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‘Us’ and ‘Them’ (Part 2 of 5): The tribes of mercantilism and reform
Reform is perhaps the most
noble, and trying, process that one can engage in— reforming one’s self, or
perhaps aspiring to reform one’s country or even the world. Is reform possible,
however, in the Arab world? And can this be done in the absence of a proactive
reform process in the “West”? Since the Crusaders, this part of the world, the
so-called “Orient” or the “East”, has shared an interactive relationship with
the so-called “West”, one rooted in a common hierarchal ideology and similar
patterns of thought. It’s a case of the Bedouin dealing with the mercantilist,
and vice versa. Although mercantilism, or economic nationalism, is said to have
ended with the advent of Adam Smith in the 18th century, it was only formalized
with the GATT Agreement in 1947.
The game is a zero-sum game. The gain of one country is invariably the loss of
another. Therefore all efforts must be taken to ensure that the “other” side (in
this case, ‘us’) remains weak and even helpless. One could look back at the
Sykes-Picot Agreement dividing the region into modern ‘nation-states’, even
though they lacked the depth of a nation and the socio-economic and political
structure of a state. Promises made by ‘them’ to encourage rebellion against the
Ottomans were broken and the Balfour Declaration paved the way for a Jewish
state. Attempts at reform since Mohammad Ali and the Arab renaissance thinkers
have been crushed, along with the principles of the Magna Carta, the French
Revolution and the United States Constitution, as if each side brings out the
worst in the ‘other’. The other side (‘us’) has been dealing with this situation
as the bedouin do—each tribe, or even each sheikh, for himself. Both sides, now
seeing eye to eye, are being driven by greed and power at the expense of the
general good, ‘here’ and ‘there’. To quote Amin Maalouf from his Crusades
Through Arab Eyes, “Patriotic sentiments were thus held in abeyance and the
local potentates arrived, with faced smiles, to present their gifts and to pay
homage. Kiss any arm you cannot break, a local proverb runs, and pray to God to
break it.”
Margaret McGilvary, the secretary of the Beirut chapter of the Red Cross during
World War I, states in her book, The Dawn of a New Era in Syria, that “Syria*
is one of the many small nations that has staked her future on America’s good
faith... and so great is Syria’s confidence in America’s loyalty to Wilson’s
principles that she is willing to entrust her national existence into our
keeping [keeping Syria undivided].” She goes on to say that “if Syria’s right to
self-determination is disregarded, and the nation is forced under an
administration that is growingly unpopular, it is a foregone conclusion that the
most desirable types of Syrian citizens will emigrate... then indeed Syria is
doomed.” The United States, seen by many here as a beacon of light, slowly but
surely showed the same face as Britain and France at the time. Since then, the
Bedouin and the Mercantilist have been ruling both worlds, which is what has
brought us to where we are today. The Mercantilist world is at times enlarged to
represent a wider interest group and sometimes a nation-state, while the Bedouin
world shrinks to represent the smallest unit in the tribe and, most of the time,
the ‘ruler’ alone. McGilvary also pointed out in her book that “the present
crying need is a complete reorganization of the administration, and the removal
from office of those local officials allowed by the Occupied Enemy Territory
Administration (OETA) to remain in office. They are almost without exception
“grafters and “crooks”. Syria needs a political house-cleaning... and not the
worst type of political boss.”
Thus the contract was forged—mediocre local tyrants lacking legality, yet
supported by a greedy Mercantilist West. Now a new deal is being formulated
between an imperialist West, that lacks moral authority and mediocre
“reformists” that lack both roots and legitimacy, and are behaving as the
Bedouins of Lawrence did. This, however, does not answer the fundamental
question of why we have not been able to evolve, reform or do our own
“house-cleaning.” To answer that, we need to first explore what is wrong with
‘us’...
*
Syria at the time included Lebanon, Palestine and Jordan
See the next issue of Ii
Monthly for Part II of this editorial series
Jawad Adra Managing Partner
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Current Statistics
Private and tourist cars
• 14,787 was the number of new private and tourist cars sold in 2003.
December registered the highest car sales (1,503) and the best-selling car was
the Nissan, with 2,504 of them sold that year.
Beetroot cultivation
• LL 28 billion ($18.6 million) will be the cost of subsidizing beetroot
cultivation in 2004. The amount of land allocated in the Beka’a alone reached
30,000 dunums.
Middle East Airlines (MEA)
• LL 552 million ($366,000) in expenses were incurred by MEA for three private
trips requested by the Lebanese government. One trip was to Kerman in Iran,
following an earthquake and the two other trips were to Benin, following a plane
crash that killed many Lebanese citizens.
Judges
• 8 judges retired in 2003. Seven of them had
reached the legal retirement age (68) and one requested early retirement. Four
of the judges belong to the Judicial Court, two to the Majlis al Shura and two
to the Court of Audit. In addition, 21 judges were appointed to the judicial
cadre in 2003. |