Can Hillary Clinton salvage a credible US foreign policy from its self-serving history?
As Gaza burns and the carnage mounts the United States has been going through the niceties of investigating how much its next Secretary of State knows about the world, including in the widest possible sense America’s largest foreign policy headache – the Middle East.
Hilary Clinton demonstrated to the Senate Committee that she is seriously well appraised on any topic they wished to hurl her way. The entire process however has exposed just how much work
America
has to do at home to reform from being the world bully, first class hypocrite and xenophobe.
These tendencies were present with bells on as Senators asked questions that just treated as accepted their prejudices towards Arab states, supposed terrorists and of course Iran.
Most of the countries they have issues with have of course been interfered with in some way by the United States within living memory – Palestine/Israel, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, and Syria.
Sure it is all history, but it is a truism that forgetting history leads to a repetition of mistakes and in the Middle East it is only with the context of an appreciation of the complicated histories that those outside this beautiful, diverse and culturally rich part of the world can make any sense of what is happening today.
This is why the Bush determination to export democracy has been such a disaster, costing lives from many nations.
Even in his exit press conference this week Bush could not be certain that after seven years of war in
Iraq
, democracy as he sees it, will be a certainty. If going to war in
Iraq
was not criminal, doing it for noting save ousting the tyrant who “tried to kill my (his) daddy” must surely be.
The unintended consequences of such a bully tactic are now on full display.
Destroying
Iraq
has destroyed
Iran
’s most serious foe, leaving it free to busy itself with the job of pursuing nuclear capability. Such a goal it must be noted is fully within the nation’s sovereign right. As a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,
Iran
is permitted to develop peaceful/civilian nuclear energy.
Iran
is suspected of trying to take that further and develop weapons grade material, and its filibustering with the International Atomic Energy Agency and the United Nations Security Council resolutions and demands for disclosure do nothing to persuade the international community otherwise.
Nevertheless,
Iran
has stayed within the NPT.
North Korea
abandoned its NPT commitments, developed and tested a nuclear weapon, and yet the
US
still negotiates with
North Korea
.
Israel
is in violation of many United Nations Resolutions, including Resolution 487 which directs it to put its nuclear facilities under the safeguard of the IAEA. Yet the
United States
professes its continued backing for the
Middle East
’s only nuclear state.
The hypocrisy of such a mélange of foreign policy stances by the
United States
is not lost on
Iran
. This week’s disclosure that
Israel
tried for
US
permission to fly over
Iraq
to bomb
Iran
’s nuclear plant at Natanz has only reinforced
Iran
’s determination to pursue nuclear capability.
Sad that it took until the dying days of his Presidency but Bush did finally see past the short term into the possible longer-term implications of acquiescing to Israel’s request for bunker-busting bombs and air-space clearance.
Iran
would not have sat by and let
Israel
bomb its facilities.
Iran
knows the
US
forces are stretched to the max in
Iraq
and
Afghanistan
and highly vulnerable should
Iran
take revenge on them in those theatres of war.
And then there are the Palestinians who do not miss the hypocrisy of the
US
backing of
Israel
despite
Israel
’s continued violations of a myriad of other UN resolutions. Amongst these are demands for compliance with the Geneva Convention in terms of its occupation of Palestinian lands, demands it protect the safety and security of Palestinian civilians, that it investigate previous deaths during the Israeli assault on the Jenin Refugee Camp, and demands that it cease construction of settlements in Arab territories.
Secretary of State Hilary Clinton will have to make good on such hypocrisy and until she does US Foreign Policy will continue to be seen as a self-serving and discriminatory practice from a nation which supposedly prides itself on treating all people as equal. At the moment some seem more equal than others.
Another key facet behind the hideous actions in
Gaza
that the world should be concerned about is the role
Israel
’s February 10 elections are playing..
It seems certain that the toughest candidate will win so long as the momentum of the “war” continues so heavily in
Israel
’s favour. That would mean Likud Leader Benjamin Netanyahu will be at the helm of the next administration and he will be there along with his anti-Palestinian baggage of years gone by.
At some stage very soon
Israel
will cease what has turned in to a repulsive slaughter in the name of weeding out Hamas fighters. However when Israel’s bombs stop there is unlikely to be a cessation of rocket fire from Hamas, so what will the point of all of this have been?
Israel
will be right to stop collective punishment of innocent Palestinians. Hamas will be wrong to continue firing rockets. But rights and wrongs have never yet been of much value here.
The only victor from it all will be the growth in devotion to the Hamas resistance movement (just as the war on
Iraq
gave birth to al-Qaeda in
Iraq
). Sheer numbers – so far nearly 1000 Palestinians killed and nearly 5000 injured – means few degrees of separation from the experience of
Israel
’s wrath for a huge number of Arabs.
In the past week in
Gaza
– let alone on the rest of the Arab street – the cry has been to avenge those deaths, not to put away the rockets. In a sinister move Hamas has sent out the call for arms, fighters and money.
Come next week – war or otherwise - Mrs Clinton has one hell of a job on her hands and the countries the
US
has messed with will all be watching.