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Arab Ex-Knesset Member Highlights Diminishing US Role In World Affai

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  • Arab Ex-Knesset Member Highlights Diminishing US Role In World Affai

    ARAB EX-KNESSET MEMBER HIGHLIGHTS DIMINISHING US ROLE IN WORLD AFFAIRS
    By Elias Sakr and Eugene Yukin

    Daily Star
    Sept 10 2008
    Lebanon

    BEIRUT: The world's changing power dynamics during the Bush
    administration era were the focus of a lecture by former Arab-Israeli
    MP Azmi Bishara before a full audience at Hamra's Al-Madina Theater
    on Monday evening. In his lecture - entitled "What's the role for
    America after Bush?" - Bishara noted that the United States remains
    the world's sole superpower but has seen its role diminish since 2005
    with the emergence of Russia and China among other countries as rising
    world powers willing to guard their interests.

    Bishara said this change in the world's power dynamics began in the
    late 1990s before it was brought to a halt following the September 11,
    2001, attacks.

    According to Bishara, US military spending, which constitutes 45
    percent of total global expenditure on armament and only 4 percent
    of the country's gross domestic product, enforces its status as a
    super power.

    Bishara highlighted the Russia-Georgia crisis as an indication of
    Moscow's determination to firmly defend its interests.

    "The process of regaining that sense of national pride and greatness
    started in 1999 when [Prime Minister] Vladimir Putin harshly crushed
    all opposition in Chechnya, making it clear Russia wouldn't tolerate
    any independence movement," he said, adding that China also guarded
    its interests in Sudan recently by opposing US foreign policy.

    Bishara noted that China's disregard for human rights by enforcing
    child labor and its harm to the environment resembles Europe's history
    during the rise of colonialism.

    He stressed that unlike the Cold War period, today's confrontations
    between the United States and other rising powers indicate conflicting
    interests, not ideologies.

    "Today no one claims that he's trying to spread an ideology aiming
    to better humanity, fight evil and preserve the welfare of people,
    it's only a matter of interests," said Bishara.

    Furthermore, he added that before 2005 the American neoconservatives
    had embraced the communist view of spreading change around the world
    and claimed "nation building" as a pretext to change foreign regimes
    by force.

    Bishara also emphasized that the globalization process had bad
    consequences on developing countries.

    "Economic help brought by capitalist states to Third World countries
    on condition of imposing reforms such as privatization and tax-barrier
    abolition was of disastrous results," he said.

    Given the dreadful position of Arab countries on the political
    and economic map, Bishara blamed the lack of strategic planning by
    the Arab world's leaders and urged them to care for their nation's
    interests as the sole means to bring positive change and growth.

    Bishara pointed to Turkey's recent efforts to reconcile with Armenia
    and Azerbaijan in order to build a new oil pipeline reaching the
    Mediterranean Sea without the need to pass though Russia's territory.

    "Turkey presents an example that Arab states should follow," he said.

    Following his visit to Syria in 2006 Bishara was charged by Israeli
    prosecutors with treason and espionage.

    He fled Israel in April 2007 amid allegations that he had advised
    Hizbullah and met with foreign agents during the summer 2006 war
    in Lebanon.

    Bishara denied spying for Hizbullah and recalled his criticism of
    the group's shelling of Arab villages in Israel.

    Bishara, who headed the small National Democratic Assembly (Balad)
    party, was Israel's first Arab citizen to run for the post of premier
    in 1999.

    Concerning the upcoming US presidential elections, Bishara said he
    believed that an Obama victory would not lead to any significant
    changes regarding American policy toward the Arab world and the
    Palestinians.

    Bishara's lecture was the first in a series of gatherings that
    Al-Madina Theater is organizing this month to commemorate the 60th
    anniversary of the Nakba. The events will include a movie screening
    and a poetry night.
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