Thursday, September 20, 2001
Noam
Chomsky interviewed on Radio B92,
Belgrade Radio
Belgrade: Why do you think these attacks
happened? To answer the question we must first
identify the perpetrators of the crimes.
It is generally assumed, plausibly, that
their origin is the Middle East region,
and that the attacks probably trace back
to the Osama Bin Laden network, a
widespread and complex organization,
doubtless inspired by Bin Laden but
not necessarily acting under his control.
Let us assume that this is true. Then to
answer your question a sensible person
would try to ascertain Bin Laden's views,
and the sentiments of the large reservoir
of supporters he has throughout the
region. About all of this, we have a great
deal of information. Bin Laden has been interviewed
extensively over the years by highly
reliable Middle East specialists, notably
the most eminent correspondent in the
region, Robert Fisk (London
Independent), who has intimate
knowledge of the entire region and direct
experience over decades. A Saudi Arabian
millionaire, Bin Laden became a militant
Islamic leader in the war to drive the
Russians out of Afghanistan. He was one of
the many religious fundamentalist
extremists recruited, armed, and financed
by the CIA and their allies in Pakistani
intelligence to cause maximal harm to the
Russians -- quite possibly delaying their
withdrawal, many analysts suspect --
though whether he personally happened to
have direct contact with the CIA is
unclear, and not particularly
important. Not surprisingly, the CIA preferred the
most fanatic and cruel fighters they could
mobilize. The end result was to "destroy a
moderate regime and create a fanatical
one, from groups recklessly financed by
the Americans" (London Times
correspondent Simon Jenkins, also a
specialist on the region). These
"Afghanis" as they are called (many, like
Bin Laden, not from Afghanistan) carried
out terror operations across the border in
Russia, but they terminated these after
Russia withdrew. Their war was not against
Russia, which they despise, but against
the Russian occupation and Russia's crimes
against Muslims. The "Afghanis" did not terminate their
activities, however. They joined Bosnian
Muslim forces in the Balkan Wars; the US
did not object, just as it tolerated
Iranian support for them, for complex
reasons that we need not pursue here,
apart from noting that concern for the
grim fate of the Bosnians was not
prominent among them. The "Afghanis" are
also fighting the Russians in Chechnya,
and, quite possibly, are involved in
carrying out terrorist attacks in Moscow
and elsewhere in Russian territory. Bin
Laden and his "Afghanis" turned against
the US in 1990 when they established
permanent bases in Saudi Arabia -- from
his point of view, a counterpart to the
Russian occupation of Afghanistan, but far
more significant because of Saudi Arabia's
special status as the guardian of the
holiest shrines. Bin Laden is also bitterly opposed to
the corrupt and repressive regimes of the
region, which he regards as "un-Islamic,"
including the Saudi Arabian regime, the
most extreme Islamic fundamentalist regime
in the world, apart from the Taliban, and
a close US ally since its origins. Bin
Laden despises the US for its support of
these regimes. Like others in the region,
he is also outraged by long-standing US
support for Israel's brutal military
occupation, now in its 35th year:
Washington's decisive diplomatic,
military, and economic intervention in
support of the killings, the harsh and
destructive siege over many years, the
daily humiliation to which Palestinians
are subjected, the expanding settlements
designed to break the occupied territories
into Bantustan-like cantons and take
control of the resources, the gross
violation of the Geneva Conventions, and
other actions that are recognized as
crimes throughout most of the world, apart
from the US, which has prime
responsibility for them. And like others, he contrasts
Washington's dedicated support for these
crimes with the decade-long US-British
assault against the civilian population of
Iraq, which has devastated the society and
caused hundreds of thousands of deaths
while strengthening Saddam Hussein -- who
was a favored friend and ally of the US
and Britain right through his worst
atrocities, including the gassing of the
Kurds, as people of the region also
remember well, even if Westerners prefer
to forget the facts. These sentiments are very widely
shared. The Wall Street Journal
(Sept. 14) published a survey of opinions
of wealthy and privileged Muslims in the
Gulf region (bankers, professionals,
businessmen with close links to the U.S.).
They expressed much the same views:
resentment of the U.S. policies of
supporting Israeli crimes and blocking the
international consensus on a diplomatic
settlement for many years while
devastating Iraqi civilian society,
supporting harsh and repressive
anti-democratic regimes throughout the
region, and imposing barriers against
economic development by "propping up
oppressive regimes." Among the great
majority of people suffering deep poverty
and oppression, similar sentiments are far
more bitter, and are the source of the
fury and despair that has led to suicide
bombings, as commonly understood by those
who are interested in the facts. The U.S., and much of the West, prefers
a more comforting story. To quote the lead
analysis in the New York Times
(Sept. 16), the perpetrators acted out of
"hatred for the values cherished in the
West as freedom, tolerance, prosperity,
religious pluralism and universal
suffrage." U.S. actions are irrelevant,
and therefore need not even be mentioned
(Serge Schmemann). This is a
convenient picture, and the general stance
is not unfamiliar in intellectual history;
in fact, it is close to the norm. It
happens to be completely at variance with
everything we know, but has all the merits
of self-adulation and uncritical support
for power. It is also widely recognized that Bin
Laden and others like him are praying for
"a great assault on Muslim states," which
will cause "fanatics to flock to his
cause" (Jenkins, and many others.). That
too is familiar. The escalating cycle of
violence is typically welcomed by the
harshest and most brutal elements on both
sides, a fact evident enough from the
recent history of the Balkans, to cite
only one of many cases. Radio
Belgrade: What consequences will they have
on US inner policy and to the American
self reception? US policy has already been officially
announced. The world is being offered a
"stark choice": join us, or "face the
certain prospect of death and
destruction." Congress has authorized the
use of force against any individuals or
countries the President determines to be
involved in the attacks, a doctrine that
every supporter regards as ultra-criminal.
That is easily demonstrated. Simply ask
how the same people would have reacted if
Nicaragua had adopted this doctrine after
the U.S. had rejected the orders of the
World Court to terminate its "unlawful use
of force" against Nicaragua and had vetoed
a Security Council resolution calling on
all states to observe international law.
And that terrorist attack was far more
severe and destructive even than this
atrocity. As for how these matters are perceived
here, that is far more complex. One should
bear in mind that the media and the
intellectual elites generally have their
particular agendas. Furthermore, the
answer to this question is, in significant
measure, a matter of decision: as in many
other cases, with sufficient dedication
and energy, efforts to stimulate
fanaticism, blind hatred, and submission
to authority can be reversed. We all know
that very well. Radio
Belgrade: Do you expect U.S. to profoundly
change their policy to the rest of the
world? The initial response was to call for
intensifying the policies that led to the
fury and resentment that provides the
background of support for the terrorist
attack, and to pursue more intensively the
agenda of the most hard line elements of
the leadership: increased militarization,
domestic regimentation, attack on social
programs. That is all to be expected.
Again, terror attacks, and the escalating
cycle of violence they often engender,
tend to reinforce the authority and
prestige of the most harsh and repressive
elements of a society. But there is
nothing inevitable about submission to
this course. Radio
Belgrade: After the first shock, came fear
of what the U.S. answer is going to be.
Are you afraid, too? Every sane person should be afraid of
the likely reaction -- the one that has
already been announced, the one that
probably answers Bin Laden's prayers. It
is highly likely to escalate the cycle of
violence, in the familiar way, but in this
case on a far greater scale. The U.S. has already demanded that
Pakistan terminate the food and other
supplies that are keeping at least some of
the starving and suffering people of
Afghanistan alive. If that demand is
implemented, unknown numbers of people who
have not the remotest connection to
terrorism will die, possibly millions. Let
me repeat: the U.S. has demanded that
Pakistan kill possibly millions of people
who are themselves victims of the Taliban.
This has nothing to do even with revenge.
It is at a far lower moral level even than
that. The significance is heightened by
the fact that this is mentioned in
passing, with no comment, and probably
will hardly be noticed. We can learn a
great deal about the moral level of the
reigning intellectual culture of the West
by observing the reaction to this demand.
I think we can be reasonably confident
that if the American population had the
slightest idea of what is being done in
their name, they would be utterly
appalled. It would be instructive to seek
historical precedents. If Pakistan does not agree to this and
other U.S. demands, it may come under
direct attack as well -- with unknown
consequences. If Pakistan does submit to
U.S. demands, it is not impossible that
the government will be overthrown by
forces much like the Taliban -- who in
this case will have nuclear weapons. That
could have an effect throughout the
region, including the oil producing
states. At this point we are considering
the possibility of a war that may destroy
much of human society. Even without pursuing such
possibilities, the likelihood is that an
attack on Afghans will have pretty much
the effect that most analysts expect: it
will enlist great numbers of others to
support of Bin Laden, as he hopes. Even if
he is killed, it will make little
difference. His voice will be heard on
cassettes that are distributed throughout
the Islamic world, and he is likely to be
revered as a martyr, inspiring others. It
is worth bearing in mind that one suicide
bombing -- a truck driven into a U.S.
military base -- drove the world's major
military force out of Lebanon 20 years
ago. The opportunities for such attacks
are endless. And suicide attacks are very
hard to prevent. Radio
Belgrade: "The world will never be the
same after 11.09.01". Do you think
so? The horrendous terrorist attacks on
Tuesday are something quite new in world
affairs, not in their scale and character,
but in the target. For the US, this is the
first time since the War of 1812 that its
national territory has been under attack,
even threat. It's colonies have been
attacked, but not the national territory
itself. During these years the US
virtually exterminated the indigenous
population, conquered half of Mexico,
intervened violently in the surrounding
region, conquered Hawaii and the
Philippines (killing hundreds of thousands
of Filipinos), and in the past half
century particularly, extended its resort
to force throughout much of the world. The
number of victims is colossal. For the first time, the guns have been
directed the other way. The same is true,
even more dramatically, of Europe. Europe
has suffered murderous destruction, but
from internal wars, meanwhile conquering
much of the world with extreme brutality.
It has not been under attack by its
victims outside, with rare exceptions (the
IRA in England, for example). It is
therefore natural that NATO should rally
to the support of the US; hundreds of
years of imperial violence have an
enormous impact on the intellectual and
moral culture. It is correct to say that this is a
novel event in world history, not because
of the scale of the atrocity --
regrettably -- but because of the target.
How the West chooses to react is a matter
of supreme importance. If the rich and
powerful choose to keep to their
traditions of hundreds of years and resort
to extreme violence, they will contribute
to the escalation of a cycle of violence,
in a familiar dynamic, with long-term
consequences that could be awesome. Of
course, that is by no means inevitable. An
aroused public within the more free and
democratic societies can direct policies
towards a much more humane and honorable
course.
|