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What 'International Community' Are We Talking About?
By Farish A. Noor
Politics, particularly of the
international variety, is often
best served on a bed of dubious
generalities. Witness the
spectacular affront on human
rights worldwide occassioned by
the so-called 'War on Terror'; a
dubious artificial construct if
there ever was one. Thus far we
have been fed a steady dose of
lukewarm political dishes
likewise predicated on amorphous
concepts like 'freedom',
'liberty', 'humanity' and such
like. Little effort has been put
to filling out these grand
concepts and telling us exactly
what is the category of 'human'
that we are fighting for.
At the moment there is in
circulation yet another
grandiose concept that sounds
too good to be true: The
'International Community'. We
dont exactly know who or what
this community is, but
apparently this community is
quite annoyed with the
government of Iran for doing
what other governments in other
parts of the world have been
doing all along: developing the
know-how and technological base
for the development of nuclear
energy as well as nuclear
weapons.
In this respect Iran is merely
the latest member of a steadily
growing club of nations that
includes the United States of
America, Britain, France,
Russia, China, India and
Pakistan. Other members have
chosen to conceal their
membership for fear of courting
the jealousy of their neighbours:
Israel being a case in point,
which the world knows already
has nuclear weapons capability
for a long time.
Nonetheless it would appear that
the entry of Iran into the
global nuclear club has incurred
the wrath of the 'International
Community'. President Bush
Junior, the current occupant of
the White House, seems to have
intimate knowledge and relations
with this 'international
community' as he keeps referring
to it in his speeches and
diatribes against intransigent
Iran. The 'International
community', the President
informs us, is deeply worried
about Iran's nuclear capability.
Then came the warning that the
'international community' will
not rest till the question of
Iran's nuclear status is
satisfactorily resolved. Finally
there has come the warning from
the 'international community'
that Iran's nuclear programme
will not be tolerated and that
decisive steps will be taken to
ensure that Iran does not go
fully nuclear.
Where does this near-mythical
'international community'
reside? One wonders how come
President Bush alone seems so
close to this invisible
community and knows so much
about its secrets. Is President
Bush a secret member of this
'international community'
himself? Is, God forbid, the
'international community'
actually hiding in his cupboard
in his office?
If so, then this mysterious
community has to be rather small
indeed. Analysts and researchers
have been looking for this
fabulous international community
for some time now. Apparently it
is not found in the Assembly of
the United Nations, for thus far
the members of the UN have not
spoken with a unilateral voice
on the issue of Iran and her
acquisition of nuclear arms and
technology. At global forums and
international forums one has not
caught sight of this nebulous
community either.
As time wears on, it has become
evident that the 'International
Community' that President Bush
keeps talking about is made up
of himself, his aides and allies
and a handful of subservient
middle-power states hovering
around Western Europe that dont
seem to have an independent
foreign policy of their own. If
the 'International Community'
that President Bush talks about
refers to the USA, Britain,
France and a few other West
European middle powers, then one
can easily point out that it
hardly ammounts to any
international community at all.
(They could have at least paid
lip service to political
correctness and invite at least
one petty African or Asian state
to join in the gang.)
So it would appear that all this
rhetorical pyrotechnics about
the concern and efforts of the
'international community' boils
down to the unilateral efforts
and ambitions of a sole
superpower with a handful of
other willing crony states in
tow. Like the other grand
notions and cloudy ideas that
have been barterred by the USA
of late, it would appear as
little more than a guise for
American unilateralism thinly
dressed in rainbow colours to
lend it an air of diversity.
The rest of the real world on
the other hand - that means the
rest of the planet that may not
figure all that prominently on
President Bush's mental map -
seems to be more ambivalent
about the Iranian nuclear
programme; and few Asian,
African, Arab or Latin American
countries have shown any
discomfort at Irans new status.
Perhaps the reason for this is
the simple fact that other
Asian, African and Latin
American countries have not
tried to meddle in Iran's
domestic affairs or attempted to
interfere in the country's
internal politics.
Listening to the rhetoric of the
'international community' that
bears the heavy stamp of America
and Americanism, one cannot help
but make the same comparison
with the title of the American
sports tournament dubbed 'the
World Series'. The title sounds
typically American and
pretentious enough, with its
claim to global significance and
import. But someone ought to
remind the Americans that when
they play out their 'World
Series' they are in fact playing
only with themselves. A case of
deja vu perhaps?
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