A
million, protest war in London but Arab streets are
silent
By:
Robert Fisk - the Independent
Could
anything be more pathetic than the Arab demonstration
against war? A million Britons marched in London, more
than half a million Spaniards in Madrid; 200,000 in
Paris and New York. And Cairo? Well, just 600
Egyptians turned up in their capital to protest at
America's forthcoming invasion of brotherly Iraq -
surrounded by 3,000 security police. By way of
contrast - brave contrast - 2,000 Israelis protested
in Tel Aviv against the war.
What
on earth is it with the Arabs? Of all people, they -
and they alone - are likely to suffer in this American
invasion of their homeland. They - and they alone -
have the will and the ability to understand that this
US military adventure is intended - as Colin Powell,
the Secretary of State, frankly declared last week -
to change the map of the Middle East.
Yet,
faced with catastrophe, the Arabs are like mice. Their
leaders may agree with their people - but they will
not let their people say so.
President
Mubarak of Egypt has made it all too clear there is
little he can do to rein in President Bush. King
Abdullah of Jordan has said there is almost
"nothing" the Arabs can do to avert war.
Which means Arabs ask, more and more, what their
leaders are for. The presidents and kings of the Arab
world agree with their people, it seems, but do not
wish them to express the views they themselves hold.
It's
one thing for Mr. Mubarak to criticize the United
States - quite another for Egyptians to do so. What on
earth, one wonders, did the 3,000 Egyptian security
police think as they surrounded their protesting
brothers and sisters?
True,
200,000 Syrians protested against the war in Damascus.
But no one protests in Syria unless they are in accord
with their government, which means that this
particular "popular" protest was arranged by
the Arab Socialist Baath Party of Syria. But at least
the Syrians did not carry, as their neighbours in
Beirut did, portraits of Saddam Hussein. For in Arab
capital cities, there is a special problem.
Repeatedly, Arab opposition to war is trammeled up
with Arab support for the Iraqi dictator.
In
Cairo two weeks ago, pictures of the Iraqi leader
detracted from anti-war protests. In Beirut on
Saturday, men who had fought each other in Lebanon's
15-year civil war came together to oppose America's
invasion of Iraq, but were then demeaned by far
greater numbers of Lebanese who supported Saddam
Hussein and carried pictures of the wretched man to
prove it.
Sayed
Hassan Nasrallah, the head of the Lebanese Hizbollah
guerrilla army, castigated the Arabs for their
"silence" and urged them to
"re-evaluate" their attitude towards Europe
following the protests against war - this, remember,
from the man who leads an organization whose satellite
groups once held dozens of Westerners hostage in
Lebanon during the 1980s.
Sayed
Nasrallah also deplored the fact that "the
greatest Muslim demonstration in history" - the
gathering of two million Muslim pilgrims at Mecca for
the Haj - had not used the slogan "Death to
America" or "No to War". Nasrallah also
accused "certain" Arab regimes of
"supporting the war or approving of it in
secret". And, of course, we all know who they
are.