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Anti-Americanism & the Making of Faisal Shahzad

Posted on May 8, 2010
Filed Under >Pervez Hoodbhoy, Foreign Relations, Law & Justice, Society
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Pervez Hoodbhoy

""The man who tried to set off a car bomb in Times Square was a Pakistani. Why is this unsurprising? Answer: because when you hold a burning match to a gasoline tank, the laws of chemistry demand combustion.

As anti-American lava spews from the fiery volcanoes of Pakistans private television channels and newspapers, collective psychosis grips the countrys youth. Murderous intent follows with the conviction that the US is responsible for all ills, both in Pakistan and the world of Islam.

Faisal Shahzad, with designer sunglasses and an MBA degree from the University of Bridgeport, acquired that murderous intent. Living his formative years in Karachi, he typifies the young Pakistani who grew up in the shadow of Zia-ul-Haqs hate-based education curriculum.



The son of a retired Air Vice-Marshal, life was easy as was getting US citizenship subsequently. But at some point the toxic schooling and media tutoring must have kicked in. Guilt may have overpowered him as he saw pictures of Gaza’s dead children and held US support for Israel responsible. Then a little internet browsing, or perhaps the local mosque, steered him towards the idea of an Islamic caliphate. The solution to the worlds problems would require, of course, the US to be damaged and destroyed. Hence Shahzad’s self-confessed trip to Waziristan.

Ideas considered extreme a decade ago are now mainstream. A private survey carried out by a European embassy based in Islamabad found that only 4% of Pakistanis polled speak well of America, 96% against. Although Pakistan and the US are formal allies, in the public perception the US has ousted India as Pakistans number one enemy.

Remarkably, anti-US sentiment rises in proportion to aid received. Say one good word about the US, and you are automatically labeled as its agent. From what popular TV anchors had to say about it, Kerry-Lugars $7.5 billion may well have been money that the US wants to steal from Pakistan rather than give to it.

Pakistan is certainly not the worlds only country where America is unpopular. In pursuit of its self-interest, wealth and security, the US has waged illegal wars, bribed, bullied and overthrown governments, supported tyrants and military governments, and undermined movements for progressive change.

But paradoxically the US is disliked far more in Pakistan than in countries which have born the direct brunt of American attacks – Cuba, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

Why?

Drone strikes are a common but false explanation. Foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi implicitly justified the Times Square bombing as retaliation. But this simply does not bear up. Drone attacks have killed some innocents, but they have devastated militant operations in Waziristan while causing far less collateral damage than Pakistan Army operations. On the other hand, the cities of Hanoi and Haiphong were carpet-bombed by B-52 bombers and Vietnam’s jungles were defoliated with Agent Orange, the ffects of which persist even today. Yet, Vietnam never developed deep visceral feelings like those in Pakistan.

Finding truer reasons requires deeper digging. In part, Pakistan displays the resentment and self-loathing of a client state for its paymaster. US-Pakistan relations are frankly transactional today, but the master-client relationship is older. Indeed, Pakistan chose this path because confronting India over Kashmir demanded heavy militarization and big defense budgets. So, in the 1960s, Pakistan willingly entered into the SEATO and CENTO military pacts, and was proud to be called ‘Americas most allied ally’. The Pakistan Army became the most powerful, well-equipped and well-organized institution in the country. This also put Pakistan on the external dole, a price that Pakistan has paid for its Indo-centrism.

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, even as it brought in windfall profits, deepened the dependence. Paid by the US to create the anti-Soviet jihadist apparatus, Pakistan is now being paid again to fight that war’s blow-back. Pakistan then entered George W. Bush’s war on terror to enhance America’s security – a fact that further hurt self-esteem. It is a separate matter that Pakistan fights that very war for its own survival, and must call upon its army to protect the population from throat-slitting, hand-chopping, girl-whipping fanatics.

Passing the buck is equally fundamental to Pakistan’s anti-Americanism. It is in human nature to blame others for one’s own failures. Pakistan has long teetered between being a failed state and a failing state. The rich won’t pay taxes? Little electricity? Sewage-contaminated drinking water? Population out of control? Kashmir unsolved? Just blame it on the Americans. This phenomenon exists elsewhere too. For example, one recently saw the amazing spectacle of Hamid Karzai threatening to join the Taliban and lashing out against Americans because they (probably correctly) suggested he committed electoral fraud.

Tragically for Pakistan, anti-Americanism plays squarely into the hands of Islamic militants. They vigorously promote the notion of an Islam-West war when, in fact, they actually wage armed struggle to remake society. They will keep fighting this war even if America were to miraculously evaporate into space. Created by poverty, a war-culture, and the macabre manipulations of Pakistan’s intelligence services, they seek a total transformation of society. This means eliminating music, art, entertainment, and all manifestations of modernity. Side goals include chasing away the few surviving native Christians, Sikhs, and Hindus.

At a time when the country needs clarity of thought to successfully fight extremism, simple bipolar explanations are inadequate. The moralistic question ‘Is America good or bad?’ is futile. There is little doubt that the US has committed acts of aggression as in Iraq, worsened the Palestine problem, and maintains the world’s largest military machine. We also know that it will make a deal with the Taliban if perceived to be in America’s self-interest, and it will do so even if that means abandoning Afghans to blood-thirsty fanatics.

Yet, it would be wrong to scorn the humanitarian impulse behind US assistance in times of desperation. Shall we simply write off massive US assistance to Pakistan at the time of the dreadful earthquake of 2005? Or to tsunami affected countries in 2004 and to Haiti in 2010? In truth, the US is no more selfish or altruistic than any other country of the world. And it treats its Muslim citizens infinitely better than we treat non-Muslims in Pakistan.

Instead of pronouncing moral judgments on everything and anything, we Pakistanis need to reaffirm what is truly important for our people: peace, economic justice, good governance, rule of law, accountability of rulers, women’s rights, and rationality in human affairs. Washington must be firmly resisted, but only when it seeks to drag Pakistan away from these goals.

More frenzied anti-Americanism will only produce more Faisal Shahzads.

The author teaches at Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad. This article was also published in Dawn.

LAST NIGHT; A bad day at Bangkok for rookie Excise man.(Features)

Daily Record (Glasgow, Scotland) January 29, 1999 | Fulton, Rick THE KNOCK (ITV) POOR old Alex Murray, the Customs & Excise rookie, had a bad night last night.

First he thought he was going on a slap and tickle junket to Bangkok, only to find the drugs courier he was following was gay.

So rather than being surrounded by lovely young Thai ladies, it was young men in thongs winking at him.

Then he lost the drug courier who could lead him to Mr Big and got a massive dressing down from his boss Ancrom (Mark Lewis Jones).

Returning exhausted and ear bitten to his girlfriend, he hoped for some cosy comfort, only for her to produce a condom and accuse him of sleeping with prostitutes.

All the way through, Scots actor Daniel Brown looked like a big Andrex puppy. His great hound dog face kept registering disbelief that it was all going wrong.

Daniel added some light relief to this gritty thriller, which just gets better and better.

Cherie Lunghi was the guest actress in the first of a new three-parter.

She played Toni Maxwell (yes, I know she’s the face of Kenco coffee but even The Knock has an ounce – or should that be a teaspoonful – of humour) who had taken over her jailed husband’s business.

Wearing leather trousers or silky undies, she oversaw her minions – two dogs, a girlfriend and some heavies.

Toni gets Thai women to smuggle heroin concealed in breast implants.

Alex was trying to pin the smuggling on her, but by the end of the first part had botched the job, arrested the courier and lost any leads to her.

Meanwhile, Barry Christie (Steve Toussaint) was made to go undercover cleaning buses.

Someone is smuggling drugs through Customs and Excise in the buses and he gets a job as a cleaner.

He’s not happy, thinking that it is because he’s black, but uses a racist attack to get in with the smugglers.

After a shaky start this series has found its form. But it will have to keep up to the standards of last night’s show to match the sheer power of The Vice. this web site brier creek movies

SOAPWATCH BROOKSIDE (Channel 4, 8.30pm) THE friendship between Sinbad (Michael Starke, left) and Mick could be at an end as the rape continues to rip Brookside Close apart. The truth could soon be revealed after victim Nikki sees a familiar face in a flashback which could be the rapist. Ron has to decide between Bev and Anthea PICK OF THE BOX COMEDY: Gimme, Gimme, Gimme (BBC2, 9.00pm) STARS Kathy Burke and James Dreyfus manage to steer this sometimes- wayward comedy into funny waters. web site brier creek movies

Kathy just looks and acts brilliantly as Linda La Hughes. Dreyfus’ character Tom is slightly boring and one-dimensional, but he still has some withering lines.

Tonight, Linda’s long-lost sister comes to stay and Tom is suddenly inundated with offers of television work. Dale Winton makes a guest appearance.

DOCU-SOAP: Vets In Practice (BBC1, 8.00pm) VETS Trude Mostue, Hannah Pollard and Sam Robinson all reflect on their social lives this week.

Trude thinks her new boyfriend Patrick could be Mr Right, then has to worry about a dog’s possible pregnancy.

Hannah has a new look after losing three stones and takes it out on an overweight rabbit that she puts on a diet.

And Sam, who has little time to socialise, has to castrate a young stallion.

SITCOM: Frasier (Channel 4, 10.00pm) THE pompous brothers Niles (David Hyde Pierce) and Frasier (Kelsey Grammer) are red faced when they can’t get tickets for the hottest new theatrical show in town.

Could they be losing their status within Seattle society?

Meanwhile, the wonderful Daphne Moon (Jane Leeves) becomes a minor celebrity when the local newspaper shows a whole new side to her.

CHAT: Parkinson (BBC 1, 9.30pm) PARKY is joined by Mo Mowlam, the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, in what promises to be a great show.

The MP has battled against a brain tumour and lost her hair. But she refuses to be vain and simply ties a bandana around her head.

They are also joined by Alan Davies, the stand-up comedian and star of the quirky comedy drama Jonathan Creek.

MOVIES BETWEEN HEAVEN AND HELL (Ch4, 1.45pm – 3.30pm) Bigoted Southern boy Robert Wagner learns tolerance when serving in the Pacific. Soapy war drama. 1956 FOR THE FUTURE: The Irvine Fertility Scandal (BBC2, 3.30pm – 5.00pm) Marilu Henner given dubious treatment in another true-life story. 1996 TAKE YOUR BEST SHOT (Ch5, 3.30pm – 5.20pm) Struggling actor Robert Urich tries to revive his career and his marriage in hollow comedy. With Meredith Baxter. 1982 A PROMISE TO CAROLYN (Ch5, 9.00pm – 10.50pm) Abused sisters seek vengeance on wicked stepmother in true-life teledrama. 1996 LOCK UP (BBC1, 10.25pm – 12.05am; Scotland, 10.55pm – 12.35am) Saintly Sylvester Stallone at his most humourless as a framed convict transferred to a hell-hole run by vicious warden Donald Sutherland. Manipulative melodrama. 1989 WITH A VENGEANCE (Grampian, STV, 10.30pm – 12.15am) Melissa Gilbert in tele-dramatics. 1992 THE WIZARD OF LONELINESS (BBC2, midnight – 1.50am) Young Lukas Haas is despatched to his grandparents during World War Two. Poignant drama with many memorable touches, impeccably acted. With John Randolph. 1988 THE HAPPY HOOKER (Ch5, 12.30am – 2.20am) Lynn Redgrave unhappily cast as New York madam Xaviera Hollander. 1974 STEEL JUSTICE (ITV regions, 12.35am – 2.15am) Lame robot monster cop thriller with Robert Taylor. 1992 BLUE CITY (BBC1, 1.05am – 2.25am) Cynical drifter Judd Nelson attempts to solve his father’s mysterious murder in routine Ross McDonald yarn. 1986 THE DEMOCRATIC TERRORIST (Ch5, 2.20am – 4.05am) Trashy Euro-action drama. 1992 THE IRON CURTAIN (Ch4, 3.25am – 4.50am; S4C, 3.45am – 5.20am) Dana Andrews in dull defection tale. 1948 Fulton, Rick

106 comments posted

Comment Pages: « 14 [13] 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 41 » Show All

  1. readinglord says:
    May 31st, 2010 1:52 am

    I think it is the extreme jealousy in their sub-consciousness which makes the Pakies to feign hatred to West , in general, and Ameica, in particular. Otherwise they risk their lives even to migrate to these countries.

  2. readinglord says:
    May 31st, 2010 1:28 am

    @Salman
    @Obaidi

    The greatest evil was in fact Zia himself. Being a usurper despotic ruler Jehad-e-Akbar was required to be waged against him first of all than any body else.

  3. Bangash says:
    May 20th, 2010 11:36 am

    @Irfan Asim

    Your claim of “innocent civilians” is a repeat of Taliban propaganda, who are unhappy at their safe havens in Pakistan being disturbed and their leaders blown to pieces by drones. The Taliban-lovers in Pakistan are also unhappy for this reason.

    However one group of people who are happy with drone attacks are the tribals themselves, who have been enslaved by the Taliban and their lands turned into a warzone without their permission, by the Taliban.

    Of course Pakistanis being killed by terrorists is something you object to only when pushed. So keep your bogus “civilian” concerns to yourself.

  4. Roger says:
    May 20th, 2010 10:58 am

    The best thing I have noticed about this is how all Pakistanis in America and in Pakistan have clearly spoken against this idiot and what he was trying to do. That is heartening.

  5. May 20th, 2010 2:52 am

    There are voices that claim to speak for Pakistan – voices of division, fear, and extremism. They do not speak for us, the people of Pakistan. Through the Azm-e-Alishan campaign we affirm amongst ourselves – and send a message to the world – that we will not be defined by violence, nor will we give in to it. We are diverse but we are bound together as a single people and nation and we will define our future together.
    Log on to http:/www.azmealishan.com register your AZM and make your pledge for a better Pakistan. Catch updates on http://twitter.com/azmealishan

  6. Irfan Asim says:
    May 20th, 2010 2:38 am

    @Bangash

    You have it wrong.

    Tell me names of more than three American Civilians who have died at the hands of Pakistani terrorists. Those who have been dying have been hundreds and hundreds of Pakistanis. These idiot terrorists are mostly killing Pakistanis, not Americans.

    I am delighted and happy that those three terrorists have been killed by the drones. But the innocent civilians who have been killed are far far more. Unless you are saying it is all right to kill these civilians to get at a few terrorists, there has to be a better way to get to them. Otherwise, the logic of the terrorists would also start making sense. That I cannot accept.

  7. Bangash says:
    May 20th, 2010 2:02 am

    @Irfan Asim

    I will tell you the number of Pakistani terrorists killed by drones……at least 3….Baitullah Mehsud, Haji Omar and Nek Mohammed. These terrorists used to boast about their murders of Pakistanis that they had committed, but I don’t think that matters to you. Only when America eliminates these terrorists, you speak up.

    Your figure of only 3 Americans killed by Pakistanis is wrong, not just Americans but the number of foreigners killed in Pakistan in last 10 years is very high and includes Americans, Chinese, French, Turkish, British and Japanese. Shame on you.

  8. Wajid says:
    May 20th, 2010 12:53 am

    Yes, the problem of hatred for America is eating Pakistan from the inside. Just like the problem of Americans hating Pakistan is eating America from the inside.

Comment Pages: « 14 [13] 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 41 » Show All



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