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The fantasies of power

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  • The fantasies of power

    World Magazine
    May 11 2007


    The fantasies of power

    Interview: The United States has a complex history in the Middle
    East, says author Michael Oren, and it goes back to the beginning of
    the republic | Marvin Olasky


    Michael Oren's Power, Faith and Fantasy: America in the Middle East,
    1776 to the Present (Norton, 2007) tells in 778 pages the fascinating
    story of a 230-year-long U.S. encounter with Muslims and Israel. For
    example, Woodrow Wilson's key advisor, Col. Edward House, examined
    the seeds of Arab/Jewish conflict and called the small land "a
    breeding place for future wars."

    Oren has his own colorful history. Born in New Jersey in 1955, he
    graduated from Princeton and Columbia universities but then moved to
    Israel in 1979 and became a paratrooper in the Israel Defense Forces,
    reaching the rank of major. He now lives with his wife and three
    children in Jerusalem, where he is a senior fellow at the Shalem
    Center, a Jerusalem research and educational institute.

    WORLD: Why was John Adams complaining during the 1780s that
    "Christendom has made cowards of all their sailors before the
    standard of Mahomet"?

    OREN: Adams was referring to the centuries-old European custom of
    paying off the Barbary pirates. The so-called Barbary States of North
    Africa - today's Morocco, Tunisia, Libya, and Algeria - were sending
    pirates to attack Western merchant ships in the Mediterranean,
    plundering their cargoes and enslaving their crews. After declaring
    independence from Britain, and consequently forfeiting the protection
    of the Royal Navy, the United States became a prime target for these
    brigands. By 1785, 127 American sailors had been captured, presenting
    the nascent United States with its first hostage crisis.

    The pirates, more menacingly, posed an existential threat to the
    United States' fragile economy, which heavily depended on the
    Mediterranean trade. And even if it wanted to fight back, the United
    States lacked a navy or even a central government capable of creating
    naval power. Indeed, the mortal danger from the Middle East played a
    central role in convincing Americans to unite under a Constitution in
    1789 and, five years later, to construct a navy specifically for
    combat in the Middle East.

    WORLD: So when the ships were ready, the United States fought?

    OREN: No, Americans hesitated to go to war in the distant region, and
    during his presidency, John Adams was spending as much as one-fifth
    of his federal revenues on Middle Eastern bribes. Thomas Jefferson,
    by contrast, believed that this was a waste of money - that bribing the
    pirates would only induce them to further piracy and that Americans,
    unlike Europeans, had a "temper" that would not abide blackmail.
    Having tried and failed to rally the European countries into a
    coalition against Barbary, Jefferson, assuming the presidency in
    1801, immediately went to war in the Middle East.

    WORLD: Instant victory?

    OREN: Many setbacks occurred before the Marines marched "to the
    shores of Tripoli" in 1805, and before Stephen Decatur - for whom some
    27 cities are named in the United States - forced the pirates to
    surrender at cannon-point in 1815. The United States had fought its
    first and longest foreign war in the Middle East, and proved that
    Americans would not be "cowards before the standard of Mahomet."

    WORLD: Did Arab slave-trading get Americans to think about their own
    actions? You write that Abraham Lincoln listed James Riley's
    Sufferings in Africa, along with the Bible and Pilgrim's Progress, as
    one of the books that most shaped his life and thinking.

    OREN: Riley, a 38-year-old Connecticut sea captain and veteran of the
    war of 1812, was shipwrecked off the Spanish Saharan coast in 1815
    and captured by Arabs who starved and tortured him. He nevertheless
    escaped and returned to write his memoirs, the final chapter of which
    contains an impassioned plea to outlaw the enslavement of Africans in
    America.

    Riley could not countenance the thought that his own countrymen would
    mistreat human beings the way the Arabs had abused him. His book
    became a national sensation and was especially popular among
    slavery's Abolitionist opponents.

    WORLD: You note that American missionaries throughout the 19th
    century established many churches within the Ottoman Empire. What
    were the results?

    OREN: The first American missionaries, Pliny Fisk and Levi Parsons,
    left Boston for the Middle East in 1819. Their objectives were to
    help recreate the Jewish state in Palestine and to convert the
    region's Muslim and Eastern Christian peoples. They soon discovered,
    however, that Jews did not want to ingather under their auspices, and
    proselytizing Muslims was a capital offense.

    Hundreds of missionaries followed but fared no better. One American,
    writing in the 1860s, lamented, "Christian Missions make no more
    impression upon Islam than the winds of the desert upon the cliffs of
    Mount Sinai."

    WORLD: So they failed?

    OREN: They failed to convert large numbers of Middle Easterners, but
    American missionaries had a major impact on the region through the
    building of modern schools - at first primary and secondary schools,
    and then Western-style universities. Through institutions such as the
    American University in Beirut, the missionaries began to teach the
    "Gospel of Americanism" - patriotism, civic virtues, and democracy.

    They also became primary proponents of Arab nationalism, a movement
    destined to change the political map of the Middle East.

    WORLD: One objective of U.S. foreign policy used to be to preserve,
    in Theodore Roosevelt's words, "the just rights" of American
    missionaries in the Middle East . . .

    OREN: Twice, in 1903 and 1904, Roosevelt dispatched battleships to
    the Middle East in response to reports of Ottoman mistreatment of
    American missionaries. The Turkish defeat in the First World War and
    their replacement by British and French colonialist administrators
    meant that American missionaries could run their schools and
    hospitals relatively free of threat.

    WORLD: But at one critical juncture that desire to protect
    missionaries contributed to inaction. Tell us about American reaction
    to the 1915 Turkish jihad of over 1 million Armenians.

    OREN: The first reports of the massacre of Armenian civilians by the
    Turkish military reached the State Department in the early spring of
    1915. The United States was then neutral in World War I and, as such,
    the government was reluctant to intervene on the Armenians' behalf.

    WORLD: Was President Wilson particularly reluctant?

    OREN: Even when the country entered the war against Germany and
    Austria-Hungary in April 1917, Washington deliberated over whether to
    declare war against Turkey. A solid majority of both Houses of
    Congress were strongly in favor of it, and Teddy Roosevelt insisted
    that the slogan "making the world safe for democracy" was meaningless
    unless America saved the Armenians. But Woodrow Wilson, the grandson
    and son of Presbyterian ministers, was extremely close to the
    missionaries. And the missionaries warned him that if he went to war
    in the Middle East, the Turks would murder the missionaries much as
    they had the Armenians.

    WORLD: So he didn't do anything . . .

    OREN: Wilson decided to keep America out of the Middle Eastern war.
    His response contrasted sharply with that of the American public.
    Many Americans felt a strong sense of responsibility for the
    Armenians, great numbers of whom had studied in American schools.

    WORLD: What's happened to that idea of making the world safe for
    missionaries?

    OREN: The missionaries maintained favorable relations with the Arab
    nationalist movements that achieved independence after World War II.
    It was only in the 1980s, with the ascendancy of Islamic extremist
    groups, all of which were deeply inimical to missionaries, that the
    danger resurfaced. By that time, however, the United States had
    established extremely close relations with the Saudis, who were among
    the extremists' primary sponsors. American missionaries have since
    become the targets for Islamist attacks, especially in Lebanon, while
    the United States has remained largely passive.

    Read Part II of the Michael Oren interview now ...

    http://www.worldmag.com/articles/12957
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