"We Are Not Allies, We Are Still The Infidels"
By Major General Jerry Curry, USA, Ret. Published:
The
great British poet Rudyard Kipling, understanding todays situation in
Afghanistan better than our State Department wrote, "I have eaten your
bread and salt. I have drunk your water and wine. The deaths ye died I
have watched beside. And the lives ye led were mine."
There
are two points the President and the Secretaries of State and Defense
may want to keep in mind as they evaluate future problems in the Middle
East and How to successfully address them. Both are easiest illustrated
by real life happenings.
Many
years ago I attended the Infantry officer Advanced Course at Fort
Benning, Georgia. Probably ten percent of the students attending that
ten month course of instruction were from foreign countries. For about
half of the course my table mate was an Arab. We studied together,
completed homework assignments together, got to know each other's
families and generally enjoyed each other's company.
Part
of that time we students were immersed in reading about, researching
and discussing wars and problems of the Middle East. By this time my
Arab Classmate and I had, I thought, become close friends. A question
popped into my mind and without evaluating it I said, I have a question
to ask you, but you may find it a little impertinent . or, perhaps,
offensive.
That's
quite alright, he replied. We know each other well enough to be honest
with each other. So go ahead and ask your question.
Well,
I began. Each time you Arabs start a war with Israel, they beat your
socks off. Why don't you learn your lesson and quit making war on them?
The
words hadn't passed my lips before I knew that I shouldn't have asked
that particular question. But I was wrong. My Arab officer friend didn't
get
angry. He didn't even think before replying.
My
dear friend, he said in his British accent, You are absolutely right.
Each time we attack the Israelis they whip our asses. But have you
noticed that with each loss we get better. We get whipped not as badly
as in the war before.
Then he got a faraway look in his eyes, pounded on the table and said, Sometime in the next thousand years . we will win!
Up
until then I had never thought in terms of a thousand years, and I
don'tthink I'm very good at it today. But for those formulating foreign
and defense policy for the nation, it is worth making the effort. For it
is difficult to think in terms of the immediate future while
negotiating with a nation whose leaders are thinking in terms of
hundreds or thousands of years.
Point
two: during the first Gulf War U.S. and Arab forces fought side by side
and some of the officers became close friends. When the war ended in
victory there was a celebration in the officers' club with everyone
congratulating each other. A lot of handshaking and hugging was going
on. It was a time of displaying real brotherly love. Seeing this, one of
the senior Arab generals felt the need to set the record straight.
Look, he said to a small cluster of American generals. We have fought
together and some of us have died together. I know you feel that makes
us brothers. But that is not the way it is in my world.
He
looked around the circle making eye contact with all of them. I don't
want to see you hurt so I need to share this with you. There will be no
tomorrow for us jointly. No matter how much you have helped my country
and you came and helped us when we desperately needed your help and no
matter how friendly you feel toward us, we are still Muslims and you are
still Christians. That means that in our eyes, we can never be
brothers. I'm sorry but to us, you will always be Infidels!
And
so we Infidels have liberated Iraq and Afghanistan, but we have not
made their countries nor their people depositories of freedom and
liberty. No matter how hard we work to rebuild their governments,
infrastructure, educational and medical institutions, and no matter how
desperately they need our help as The Arab general pointedly noted we
can never be brothers to each other.
Also,
I learned what Kipling meant when he wrote, "East is East, and West is
West, and never the twain shall meet." He was pointing out to the
western world that to Muslims, we Christians will always be infidels!