The year is 2012.
Anti-American violence thrives in the Middle East. And for the first time since February of 1979
in Kabul, Afghanistan (33 years ago), an American ambassador was attacked and
murdered while in office.2 Ambassador
Chris Stevens died in Libya on September 11.
All the while, Washington has been operating under the auspices that the
negative perceptions of the U.S. will be changed primarily by rhetoric. However, what many people, especially those
in the Middle East, have found is that rhetoric is futile if it does match a
coherent policy for the region. For many
Arabs, the fact that perceptions have been set since the ‘60s makes it exceptionally
difficult to change them without a radical shift in U.S. support of Israel –
and it is naïve to assume anything else will serve as the magic bullet. The situation is not hopeless, only bleak
without a clear direction and vision from the top. If we have learned anything from the history
of the Middle East, it is that actions shape perception, not talk. Clearly.
1David W. Lesch, ed., The Middle East and the United States: A Historical and Political
Reassessment, (Westview Press: Boulder, Colorado), 2003. Gerges’ chapter is on pages 191-210. The above quotes come from pages 191 and 204.
2Ambassador Arnold L. Raphel was actually the
last sitting U.S. ambassador to die in office.
He died in a suspicious plane crash in Pakistan in 1988. However, Adolph Dubs was the last victim of a
direct attack in 1979 as mentioned above.
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