An Agenda of Opportunity
The United States and its friends can stress educational and economic
opportunity. The United Nations has rightly equated "literacy as
freedom."
- The international community is moving toward setting a concrete goal-to
cut the Middle East region's illiteracy rate in half by 2010, targeting
women and girls and supporting programs for adult literacy.
- Unglamorous help is needed to support the basics, such as textbooks that
translate more of the world's knowledge into local languages and libraries
to house such materials. Education about the outside world, or other
cultures, is weak.
- More vocational education is needed, too, in trades and business skills.
The Middle East can also benefit from some of the programs to bridge the
digital divide and increase Internet access that have already been developed
for other regions of the world.
Education that teaches tolerance, the dignity and value of each individual,
and respect for different beliefs is a key element in any global strategy to
eliminate Islamist terrorism.
Recommendation: The U.S. government should offer to join with other
nations in generously supporting a new International Youth Opportunity Fund.
Funds will be spent directly for building and operating primary and secondary
schools in those Muslim states that commit to sensibly investing their own money
in public education.
Economic openness is essential. Terrorism is not caused by poverty. Indeed,
many terrorists come from relatively well-off families. Yet when people lose
hope, when societies break down, when countries fragment, the breeding grounds
for terrorism are created. Backward economic policies and repressive political
regimes slip into societies that are without hope, where ambition and passions
have no constructive outlet.
The policies that support economic development and reform also have political
implications. Economic and political liberties tend to be linked. Commerce,
especially international commerce, requires ongoing cooperation and compromise,
the exchange of ideas across cultures, and the peaceful resolution of
differences through negotiation or the rule of law. Economic growth expands the
middle class, a constituency for further reform. Successful economies rely on
vibrant private sectors, which have an interest in curbing indiscriminate
government power. Those who develop the practice of controlling their own
economic destiny soon desire a voice in their communities and political
societies.
The U.S. government has announced the goal of working toward a Middle East
Free Trade Area, or MEFTA, by 2013.The United States has been seeking
comprehensive free trade agreements (FTAs) with the Middle Eastern nations most
firmly on the path to reform. The U.S.-Israeli FTA was enacted in 1985, and
Congress implemented an FTA with Jordan in 2001. Both agreements have expanded
trade and investment, thereby supporting domestic economic reform. In 2004, new
FTAs were signed with Morocco and Bahrain, and are awaiting congressional
approval. These models are drawing the interest of their neighbors. Muslim
countries can become full participants in the rules-based global trading system,
as the United States considers lowering its trade barriers with the poorest Arab
nations.
Recommendation: A comprehensive U.S. strategy to counter terrorism
should include economic policies that encourage development, more open
societies, and opportunities for people to improve the lives of their families
and to enhance prospects for their children's future.