More on conspiracy theory, the Arab and…
Hani Shukrallah, The Daily Star Egypt & Counterpunch, 26 Sept, 2006
This is in Denver. Colorado, USA - and it's "the Arab mind" that's supposed to be enamored of conspiracy theories |
Where would you expect conspiracy
theories about 9/11 to be disseminated in Cairo? A coffee house in Sayeda
Zeinab, Al-Azhar or any of the multitude of so-called "popular"
quarters of the city–filled with Shisha smoke, and permeated by the smell of
molasses-soaked tobacco (otherwise known as me’assel) mixed, perhaps, with the
subtle whiff of some other rather more expensive substance?
Where does the "Arab
mind’s" supposed propensity for conspiracy theory come to its own and
propagate? Could it be in the scruffy offices of local newspapers, regularly
slammed by a certain Mossad-led, U.S.-based media monitoring organization as
dens of anti-American, anti-Semitic incitement, and which the U.S. government,
the EU and nearly everybody with some aid money to disburse is doing their
utmost to help reform? (God knows the need is great, even if the path, in this
as in every other area of our contemporary life, is shrouded in mystery?)
Possibly, but the most lucid, indeed
the most erudite and comprehensive argument to the effect that all was not what
it seemed in 9/11 was to be had in none of these.
Certainly, I’ve come across several
versions of what "really" happened on that fateful day in September
2001, over the past five years. There’s been my friend and colleague, the
expert on political Islam, who throughout continued to insist that Al-Qaeda
didn’t do it, almost totally unfazed by my taunting him with each growingly
more blunt admission to having indeed ‘done it’ by Messrs Bin Laden and
Zawahry. We’ve all heard the one about 3,000 Jews that failed to show up at the
World Trade Center on the day of the atrocity. And though many have written to
expose this story for the myth it has always been, much of the Egyptian public
continued to believe it–just, one may add, as their more prosperous and
literate American counterparts went on believing in that other 9/11 urban
legend, curtsey of Mr. Cheney; the one about Saddam’s links to Al-Qaeda.
My absolute favorite 9/11 conspiracy
theory, however, was told to me by that most ubiquitous source of information
vis-à-vis the mood on the "Egyptian street"–a taxi driver. (In the
absence of any sort of political life in the country outside a narrow and
isolated political elite, both local and foreign journalists have come to rely
on the taxi driver as the ultimate authority on what the "ordinary
Egyptian" thinks or believes.)
According to my source, both Bin
Laden and Saddam Hussein (who was yet to be captured) are CIA agents; and were in
fact tucked away by their handlers somewhere in the United States. This
particular theory had the ingenious merit of fusing all the conspiracy theories
in one: Bin Laden did it, so did Saddam and so did the Americans. How far that
particular theory was reflective of the word on the Egyptian street is
anybody’s guess. I had a lot of fun with it, nevertheless, imagining Saddam and
Bin Laden, clean-shaven, sharing a little house in some Midwestern American
city–posing, perhaps, as a gay couple?
I had to wait five years to listen
to a 9/11 conspiracy theory I could not easily laugh, or shrug off. The setting
was as incongruous as were the parties to the discussion–largely one sided, my
interlocutors talking and I, skeptically, listening. Sipping cold Stella beer,
munching on antipasti and enclosed in the courtyard of the Italian Club, a
surprisingly idyllic spot discretely hidden from the hustle and bustle of one
of the busiest streets in town, my friends and I could not have been more
securely insulated from "the Egyptian street."
Nor could my friends be accused, by
any stretch of the imagination, of suffering from that most dangerous disease,
endemic to the region, and differentially diagnosed as "the Arab
mind" My friend had lived a large chunk of his adult life in the West; his
recipe for solving Egypt’s multifarious political, economic and social problems
is to entice Egypt’s erstwhile foreign communities (the Greeks, Armenians,
Italians, Jews) back into the country. (I am, I might add, particularly enamored
of the idea of enticing the Jews back, since it would have the additional
potential benefit of emptying Israel of nearly half its Jewish population).
The third party to our little group
on that particular summer evening was my friend’s American wife, a lovely, tall
Texan, with long auburn hair. They had been recently married at the foot of the
Pyramids in what my American pop-culture-savvy wife informed me at the time was
a New Age ceremony. Extremely vague about what "New Age" anything
actually denotes, I was nevertheless quite impressed by the insouciance shown
by my friend’s large Egyptian Muslim family toward the flower-bordered Ankh
within which the bride and groom exchanged their conjugal vows.
Having gone to considerable detail
to absolve my companions at the Italian Club of any suspicion of being blighted
by, God forbid, an Arab mind, I might now reveal that they were the source of
the most persuasive 9/11 conspiracy theory I had yet to come across. It was all
about steel structures and impossible cell-phone calls and an unlikely hole in
the Pentagon and a disappeared fourth, or was it fifth, plane. I was referred
to Web sites and to American scholars who have organized to question the whole
edifice of reasoning and evidence presented by the official investigation.
I remain highly skeptical–for a
number of reasons. The first may be discounted as sheer pigheadedness. As soon
as I learned of the attack on the World Trade Center twin towers, my first
guess, accompanied by intense dread (I could already see the war of
civilizations being launched), was that it was Bin Laden and Co. who’d done it.
Something of the sort seemed to be coming ever since the Jihadists had reached
the conclusion (eloquently expressed by our good doctor Al-Zawahry in a famous auto-critique)
that battling "the far enemy" (Crusaders and Jews) was a far better
strategy in terms of winning Arab and Muslim hearts and minds than focusing on
"the near enemy" (apostate Arab and Muslim regimes), which they had
been doing to no avail for nearly two decades. Later developments, needless to
say, seemed to amply confirm my initial guess.
The second reason for my skepticism
is rather more compelling. I find it very difficult to believe that a secret on
such a heinous and grandiose scale could be kept secret. Whatever the loopholes
in the findings of the official investigation (and obviously there are
loopholes) it is nearly impossible to assume a cover-up that must have involved
the complicity of at least several hundred people in a whole array of branches
of the government bureaucracy at a great many levels–and this, of the
deliberate murder of more than 3,000 American citizens by an American
intelligence body. Such an assumption makes the Kennedy assassination
(presumably at the hands of Lyndon B. Johnson, J. Edgar Hoover, the CIA, the
Mafia and Cuban émigrés) seem pretty tame. And while I have few illusions about
the greatness of American democracy, there is little doubt in my mind that the
U.S.–despite the best efforts of the American Right–is in fact a democracy,
however imperfect.
My third, and indeed, most
compelling reason is that grand conspiracy theories present us with something
in the nature of divine and/or other forms of supernatural intervention.
Simply, they place major historical events and processes at the mercy of whim,
beyond prediction or reasoned analysis. A corollary of such an assumption is
that human beings are ultimately no more than puppets on a string, and that the
choices we make are exercises in futility.
It so happens, however, that we need
no conspiracy theory, grand or small, to learn that both President Bush and his
neo-con cabal no less than the Prince of the Faithful of Tora Bora and his band
of global marauders had been, on the eve of 9/11, chomping at the bit to
instigate a great, bloody and perpetual "war of civilizations." It
has served them tremendously well over the past five years. It’s the rest of us
that have to suffer the devastating fallout.
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