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Major Censorship Action Alert for Middle East Studies

by Juan Cole
Major Censorship Action Alert for Middle East Studies
Major Censorship Action Alert for Middle East Studies

Some of you know that some unsavory political forces have convinced the House of Representatives to create a Big Brother committee to police the thought of university professors who write about world affairs. The bill is HR 3077. The main goal of this legislation is to impose an ideological agenda on university teaching, research and writing about issues like the Middle East. The point of the committee is to warp academic study and ensure that independent researchers are not allowed to be heard. But it was precisely the imposition of such ideological litmus tests in Washington that led to the case of the missing Weapons of Mass Destruction and the conviction that Iraq was 3 years away from having a nuclear bomb, both propositions completely false. It would not be doing the United States any favors to muzzle the academics, as well.

I plead with all the thousands of you who have expressed interest in this site and read it frequently, to FAX your senator, or the senate generally, expressing your conviction that this advisory committee be excised from the final bill. Repeat: The message should be that HR 3077 is OK in general, but the "Advisory Board" stinks. The contact information is below. An email is better than nothing, but the FAX is what would get the job done.

The fact is that international studies in the United States is extremely underfunded. Probably Federal spending on it annually is about equivalent to buying two F-16e fighter jets. In the entire country, at all universities and colleges. It is nothing compared to the need. Among the main programs is Title VI, which funds over 100 area studies centers at major universities. But it funds just 15 or so fully fledged Middle East Centers, in the entire country! (A Middle East center typically has 20-30 faculty members who study the Middle East proper since 600 A.D., in various disciplines, though if you add in the scholars who work on the ancient Near East and the people who work on the Caucasus and other related areas, it might come to 60). Actually, usually a lot of the money goes to language fellowships for graduate students. But since nowadays it costs around $20,000 to pay tuition and a stipend even at a state university, you can see that not many students can be funded for Arabic or Persian language study at that rate.

When I came to the University of Michigan in 1984, we were able to give about 20 such fellowships annually. The Reagan administration annually zero-budgeted Title VI, which is to say that Reagan tried to abolish Federal support for things like Middle East Studies altogether, every year for 8 years. Congress always put the money back, but it did not increase it at the rate of inflation. By the late 1990s, the University of Michigan had been denied funding for its Center altogether, and only 2 or 3 graduate students were being supported to study Arabic, Persian, or Turkish. Now, these same old-time Reaganites are coming and saying that we haven't done our jobs and need to be watched.

Although the Middle East is a huge policy concern for the US now, we probably don't have more than about 1,000 full time faculty members who specialize in the area, know the languages, and write mainly about it. That is a tiny group for a region stretching from Morocco to Afghanistan, and needing to be covered for the past 1400 years.

The Neocons would have you believe that the Middle East specialists at universities have fallen down on the job by not all becoming terrorism experts. But none of the Neocons who did Middle East or South Asian studies wrote their dissertations on anything to do with US security, and most still have not contributed to its security--often quite the opposite. Many of them were hand in hand with creating the Afghan Mujahidin and al-Qaeda by throwing billions of dollars at such groups in the 1980s. University professors mainly research in the areas they teach, and most teaching jobs are for history or cultural studies. This is what the students want, and nowadays universities pay attention to student demand. These positions are largely at small liberal arts colleges or private universities, and most are not supported by the Federal government, so I should think those institutions can shape the positions as they please. If the US government wanted lots of Arabists at lots of security studies programs in universities, it should have spent some money on that goal. It did not.

But it is also true that a significant part of the US government is now busily reading the books and articles about the Middle East produced by Middle East academics at US universities. Without that corpus of literature, these brave and dedicated men and women would be flying blind. Doing anything to gut this academic establishment would be extremely self-defeating for a US that is going to be increasingly engaged with the Middle East. The tack of trying to intervene in the region without knowledge of it has been shown to be a disaster.

Frankly, the Federal government doesn't make use of the experts it has. There are only a handful of us who write professionally about Iraq, because for most of our lives it was hard to do field work there or get access to primary sources. I could mention Peter Sluglett at Utah, Yitzhak Nakash at Brandeis, and a handful of others. I don't know about them, but I have never, ever even once been invited to a State Department conference on Iraq. And, as we all know, even if I had been it would not have mattered, since the Neocons at the Pentagon threw all the work Tom Warrick at State had done on the Future of Iraq project into the trash can and prevented Tom himself from going to join the CPA! This is what I would have told anyone who had asked me a year and a half ago about the pros and cons of going to war in Iraq.


So here's the alert:

The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee is hoping to take up the Higher Education Act reauthorization in the next two-three weeks. [Note that there is no separate subcommittee on higher education on the HELP Committee, so the bill will be considered by the full committee and then go to the floor.]

Opponents and proponents of the controversial Advisory Board provision have been vigorously lobbying the Senate on this issue. If you have not already written a letter to the Senate or telephoned a message, NOW is the time. Write to your Member on the Senate HELP Committee (see list below), or if your state is not represented on the committee, write to Senators Gregg and Kennedy with a copy to your two Senators. Faxing your letters will ensure timely receipt due to the recent ricin scare. E-mailing is not recommended.

If you want to visit the real world instead of the rarefied atmosphere of K Street, you can get a sense of what an actual Middle East center is and does here.

A. The people who support the "Advisory Committee" argue that there is extreme ideological bias in the teaching about Middle East studies and other area studies fields at US universities. I have addressed many of these charges in my article for the History News Network. Here is what I wrote about Political Science:

Last spring Kurtz implicitly attacked the political scientists at the Middle East Centers at American universities for being postmodernist, leftist, anti-American terrorist-coddlers. The 14 or so tenured professors of Middle East political science at the federally funded National Resource Centers, however, include Leonard Binder of UCLA (who fought on Israel's side in the 1948 war); Joel Migdal and Ellis Goldberg at the University of Washington, Seattle (exponents of the New Institutionalism and Rational Choice, respectively); Mark Tessler of the University of Michigan (with a Ph.D. From Hebrew University, who analyzes survey data quantitatively), Lisa Anderson and Gary Sick of Columbia (comparative politics and policy studies, respectively; Sick is a former naval officer and served on the National Security Council), and so on. Of the fourteen, only one (Timothy Mitchell at New York University) could be considered a postmodernist, and his work on the Middle East from that framework has been illuminating. None of the fourteen has ever to my knowledge supported any sort of terrorism.

That is to say, Middle East political science is an ideologically highly diverse field, with lots of approaches represented. It is not dominated by a single methodology or school, as was falsely charged. The same thing is true for the other disciplines.

HR 3077 mandates that Title VI programs must "reflect diverse perspectives and represent the full range of views on world regions, foreign language, and international affairs."

This language is potentially disastrous.

As Stanley Fish has said, university teaching and research is not about "balance." Our cancer institute isn't required to hire at least a few biologists who believe smoking is good for your health. In research, it is all right to be partisan for the evidence. It is in fact one of the things wrong with journalism and political discourse that there is so much emphasis on "telling both sides of the story." This is a bad approach because many stories have many more than two sides, and some stories only have one true side. Appointing a professor at each major university who would have insisted in early 2003 that Iraq was only 3-5 years away from having a nuclear bomb would not have been an academic advance, but it is the sort of thing the framers of HR 3077 had in mind when they urged "balance."

I teach a course on War in the 20th Century Middle East at the University of Michigan, and as a historian I have to admit that it is a biased course, especially when we get to the 1990s. It is biased because I despise the Taliban and al-Qaeda and Saddam Hussein, and I certainly do not properly give their side of the story. If what the Senate wants is "balance," then we shall have to hire some of those unemployed ex-Baathists to teach Iraqi history at the University of Michigan, to offset my jingoistic pro-American approach. "Reflecting" "the full range of views" would also require us to have more Communist, Nazi, Holocaust-denying and Hamas professors. The Senate should be very careful about putting into statute this language about "balance," because although the committee's supporters want to use it mainly as affirmative action for Republican academics, there are lots of extremist groups in US society that may find ways to use the language perniciously. (Contrary to the hype, there are plenty of Republican academics, and try to find a leftist in any major Economics Department or Business School in the country).

B. The people who argue for the Advisory Board charge "anti-Americanism" in the classroom. But actually what they mean by that if you pin them down is ambivalence about the Iraq war, or dislike of Israeli colonization of the West Bank, or recognition that the US government has sometimes in the past been in bed with present enemies like al-Qaeda or Saddam. None of these positions is "anti-American," and any attempt by a congressionally-appointed body to tell university professors they cannot say these things (or that if they say them they must hire someone else who will say the opposite) is a contravention of the First Amendment of the US Constitution.

c. The "Advisory Committee" that HR 3077 sets up is unneeded. The Department of Education already does oversight of the area studies centers, and gives or withholds money according to whether they meet government goals. Funding a whole extra committee is a waste of taxpayer money and a clear duplication of effort. The Committee explicitly has "investigatory" powers, which it is hard to see as anything other than McCarthyism. Given Republican dominance of all three branches of government, the committee is going to be highly politicized, and some ideologues will probably be shoe-horned onto it.

Most troubling of all, the "advisory board" will have "investigative" powers. These powers are clearly meant to intimidate US academics and administrators, and some institutions are already talking of turning down Federal money rather than submit to such tactics. You decide if the country would be well served by a law that made it impossible for the best universities to even take Federal funds for international studies.


Polite, accurate and thoughtful letters will be useful. Testimonials and anecdotes based on fact can convey a lot. If you are unsure of HR 3077 details, go to:
http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=108_cong_bills&docid=f:h3077rfs.txt.pdf

You can follow proposed revisions by searching on HR 3077 through the "Bill Search" function on the Senate web site.

Also a google search on HR3077 will bring up many sites with many points of view.

For those interested: a recent article in the Village Voice about HR3077?s advisory board:
http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0408/solomon.php

A fairly recent op-ed in USA Today:
http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/editorials/2004-02-16-our-view_x.htm



SENATE HEALTH, EDUCATION, LABOR AND PENSIONS COMMITTEE
For more info, go to http://health.senate.gov/committee_members.html
For all senators: http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm
(unfortunately, you have to telephone to get the FAX number)

REPUBLICAN MEMBERS

Judd Gregg, NH
Chairman
Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions
TEL (202) 224-3324
FAX (202) 224-4952
mailbox [at] gregg.senate.gov

Bill Frist, TN
TEL (202) 224-3344
FAX (202) 228-1264

Michael B. Enzi, WY
TEL (202) 224-3424
FAX (202) 228-0359
senator [at] enzi.senate.gov

Lamar Alexander, TN
TEL (202) 224-4944
FAX (202) 228-3398

Christopher S. Bond, MO
TEL (202) 224-5721
FAX (202) 224-8149
kit_bond [at] bond.senate.gov

Mike DeWine, OH
TEL (202) 224-2315
FAX (202) 224-6519
senator_dewine [at] dewine.senate.gov

Pat Roberts, KS
TEL (202) 224-4774
FAX (202) 224-3514

Jeff Sessions, AL
TEL (202) 224-4124
FAX (202) 224-3149
senator [at] sessions.senate.gov

John Ensign, NV
TEL (202) 224-6244
FAX (202) 228-2193

Lindsey O. Graham, SC
TEL (202) 224-5972
FAX (202) 224-1189

John W. Warner, VA
225 Senate Russell Building
US Senate
Washington, DC 20510-4601
TEL (202) 224-2023
FAX (202) 224-6295
senator [at] warner.senate.gov

DEMOCRAT MEMBERS

Edward M. Kennedy, MA
Ranking Minority Member
Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions
TEL (202) 224-4543
FAX (202) 224-2417
http://kennedy.senate.gov/contact.html

Christopher J. Dodd, CT
TEL (202) 224-2823
FAX (202) 224-1083

Tom Harkin, IA
TEL (202) 224-3254
FAX (202) 224-9369
tom_harkin [at] harkin.senate.gov

Barbara A. Mikulski. MD
TEL (202) 224-4654
FAX (202) 224-8858

Jeff Bingaman, NM
TEL (202) 224-5521
FAX (202) 224-2852
senator_bingaman [at] bingaman.senate.gov

Patty Murray, WA
TEL (202) 224-2621
FAX (202) 224-0238
senator_murray [at] murray.senate.gov

John F. Reed, RI.
TEL 202) 224-4642
FAX (202) 224-4680
jack [at] reed.senate.gov

John R. Edwards, NC
TEL (202) 224-3154
FAX (202) 228-1374

Hillary Rodham Clinton, NY
TEL 202) 224-4451
FAX (202) 228-0282

INDEPENDENT MEMBER

James M. Jeffords, VT
TEL (202) 224-5141
FAX (202) 228-0776
vermont [at] jeffords.senate.gov
by Oakland Resident
The problem is not "critical perspectives" but the fact that Departments of Middle Eastern Studies have links to organizations, indivduals, and nations that support terrorism. The government should be concerned about this, as should you.

*************************************
The Urgent Need to Study Islamic Anti-Semitism
by Neil J. Kressel
Chronicle of Higher Education
March 12, 2004
http://chronicle.com/temp/email.php?id=2vo41lzv1h7phgh4guqfx94wask2401v

For many decades, social scientists of every disciplinary stripe have placed themselves in the forefront of the battle against bigotry. On the basis of that record, one might expect to find psychologists, sociologists, and others hard at work studying the dynamics of Jew-hatred in the Muslim world. But that is far from the case.

These days, more than a few leading Muslim clerics routinely denounce Jews with dehumanizing rhetoric. For example, in April 2002, Sheikh Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi of Egypt, one of the most important Sunni clerics, described Jews in his weekly sermon as "the enemies of Allah, descendants of apes and pigs." Sheikh Abd Al-Rahman Al-Sudayyis, the imam of the most important mosque in Mecca, similarly sermonized that the Jews are "the scum of the human race, the rats of the world, the violators of pacts and agreements, the murderers of the prophets, and the offspring of apes and pigs." The imam further advised Arabs to abandon all peace initiatives with Jews and asked Allah to annihilate them. Many leaders of Muslim countries enthusiastically greeted former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad's similarly racist ranting.

Yet social scientists have essentially remained mum concerning a problem that President Bush, in a speech in November, has placed high on the world agenda. "Europe's leaders, and all leaders," he said in London, "should strongly oppose anti-Semitism, which poisons public debates over the future of the Middle East."

The image of the president of the United States pressing ahead in the battle against bigotry while social scientists lag far behind is, to say the least, unusual -- especially when one considers the mountains of research that have addressed past anti-Semitism and racism in Europe and the United States.

An examination of PsycINFO, a leading online index of psychological studies, shows 458 entries on anti-Semitism since 1940, 99 of which have appeared during the past 10 years. But not a single one deals directly with hatred of Jews by Muslims or Arabs in the contemporary world. At most, a few psychologically oriented authors, like Mortimer Ostow, have touched tangentially on Muslim anti-Semitism in studies focusing on Jew-hatred in other contexts, and a few political historians, like Bernard Lewis and Robert Wistrich, have offered some social-scientific speculation on the topic.

An analysis of Sociological Abstracts tells much the same story. Since 1963, 130 entries in the database have dealt with anti-Semitism, but none center on the hatred of Jews among Arab Muslims or others in the broader Muslim world.

The failure of social scientists to confront this dangerous form of contemporary bigotry is particularly curious in light of the past prominence of sociologists and psychologists in the study of anti-Semitism. The list of important studies is long and includes, among many others, books by Nathan Ackerman and Marie Jahoda (1950), Bruno Bettelheim and Morris Janowitz (1964), Charles Glock and Rodney Stark (1966), George Kren and Leon Rappoport (1994), Robert Jay Lifton (1986), Gary Marx (1967), Harold Quinley and Charles Glock (1979), Gertrude Selznick and Stephen Steinberg (1969), and Charles Stember (1966). Indeed, several seminal studies in mainstream social psychology -- The Authoritarian Personality, by Theodor Adorno and his colleagues; The Nature of Prejudice, by Gordon W. Allport; and Obedience to Authority, by Stanley Milgram -- had their roots, in part, in the desire to understand manifestations of anti-Semitism.

So what's going on? Why have social scientists neglected the study of Muslim anti-Semitism?

Some say there is no need to study the phenomenon, and that the charge itself is merely a sneaky ploy to fend off criticism of Israel. For example, the columnist Norman Solomon purports to explain the "strategy" used by supporters of Israel: "To quash debate, just smear, smear, smear. Instead of trying to refute critiques of Israeli policies, it's much easier to equate criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism -- a timeworn way of preventing or short-circuiting real debate on the merits of the issues."

Sheikh Tantawi, of Egypt's Al-Azhar University, offers a more extreme form of the argument, holding that "the charge of anti-Semitism was invented by the Jews as a means of pressuring the Arabs and Muslims, and with the aim of implementing their conspiracies in the Arab and Muslim countries. It should be disregarded."

While the question of where legitimate criticism of Israel ends and anti-Semitism begins can be a tricky matter, whether one looks at bombings or rhetoric it is clear from a review of recent events that much Muslim hostility to Jews is old-fashioned bigotry, plain and simple.

Another attempt to end the discussion of Muslim anti-Semitism before it starts can be found in the contention that Arabs cannot be anti-Semites because they are Semites. Bernard Lewis put that specious semantic argument to rest when he explained in his 1986 book, Semites and Anti-Semites, that "the term Semite has no meaning as applied to groups as heterogeneous as the Arabs or the Jews, and indeed it could be argued that the use of such terms is in itself a sign of racism and certainly of either ignorance or bad faith. ... Anti-Semitism has never anywhere been concerned with anyone but Jews, and is therefore available to Arabs as to other people as an option should they choose it." In any event, nothing is gained from applying the "anti-Semitism" label to anti-Arab discrimination, abhorrent in its own right, except to confuse matters and take attention away from anti-Jewish hostility.

Part of the real explanation for the lack of research on Muslim Jew-hatred is that social scientists who wish to conduct empirical research on anti-Semitism in Arab countries and many other parts of the Muslim world face nearly insurmountable obstacles, starting with the critical problem of access.

Few countries in these regions welcome indigenous or Western interviewers -- whether social scientists or journalists -- who are apt to ask pesky questions. Recently, a Palestinian mob attacked the research center of a well-known Palestinian social scientist whose findings did not square with the local political agenda: Khalil Shikaki, of the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, had conducted a survey that found that only a small percentage of Palestinians would exercise a "right of return" as part of a peace settlement.

In addition, nondemocratic regimes in much of the Muslim world tend to place strict limits on journalists and social scientists. They are especially likely to prohibit Jews and those suspected of sympathizing with Israel from conducting their professional activities. Such people are, of course, among the most likely to study anti-Semitism.

Consider, for example, the significant roadblocks encountered by the reporter Caroline Glick, a U.S. citizen, when she arrived in Kuwait in 2003, just before being embedded with an American military unit in Iraq. She also held Israeli citizenship and intended to send her dispatches to two papers owned by Hollinger International: the Chicago Sun-Times and the Jerusalem Post. Despite strong Kuwaiti support for the war, Kuwait's harsh treatment of its Palestinian population, and heavy American diplomatic pressure, the pro-Western and relatively open country refused to accredit her unless she signed a document promising not to report for any Israeli media outlet. Credentialing war correspondents is, of course, a somewhat different matter than permitting leeway for studies on anti-Semitism, but Glick's case illustrates problems likely to be encountered in the Middle East by Jewish researchers with a pro-Israel orientation.

Assuming access, financial support, and successful navigation of linguistic problems, there remains, simply, the danger involved in such research -- what might now be called "the Daniel Pearl effect." Probing questions directed to the wrong people can be fatal. It would require uncommon bravery for Western or indigenous social scientists, especially Jewish ones, to embark on serious empirical studies of anti-Semitism in the Middle East.

Beyond all of that, however, I suspect that there is some political motivation to avoid the topic -- even among those who are not, themselves, the least bit anti-Semitic.

Most social scientists approach current disputes in the Middle East with a perspective similar to that articulated by the influential Columbia University social psychologist Morton Deutsch just after the 9/11 attacks. Speaking to "those of us who have been working for a just, peaceful, humane, and sustainable world," he urged cooperation with Muslim religious authorities "in de-legitimizing violence against civilians whatever their religious background" and in encouraging "leading Islamic religious figures to broadcast statements that people who engage in terrorism are not acceptable in the Islamic community." He further maintained that Islam, like all of the other major religions, respects the sanctity of human life, and that only a small group of "deviant radical 'fundamentalist' groups" condone or encourage politically inspired violence against innocent victims. The highest goal, according to Deutsch, is to prevent the "conflict with terrorism" from escalating into a "conflict with Islam or Muslims." In all those regards, his goals were not so very far from those of the Bush administration.

Gaining the cooperation of Muslim religious leaders, however, has proved far more difficult than expected, and hostility toward the United States appears more broad-based than initially believed in the days following 9/11. In that context, attempts to focus attention on mass hatred emanating from large segments of the Muslim and Arab world may be seen by some social scientists as fanning the flames of conflict by identifying negative characteristics of a population with whom they seek to get along.

Thus, well-intentioned observers may have sensed that it is best, at this historic moment, to leave this stone unturned. But by doing so, they may be shielding a significant danger from scrutiny and doing an injustice to their disciplines' proud history in the war against hate.

The historians Marvin Perry and Frederick M. Schweitzer may well be correct when they suggest in the introduction to their recent book, Anti-Semitism: Myth and Hate From Antiquity to the Present, that large segments of the billion-strong Muslim world may now endorse a full-blown anti-Semitism, replete with home-grown Islamic themes, new and old, as well as hate imagery imported from the Christian world. Such hatred does not seem to be limited to fringe elements, and it is not constrained by the geographical confines of the Middle East.

Still, conclusive data about the extent and distribution of this hostile ideology are lacking. For example, how does hostility vary by country, level of education, social status, income, occupation, political ideology, and other characteristics? Where are we most apt to find moderate and tolerant people? What is the impact of variations in socialization and education? How do Middle Eastern Muslims differ from those outside the region in their feelings about Jews and Israel? In those same respects, how do Christian Arabs differ from Muslim Arabs? It would be especially helpful to explore the relationships among Muslims' anti-Semitism, anti-Americanism, and anti-Hinduism.

From a psychological perspective, it would be useful to construct a functional typology of anti-Semitism in the Muslim and Arab world. For some people, presumably, the ideology is centrally important, serving some key personality function. For others it is more peripheral, grounded in a social-adjustment function. Anti-Semitic ideology involves a wide range of irrational thought processes that might fruitfully be elaborated from a cognitive perspective. Psychoanalysts have offered many commentaries -- some insightful, some of limited value -- on European anti-Semitism; it may be possible to speak meaningfully about the psychodynamic underpinnings of Muslim anti-Semitism as well. Moreover, as I argued in Mass Hate: The Global Rise of Genocide and Terror, hateful behavior is generally best understood as an interaction between personal dispositions and situational pressures. We know very little about how those determinants interact to produce or inhibit anti-Semitic action in the Muslim world.

Some of those questions may be addressed from a distance. Others require access to local populations and, for the reasons noted here, are far more difficult to explore. Still, one should not presume to understand the foundations of Muslim anti-Semitism on the basis of studies conducted in other contexts. Extrapolations from research on European and American anti-Semitism are not likely to apply. For example, a substantial body of American research shows that anti-Semitism is least apt to be found among the highly educated. That, I suspect, would not be the case in the Muslim Middle East. Anti-Semitism has always been an idiosyncratic form of bigotry; consequently the very large body of research on American racism is even less likely to offer useful guidance.

There are those who argue that the dangers of Muslim anti-Semitism are not so severe. Hazem Saghiyah, one of the few Arab writers to address the topic (albeit from an anti-Israel viewpoint), believes that "Arab anti-Semites lack the functional modernism of Nazism, the Nazi order, and the racist ideological adherence of European anti-Semitism. ... Our anti-Semitism is uncivilized and totally idiotic, even in the mouths of flashy politicians and journalists." Thus he denies much important political potential for Jew-hatred in the Muslim world.

That position strikes me as unjustifiably sanguine. The warning signs surrounding Muslim Jew-hatred are too ominous to ignore. The dehumanizing rhetoric used to denounce Jews in the Muslim world is precisely the sort that alarms scholars who study genocide and mass atrocities. Surely the problem of Muslim anti-Semitism merits the attention of Western social scientists.

Neil J. Kressel, author of Mass Hate: The Global Rise of Genocide and Terror (Westview Press, 2002), directs the honors program in social sciences at William Paterson University of New Jersey.
by Daniel Pipes
Defund Middle East Studies
by Daniel Pipes
New York Sun
February 24, 2004
http://danielpipes.org/article/1581

Here's a prime example, one that involves me personally, of how the radical Left and the Islamists, those new best friends, readily deceive.

It has to do with a proposed piece of U.S. legislation passed by the House, the "International Studies in Higher Education Act of 2003," known familiarly as H.R. 3077, and awaiting action by the Senate. H.R. 3077 calls for the creation of an advisory board to review the way in which roughly US$100 million in taxpayer money is spent annually on area studies, including Middle East studies, at the university level.

This board is needed for two reasons: Middle East studies are a failed field and the academics who consume these funds also happen to allocate them — a classic case of unaccountability. The purpose of this subsidy, which Congress increased by 26% after 9/11, is to help the American government with exotic language and cultural skills. Yet many universities reject this role, dismissing it as training "spies."

Martin Kramer pointed to the need for Congressional intervention in his 2001 book, Ivory Towers on Sand. Stanley Kurtz picked up the idea and made it happen in Washington, testifying at a key House hearing in June 2003.

My role in promoting this advisory board? Writing one favorable sentence on it eight months ago, based on an expectation that the board creates some accountability and helps Congress carry out its own intent. While hoping the Senate passes H.R. 3077, I have otherwise done nothing to praise or lobby for this bill.

Well, that's the record. But why should mere facts get in the way? Seemingly convinced that turning H.R. 3077 into my personal initiative will help defeat it in the Senate, leftist and Islamist organizations have imaginatively puffed up my role.

--The American Civil Liberties Union accuses me of "enlisting the aid of the government" to impose my views on academia.
The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee titles its alert "Academic Freedom Under Attack by Pipes and Big Brother."

--The Council on American-Islamic Relations states that I am "actively pushing" for the advisory board.

--This deception prompted campus newspapers — for example, at Columbia, CUNY, Swarthmore, and Yale — to link me to the bill, as have city newspapers such as the Berkshire Eagle and the Oregonian, Web sites, and listservs.

What these folks missed is my skepticism about the advisory board's potential to make a major difference. It is important symbolically and it can throw light on problems. But odds are it won't be able thoroughly to solve them.

I say this because unlike comparable federal boards, this one has only advisory, not supervisory, powers. It also has limited authority, being specifically prohibited from considering curricula. Professors can teach politically one-sided courses, for example, without funding consequences. More broadly, such federal boards generally do too little. I have sat on two other ones and find them cumbersome bureaucratic mechanisms with limited impact.

Will a new board improve things? Sure. But Congress should consider more drastic solutions. One would be to revoke post-9/11's $20 million annual supplement for area studies at universities, using this money instead to establish national resource centers to focus on the global war on terror. They would usefully combine area expertise with a focus on militant Islam.

A second solution would zero-out all government allocations for area studies. This step would barely affect the study of foreign cultures at universities, as the $100 million in federal money amounts to just 10% of the budget at most major centers, funds those centers could undoubtedly raise from private sources. But doing this would send the salutary message that the American taxpayer no longer wishes to pay for substandard work.

Either step would encourage younger scholars to retool in an effort to regain public trust and reopen the public purse.

If the advisory board is not the ideal solution, it is the best to be hoped for at the moment, given the power of the higher-education lobby. I am ready to give H.R. 3077 a chance. But should the board not come into existence or fail to make a difference, I'll advocate the better solution — defunding — and work to spread these ideas among the public and in Congress. My opponents will then learn what happens when truly I am "actively pushing" for Congress to adopt a measure.
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