competing
narratives
"Terrorism
and Cosmopolitanism"
Daniele Archibugi, Italian National Research Council
"Can
Rational Analysis Break a Taboo? A Middle Eastern Perspective"
Said Amir Arjomand, Sociology, State University of New York
at Stony Brook
"Responses
to 9.11: Individual and Collective Dimensions"
Rajeev Bhargava, Political Theory, University of Delhi
"Symbols
of Destruction"
Elemer Hankiss, Sociology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
"September
11th: A Challenge to Whom?"
Huang Ping, Sociology, CASS, Beijing
"Good
Muslim, Bad Muslim – An African Perspective"
Mahmood Mamdani, Anthropology, Columbia University
"The
Political Psychology of Competing Narratives: September 11 and
Beyond"
Marc Howard Ross, Political Science, Bryn Mawr College
"Terrorism
and Freedom: An Outside View"
Luis Rubio, Political Economy, Center for Research for Development,
Mexico City
"America
and the World: The Twin Towers as Metaphor"
Immanuel Wallerstein, Sociology, Yale University
"Anti-Americanisms,
Thick Description, and Collective Action"
Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom, History, Indiana University
"The
Predicament of Diaspora and Millennial Islam: Reflections in
the Aftermath of September 11"
Pnina Werbner, Social Anthropology, Keele University
other
topics ...
Globalization
Fundamentalism(s)
Terrorism and
Democratic Virtues
New War?
New World Order?
Building
Peace
Recovery
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Can
Rational Analysis Break a Taboo?
A Middle Eastern Perspective
Said Amir
Arjomand, Professor of Sociology, State
University of New York at Stony Brook
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I
happened to be in Beirut in mid-May, when the Israeli
retaliatory raids began to escalate. My host called me at
midnight, after I had gone to bed, to come and see what was
happening. I saw on the TV screen, as did millions in the
Middle East, pictures of the continuing fire caused by the
bombing. I saw the rubble of destroyed buildings and the human
suffering that went with them. The next day, it was evident
that these pictures had evoked not only deep revulsion among
Lebanese but also the fear of another Israeli invasion of
Lebanon. With very good reason, nobody believed the Americans
would do anything to stop the Israelis if they decided to
invade. When I returned to the U.S., none of that horror and
tragedy experienced in the Middle East had registered with my
fellow Americans, who had the luxury of ignoring it in the
false security of their different world.
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Of
the two evident factors that can explain the terrorist
destruction of the World Trade Center and a wing of the
Pentagon, one has been blown to distorted proportions and
misleadingly simplified; the other was at first studiously
avoided and then increasingly denied. The first factor is
Islamic fundamentalism, the second, our unconditional support
for the policies of the state of Israel. From a Middle Eastern
perspective (I would not be presume to offer an exhaustive or
"global" enumeration of the pertinent factors in this
complex issue), next to the US-Israel connection among the
causes of violent opposition to the United States comes our
action in Iraq since the Gulf War; and then there is our
support for a number of Arab repressive regimes. Guessing from
the background of the terrorists, we may assume that
opposition to Israel or solidarity with Iraq were of foremost
importance to the hijacking pilots from Lebanon and Egypt; to
the rest (the great majority of the terrorists) opposition to
the Saudi regime. Be that as it may, these motives were
blended together by bin Laden’s extremist political Islam.
But the constantly repeated simplistic explanation of the
motive of terrorists as crazy and fanatical hatred of freedom
and democracy obviates the need for any further explanation
and therefore obscures all of the above. Can the social
sciences offer a more rational ordering of the causally
relevant factors through a nuanced assessment of the religious
motivation of terrorism in the context of the facts and trends
in Islamic fundamentalism, on the one hand, and the Middle
Eastern political situation on the other?
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See also essays on
this site by Kuran, Modood,
Hefner, Roy, and
Mamdani addressing
various aspects of Islam and Islamism.
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The
immediate shock of the September 11 events resulted in serious
disorientation and an urgent demand for making sense of what
had happened, which was met by a series of teach-ins in my
university as in others. Beyond the universities and schools,
the media and organized groups watching them engaged in the
enterprise of the construction of reality in a great crisis,
and in the framing of a discourse around September 11 which
would henceforth constitute the objective facts of terrorism.
The contest for the control of reality and constitution of
objectivity through the forging and appropriation of the
emerging dominant discourse was highly uneven. The
well-organized Jewish groups and Israeli lobby were drawn into
the business of defining reality and shaping public discourse,
as we shall see presently. The minimally organized Arab and
Muslim Americans, by contrast, found themselves totally on the
defensive against guilt by association and the general moral
outrage of the American society. The media did perform
credibly and responsibly in publicizing and protesting the act
of racism and hate crimes against Arab and Muslim American.
This performance was made easy as it drew on the dominant
American ethos of pluralism and the rule of law. The same,
however, cannot be said about more difficult issues in public
debate on our policy options. These raise some uncomfortable
questions about the accountability and deeds of our government
and those of our close allies. In the face of psychologically
uncomfortable questions, demonology tends to displace rational
analysis, and the danger is all the greater as we move from
one distraction to the next with the onset of military action.
The
undoubted relevance of the growth of Islamic fundamentalism, and especially the rise within
it of the ‘political Islam’ that fuels terrorism does not,
by itself, provide an adequate explanation for the disaster of
September 11, and does not obviate the need for understanding
other mediating causes of the tragedy. The complex internal
factors determining the growth and decline of Islamic
fundamentalism in different countries are largely unaffected
by our acts. It can be shown that urbanization and a variety
of other social and political processes such as the spread of
literacy and higher education and the media in the last
half-century have resulted not only in the rise of Islamic
fundamentalism, and within it, of political Islam based on the
cloning of the pre-1989 Marxist, anti-imperialist
revolutionary ideology, but also in a general increase in the
vitality of religion in the Muslim world. (Arjomand 1995)
Internal processes can also account for the decline of Islamic
fundamentalism and of political Islam, as in Iran, where we
have had highly visible demonstrations of sympathy over the
last few weeks. In any event, the impetus of Islamic
fundamentalism need not be against the United States and can
take various other directions. One need only think of our
alliance with Saudi Arabia, the first Islamic fundamentalist
state of the twentieth century. To get from fundamentalism to
terrorist attacks, we must look for additional causes such as
hatred animated by the use of American weapons against
Palestinian civilians, our continued bombing of Iraq and our
support for compliant Arab regimes who maintain our oil
supply.
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Reflecting
on Iraq does not run against any deep-rooted taboos, though it
does raise some uncomfortable questions. At the end of the
Gulf War in 1991, former President George Bush countermanded
General Norman Schwartzkopf’s expected march on Baghdad to
finish Saddam Hussein off fair and square. Many Iraqis who had
risen against Saddam in anticipation of American capture of
Baghdad were let down and were slaughtered by his remaining
armored forces. The population of Iraq has since suffered a
decade of siege and bombing by our aircraft, with occasional
advertisement of "covert" operations to overthrow Saddam
by the CIA. There has been no historical judgment or public
debate on the decision by former President Bush of the kind
that is necessary for a healthy democracy. Nor did we, in the
false security of our supposedly invulnerable world, show any
concern that the suffering of the Iraqi civilian population
might tarnish our image as the haven of freedom and democracy.
As we now hear of renewed plans to "punish Saddam" in our
war against terrorism (the Wolfowitz plan, New York Times,
9/20/01,10/12/01), we should not forget the fateful 1991 Bush
decision, nor remain indifferent to the suffering of Iraqi
civilians.
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Click here
for the October 12 article in the New York Times.
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Level-headed
thinking about the US-Israeli connection is much more
difficult as it does run counter to a long-standing taboo
against criticizing the Israeli government, and all the more
so because the taboo is understandably reinforced in
adversity. Mentioning Israel is pointing a finger to an ally
the way the terrorists would have wanted, and we would be
cowards to let them have that satisfaction as well as the
horrendous destruction of American lives and property. This
basic lay of the land in American politics gives a tremendous
advantage to pro-Israel organized groups for framing the
post-crisis public discourse. The reinforcement of the taboo
can be short-sightedly exploited in the interest of the
Israeli government. On the day that Prime Minister Sharon
cancelled peace talks with the Palestinians, for instance, an
article by Serge Schmemann, "Israel as Flashpoint, not
Cause" (New York Times , Sunday, 9/23/2001) had the
words "The Target" above the headlines, and an enigmatic
picture of shadows of men engaged in the politically innocuous
act of praying on the Western Wall of Jerusalem. It quoted our
former Ambassador to Israel, Martin Indyk as stating that
"Israel will not pay the price in its blood for such a
coalition [that includes Arab and Islamic states]. There is
real concern that Israel’s enemy will be the U.S.’s
friend." (Mr. Indyk does not appear to measure the Israeli
and American blood on the same scale.) In other words, business as usual for the
pro-Israel stalwarts as if nothing had happened. Or perhaps
even better than usual. Boosted by the likes of Schmemann and
Indyk some two weeks later (10/4/2001), just before ordering
the attack on two Palestinian neighborhoods with American-made
tanks and Apache helicopters, Prime Minister Sharon warned the
Americans not to "appease Arabs" as the Western
democracies had appeased Hitler on the eve of World War II.
The New York Times cycle of op-editorial restoration of
consensus was completed with Dennis Ross’s reassurance
(10/12/01) that, bin Laden’s clear and unequivocal words
notwithstanding, "Bin Laden’s Terrorism Isn’t About the
Palestinians." With its irrelevance to September 11 so
securely established, the shaping of public discourse on
behalf of the hidden Israel can move from the defensive to the
offensive. To tackle Islam as the sole remaining cause of
terrorism, the New York Times leads the way once more.
In the Arts & Ideas Section, recently refashioned to help
us think through the national crisis the right way, a
polemical book by Martin Kramer, an Israeli political
scientist described as an expert "who teaches in the United
States and Israel," just published by a Washington "group
that has close ties with Israel" (11/3/2001, pp. A13 &
A15), occasions the appearance of the lead article ("Many
Experts on Islam are Pointing Fingers at One Another"),
providing advance publicity for the accusation against the
academic specialists on Islam of failing to warn the American
public.
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Click here
for Schmemann's article.
Click here
for the Ross opinion piece.
Click here
for the article in the New York Times.
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This
refabricated consensus can easily mislead us into the trap of
an American crusade against the Muslims. Bin Laden could not
wish for greater help with his apocalyptic war than the
assistance given by Sharon and his allies in the press.
Nothing would make bin Laden happier, or give the terrorists
greater satisfaction, beyond the grave, than an open-ended war
against the Arabs or Muslims with no clear goal, but involving
the bombing of civilian targets, that would precipitate a
revolution in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf and pit the United
States against Islam.
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It
is well-known that the PLO was a secular organization, as is
its affiliate, the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, which claimed responsibility for the assassination
of the Israeli Tourism Minister, Rehavam Zeevi, on October 17,
2001. So is the fact that some of the PLO's leading figures in
its radical wing were Christian rather than Muslim Arabs. With
the advent of Islamic fundamentalism a quarter of a century
ago, the recruiting base for terrorism in opposition to
US-backed Israel expanded from the ethnic Arabs in the Middle
East to the entire Muslim population of the globe. This larger
Muslim population, amidst which Islamic fundamentalist
movements of varying strength have grown in the last two
decades, includes Afghanistan, where bin Laden and the Taliban began
their political venture against the Soviet Union in the 1980s
with substantial support from the US policy organs, including
the Central Intelligence Agency. If we read this bare sketch
of historical progression forward, the increasing vitality of religion in the Muslim world
can explain why the militants justify their political goals in
terms of Islam, and it explains that in doing so, they induce
total commitment and willingness to die for the cause.
Nevertheless, Islamic fundamentalism does not in itself set
those goals as terrorism against the US. The problem is that,
with the broadening of the recruitment base for terrorism and
its attempt to appropriate Islam, it is tempting to see not
just Islamic fundamentalism or political Islam but Islam
itself as its explanation. Such backward reading of history
would obfuscate the multiply mediated causation of the
terrorist attacks, and easily engender a grave misconception.
Such misconception – blunt or subtle deduction of terrorism
from allegedly essential characteristics of Islam – is
politically very dangerous as it includes allegations of
‘clash of civilizations’ by academic pundits (for example
Lamin Sanneh’s Op-Ed in the same 9/23/2001 issue of the New
York Times) which amount to the advocacy of war against over a billion Muslim people,
many of whom are loyal citizens of the United States,
including some who perished in the World Trade Center.
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Click here
for Sanneh's Op-Ed article.
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This is not to deny the bearing of the idea of the
clash of civilizations on the present crisis, but to caution
against its uncritical use (just as with Islamic
fundamentalism). Huntington's thesis has been quite popular
among the Islamic fundamentalists, as its opposite, Iranian
President Khatami's idea of "dialogue of
civilizations" has been among the reformists (see my
editorial introduction to International Sociology,
2001). A few days after the September 11 attacks, a Turkish daily sympathetic to Islamic fundamentalists
quoted a professor as saying "We have not as yet
witnessed a full clash of civilizations in the concrete,
though the events of Sept. 11 constitute the beginnings of
such a concretization." (Zaman, 9/18/01)
Huntington himself, however, has been much more cautious. In
an interview with the New York Times (10/20/01, pp.
A13,15), he implicitly acknowledged many criticisms of his
thesis, maintaining that Islam's borders are bloody because
there are so many of them and with every other civilization,
that it is not Islam but demography (large number of males in
the 16-30 age bracket) that accounts for militancy and
terrorism, that there are as many intra- as inter-civilizational
conflicts (he claimed to have made the point with reference to
Islam), and that it is bin Laden who wants a clash of
civilizations (and not Huntington). Above all, he denies the
presumption that civilizations are unified blocks, which had
been taken as a basic premise for their inevitable clash,
highlighting the lack of cohesion as the main problem with
contemporary Islam. In truth, bin Laden's terrorism has as
many roots in the modern political tradition of revolutionary
terrorism, begun with the Jacobins during the French
revolution and developed by Russian revolutionary groups in
the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as it does in
the Islamic tradition. Like the fascists
movements in the inter-War Europe, political Islam represents
"the Jacobin dimension of modernity" (Eisenstadt 1999) in
the contemporary Muslim world. It is thus a
phenomenon of the global interpenetration of civilizations.
Huntington, however, is more relevant than he thinks. In
addition to his famous geological metaphor of "fault
lines" between distinct and impenetrable civilizations,
he also offers the
idea of "cleft countries" such as the United States,
which replicate these hypothesized lines within them.
(Huntington 1996: 209) It
would be more accurate to speak of one cleft global
civilization in which both dialogue and clash among different
elements of civilizational complexes is inevitable. From the
perspective of this new global civilization and its
discontents, the September 11 tragedy shows the alarming new
possibilities for revolutionary violence as an expression of such discontents.
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Click here for
the October 20th interview in The
New York Times.
See also essays on this site by Modood,
Rubio, Smith, and
Hefner on the Huntington thesis.
Click here
for short essay on the Jacobins by Robert Schwartz of Mount
Holyoke college.
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Viewing
recent Israeli-Palestinian developments from the Muslim world,
the inability of the American superpower to stop the expansion
of Jewish settlements in Palestinian territory even during the
period of peace accords and negotiations is incomprehensible.
Such incomprehension doubtless facilitated the spread of the
conspiratorial rumor, widely current in the Arab Middle East,
that it was not bin Laden but the Jews who destroyed the World
Trade Center. On the other hand, what is impossible to miss is
the conspicuous use of American weapons, especially of F-16
and smart bombs since May 2001. Those who see our weapons used
to destroy Palestinian civilian targets on their television
screens throughout the Middle East are more likely to hate our
destructive power than to consider us champions of freedom and
democracy. What is relevant to the appeal of terrorism is the
sociologically determinable impact of these images, and not
the moralistic question whether bin Laden really cares about
the Palestinians as he claims to. It is true that the mind set
of the Islamic fundamentalists is formed over a long period, and
this particular terrorist operation must have been planned by
bin Laden some time ago. But the intensity of commitment to
the goals of the movement at the moment of decisive suicidal
action may be influenced by more immediate events. Who is to
say that if the F-16s had not been so visible in the
destruction of Palestinian targets a short while ago, some of
the plotters in this highly improbable and risky project would
not have wavered and caused its failure, as happened in the
attempt to destroy the WTC in 1993? The point, anyway, is to
reduce the likelihood of another attack, and removing the
cause that fuels suicide bombings is not irrelevant.
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Turning
to policy considerations with our false sense of security
gone, we can no longer maintain our indifference toward the
events in the distant Middle East and should insist on the
greater accountability of our government and its allies. After
World War I, German sociologist Max Weber argued that modern
politics required its own "ethic of responsibility," which
can be said to consist in taking into account the costs and
consequences of our action in politics. The present crisis highlights the enormous practical
difficulty of such an ethic of responsibility based on a
cost-benefit analysis of the kind the rational choice
theorists take for granted. Given the openness of our society,
the vulnerability of our skyscrapers and densely populated
cities to biological and other forms of terrorism, it would be
irresponsible to ignore the colossal cost of identification
with the expansionist policies of the state of Israel in lives
and resources of the American people. Yet any such
cost-benefit analysis seems crass and morally repellent to the
majority of Americans.
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Click here
for Weber's text Politics as a Vocation.
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The
national consensus on bringing to justice Osama bin Laden and
the other perpetrators of these heinous acts has an unshakable
rational and emotional basis. Rational debate on our policy options, such as
striving for a fairly equitable peace in the Middle East
against the recipes for intractable military engagement,
however, requires breaking the long-standing taboo against
mentioning the cost of our identification with Israel and
criticism of it policies when appropriate. Any help we can
draw from the social sciences to this end through a critical
examination of the shaping of public discourse should be most
welcome.
The author is Professor of Sociology, State University of
New York at Stony Brook, Editor of International Sociology,
and President of the Association for the Study of Persianate
Societies.
References
Arjomand,
S.A. 1995 "Unity and Diversity in Islamic
Fundamentalism," in M. Marty and R.S. Appleby, eds., Fundamentalisms
Comprehended, the University of Chicago Press, pp. 179-98.
Eisenstadt,
S.N. 1999, Fundamentalism, Sectarianism, and Revolution. The
Jacobin dimension of Modernity, Cambridge University
Press.
Huntington,
S.P. 1996, Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World
Order, New York: Simon & Schuster.
"Rethinking
Civilizational Analysis," Special Issue of International
Sociology, 16.3 (September 2001)
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