Apocalypse Please
US policy towards the Middle East is driven by a rarefied
form of madness. It’s time we took it seriously.
By George Monbiot. Published in the Guardian 20th April
2004
To understand what is happening in the Middle East, you must
first understand what is happening in Texas. To understand what
is happening there, you should read the resolutions passed at
the state's Republican party conventions last month. Take a
look, for example, at the decisions made in Harris County, which
covers much of Houston.
1. The delegates began by nodding through
a few uncontroversial matters: homosexuality is contrary to
the truths ordained by God; "any mechanism to process,
license, record, register or monitor the ownership of guns"
should be repealed; income tax, inheritance tax, capital gains
tax and corporation tax should be abolished; and immigrants
should be deterred by electric fences.
2. Thus fortified, they turned to the real
issue: the affairs of a small state 7000 miles away. It was
then, according to a participant, that the "screaming and
near fistfights" began. I don't know what the original
motion said, but apparently it was "watered down significantly"
as a result of the shouting match. The motion they adopted stated
that Israel has an undivided claim to Jerusalem and the West
Bank, that Arab states should be pressured to absorb refugees
from Palestine, and that Israel should do whatever it wishes
in seeking to eliminate terrorism.
3. Good to see that the extremists didn't
prevail then. But why should all this be of such pressing interest
to the people of a state which is seldom celebrated for its
fascination with foreign affairs? The explanation is slowly
becoming familiar to us, but we still have some difficulty in
taking it seriously. In the United States, several million people
have succumbed to an extraordinary delusion. In the 19th century,
two immigrant preachers cobbled together a series of unrelated
passages from the Bible to create what appears to be a consistent
narrative: Jesus will return to earth when certain preconditions
have been met. The first of these was the establishment of a
state of Israel. The next involves Israel's occupation of the
rest of its "Biblical lands" (most of the Middle East),
and the rebuilding of the Third Temple on the site now occupied
by the Dome of the Rock and Al-Aqsa mosques. The legions of
the Antichrist will then be deployed against Israel, and their
war will lead to a final showdown in the valley of Armageddon.
The Jews will either burn or convert to Christianity, and the
Messiah will return to earth. What makes the story so appealing
to Christian fundamentalists is that before the big battle begins,
all "true believers" (ie those who believe what THEY
believe) will be lifted out of their clothes and wafted up to
heaven during an event called the Rapture. Not only do the worthy
get to sit at the right hand of God, but they will be able to
watch, from the best seats, their political and religious opponents
being devoured by boils, sores, locusts and frogs, during the
seven years of Tribulation which follow. The true believers
are now seeking to bring all this about. This means staging
confrontations at the old temple site (in 2000 three US Christians
were deported for trying to blow up the mosques there)
4. sponsoring Jewish settlements in the occupied
territories, demanding ever more US support for Israel, and
seeking to provoke a final battle with the Muslim world/Axis
of Evil/United Nations/European Union/France or whoever the
legions of the Antichrist turn out to be. The believers are
convinced that they will soon be rewarded for their efforts.
The Antichrist is apparently walking among us, in the guise
of Kofi Annan, Javier Solana, Yasser Arafat or, more plausibly,
Silvio Berlusconi.
5. The Walmart corporation is also a candidate
(in my view a very good one), because it wants to radio-tag
its stock, thereby exposing humankind to the Mark of the Beast.
6. By clicking on www.raptureready.com, you
can discover how close you might be to flying out of your pyjamas.
The infidels among us should take note that the Rapture Index
currently stands at 144, just one point below the critical threshold,
beyond which the sky will be filled with floating nudists. Beast
Government, Wild Weather and Israel are all trading at the maximum
five points (the EU is debating its constitution, there was
a freak hurricane in the South Atlantic, Hamas has sworn to
avenge the killing of its leaders), but the second coming is
currently being delayed by an unfortunate decline in drug abuse
among teenagers and a weak showing by the Antichrist (both of
which score only two). We can laugh at these people, but we
should not dismiss them. That their beliefs are bonkers does
not mean they are marginal. American pollsters believe that
between 15 and 18% of US voters belong to churches or movements
which subscribe to these teachings.
7. A survey in 1999 suggested that this figure
included 33% of Republicans.
8. The best-selling contemporary books in
the United States are the 12 volumes of the Left Behind series,
which provide what is usually described as a "fictionalised"
account of the Rapture (this, apparently, distinguishes it from
the other one), with plenty of dripping details about what will
happen to the rest of us. The people who believe all this don't
believe it just a little; for them it is a matter of life eternal
and death. And among them are some of the most powerful men
in America. John Ashcroft, the attorney-general, is a true believer,
so are several prominent senators and the House majority leader,
Tom DeLay. Mr DeLay (who is also the co-author of the marvellously-named
DeLay-Doolittle Amendment, postponing campaign finance reforms)
travelled to Israel last year to tell the Knesset that "there
is no middle ground, no moderate position worth taking."
9. So here we have a major political constituency
- representing much of the current president's core vote - in
the most powerful nation on earth, which is actively seeking
to provoke a new world war. Its members see the invasion of
Iraq as a warm-up act, as Revelations (9:14-15) maintains that
four angels "which are bound in the great river Euphrates"
will be released "to slay the third part of men."
They batter down the doors of the White House as soon as its
support for Israel wavers: when Bush asked Ariel Sharon to pull
his tanks out of Jenin in 2002, he received 100,000 angry emails
from Christian fundamentalists, and never mentioned the matter
again.
10. The electoral calculation, crazy as it
appears, works like this.
- Governments stand or fall on domestic issues.
- For 85% of the US electorate, the Middle East is a foreign
issue, and therefore of secondary interest when they enter
the polling booth.
- For 15% of the electorate, the Middle East is not just a
domestic matter, it's a personal one: if the president fails
to start a conflagration there, his core voters don't get
to sit at the right hand of God.
Bush, in other words, stands to lose fewer votes by encouraging
Israeli aggression than he stands to lose by restraining it.
He would be mad to listen to these people. He would also be
mad not to.
George Monbiot's book The Age of Consent: a manifesto for a
new world order is now published in paperback. www.monbiot.com
References:
1. http://www.harriscountygop.com/sections/sdconv/sdconv.asp
2. eg. Committee on Resolutions, Harris County Republican Party,
27th March 2004. Final report of Senatorial District 17 Convention.
http://www.harriscountygop.com/sections/sdconv/sdconv.asp
3. ibid. (ibid" is short for ibidem, Latin for "in
the same place." It's an expression used in bibliographies
when authors repeatedly cite the same source.*D.T.)
4. Paul Vallely, 7th September 2003. The Eve of Destruction.
The Independent on Sunday.
5. eg. http://www.raptureready.us
6. eg.
http://www.raptureready.com/rap16.html (note: 5 and 6 are
rival sites)
7. Megan K. Stack, 31st July 2003. House's DeLay Bonds With
Israeli Hawks, Los Angeles Times; Matthew Engel, 28th October
2002. Meet the new Zionists. The Guardian; Paul Vallely, ibid.
8. Donald E. Wagner, 28th June 2003. Marching to Zion: the
evangelical-Jewish alliance. Christian Century.
9. Leader, 1st August 2003. DeLay's Foreign Meddling. Los Angeles
Times.
10. Jane Lampman, 18th February 2004. The End of the World.
The Christian Science Monitor.
*D.T. - Additions by darlingtontown admin |