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2002 |
Ambassador
speaks on Middle East issues
Although David J. Dunford, the
former U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia and Oman, spent much of last week
in Sisters, his real purpose for being in Central Oregon was to speak to
the High Desert Forum on the Middle East.
On Wednesday night, April
17, at the First Presbyterian Church in Bend, that's exactly what he did.
Dunford started with the premise
that "I don't need to remind anyone how important the Middle East is to
U.S. interests."
He asked how many people walked
to the Forum; the answer: none.
The answer was the same when
he queried the crowd about bicycle, horseback, and public transportation.
He pointed out that everyone
had arrived in one- to two-ton packages of plastic and steel.
He made his point, and it
was a launching pad for the talk that followed.
After a brief lesson in oil
economics and a reference to the Arabic "feudal monarchies," Dunford was
off and running.
"Ignorance," he said, "is
the biggest obstacle to resolving international issues."
As it turned out, the ignorance
he referred to is shared by all sides: we don't understand them; they
don't understand us; and their own governments conspire to keep them in
the dark.
He referred to "failed societies
suffering under bad governments" that deflect anger away from internal
failures and toward Israel and the United States.
"The question they ask," he
said, "is not where did we go wrong, but who did this to us?"
Dunford stated that Arabic
governments take our aid and purport to be friendly to us but routinely
hide their own inadequacies by formally indoctrinating their people that
the United States and Israel are to blame for the country's problems.
The result, Dunford explained,
is a society that easily falls prey to the rhetoric of what he termed
"Binladenism."
Still, he said, "We can't
defeat Binladenism without dealing with what feeds it."
Specifically, he argued that
the U.S. cannot be passive to the events of the Middle East and must take
a more active role.
While he praised President
Bush's initial actions after September 11, he was critical of the government's
subsequent failure to proactively deal with a broader range Middle Eastern
issues.
Dunford is also concerned
about our country's long-term relationship with Afghanistan.
Referring to the United States'
abandonment of Afghanistan after the expulsion of Soviet forces, he said,
"There's a real danger that we'll walk away from Afghanistan again.
"We need to get that right
this time.
"Toppling the Taliban and
defeating al-Quaida is the easy part.
"We need to learn about Islam."
Another part of getting it
right, he said, is that "the benefits of globalization need to be extended
to all the people."
He also said that we must
improve on our "shameful performance" in foreign policy issues.
Regarding the current stage
of the Middle East crisis, he stated "(Yasser) Arafat lacks a vision.
With a vision, Palestinians could see hope," something that he says is
now lacking.
He had sharp words for the
Israelis, as well.
"If Israel is to remain Jewish
and Democratic, it must get rid of Gaza and the West Bank."
It's simple math, he explained:
"The Arab birthrate is much higher, and it won't take that long to get
an Arab majority (in Israel)."
One of the most interesting
questions that followed was not about Israel or Palestinians, but about
Iran.
Dunford described Iran as
the "second most democratic country in the Middle East" and suggested
that we have more in common with the people of Iran than we realize.
He even pointed out -- with
some chagrin -- that, at one point in time, the most popular television
program in Iran was "Baywatch."
In any event, he said our
country was so scarred by the Iranian hostage crisis during the Carter
administration, that we have been unable to fashion an effective relationship
with that country.
"It's in our best interest,"
he said, "to reach out to Iran."
Therein lies the crux of Dunford's
message.
In order to put an end to
ignorance -- both ours and theirs -- it is imperative for our country
to reach out beyond its borders in positive, productive, and proactive
ways.
If we don't reach out to the
rest of the world in cooperation and understanding, "they" will come to
us on entirely different terms.
They did on September 11,
and they will again.
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