One would have to be foolish to argue that the nationalism and doctrinaire separateness of individual Arabstates, whether the state is Egypt, Syria, Kuwait or Jordan, is a better thing, a more useful politicalactuality than some scheme of inter-Arab cooperation in economic, political and cultural spheres. Certainly Isee no need for total integration, but any form of useful cooperation and planning would be better than thedisgraceful summits that have disfigured our national life, say, during the Iraq crisis. Every Arab asks thequestion, as does every foreigner: why do the Arabs never pool their resources to fight for the causes whichofficially, at least, they claim to support, and which, in the case of the Palestinians, their peopleactively, indeed passionately believe in?