Bill Clinton Links Extremism And Lack Of Opportunity In Dubai Speech
Wednesday November 4, 2009 1:18 p.m.
Former U.S. President Bill Clinton talks to the audience at the American University of Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2009. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili)
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Former President Bill Clinton on Wednesday drew a link between extremism and lack of opportunity in the Middle East, telling students in the region that suicide bombers are driven by a feeling they have more to gain in the afterlife than now.
The former president hushed a packed basketball stadium at the American University in Dubai when he asked, rhetorically: "What leads people to suicide bombing?"
Answering his own question, Clinton said: "They believe they have more to gain in the next world than this one."
"They believe that change is not possible through reasoned, common efforts," he continued. "They believe that, absent some cataclysmic and destructive event, that tomorrow is going to be just like yesterday."
That feeling, he said, is the "major danger" confronting Palestinians and Israelis today.
"If we keep going on where the Palestinians are absolutely convinced that tomorrow is going to be just like yesterday, it can have calamitous consequences not just for them, but for all the rest of you as well," he said.
Clinton's comments came as his wife, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, was elsewhere in the region defending the U.S. stance toward Israeli settlement to worried Arab allies.
After meeting with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Cairo, the secretary of state told reporters that Washington does not accept the legitimacy of Israeli settlements in the West Bank.
But she said an Israeli offer to restrain — but not halt — construction represents "positive movement forward" toward resuming stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations.
The former president's comments in Dubai — a peaceful enclave that has largely been spared the region's violent extremism — were part of a broader address urging students to work to overcome the triple challenges of inequality, instability and unsustainability he said confront the world today.
In the talk, he praised the American-style university for offering young women the same chances as young men, drawing enthusiastic applause when he said such equality was "key to the future of the Middle East."
He also highlighted the need promote education, equality and economic opportunity in fighting extremism in Afghanistan and Pakistan, saying "we cannot shoot our way out of the world's instability."
"Peace is not just the absence of conflict," the former president said. "It is the presence of opportunity and cooperation and a sense of justice and fairness and movement."


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You're not saying anything that hasn't already been known for decades, Bill, but it has implications inside our own country too. In the years after WW1, onerous reparations started the German people down the road of extremism, and once the Depression kicked in, it added stimulus to the Nazis. Now take a look today at the US. We have an economic crisis deeper than anything since the depression, and what do we see? Tea baggers, birthers, deathers, people who believe they have to slit their wrists to stop healthcare reform, who need to bring guns to town hall meetings, people who have to lead tours to "scare" their elected representatives. Was any of this happening a few years ago? No, because the economy was good, people had jobs, and folks were happy with their present and optimistic about their future. Today, things have changed 180 degrees, and angry and frustrated people are being manipulated by cynical thugs who only want power.
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