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Article 5.
Wall Street Journal
From 9/11 to the Arab Spring
Fouad Ajami
September 8, 2011 -- The Arabic word shamata has its own power.
The closest approximation to it is the German schadenfreude—glee at
another's misfortune. And when the Twin Towers fell 10 years ago
this week, there was plenty of glee in Arab lands—a sense of wonder,
bordering on pride, that a band of young Arabs had brought soot and
ruin onto American soil.
The symbols of this mighty American republic—the commercial
empire in New York, the military power embodied by the Pentagon—
had been hit. Sweets were handed out in East Jerusalem, there were
no tears shed in Cairo for the Americans, more than three decades of
U.S. aid notwithstanding. Everywhere in that Arab world—among
the Western-educated elite as among the Islamists—there was
unmistakable satisfaction that the Americans had gotten their
comeuppance.
There were sympathetic vigils in Iran—America's most determined
enemy in the region—and anti-American belligerence in the Arab
countries most closely allied with the United States. This occasioned
the observation of the noted historian Bernard Lewis that there were
pro-American regimes with anti-American populations, and anti-
American regimes with pro-American populations.
I traveled to Jeddah and Cairo in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. In
the splendid homes of wealthy American-educated businessmen, in
the salons of perfectly polished men and women of letters, there was
no small measure of admiration for Osama bin Laden. He was the
avenger, the Arabs had been at the receiving end of Western power,
and now the scales were righted. "Yes, but... ," said the Arab
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| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_025016.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 1,699 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:55:58.306792 |