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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, March 5, 2006

COMMENTARY
Ruckus over Dubai port deal offensive, damaging to U.S.

By James J. Zogby

Members of the Teamsters Union marched in protest outside the Seagrit Marine Terminal at the Port of Baltimore last month. Dubai Ports World has volunteered to postpone its takeover of operations at six major U.S. seaports so a 45-day review of the plan can take place.

CHRIS GARDNER | Associated Press

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Maryland officials including Gov. Robert Ehrlich, second from left, tour the Port of Baltimore before meeting to discuss Dubai Ports World's acquisition of a British company that has been running six U.S. ports.

GAIL BURTON | Associated Press

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There's been a virtual frenzy with senators, congressmen and governors jumping over each other to take the lead in bashing the Dubai port deal, the United Arab Emirates or the Bush administration. It's all being done, critics say, in the name of national security.

But in reality, what is taking place is nothing more than crass political posturing and an irresponsible and ill-informed attack on an Arab country that has been a strong ally of the United States.

At its essence, three factors are driving this ruckus: It's an election year, the public has a continued concern about national security and there's an Arab country involved. Elected officials are preying on the public's fear by exploiting an Arab bogeyman. The language they've used is shameful, irresponsible and false.

But in election-year politics, it doesn't matter.

Because it involves an Arab country, members of Congress assume they won't be called to account for a falsehood. Smearing all things Arab remains the last acceptable form of ethnic bigotry in America.

As a result of this mind-set, the UAE, one of America's closest Mideast allies in the war on terror — a country that has sent troops to fight alongside ours in Afghanistan, complied with all of our antiterrorism initiatives and provides the largest base port for U.S. military ships — is being called a "rogue government," an "Islamic fascist" state, and the "home of terrorists."

In the Middle East, people are scratching their heads.

If the UAE, which has stuck its neck out to support the United States, can be treated with such scorn, some ask, what's the point of being a friend of America?

It is ironic and troubling that U.S. public diplomacy czar Karen Hughes recently was in the UAE to promote America, and that UAE and U.S. trade teams last week entered yet another round in their talks toward establishing a free trade agreement.

Hughes must feel like packing it up and going back to Texas. If this anti-UAE campaign succeeds, there is no public diplomacy campaign that can salvage the damage. Arabs, you see — not unlike any other people — react not by what you say about yourself but by how you treat them.

Having said all this, the current exercise in Arab-bashing is, in fact, nothing more than election-year politicking at its worst, with Democrats feeling that President Bush is vulnerable and piling on, and Republicans feeling vulnerable and joining the fray.

If it weren't so serious and dangerous, it might be comical.

We've seen scenes like this before as congressmen and senators trip over each other on their way to the microphone, calculating just how outrageous they need to be to guarantee that their sound bite will be the one on the evening news. In this game, facts don't matter. Instead, with officials hyperventilating on their own rhetoric, exaggerations abound.

Especially disturbing is that the legitimate issue of port security has been lost in the melee.

If Congress really wanted a debate about port security and the failings of the current system, it would be talking about increasing funding for more Customs officials, beefing up our Coast Guard presence and additional equipment to screen more containers that enter our country. These are what is needed.

Regardless of what company owns the management of our ports, the security issues remain in the hands of the Department of Homeland Security.

Instead of a real debate, we're given scapegoating. Instead of making us more secure, politicians engage in isolating us more from the world and damaging our relationship with an important ally in the Middle East. They ought to be ashamed. They owe an apology not only to the UAE but also to the American people.

But since politics and shame are estranged bedfellows, I'm not holding my breath.

James J. Zogby is president of the Arab American Institute. He wrote this commentary for The Baltimore Sun.