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            When 
            Barack Obama, the US president, lands in Cairo on June 4 as part of 
            his efforts to address the Muslim World, he will have arrived at the 
            foot of a mountain of troubles carrying two leather folders.
               
            The 
            charismatic young president will have to resort to every trick in 
            his book of eloquence to convince some 1.3 billion Muslims that 
            America is not their enemy, and that his administration is reaching 
            out to 57 Muslim countries in the hopes of ushering in a new era of 
            cooperation, mutual respect, and combined efforts to combat 
            worldwide extremism.   
            
            Tough sell. 
            The purpose 
            of Obama's trip is untenable at best; he will have to deconstruct 
            decades of belligerent US doctrine and foreign policy and atone for 
            what many Arabs and Muslims say are crimes against humanity.   
            The first 
            folder is about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Obama will have to 
            explain why the United States has blindly stood shoulder-to-shoulder 
            by Israel, offering unwavering support for Israeli military 
            campaigns which have since 1948 left hundreds of thousands of dead 
            men, women, and children.   
            
            Rugged Quiz 
            He 
            will have to explain why his predecessor George W. Bush called Ariel 
            Sharon a man of peace after the latter was found by an Israeli 
            commission to be complicit in the Sabra and Shatila massacres in 
            Lebanon. Or why a man who bulldozed over Jenin and rejected the Arab 
            Peace Initiative flouted during the Beirut Arab League conference of 
            2002 is called a partner in the peace process.
               
            
            
            Why, for example, has the United States led international efforts to 
            pursue and convict Serbia's 
            Slobodan Milosevic, Radovan Karadzic, Omar Al-Bashir of Sudan, and 
            Rwandan leaders on charges of genocide but tacitly offer Israeli 
            leaders virtual immunity from any prosecution.   
            As the 
            leader of the world's only superpower, which advertises itself as a 
            beacon of freedom and democracy, he will have to tackle the issue of 
            Israel's free rein during the 2006 Lebanon and 2009 Gaza wars.   
            Obama will 
            also have to revisit why 61 years of US policies have allowed 
            Palestinian lands to be usurped, stolen, and annexed leaving almost 
            nothing to negotiate over when — if — peace negotiations ever do 
            resume.   
            The 
            Palestine folder is exhaustive but Obama will likely embark on 
            outlining what measures his administration will take to get the 
            derailed peace process back on track. His words will mean little, 
            however, because Israel is today ruled by the Jewish State's most 
            right-wing government which has already signalled it is unmoved by 
            his overtures.   
            However, 
            while the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been one of America's 
            most pressing — and bungled — foreign policy issue for several 
            decades, it is more recent events, and wars perpetrated by 
            Washington, which Obama must urgently address.   
            
            New Realities 
            Condi 
            Rice, the former US secretary of state, may have been right in one 
            thing: This is a new Middle East we live in. The belief that a 
            resolution to the Palestinian issue will take care of all 
            outstanding crises in the region is no longer palpable.
               
            The second 
            folder, the war of choice in Iraq, has created new realities, drawn 
            new battle lines, and resurrected age-old distrust and sectarian 
            strife. Iraqis say that nearly 1.3 million people have died since 
            the United States invaded on March 19, 2003 (according to the UN, 
            some 1.7 million Iraqis died due to the 1990-2003 UN sanctions).   
            Those who 
            could, fled for their lives — to the order of some 4.5 million 
            Iraqis now begging for jobs on the doorsteps of western and Arab 
            countries.   
            The plight 
            of Iraqis since the invasion is well-documented and serves as an 
            immediate and recurring indictment of US foreign policy. However, 
            one issue that is yet to be conclusively addressed is America's 
            blatant disregard for human rights and war conventions, with 
            particular emphasis on the horrors visited on Iraqis in the 
            notorious Abu-Ghraib prison.   
            Well before 
            the abuses in Abu-Ghraib came to light, Iraqis had already reported 
            that US forces had covered up abuses at the notorious prison. The 
            Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT), a NGO working with refugees and 
            promoting peace initiatives, published on the group's website a long 
            list of allegations of "verbal, physical, and psychological abuse 
            inflicted on Iraqis by US forces."   
            But the 
            media — and the US administration — chose to look the other way 
            until journalist Seymour Hersh and others published photos proving 
            illicit interrogation techniques at the prison.   
            At the time, 
            US officials who had seen the extensive photographic and video 
            evidence said they could not allow such material to become public 
            domain because the severity and inhumanity of US torture techniques 
            would tarnish America's record.   
            Perhaps the 
            picture would show that the US military has conducted itself in much 
            the same as a pariah state — like Rwanda, North Korea, or Nazi 
            Germany — would.   
            
            Obama's Old Promises, New Hopes 
            The pictures 
            and videos will likely surface despite the protestations of Major 
            General Antonio Taguba, the former army officer who conducted an 
            inquiry into the Abu-Ghraib torture in Iraq. He did admit however 
            that the pictures showed every type of "indecency", and then some. 
            Choosing the word indecency to describe the rape and torture in Iraq 
            is tantamount to my choosing to call the Holocaust a bar fight or 
            the 3,000 deaths in 9/11 an airline glitch. 
            I would do 
            neither, of course; the crimes of the Holocaust are inescapable 
            realities, while the crimes committed on 9/11 are acts of wholesale 
            murder.   
            When he 
            addresses the Muslim world, Obama must be made to answer why US 
            officials have actively participated in the abscondence of evidence 
            which indicts official policy and US misconduct.   
            British 
            commanders, who were until recently based in Basra, have been 
            condemning the Americans' heavy-handed and disproportionate military 
            tactics in Iraq. According to the Telegraph's Sean Rayment, a 
            British officer, "who agreed to the interview on the condition of 
            anonymity, said that part of the problem was that American troops 
            viewed Iraqis as 'untermenschen' — the Nazi expression for 
            'sub-humans'. (Untermenschen is the popular term a certain Adolf 
            Hitler used to express his disdain for what he termed the "inferior" 
            Jews in Mein Kamp.)   
            "They are 
            not concerned about the Iraqi loss of life in the way the British 
            are. Their attitude towards the Iraqis is tragic, it's awful." 
            The British 
            officer accused the US Military of targeting "terrorists" even if 
            they are located in densely-populated civilian areas: "They may well 
            kill the terrorists in the barrage but they will also kill and maim 
            innocent civilians. That has been their response on a number of 
            occasions. It is trite, but American troops do shoot first and ask 
            questions later. They are very concerned about taking casualties and 
            have even trained their guns on British troops, which has led to 
            some confrontations between soldiers," the Telegraph reported in 
            2004.   
            
            Consequently, if the US Military, which can be considered the 
            military hand of the US government, considers Iraqis as inferior 
            beings, it is then academic to extrapolate that US lawmakers view 
            Iraqis as lesser people. Perhaps that helps explain why the Bush — 
            and now the Obama administration — is so fearful of releasing the 
            Abu-Ghraib pictures.   
            As an 
            African American, Obama is sure to understand how racism and 
            disregard for human rights allowed slavery to flourish in America. 
            He should draw from the experiences of civil rights leaders in 
            Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Mississippi, and other states to 
            understand that if criminals are not brought to justice, hatred and 
            distrust will continue to thrive. Obama should look to the South 
            African model of truth and reconciliation.   
            The world 
            community is made to watch re-broadcast footage of Nazi atrocities 
            against six million innocent Jews during the Holocaust; images of 
            the World Trade Center and mention of the 3,000 killed on 9/11 are 
            re-broadcast in North American media. But by keeping the Abu-Ghraib 
            pictures under lock and key, Obama is signalling that stories of 
            atrocities against Muslims and Arabs must be kept buried like the 
            hatchet, perhaps in the hopes that the blemish on the West will 
            somehow be erased.   
            The Middle 
            East is a region where histories live on in the daily lives of its 
            people; if the US president hopes to make in-roads, he should start 
            by apologizing for Abu-Ghraib.   
            
            
            Obama has his work cut out for him in Cairo. 
            
            (IslamOnline.net)   
            
            
            Aexander Gainem 
            is a journalist and commentator  
            
            
            who has written on  
            
            
            Middle Eastern affairs since 2001   
              
              
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