Connect the Dots
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

The U.S. war on terrorism suffered a huge
blow last week — not in Baghdad or Kabul, but on the beaches of Cancún.
Cancún was the site of the latest world
trade talks, which fell apart largely because the U.S., the E.U. and
Japan refused to give up the lavish subsidies they bestow on their
farmers, making the prices of their cotton and agriculture so cheap that
developing countries can't compete. This is a disaster because exporting
food and textiles is the only way for most developing countries to grow.
The Economist quoted a World Bank study that said a Cancún agreement,
reducing tariffs and agrisubsidies, could have raised global income by
$500 billion a year by 2015 — over 60 percent of which would go to
poor countries and pull 144 million people out of poverty.
Sure, poverty doesn't cause terrorism —
no one is killing for a raise. But poverty is great for the terrorism
business because poverty creates humiliation and stifled aspirations and
forces many people to leave their traditional farms to join the
alienated urban poor in the cities — all conditions that spawn
terrorists.
I would bet any amount of money, though,
that when it came to deciding the Bush team's position at Cancún, no
thought was given to its impact on the war on terrorism. Wouldn't it
have been wise for the U.S. to take the initiative at Cancún, and offer
to reduce our farm subsidies and textile tariffs, so some of the poorest
countries, like Pakistan and Egypt, could raise their standards of
living and sense of dignity, and also become better customers for U.S.
goods? Yes, but that would be bad politics. It would mean asking U.S.
farmers to sacrifice the ridiculous subsidies they get from our federal
government ($3 billion a year for 25,000 cotton farmers) that make it
impossible for foreign farmers to sell here.
And one thing we know about this Bush war
on terrorism: sacrifice is only for Army reservists and full-time
soldiers. For the rest of us, it's guns and butter. When it comes to the
police and military sides of the war on terrorism, the Bushies behave
like Viking warriors. But when it comes to the political and economic
sacrifices and strategies that are also required to fight this war
successfully, they are cowardly wimps. That is why our war on terrorism
is so one-dimensional and Pentagon-centric. It's more like a hobby —
something we do only until it runs into the Bush re-election agenda.
"If the sons of American janitors can
go die in Iraq to keep us safe," says Robert Wright, author of
"Nonzero," a book on global interdependence, "then
American cotton farmers, whose average net worth is nearly $1 million,
can give up their subsidies to keep us safe. Opening our markets to farm
products and textiles would be critical to drawing many nations —
including Muslim ones — more deeply into the interdependent web of
global capitalism and ultimately democracy."
The U.S. and Europe, argues Clyde
Prestowitz, the trade expert and author of "Rogue Nation,"
should actually shrink their farm subsidies unilaterally, even if
developing countries don't immediately reciprocate.
"Such a move is essential," wrote
Mr. Prestowitz on the YaleGlobal Web site, "not only as a matter of
providing a badly needed boost to developing countries, but also because
the failure [of Cancún] poses a serious threat to the main hope of
generating the economic growth necessary to lift developing countries
out of poverty."
If only the Bush team connected the dots,
it would see what a nutty war on terrorism it is fighting, explains Mr.
Prestowitz. Here, he says, is the Bush war on terrorism: Preach free
trade, but don't deliver on it, so Pakistani farmers become more
impoverished. Then ask Congress to give a tax break for any American who
wants to buy a gas-guzzling Humvee for business use and also ask
Congress to resist any efforts to make Detroit increase gasoline mileage
in new cars. All this means more U.S. oil imports from Saudi Arabia.
So then the Saudis have more dollars to
give to their Wahhabi fundamentalist evangelists, who spend it by
building religious schools in Pakistan. The Pakistani farmer we've put
out of business with our farm subsidies then sends his sons to the
Wahhabi school because it is tuition-free and offers a hot lunch. His
sons grow up getting only a Koranic education, so they are totally
unprepared for modernity, but they are taught one thing: that America is
the source of all their troubles. One of the farmer's sons joins Al
Qaeda and is killed in Afghanistan by U.S. Special Forces, and we think
we're winning the war on terrorism.
Fat chance.
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