tribute to the land that has made this possible. Where else would a boy of marginality and relative poverty find his way to the peak of political life? Certainly not in his father’s Kenya, where the tribal origins of the Obamas would have determined young Barack’s life-chances. In an Arab world hemmed in by pedigree, where rulers bequeath power to their sons and the lot of the sons is invariably that of the fathers, the tale of Obama is fantasy.

There are lines, and barriers, of race which bedevil Arab lands, and they will be there awaiting a President Obama should he prevail in November. Consider a recent speech by Libya’s erratic ruler, Moammar Gadhafi, to his countrymen.

He said he feared that Mr. Obama, as a “black man,” might succumb to an “inferiority complex” if he were to come to power. “This is a great menace because Obama might turn out to be more white than the whites, exaggerating his persecution and disdain of blacks. The statements of our Kenyan brother with an American nationality about Jerusalem, and his support for Israelis, and his slighting of the Palestinian people is either a measure of his ignorance of international politics or a lie perpetrated on the Jews in the course of an election campaign.”

There is no need to roam distant lands in search of indictments of America’s ways. Tales of our demise appear every day in our media. Yes, it is not perfect, this republic of ours. But the possibilities for emancipation and self-improvement it affords are unmatched in other lands.

Meanwhile, a maligned American president now returns from a Europe at peace with American leadership. In France, Germany and Italy, center-right governments are eager to proclaim their identification with American power. Jacques Chirac is gone. Now there is Nicolas Sarkozy, who offered a poetic tribute last November to the American soldiers who fell on French soil, before a joint session of the U.S. Congress. “The children of my generation,” he said, “understood that those young Americans, 20 years old, were true heroes to whom they owed the fact that they were free people and not slaves. France will never forget the sacrifice of your children.”

The great battle over the Iraq war has subsided, and Europeans who ponder the burning grounds of the Islamic world know the distinction between fashionable anti-Americanism and the international order underpinned by American power. George W. Bush may have been indifferent to political protocol, but he held the line when it truly mattered, and the Europeans have come to understand that appeasement of dictators and brigands begets its own troubles.

It is one thing to rail against the Pax Americana. But after the pollsters are gone, the truth of our contemporary order of states endures. We live in a world held by American power – and benevolence. Nothing prettier, or more just, looms over the horizon.

Mr. Ajami, a Bradley Prize recipient, teaches at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University. He is the author of “The Foreigner’s Gift” (Free Press, 2006).


14 Responses

  1. franchie

    “You would not know from these surveys, of course, that anti-Americanism runs deep in the French intellectual scene, and that French thought about the great power across the Atlantic has long been a jumble of envy and condescension.”

    yeah, could be that those lefties are the MSM best references, though, many moderated and right-wing intellectuals have hard time to find a tribune, cause they aren’t fashionable in the mainstream thought that has the monopole of the medias.

    cf Pew, 60 % frenchs favorabe view of the US

    http://pewresearch.org/pubs/524/global-unease-with-major-world-powers-and-leaders

    I grew up in the Arab world in the late 1950s and early 1960s,

    Bizarre, no ? that also explains his diatribe “anti” french too

  2. Right_is_Right

    Wow Franchie; coherent and logical thought…didn’t know that you had it in you! :mrgreen:

  3. franchie

    Right_is_Right,

    Damn, might-be cause I was the first commenter, and that I didn’t have to nail one’s beak :mrgreen:

  4. tedders

    franchie’s had it in her the whole time she’s been here, most never take the time to understand her slightly different perspective.

  5. sully

    lol

    :arrow: “cf Pew, 60 % frenchs favorabe view of the US

    http://pewresearch.org/pubs/524/global-unease-with-major-world-powers-and-leaders”

    did you READ your own link? you got it backwards. it’s a 60% *UNFAVORABLE* view of the U.S.

    :arrow: “Bizarre, no ? that also explains his diatribe “anti” french too”

    Ajami is Lebanese and is one of the very few actually growing up in the Middle East who offers a balanced view of the Middle East and America’s role in it.
    Try reading more by him before you nail his or anyone else’s ‘beak’ in your typically incoherent and illogical fashion.

  6. franchie

    OK, sully you got that one on me, I was too speeded on the “good view” :mad:

    so, there is still work to make here, may-be a better communication between your peoples and ours :lol:

    Ajami’s name induced me in error, as it’s also an algerian name ; now, how can I read him if he’s only on US papers that I happen to discover on this place

    anyway, thanks Mr Professor, your right on your faculty here : it’s also your domain,
    though you made some understanding “boulettes” vis-à-vis me quite a few times too

  7. sully

    “though you made some understanding “boulettes” vis-à-vis me quite a few times too”

    No I have not.

  8. franchie

    do Brazil, no ?

  9. sully

    No… you’re whole post re brazil was a POS as usual

    not saying i’m never wrong. just not, as you said, “quite a few times”.

    YOU however are quite often posting stuff you yourself never read and, like Ajami, making assertions about where he’s ‘coming from’ with NO knowledge of the man whatsoever.

  10. franchie

    POS ? because it was not written in your education paper ; though that was a convesation that we had many times with my friends who also were living in my town ; they had difficult relations with their “father” who was spending money for a “stranger”, and not for them who need it in France.

    “not saying i’m never wrong. just not, as you said, “quite a few times”. :arrow: all the time :twisted:

    “YOU however are quite often posting stuff you yourself never read and, like Ajami, making assertions about where he’s ‘coming from’ with NO knowledge of the man whatsoever.”

    where did I say that I knew Ajami ? but in the contrary, no assertion, just a reflexion at what his paper inspired me.

    I can’t know all the papers authors on that board and inquiry on them ; I don’t work in a journal redaction. Though like many american posters, just to get some infos and enjoy a few “café” discussions.

    though I did search who is Ajami afterwords : he is the “neocon” adviser for the ME policy, especially for Condi Rice, and a former supporter to the palestinian cause in Princetown ; might be why he couldn’t get a tenure there.
    He is also a Shia from Southern Lebanon….

    something that induced you to support him I see !

    Or is it because he turned his jacket to become that brave supporter of the Bush government policy ?

    Now I understand better his paper and his references to the Frenchs, convenient position in those war times ! I don’t want to argue with that paper, he is right according to his situation among the actual nomenklature, though, controversed on this side of the pond. I am not giving you the window to expose what you would also call POS, again, the old world position.

    the only error I made was to visualize too quickly the Pew thing

    I am waiting from you, once, a whole argumentation instead of quick “formules à l’emporte-pièce”, to condamn or to mock…

    So, when are you really “wetting” your throusers ?

    You pretend being that super man of knowledge, but your the only one to be sure of that.

    or just a prof, that ironises on his pupils.

    I know that kind of persons, I had such AH as teachers in chool of arts, that nerver push someone ahead, always criticise him/her.

    But these doctors (in the occurenc) of BS, felt miserable inside. They couldn’t really be these “great artists” that they fatuatly embodied. Bitterness was their existence weight.

  11. sully

    Like I told Obama… I’m not bitter, you’re just wrong. Again.

  12. franchie

    “I’m not bitter”

    your are IMPOSSIBLE

  13. sully

    well you might be right about that.
    i do hear that ALOT from moral relativists like yourself.

  14. franchie

    LMAO

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