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FORESIGHT AND CONNECTING THE DOTS: The politics of worldviews and disowned selves/collectivities
By Sohail Inayatullah
FORESIGHT
For the foresight practitioner,
what is most stunning about the
war in Iraq, the recent war in
Lebanon and the war on terror is
the lack of capacity of Western
governments to connect the dots.
While surveillance continues to
heighten, the British Prime
Minister Tony Blair appears to
have forgotten part two of his
formula, that is, tough on
crime/terror and tough on the
causes of crime/ terror. The
links between recent foiled
terror attacks in England and
the war against Lebanon (or
Hezbollah) are not noticed.
While radio stations take calls
by Muslims asking for a fairer
more balanced – reasonable and
rational – policy and strategy
from England, Blair continues to
tow the American line.
Taking the future into account,
the American response appears
neither reasonable nor rational.
That is, we have seen that
sanctions and wars do not
isolate particular groups -
Serbs have not become more
democratic since they were
bombed (the extreme right
remains ever alive), and Iraq
certainly is far from having
become democratic; rather it is
in a midst of a civil war and
may have become a haven for
terrorists –the exact opposite
of USA strategy and planning
goals. Bombing people into
democracy does not appear to be
a viable strategy; in fact, the
violence becomes internalized,
and is considered by those
bombed as the rational
strategy.
However, the memory of World War
II remains – total destruction
followed by rebuilding. Generals
appear to continue to fight
today’s wars with the memory of
previous wars. What made the
German experience different was
near total annihilation followed
by a real hearts and minds
rebuilding. The war in Lebanon
has weakened if not destroyed
any possibility of hearts and
minds changing. Indeed,
conspiracy theories, already the
dominant currency in the Arab
world, have become even more
inflated.
Irrespective of one’s views
toward Al-Qaeda – their demand
of withdrawal of western armies
from the Arabian Peninsula
appear reasonable. Earlier, they
offered a ceasefire in Iraq, and
yet, most reasonable and
rational parties would look
toward dialogue. Of course, the
trauma of 9/11 in the USA – the
pain of the families who lost
loved ones along with the shock
of an attack on the world’s
imperial power removes any
chance of a dialogue.
Or is there some other worldview
that is so forceful that
rationality is lost, something
deeper than trauma as well. We
know that after the USA initial
victory in Iraq, the entire
Iraqi army was disbanded:
400,000 solders fired. Certainly
a bit of foresight could see
that unemployed, angry,
dishonored men would provide a
reserve army for outside
recruiters. Iraq, once
authoritarian and totalitarian,
is now the Wild West - the site
of the terrorism and Sunni-Shia
fault lines. But it was not the
rational that was victorious but
a desire for revenge and the
deep Orientalism of the victors,
i.e. Iraqis are inferior.
Subsequent rapes and prisoner
abuse point this out.
Orientalism creates the
framework wherein others are
reduced to sub-humanity. In
short: war others all.
OTHER DISCOURSES
What are other discourses that
explain the irrationality of
today’s geo-politics?
First, as mentioned above is
Orientalism – they are
barbaric, evil, to be destroyed.
A “new” form of this is extreme
evangelism, the hope for a
united Israel, leading to
Armageddon – with two billion to
die – followed by the return of
Jesus, and heaven on Earth. It
appears that the President of
the USA, Bush supports this
view. Secondly, the inverse
holds true also. The extreme
Islamic version of this appears
to be supported by the President
of Iran, who too waits for the
12th Imam to come
back and save the world.
A
third related discourse is that
of the triumph of democracy –
eventually a new middle east
will emerge once Iraqis,
Hezbollah, and others discover
the joys of Westernism. In the
Iranian case, however, it is the
CIA disposal of the Iranian
prime-minister Mohammad
Mossadegh
in1953 that is a more recent
memory, not to the mention the
Iranian’s own desire for Empire.
At another level, this is merely
the paradigm of good versus evil
being played out in the body
politic. American society lives
out this drama and cannot rest
unless this struggle is played
on CNN nightly and now far more
disturbingly on Fox News. That
is, the USA needs an enemy to
exist – with the fall of Russia;
Islam has taken its place. Next
will be China and East Asia in
general. Islam, as part of the
Judaeo-Christian- tradition (the
three brothers), is also part of
the good-evil field.
Perhaps far saner discourses are
the feminist and the
environmentalist. War itself is
the problem – it is inequitable,
killing the most vulnerable on
each side. War is not an equal
opportunity killer, as we have
seen in Lebanon and in Israel.
The environment too suffers –
mountains are destroyed, and now
with the Oil spill in Lebanon,
water too is destroyed. Nature
is the victim of patriarchy.
Democracies do not attack
democracies because they are
busy attacking ‘lesser forms of
governance’, ‘more vulnerable
humans,’ and ‘nature herself,’
as Ivana Milojevic has argued (www.metafuture.org)
Equally valuable is the work of
Hal and Sidra Stone (http://www.enotalone.com/authors.php?aid=14)
[1] with their
focus on disowned selves. The
self disowned is the problem; it
is seen as ‘out there’,
objective and in need of
colonization, conversion or
destruction. However, this
objective external reality is
created by the evolution of the
dominant self – thus extreme
Islam is the disowned self of
the West.
Less internal is classic
political-economy. We know that
who gains from conflict are the
arms merchants underwritten by
the usual suspects: USA,
Britain, Israel, China and
France.
These discourses help explain
the irrationality – why the USA
would support a war that will
only create more terrorism, i.e.
dysfunctionality will be met by
more dysfunctionality. With a
youth boom predicted to continue
for the next 20 years in the
Arabian Peninsula, we can see
that more rather than less war
is likely.
Solving Israel-Palestine on
terms of dignity for the
Palestinians remains the issue.
It is absolutely stunning that
there are still refugee camps in
Lebanon – these are now
permanent camps. Generations of
pathology have been created and
will continue to be created. The
neural pathways of Palestinians
and Israelis remain focused on
fear and war – that is what is
now normal. They may not even be
able to find a solution
themselves – it may require a
super-ordinate power, i.e. no
more funding to either group
until they find systemic
solutions. We know that
worldview/cultural solutions
will take much longer – i.e.
creating identities not based on
fear and revenge but on
forgiveness.
GLOBAL LEVEL – MOVING FORWARD
While there are certainly
excellent ways forward, as for
example developed by Johan
Galtung through his Transcend
conflict resolution method (www.transcend.org)[2],
at the global level, I believe
we cannot move forward in our
human evolution until this
problem is solved. Hoping that a
massive war will solve it
forgets that war creates more
memories, more stories of
revenge and hate – healing does
not occur. For Israel to
succeed, or for the Israeli
haters to succeed, every last
person must die. Who has the
stomach for that, not to mention
morality? Yet, without
transformation we face more
irrational bleeding, fighting
with no solutions in sight, only
temporary winners and losers.
Arab populations remain lost in
conspiracy theories, on the
problem of Israel, or when that
is solved (on the problem of the
Kurd, or Shia, or…)
Most leaders cannot see this –
their worldview does not allow
it. Perhaps this is just our
evolutionary stage – we remain
locked in vicious lock-ins – but
if we are to survive, certainly
more robust global governance is
needed, as well as ways to move
past our worldviews of
co-dependency, of good and evil,
and Armageddon. Until then, our
disowned selves keep coming back
to kill. Can we listen and
change?
If not, perhaps this poem by
Patricia Kelly will remind us
why we must!
Bomblet meditation
The let of the past was a dainty
diminutive.
Anklets jingled on chubby legs
Circlets of flowers crowned gods
and brides
Ringlets flounced on moppets’
heads.
‘Bomblets’ are a lethal present.
Metal shards shatter
anklets and circlets
ringlets and moppets
brides and gods
and language
alike.
[1]
Essential here is the
work of Hal and Sidra
Stone. They focus on the
disowned selves – selves
that we push away as we
focus on particular
identities. For
academics, in the search
for the purity of truth,
the business self is
pushed away. Classically
for the corporate world,
the ethical self is
pushed away in the drive
for profits. Integrating
these various selves may
be the most important
challenge for academics.
See
http://www.enotalone.com/authors.php?aid=14
[2]
See Johan Galtung, The
Middle East: Building
Blocks for Peace.
Journal of Futures
Studies. Vol 11, No2,
November 2006.
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