Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts

Monday, October 11, 2004

Israel and Palestine: Collaborative suicide

By Nicolai Brown
Iowa State Daily columnist

The other day I was walking through Campustown when a newspaper image caught my eye. On the other side of the news laid a picture of a bloodied, pregnant Israeli woman who had been staying at the Red Sea Hotel in Taba, Egypt when it was bombed by an undetermined group.

Much like the unborn fetus inside the woman, the health and future of the Israeli and Palestinian people laid in doubt. What both groups don't seem to realize is that their actions aren't leading to safety or independence, but rather to mutual self-destruction.

We must not allow ourselves to take sides with either the Israelis or Palestinians in this matter, because the opposition mentality is what perpetuates the cycle of violence. By taking a neutral stance, we can bypass the runaway emotion felt by many of those directly involved and therefore serve as a legitimate and calm mediator between two groups stained by unspeakable horror.

However, in our effort to bring peace, we must have a clear understanding of the situation we seek to improve. We can't afford to pretend that either the Israelis or Palestinians are wholly innocent. They're not.

While Palestinians do live under the brutal occupation of the Israeli military, suicide bombings must not be glossed over or viewed as leading to Palestinian liberation. Rather, we must view these suicide bombings for what they are: repugnant and shameful attacks that kill innocent people.

There is no honor or integrity in killing children. When a suicide bomber walks into an Israeli cafe, hoping to spark Palestinian "liberation," the opposite is accomplished. The attacker detonates his or her bomb, and gas expands from the explosion at a speed of many thousands of feet per second.

The bomber is instantly ripped in half (or worse), and whoever isn't decimated by the shockwave then faces deadly shrapnel, fire and building structure collapse. How would you feel if a loved one was reduced from a smiling human being to a pile of scattered body parts? Think hard about what that might feel like.

Such attacks, no doubt, give many Israelis the impression that Palestinians are more animal than human. This dehumanizing view is then used to justify savage violence employed not only against members of Hamas but also against innocent Palestinians. You can guess where this is going. After forcing Palestinians into homelessness and claiming their homes and neighborhoods for Israel, the Israeli military swoops in to bomb suspected (and not always proven) Hamas members and whoever else happens to be nearby.

Israeli bombs tear through buildings, cutting apart men, women and children like pieces of paper. Israeli troops gun down unarmed, rock-throwing Palestinian kids -- pumping bullet streams into young human flesh, destroying organs and breaking bones.

The crime? Throwing rocks. Try to imagine what it might feel like to have a loved one murdered in cold blood or to return home to find your family incinerated in a pile of rubble with the smell of burning flesh still hanging in the air. Go ahead, picture it.

There is no "side" for us to take in this matter other than peace. The Israelis and Palestinians both have a right to defend themselves, but they must understand that their methods only produce more hate and violence.

Therein lies the irony of the conflict: By seeking to protect themselves, they effectively sow their own seeds of destruction.

They live in a symbiotic relationship -- both need each other in this double-suicide arrangement.

The Israeli government can and will conscript its citizens into military service for as long as it has to. Groups like Hamas can and will recruit new members for as long as they have to. Neither entity, nor their respective goals, can be effectively opposed through violent means.

There will always be another generation -- and some of the young are taught from even before birth on which side of the line they stand.

Nicolai Brown is a senior in linguistics from Okoboji.


© Copyright 2006 Iowa State Daily

Saturday, November 15, 2003

How long can the Middle East economic boom continue?

The Middle East is almost four years into an economic boom. How long can this good economic fortune continue? Could this be a generational global wealth shift?
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It began in 2000 with what everyone thought was an exceptional year for oil revenues. The tragedy of 9/11 in 2001 accelerated the repatriation of wealth to the region. But this year oil revenues will actually be higher than in 2000.

Arab stock markets have surged in 2003. Up 150% in Egypt, 87% in Kuwait, 60% in Saudi Arabia, 37% in Jordan and 31% in the UAE. Money supply has taken off and liquidity is at record levels. Real estate prices have rocketed.

Welcome to the third great Middle East Oil boom. We have been here before. But how long can it last this time?

A lot depends on one commodity price, oil. After a 20-year bear market for commodities, some analysts believe we are now into a 20-year bull market. That maybe hard to swallow but certain economic factors do support such a scenario.

China is the new force in global growth, and depends almost entirely on oil imported from the Middle East. If demand continues to grow at present exponential rates that will make China the region's customer of the future, and keep oil prices high.

We also know for a fact that oil stocks in the US and UK are now dwindling and will be a fraction of present output levels in 10 years' time. But this does not mean that either of these two major economies will cease to use oil.

That is the long-term perspective. The short-term is easier to predict. Iraq, which has the world's second largest oil reserves, remains unstable and unlikely to attract investment from oil majors in the immediate future. This will keep supply pressures in place and allow Opec to manage oil prices towards the top of its target price range.

Fortunately Opec's management also seems to have fallen into capable hands. And while some may question the Saudi Oil Minister's attitude to foreign direct investment, his ability to support the oil price is widely acknowledged.

However, it will be down to domestic economic policy in the Arab countries to translate an oil boom into a better standard of living for residents. Massive liquidity can translate into higher inflation if money can not find another place to go, and indeed higher local stock and real estate prices are a manifestation of this factor.

But if Arab countries want a successful example of economic diversification they do not have to look very far. The UAE, or more particularly Dubai, is literally shoveling money into economic development projects and real estate. This is how to secure lasting benefit from an economic boom as this infrastructure will still be in place when the boom disappears.

How long will that be? Certainly another two years, as US economic policy will not change much until the next President has been elected to the White House. But it is possible that we are witnessing a generational shift in the pattern of global wealth, and that could prove remarkably enduring for the Middle East.

Source:

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This story was posted by Peter J. Cooper, Editor-in-Chief
Saturday, November 15 - 2003 at 08:31 UAE local time (GMT+4)