RECOMENDAMOS
- Real Instituto Elcano
- LATN
- Portal Estado Peruano

ARCHIVO EDITORIALES

POLITICA
Países
Organismos
Regiones
Situación General
Política Bilateral
Política Multilateral
Política Exterior
Otros temas

ECONOMIA
Inversiones y Comercio
Integración
Desarrollo
Negociaciones Económicas Multilaterales
Situación General
Otros temas

SEGURIDAD
Defensa
Seguridad Colectiva
Amenazas Globales
Situación General
Otros temas
DESARROLLO Y OTROS ASUNTOS
LINKS DE INTERES
Links del Perú
Links Internacionales

 


SEGURIDAD

FPIF Commentary

High Time Bush Defines the Enemy
By Ronald Bruce St John | August 2, 2004

Editor: John Gershman, Interhemispheric Resource Center

Immediately after 9/11, President Bush addressed the American people, defining policy in the simplest terms. “Every nation in every region now has a decision to make. Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists.” In declaring a War on Terrorism, he defiantly stated his intent to pursue nations providing aid or safe haven to terrorism, suggesting every nation had a decision to make on the issue.Three years later, the White House has yet to define clearly what constitutes a terrorist organization. The failure to do so has increasingly contributed to the administration’s limited success in making America and the world a safer place. Filling the gap, individuals and groups are adopting their own definitions of terrorism with worrying, potentially disastrous results.


Coalition of the Willing

The administration’s refusal to define terrorism served the White House well in the early days of the War on Terrorism. Employing terrorism as a catchall term for a potpourri of movements and organizations, Washington was in a position to label just about anyone opposed to its policies as a terrorist organization. Its subsequent inability to prove in a court of law, in the few cases accorded judicial procedure, that individuals and groups so identified were actually terrorists or terrorist organizations proved a later embarrassment.The failure to define terrorism, what could be termed the “Opaque Corollary” to the Bush Doctrine, also served the administration well in the run up to the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Desperately searching for recruits to its Coalition of the Willing, the White House was eager to add any number of diverse groups to the State Department’s terrorist list if it meant the host country might then support U.S. policy in Iraq. For example, the list of terrorist organizations in the current issue of the Patterns of Global Terrorism report includes the Anti-Imperialist Territorial Nuclei in Italy, the Great Islamic Raiders-Front in Turkey, Red Hand Defenders in Ireland, and the Riyadus-Salikhin Reconnaissance and Sabotage Battalion of Chechen Martyrs, a Chechen guerrilla group.None of these organizations was listed in the Patterns of Global Terrorism report issued just before 9/11, and none of them would appear to pose an immediate threat to the United States, certainly not on a par with al-Qaida. But all of them are recognized opposition groups in countries the White House courted for support as it prepared to invade Iraq.


Official Terrorist Groups

Since many people are not familiar with the Patterns of Global Terrorism report, it might be helpful here to discuss briefly its format and content. The report is issued annually by the U.S. Department of State, normally in the late spring of the year, and covers events in the previous year. For example, Patterns of Global Terrorism 2003 (www.state.gov) was first released in April 2004.Each report contains two lists of terrorist groups. The first is the group of “Designated Foreign Terrorist Organizations,” which an earlier report described as those groups “designated by the Secretary of State as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs), pursuant to section 219 of the Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996.” This designation carries legal consequences, as it is unlawful to provide funds or other material support to an FTO, and their representatives can be denied visas or otherwise excluded from the United States.The second list provides information on “Other Terrorist Groups,” which are loosely defined as terrorist groups active in the course of the year. In theory, terrorist groups whose activities were limited in the course of the year are not listed, but this distinction is honored in the breach. For example, the Abu Nidal organization is listed in the current report, but the accompanying text says it “has not staged a major attack against Western targets since the late 1980s.” There is also no suggestion in the report of non-Western attacks by the group in recent years. Abu Nidal died in 2002.Both lists provide a wide-ranging, varied record of most unlikely partners in terror. The list of “Designated Foreign Terrorist Organizations,” for example, includes Basque Fatherland and Liberty, the Communist Party of the Philippines/New People’s Army, and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. Similarly, the list of “Other Terrorist Groups” includes the Japanese Red Army, the Lord’s Resistance Army of Uganda, and the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement of Peru. As should be clear even to the casual observer, the bulk of the organizations on both lists share nothing in the way of background, ideology, objectives, or organization.Then there is the problem of volume. There are 76 groups on the latest list of official terrorist organizations, which is 32 more than were listed in 2000, a net gain of almost 75%. In a very real sense, the terrorist list is one of the few places the Bush administration has demonstrated a serious commitment to a policy of inclusion.America now has some 5 million people on its terrorism watch list. By listing virtually every terrorist organization in the world and every person in those organizations thought capable of a terrorist act, we have lost focus and created a bureaucratic nightmare. The Bush administration needs to define what terrorism is and which terrorist organizations pose a serious threat to the United States. Al-Qaida and its affiliates would be a good place to start.


War on Islam

The failure to define terrorism is producing other serious consequences. The Bush administration emphasized from day one that the War on Terrorism was not a war on Islam; however, administration supporters and others have increasingly defined it in exactly those terms. Buried in the heart of The 9/11 Commission Report is a shocking conclusion. In the chapter entitled, “What to Do?,” the Commission concludes the enemy is not just terrorism, what it terms “some generic evil,” but specifically Islamist terrorism [report’s emphasis]. With the stroke of a pen, the authors of the 9/11 report appear to have redefined the War on Terrorism, converting it into a War on Islamist terrorism alone.Three days before the 9/11 Commission released its report, the Committee on Present Danger (CPD), a group founded in the early days of the Cold War, announced its reactivation. Chaired by Senator Jon Kyl of Arizona, Senator Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, and former CIA director R. James Woolsey, CPD is a bipartisan group of mainly foreign policy hawks, including a number of well-known neoconservatives like Kenneth Adelman, Jeane Kirkpatrick, and Norman Podhoretz.In describing “The Nature of the Global Threat,” CPD explains on its website (www.fightingterror.org) that it has been reactivated “because of the threat posed to America--and democracy everywhere--by Islamist terror organizations.” Their posted Mission Statement reads in part: “Our mission is to educate the American people about the threat posed by a global Islamist terror movement; to counsel against appeasement and accommodation with terrorists.” In a Washington Post op-ed published on July 20, 2004, the same day as the CPD press conference, Senators Kyl and Lieberman argued “the world war against Islamic terrorism is the test of our time.”Substituting Islamist extremism for terrorism as the enemy, both the 9/11 Commission and the Committee on Present Danger appear to play into the hands of Osama bin Laden. He warned America is not really concerned about terrorism, but instead, is at war with Islam itself.


Islamist vs. Non-Islamist Terrorism

None of this makes any sense in the context of the administration’s report on the Patterns of Global Terrorism. The most recent report lists 76 organizations as either “Designated Foreign Terrorist Organizations” or “Other Terrorist Groups.” Of the total, only 36, less than half, are Islamic in orientation and membership. The remaining 40 groups, 53% of the total, have nothing to do with Islam. Examples of the latter are the Cambodian Freedom Fighters, Irish Republican Army, and Peru’s Sendero Luminoso.Equally important, of the 36 organizations that are Islamic in orientation and membership, 29 of them--or 80%--are country-specific. Examples are the Abu Sayyaf Group, Muslim separatists long active in the Philippines, and the Armed Islamic Group, seeking to establish a Muslim state in Algeria. At least six of the organizations in this category are focused on the India-Pakistan struggle for Kashmir, and another three are Chechen separatist groups. Five of the organizations are trying to coerce the Israeli government into changing its policies and vacating Palestinian territories.In short, while most of the 29 country-specific Islamic groups employ religion in support of their agenda, their goal is to persuade established governments to make significant political and territorial concessions. Moreover, while many of these groups sympathize with al-Qaida, area specialists agree that almost none of them appear to have command-and-control ties with the Osama bin Laden organization.


Time to Define Terrorism

The administration’s failure to define terrorism is contributing directly to the growing confusion about the nature of our enemies in the War on Terrorism. Struggling to show progress in the war, the White House has eagerly applied the al-Qaida label to virtually any Islamic group threatening terrorist attacks. With little or no proof, regional terrorist groups invariably have been labeled al-Qaida supporters or affiliates. In so doing, the administration has contributed to the false impression, despite data to the contrary in its own Patterns of Global Terrorism report, that the sole enemy is a global conspiracy of Islamist groups. An Islamist definition of terrorism plays well with conservative elements in the U.S. electorate, especially after the August 2004 attacks on Christian churches in Iraq; but it is clearly wrong as the government’s own terrorism report amply demonstrates.We are sliding toward disaster, identifying the wrong enemy and fighting the wrong war. The Bush administration needs to get America back on track, defining clearly the threat we face. At the same time, it needs to reach out to the Muslim community around the world, emphasizing this is not a war on Islam. Failing to do so, White House rhetoric stressing the War on Terrorism will last for years, if not decades, could become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Ronald Bruce St John

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(Ronald Bruce St John, an analyst for Foreign Policy in Focus, has published widely on Middle Eastern issues. His latest book on the region is Libya and the United States: Two Centuries of Strife (Penn Press, 2002).)

.:. subir
 


MARCO DE LA POLITICA EXTERIOR

ARCHIVO DOCUMENTOS 2007 - 2006 - 2005 - 2004 - 2003

Acuerdo Nacional Política Sexta

DISCURSOS

Perú: Discurso del Presidente de Alan García Pérez
28 de julio de 2007

- Día del Diplomático: discurso del Canciller José Antonio García Belaúnde 3 de agosto de 2007

- Día del Diplomático: discurso del Vicecanciller Embajador Gonzalo Gutiérrez 3 de agosto de 2007

- Discurso del Vicencanciller Gonzalo Gutiérres de Promo 2007 Asia,América y Europa 9 de agosto de 2007

Canciller: discurso de Año Nuevo
8 de enero, 2008

Intervención del Vicecanciller Secretario General Gonzalo Gutiérrez en el 62 período de la Asamblea General de la ONU
2 de octubre de 2007

COMUNICADOS Y DECLARACIONES
- Canciller saluda que autoridades chilenas ratifiquen respeto al Tratado de 1929

- Perú y Venezuela restablecen relaciones diplomáticas a nivel de Embajadores

- Comunicado conjunto de los cancilleres de Perú y Ecuador
22 de febrero de 2007

- Declaraciones de los presidentes Alan García y George Bush en la Casa Blanca 23 de abril de 2007

Perú-Guatemala: 150 años Visita oficial del Canciller Gerd Rosenthal 8 de mayo de 2007

Declaración Conjunta de los Presidentes de Perú y Bolivia Lima, 1 de agosto de 2007

Declaración Conjunta de los ministros de Relaciones Exteriores y de Defensa de Perú y Colombia en la I reunión 2+2
Bogotá, 13 de agosto de 2007

II Foro sobre la Iniciativa de la Cuenca del Pacífico Latinomericano
Declaración de Lima, 21 de agosto de 2007

Declaración Conjunta de los Ministros de Relaciones Exteriores del Perú y Rusia. Lima, 11 de setiembre de 2007

Comunicado sobre la 2a cumbre intercoreana
10 de octubre de 2007

Comunicado oficial sobre la situación en Myanmar
10 de octubre de 2007

Visita oficial de la Canciller de México al Perú
11 de octubre de 2007

Cumbre América Latina y el Caribe - Unión Europea
Definición de agenda
Lisboa, 10 de octubre de 2007

Gobierno condena asesinato de la ex-Primer Ministro de Pakistán, Benazir Bhutto.
27 de diciembre de 2007

ARTICULOS

NOTAS DE PRENSA
- Cancillería publica estudio sobre migrantes peruanos 1990-2005

- Presidente de Perú y Chile dan por terminado incidente generado por creación de región Arica-Parinacota

- Presidencia peruana del Consejo de Seguridad de la ONU
Noviembre de 2006

- Perú solicita al Consejo de seguridad de la ONU extensión del mandato de la Minustah
Feberero de 2007

- Visita oficial del Vicecanciller de Guatemala 13 de febrero de 2007

- Perú reconoció a Rusia como economía de mercado 19 de febrero de 2006

- Canciller García Belaúnde realiza visita de trabajo a México
19 de febrero de 2007

- Vicecanciller Gutiérrez realiza visita de trabajao a Japón
20 de febrero de 2007

- Alemania anuncia cooperación con Perú para negociación de acuerdo de asociación Unión Europea-CAN
19 de febrero de 2007

- Visita oficial de la Canciller de Ecuador
21 de febrero de 2007

- Perú-India: gobierno busca alianzas estratégicas con empresas de softaware
28 de febrero de 2007

- Perú-Corea del Sur: Memorandum de Entendimiento para informatizar proceso decisorio de Cancillería

- Canciller se entrevista con Comisaria de Relaciones Exteriores de la Unión Europea 6 de marzo de 2007

- Vicecanciller de Viet Nam realiza visita de trabajo 7 de marzo de 2007

- Visita de Estado del Presidente Alan García a Colombia Nota de Prensa
28 de marzo de 2007

- Perú ratifica ante OEA compromiso con Haití 26 de abril de 2007

- Reunión del Canciller García Belaúnde con los cancilleres de Estonia y Lituania 26 de abril de 2007

- Perú-OEA: desarrollo alternativo en la agenda de la Cicad
11 de mayo de 2007

- Perú-Unión Europea: acuerdo de cooperación 2007-2011
12 de mayo de 2007

- Visita oficial del Vicecanciller del Perú a Egipto 30 de mayo de 2007

- Visita de trabajo del Vicecanciller del Perú a Israel 2 de junio de 2007

- Reunión cumbre entre los presidentes de Perú y Ecuador y reunión interministerial 1 de junio de 2007

- Vicecanciller realizó visita de trabajo a Haití 8 de junio de 2007

- Perú-Paraguay: Visita de trabajo del Vicecanicller Embajador Gonzalo Gutiérrez 15 de junio de 2007

- Visita del Canciller José Antonio García Belaúnde a Portugal 25 de junio de 2007

- Visita del Canciller García Belaúnde a Polonia 26 de junio de 2007

- Visita del Canciller García Belaúnde a Eslovenia 29 de junio de 2007

- Cancillería, UNCTAD y PNUD suscriben documento de cooperación  técnica 27 de junio de 2007

- Visita de trabajo del Canciller García Belaúnde a Alemania Julio de 2007

- OEA: Perú expresa solidaridad con Colombia por el asesinato de parlamentarios secuestrados por las FARC 3 de julio de 2007

- Perú-Unión Europea y Bélgica: Visita de trabajo del Vicecanciller Gonzalo Gutiérrez 5 de julio de 2007

-Perú-Ecuador: Primera reunión del mecanismo 2+2 6 de julio de 2007

- Perú-Uruguay: reunión del mecanismo de consulta política 9 de julio de 2007

- Día del Diplomático
Reporte de compromisos
Nota de Prensa,3 de agosto de 2007

- Visita de la Secretraria de la CICTE
3 de agosto de 2007

- Segundo encuentro sobre financiamiento del terrorismo Cicte, Cicad 9 de agosto de 2007

-Visita oficial del Canciller de Brasil Celso Amorim
20 de agosto de 2007

- Comunidad internacional asiste a damnificados por terremoto
21 de agosto de 2007

- Visita oficial del Viceprimer Ministro y Canciller de Laos
28 de agosto de 2007

- CIADI falla a favor del Perú en caso Lucchetti
5 de setiembre de 2007

- Visita oficial del Canciler de la Federación Rusa Serguei Lavrov
11 de setimbre de 2007

- Reunión con el Secretaro General de la ONU sobre cambio climático y programas integrados
24 de setiembre de 2007

- Perú solicita ingreso al Millenium Challenge Account
24 de setiembre de 2007

- Perú participa en cumbre de Consejo de Seguridad de la ONU sobre África
25 de setiembre de 2007

- Visista de trabajo de Vicepresidente Luis Giampierti a Federación Rusa
28 de setiembre de 2007

Perú y Ecuador convocan a mesa de donantes para tareas de desminado
12 de octubre de 2007

Consejo de Seguridad de la ONU aprueba resolución de extensión de la MINUSTAH presentada por Perú
15 de octubre de 2007

Cancillería renueva compromiso con el cumplimiento de los Objetivos del Milenio
16 de octubre de 2007

Chile anuncia aministía migratoria
22 de octubre de 2007

Visita del Canciller García Belaúnde al Reino Unido
14 de noviembre de 2007

Canciller realiza vista de trabajo a Francia
16 de noviembre de 2007

La OCDE invita al Perú a participar en el Comité de Inversiones de esa entidad
19 de noviembre de 2007

Visita del Viceministro para Asuntos de América de la Cancillería egipcia
23 de noviembre de 2007

Se incicó la expedición ANTAR XVIII
5 de diciembre de 2007

Visita del Canciller a la República Checa
6 de diciembre de 2007

Asamblea General de la ONU elige a Embajador peruano como Inspector General de ese organismo
7 de diciembre de 2007

Reunón de los Viceministros de Relacciones Exteriores del Perú y Brasil
7 de diciembre de 2007

Alto Representante de la ONU para Desarme visita el Perú
13, 14 de dicimbre de 2007

Perú culmina período como miembro no permanente del Consejo de Seguridad de la ONU
28 de diciembre de 2007

Cancillería apoya red de científicos
4 de enero, 2008

    CONTEXTO.org® 2003 - Derechos reservados    
Host & Design: