[iwar] [fc:Terror.War.May.Create.New.Problems]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-09-30 22:18:53


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From: Fred Cohen <fc@all.net>
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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Terror.War.May.Create.New.Problems]
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Terror War May Create New Problems
By DEB RIECHMANN
.c The Associated Press
  
WASHINGTON (AP) - Like the opening shot in billiards that sends the
balls ricocheting in directions unknown, America's war on terrorism
could have unintended consequences far and wide. 

U.S.  policy-makers are aware that as they take their best shot against
terrorism, they could set in motion problems of a different sort. 

The risk of bolstering Islamic radicals, perhaps giving them enough
power to overthrow moderate governments in the Arab world, is among the
most apparent consequences and helps explain why the Bush administration
is picking its way so carefully in responding to the Sept.  11 terror
attacks. 

Instability in Pakistan, which has supported the hardline Taliban regime
in Afghanistan but also is cooperating with the United States, is a
particular danger. 

A takeover by fundamentalist Islamic factions there could be calamitous,
said Jim Steinberg, deputy national security adviser for President
Clinton.  ``You'd have an armed Islamic nuclear state,'' he said. 
``That would be a very serious unintended consequence.''

Secretary of State Colin Powell has expressed confidence Pakistani
President Pervez Musharraf can manage the domestic consequences of
helping Americans.  And, he said: ``I have no concerns about their
nuclear programs.''

The gathering U.S.  military response has already sent Afghans fleeing
to borders that have been sealed off by neighboring states, and food
shortages are feared with the onset of winter. 

There is also the risk of upheaval in former Soviet republics in central
Asia, where America has friends but border disputes are heating up and
extremism is taking root. 

Another indirect consequence, one with a more hopeful outcome, would be
the advance of peace in the Mideast.  Moderate Arab states pledge
cooperation in the U.S.  anti-terrorism campaign but want the Bush
administration do more to get Israel and the Palestinians back to the
negotiating table. 

Such effects, bad and good, could occur regardless of whether the
U.S.-led crackdown defeats the al-Qaida terrorist network and its leader
Osama bin Laden, who has been operating in Afghanistan under the cover
of the Taliban. 

``It's a little like a billiard table trying to figure out exactly how
it might happen,'' Defense Secretary Donald H.  Rumsfeld said this week. 
``The balls careen around for a while.''

But ``the end result, we would hope, would be a situation where the
al-Qaida is heaved out and the people in the Taliban who think that it's
good for them and good for the world to harbor terrorists ...  lose, and
lose seriously.''

The United States also faces difficult decisions on how to weigh in on
the conflict between the Taliban, which has rebuffed President Bush's
demand to hand over bin Laden and controls about 90 percent of the
rugged, mountainous nation, and the rebel Northern Alliance. 

The alliance could be helpful in finding bin Laden or even upending the
Taliban if that becomes America's goal.  But the alliance doesn't
represent the majority ethnic group in Afghanistan, which would make it
difficult for the rebels to gain control, and Pakistan opposes it. 

Creating instability in five former Soviet republics north of
Afghanistan could be just as problematic for America, said Fiona Hill,
an expert on Russia and Central Asian affairs at Brookings Institution. 

The United States has not placed a priority on furthering relations with
nations such as Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, yet they may be key allies in
a region where other states are not always eager to side with Americans,
Hill says. 

``Just the fact that we lump them together as the `stans,' which is
really a kind of a disrespectful way of referring to five very
complicated countries, just shows how little we've given thought to
them,'' she says. 

These quasi-democratic nations, possible staging areas for U.S. 
military action in Afghanistan, have extended friendship to the United
States in recent years, yet are rapidly becoming a base for extremism
and terrorism, Hill says. 

Buried in this list of possible repercussions is an opportunity for
Palestinians and Israelis to quell violence, says Martin Indyk, former
U.S.  ambassador to Israel. 

``There's a danger the Palestinian cause could face disaster if the
Palestinians come to be identified with the terrorists and those who
harbor them,'' Indyk said, ``rather than with the United States and the
international coalition against terror.''

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