Resort To Fear

By Noam Chomsky 
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9549.htm
07/23/05 "ZNet" - - The resort to fear by systems of
power to discipline the domestic population has left a
long and terrible trail of bloodshed and suffering
which we ignore at our peril. Recent history provides
many shocking illustrations.

The mid-twentieth century witnessed perhaps the most
awful crimes since the Mongol invasions. The most
savage were carried out where western civilisation had
achieved its greatest splendours. Germany was a
leading centre of the sciences, the arts and
literature, humanistic scholarship, and other
memorable achievements. Prior to World War I, before
anti-German hysteria was fanned in the West, Germany
had been regarded by American political scientists as
a model democracy as well, to be emulated by the West.
In the mid-1930s, Germany was driven within a few
years to a level of barbarism that has few historical
counterparts. That was true, most notably, among the
most educated and civilised sectors of the population.


In his remarkable diaries of his life as a Jew under
Nazism — escaping the gas chambers by a near miracle —
Victor Klemperer writes these words about a German
professor friend whom he had much admired, but who had
finally joined the pack: “If one day the situation
were reversed and the fate of the vanquished lay in my
hands, then I would let all the ordinary folk go and
even some of the leaders, who might perhaps after all
have had honourable intentions and not known what they
were doing. But I would have all the intellectuals
strung up, and the professors three feet higher than
the rest; they would be left hanging from the lamp
posts for as long as was compatible with hygiene.”

Klemperer’s reactions were merited, and generalised to
a large part of recorded history.

Complex historical events always have many causes. One
crucial factor in this case was skillful manipulation
of fear. The “ordinary folk” were driven to fear of a
Jewish-Bolshevik conspiracy to take over the world,
placing the very survival of the people of Germany at
risk. Extreme measures were therefore necessary, in
“self-defence”. Revered intellectuals went far beyond.


As the Nazi storm clouds settled over the country in
1935, Martin Heidegger depicted Germany as the “most
endangered” nation in the world, gripped in the “great
pincers” of an onslaught against civilisation itself,
led in its crudest form by Russia and America. Not
only was Germany the prime victim of this awesome and
barbaric force, but it was also the responsibility of
Germany, “the most metaphysical of nations,” to lead
the resistance to it. Germany stood “in the centre of
the western world,” and must protect the great
heritage of classical Greece from “annihilation,”
relying on the “new spiritual energies unfolding
historically from out of the centre”. The “spiritual
energies” continued to unfold in ways that were
evident enough when he delivered that message, to
which he and other leading intellectuals continued to
adhere.

The paroxysm of slaughter and annihilation did not end
with the use of weapons that may very well bring the
species to a bitter end. We should also not forget
that these species-terminating weapons were created by
the most brilliant, humane, and highly educated
figures of modern civilisation, working in isolation,
and so entranced by the beauty of the work in which
they were engaged that they apparently paid little
attention to the consequences: significant scientific
protests against nuclear weapons began in the labs in
Chicago, after the termination of their role in
creation of the bomb, not in Los Alamos, where the
work went on until the grim end. Not quite the end. 

The official US Air Force history relates that after
the bombing of Nagasaki, when Japan’s submission to
unconditional surrender was certain, General Hap
Arnold “wanted as big a finale as possible,” a
1,000-plane daylight raid on defenceless Japanese
cities. The last bomber returned to its base just as
the agreement to unconditional surrender was formally
received. The Air Force chief, General Carl Spaatz,
had preferred that the grand finale be a third nuclear
attack on Tokyo, but was dissuaded. Tokyo was a “poor
target” having already been incinerated in the
carefully-executed firestorm in March, leaving perhaps
100,000 charred corpses in one of history’s worst
crimes.

Such matters are excluded from war crimes tribunals,
and largely expunged from history. By now they are
hardly known beyond circles of activists and
specialists. At the time they were publicly hailed as
a legitimate exercise of self-defence against a
vicious enemy that had reached the ultimate level of
infamy by bombing US military bases in its Hawaiian
and Philippine colonies.

It is perhaps worth bearing in mind that Japan’s
December 1941 bombings — “the date which will live in
infamy,” in FDR’s (Franklin D. Roosevelt) ringing
words — were more than justified under the doctrines
of “anticipatory self-defence” that prevail among the
leaders of today’s self-designated “enlightened
States,” the US and its British client. Japanese
leaders knew that B-17 Flying Fortresses were coming
off the Boeing production lines, and were surely
familiar with the public discussions in the US
explaining how they could be used to incinerate
Japan’s wooden cities in a war of extermination,
flying from Hawaiian and Philippine bases — “to burn
out the industrial heart of the Empire with
fire-bombing attacks on the teeming bamboo ant heaps,”
as retired Air Force General Chennault recommended in
1940, a proposal that “simply delighted” President
Roosevelt. Evidently, that is a far more powerful
justification for bombing military bases in US
colonies than anything conjured up by Bush-Blair and
their associates in their execution of “pre-emptive
war” — and accepted, with tactical reservations,
throughout the mainstream of articulate opinion.

The comparison, however, is inappropriate. Those who
dwell in teeming bamboo ant heaps are not entitled to
such emotions as fear. Such feelings and concerns are
the prerogatives only of the “rich men dwelling at
peace within their habitations,” in Churchill’s
rhetoric, the “satisfied nations, who wished nothing
more for themselves than what they had,” and to whom,
therefore, “the government of the world must be
entrusted” if there is to be peace — a certain kind of
peace, in which the rich men must be free from fear.

Just how secure the rich men must be from fear is
revealed graphically by highly-regarded scholarship on
the new doctrines of “anticipatory self-defence”
crafted by the powerful. The most important
contribution with some historical depth is by one of
the leading contemporary historians, John Lewis Gaddis
of Yale University. He traces the Bush doctrine to his
intellectual hero, the grand strategist John Quincy
Adams. In the paraphrase of The New York Times, Gaddis
“suggests that Bush’s framework for fighting terrorism
has its roots in the lofty, idealistic tradition of
John Quincy Adams and Woodrow Wilson”. 

We can put aside Wilson’s shameful record, and keep to
the origins of the lofty, idealistic tradition, which
Adams established in a famous State paper justifying
Andrew Jackson’s conquest of Florida in the First
Seminole War in 1818. The war was justified in
self-defence, Adams argued. Gaddis agrees that its
motives were legitimate security concerns. In Gaddis’s
version, after Britain sacked Washington in 1814, US
leaders recognised that “expansion is the path to
security” and therefore conquered Florida, a doctrine
now expanded to the whole world by Bush — properly, he
argues.

Gaddis cites the right scholarly sources, primarily
historian William Earl Weeks, but omits what they say.
We learn a lot about the precedents for current
doctrines, and the current consensus, by looking at
what Gaddis omits. Weeks describes in lurid detail
what Jackson was doing in the “exhibition of murder
and plunder known as the Fist Seminole War,” which was
just another phase in his project of “removing or
eliminating native Americans from the southeast,”
underway long before 1814. Florida was a problem both
because it had not yet been incorporated in the
expanding American empire and because it was a “haven
for Indians and runaway slaves… fleeing the wrath of
Jackson or slavery”.

There was in fact an Indian attack, which Jackson and
Adams used as a pretext: US forces drove a band of
Seminoles off their lands, killing several of them and
burning their village to the ground. The Seminoles
retaliated by attacking a supply boat under military
command. Seizing the opportunity, Jackson “embarked on
a campaign of terror, devastation, and intimidation,”
destroying villages and “sources of food in a
calculated effort to inflict starvation on the tribes,
who sought refuge from his wrath in the swamps”. So
matters continued, leading to Adams’ highly regarded
State paper, which endorsed Jackson’s unprovoked
aggression to establish in Florida “the dominion of
this republic upon the odious basis of violence and
bloodshed”. 

These are the words of the Spanish ambassador, a
“painfully precise description,” Weeks writes. Adams
“had consciously distorted, dissembled, and lied about
the goals and conduct of American foreign policy to
both Congress and the public,” Weeks continues,
grossly violating his proclaimed moral principles,
“implicitly defending Indian removal, and slavery”.
The crimes of Jackson and Adams “proved but a prelude
to a second war of extermination against (the
Seminoles),” in which the remnants either fled to the
West, to enjoy the same fate later, “or were killed or
forced to take refuge in the dense swamps of Florida”.
Today, Weeks concludes, “the Seminoles survive in the
national consciousness as the mascot of Florida State
University” — a typical and instructive case…

…The rhetorical framework rests on three pillars
(Weeks): “the assumption of the unique moral virtue of
the United States, the assertion of its mission to
redeem the world” by spreading its professed ideals
and the ‘American way of life,’ and the faith in the
nation’s “divinely ordained destiny”. The theological
framework undercuts reasoned debate, and reduces
policy issues to a choice between Good and Evil, thus
reducing the threat of democracy. Critics can be
dismissed as “anti-American,” an interesting concept
borrowed from the lexicon of totalitarianism. And the
population must huddle under the umbrella of power, in
fear that its way of life and destiny are under
imminent threat…

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