"Is the West Racist
Toward Muslims and Arabs?"
The US should hold Arabs and Muslims to a universal standard
by Michael Rubin
Bitter lemons - International
August 31, 2006
Middle East Forum
Is the West racist
toward Arabs and Muslims? In the United States, the answer is both
no and yes. The United States is about the best place any Muslim,
Christian or Jew can live. They can speak freely and worship freely.
Despite the rhetoric of some groups that claim to represent American
Muslims, there is very little discrimination. According to the
Federal Bureau of Investigation's hate crimes report, in 2004, the
last year for which statistics are available, there were 1,374
religious hate crimes. Of these, 954 were anti-Jewish, 95
anti-Christian and 156 anti-Muslim. All of these are still too many
but, in a country of almost 300 million people, such figures
underscore the safety of American society and the tolerance of the
American public.
Whether Muslims are born
in the United States or immigrate to it, there is little impediment
to their full participation in society. Indeed, Muslims in the
United States are more affluent than the average American. They
enter the best schools, build successful businesses or practices and
experience little if any glass ceiling.
Why, then, can the
United States be considered racist toward Arabs and Muslims? Simply
put, because Washington policymakers and the foreign policy elite do
not hold Arab and Muslim governments to the same standards to which
they hold countries like Denmark and Sweden. Why should US or
European policymakers react any differently to the Iranian
government's abuses against striking Vahed bus drivers than we would
to striking Gdansk shipyard workers? Are Iranian laborers any less
deserving of justice than European workers? Are Tunisians any less
deserving of free speech than Frenchmen?
This hypocrisy is most
often apparent in western policy toward the Arab world. To summarize
what eminent historian Bernard Lewis said regarding the question of
democracy in the Arab world, there are two points of view, one of
which holds that "Arabs are incapable of democratic government....
Arabs are different from us and we must be more, shall we say,
reasonable both in what we expect from them and in what they may
expect from us. Whatever we do, these countries will be ruled by
corrupt tyrants. The aim of foreign policy, therefore, should be to
make sure that they are friendly tyrants." This, he said, is the
traditional "pro-Arab" view. In an Orwellian reversal of logic,
those who demand that Arabs and other Muslims be held to the same
standards of human rights are often labeled anti-Arab.
Many pundits argue that
the US government cannot impose democracy upon the Middle East.
True. Democracy is not possible without civil society, political
accountability and the buy-in of local citizens. This does not mean
that democracy cannot take root. According to The Guardian, a paper
seldom accused of sympathy to US foreign policy, more than
one-in-six Iraqis fled their country during the rule of Saddam
Hussein. When they settled in the West, they experienced no cultural
impediments to democracy. This suggests that the problem in much of
the Middle East is not democracy, but rather rule-of-law. That many
professional diplomats and elite commentators belittle even the
concept of democracy taking root in the Arab world and majority
Muslim nations is a sign of the condescension and contempt with
which so many treat Arabs. These officials would let terrorists win
by excusing their atrocities or, worse yet, forcing compromises upon
those suffering from but resisting terrorist violence.
Some put a scholarly
patina on their condescension. They try to differentiate between
democracy and Islamic democracy, or human rights and Islamic human
rights. They equivocate about the importance of religious freedom.
But qualification of such concepts as democracy, justice, or human
rights with an adjective never expands rights; it only restricts
them.
Within policymaking
circles, fear of stigma becomes an excuse to hold Arabs, Iranians
and Muslims to a lower standard. Too often, policymakers and
academics argue that to fund civil society, assist organized labor
or speak out on behalf of dissidents could undercut reform. Most
recently, many have condemned the allocation of $75 million to
support democracy and civil society in Iran. True, the Iranian
government may still brand civil society activists traitors. And
many oppositionists are charlatans, eager to defraud Uncle Sam of a
buck. But that is what quality control is for. The US should not
judge what is in the best interests of dissidents or activists bold
enough to ignore such stigma. Arabs, Iranians, and other Muslim
civil society activists are perfectly capable of deciding what is in
their best interest; the State Department should not presuppose to
do it for them.
The United States may
still be a multicultural haven of equality. It is too bad, then,
that US policymakers still embrace a doctrine of condescension and
inequality when it comes to demanding the same human rights
standards for Arabs and Muslims and behavior from their governments
that they do for European, Latin American and many Asian nations.
Michael Rubin, a
resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is editor
of the Middle East Quarterly.
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