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----- Original Message -----
From: John Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, December 26, 2001 1:50 PM
Subject: Fw: [BRC-NEWS] Defining Terrorism



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 From: Tom Wheeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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 Sent: Wednesday, December 26, 2001 12:01 AM
 Subject: [BRC-NEWS] Defining Terrorism


 > http://www.counterpunch.org/cryan1.html
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CounterPunch
 November 29, 2001

Defining Terrorism

By Phillip Cryan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

 "Terrorism" may be the most important, powerful word in the
 world right now. In the name of doing away with terrorism,
  the United States is bombing Afghanistan and talking about
  possible attacks elsewhere. Political leaders from many
  countries are at once declaring support for the new U.S. war
  and seeking to re-name their own enemies as "terrorists."

  According to polls, many people in the U.S. believe that war
  on the al'Qaeda network is justified in retaliation for the
  September 11 attacks on New York City and Washington, D.C.
  The defined enemy of the U.S. military campaign has not,
  however, been just the people responsible for the September
  11 attacks, but "terrorism" in general. The U.S. has
  declared a "War on Terrorism" -- a war which also includes
  as enemies, as President Bush has made clear since his first
  public address on the afternoon of the 11, "all those who
  harbor terrorists." What exactly do these words, "terrorism"
  and "harboring," mean? What definitions are we using?


  Legal definition: seeking international consensus

  The difficulty of answering this question was stated
  concisely in a recent New York Times article: "immediately
  beyond al'Qaeda, the high moral condemnations of global
  terrorism rapidly become relative, and the definition
  blurred." The international community has been actively
  seeking consensus on the definition of "terrorism" for many
  years, to no avail.

  Twelve separate international conventions have been signed,
  each covering a specific type of criminal activity --
  seizure of airplanes, political assassination, the use of
  explosives, hostage-taking, etc. Broad ratification of these
  treaties has been difficult to achieve; and the more
  fundamental issue of creating a comprehensive, binding
  international convention against terrorism has been set
  aside, after repeated efforts, as practically unresolvable.
  As the UN puts it, "the question of a definition of
  terrorism has haunted the debate among States for decades."

  One of the points of heated contention in this debate has
  been whether the term "terrorism" should apply to the
  actions of States in the same way that it applies to the
  actions of non-State groups. It's easy to see why this
  question would be so contentious: whatever one's overall
  view of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, for example, it's
  pretty easy to admit that unjustifiable acts of terror and
  murder have been committed by both sides. Should the two
  sides be held equally accountable, even though one is an
  already-recognized State and one is a national liberation
  movement? These kinds of questions have been repeatedly
 raised -- as will be described below -- not only in regard
to the Middle East but in regard to State-sponsored acts of
terrorism throughout the world.

Since international consensus has been so difficult to
reach, for the purposes of this brief discussion of
terrorism and "harboring" I'll use the U.S. FBI's
definition: "Terrorism is the unlawful use of force or
violence against persons or property to intimidate or coerce
a government, the civilian population, or any segment
thereof, in furtherance of political or social objectives."
How does such a definition line up with the goals and
strategies of the emerging "War on Terrorism"?


Justice

How does a definition of terrorism, such as the FBI's, get
 applied? Who has the authority to judge what counts as
 "terrorism" and what doesn't? Is there a level playing
 field, internationally, for the persecution of terrorists?

 A recent comment made by Syria's Information Minister, Adnan
 Omran, frames these problems in a provocative, yet also
  precise and urgent, way: "The Americans say either you are
  with us or you are with the terrorists. That is something
  God should say." The original title given to the U.S.
  military campaign in Afghanistan -- "Operation Infinite
  Justice" -- seems to confirm Omran's concern. President Bush
  has indeed stated, in his address to Congress, that "Every
  nation, in every region, now has a decision to make: either
  you are with us, or you are with the terrorists." Is our
  government in fact equating its judgments, policies, and
  military actions with the meting out of God-like "infinite
  justice"? If so, what kind of moral blamelessness do we
  ground such authority in?

  A brief review of some U.S. political and military
  interventions over the last few decades reveals just how far
  we are -- sadly, tragically -- as a nation from having the
  kind of virtue and integrity required to wage such a war
  with a clear conscience and certainty of purpose. Following
  the FBI definition, our government has repeatedly, in
  country after country, used "force or violence"
  "unlawfully," "to intimidate or coerce a government, [a]
  civilian population, or [a] segment thereof," in order to
  achieve "political or social objectives." I will mention
  only a few examples.


 Terrorism and "harboring" of terrorists by the U.S.

U.S. intervention in Nicaragua provides an astounding, but
  by no means extraordinary, example. First, some background:
  by 1934, when the authoritarian Somoza regime was
  established, the U.S. had already occupied the country
  militarily on at least four different occasions, established
  training schools for right-wing militia, dismantled two
  liberal governments, and helped to orchestrate fake
 elections. In 1981, the CIA began to organize the "Contras"
-- many of whom had already received training from the U.S.
 military as members of the Somozas' National Guardsmen -- to
 overthrow the progressive Sandanista government. In other
words: the CIA "harbored," recruited, armed and trained the
Contras, in order to "coerce" and overthrow a government,
and terrorize a people, through violent means ("in
furtherance of political [and] social objectives"). U.S.
intervention went well beyond "harboring," however, in this
case. In 1984, the CIA mined three Nicaraguan harbors. When
Nicaragua took this action to the World Court, an $18
billion judgment was brought against the U.S. The U.S.
response was to simply refuse to acknowledge the Court's
jurisdiction.

Another striking example of U.S. terrorist activity was the
bombing of a suburban Beirut neighborhood in March 1985.
This attack -- which killed 80 people and wounded 200
others, making it the single largest bombing attack against
a civilian target in the modern history of the Middle East
-- was ordered by the director of the CIA (William Casey)
and authorized by President Reagan. Another U.S. attack on
civilians, the 1986 bombing of Libya, is listed by the UN's
Committee on the Legal Definition of Terrorism as a "classic
case" of terrorism -- on a short list that includes the
bombing of PAN AM 103, the first attempt made on the World
Trade Center, and the bombing of the Oklahoma City Federal
Building.

Other instances of U.S. support for, or direct engagement
in, terrorist acts include:

* overthrow of the democratically elected Allende
 government in Chile in 1973 -- leading to widespread
 torture, rape, and murder by the military regime, and the
 termination of civil liberties

 * extensive support for a right-wing junta in El
 Salvador that ended up being responsible for 35,000 civilian
 deaths between 1978 and 1981

 * assassination attempts, exploded boats, industrial
 sabotage, and the burning of sugar fields in Cuba

  * the training of thousands of Latin American
  military personnel in torture methods at the School of the
  Americas

  * providing huge quantities of arms -- far more than
  any other nation -- to various combatants in the Middle East
  and West Asia

  * and massive support, in funds and arms, for
  Israeli attacks on Palestinian civilians.

  The rationale provided for many of these interventions -- in
  those case where a rationale was in fact provided -- was the
  "war on Communism." This often served as an alibi, however,
  for the protection of economic interests: unrestricted
  access to oil and other natural resources for U.S.-based
  (and other "First World") corporations.


  Double standards

  U.S. officials successfully pressured the UN to impose
  sanctions on Libya for its initial refusal to extradite
  Libyan agents implicated in the PAN AM 103 bombing; but they
  (U.S. officials) have consistently refused to extradite U.S.
  citizens -- all of whom have ties to the CIA -- charged with
  acts of terrorism in Costa Rica and Venezuela (including
  blowing up a Cuban airliner in 1976). We have provided no
  support for attempts to bring Augusto Pinochet (the Chilean
  military dictator responsible for the atrocities described
  above) to justice -- probably not only because our own
  government was so heavily involved in his rise to power but
  also because the prosecution of such an obvious
  State-terrorist would open the door, legally, for the likes
  of Henry Kissinger and Oliver North to be tried for having
  ordered terrorist acts.

  The double standards at play, the hypocrisy and bad faith
  involved, in calling for the world to decide whether it is
  "with us" or "with the terrorists" should by now be fairly
  evident. To use President Bush's terms, our nation has --
  tragically -- in reality championed "Fear" and suppressed
  "Freedom" in a great many countries, for millions of people.
  We have been directly responsible for acts of terrorism, and
  for the "harboring" of terrorists, on an almost unimaginable
  scale in terms of human death and the creation of fear. When
  Green Berets trained the Guatemalan army in the 1960s --
  leading to a campaign of bombings, death squads, and
  "scorched earth" assaults that killed or "disappeared"
20O,000 -- U.S. Army Colonel John Webber called it "a
technique of counter-terror." This comment can serve as a
reminder and warning for us now -- not that there are not
real terrorist threats to our national security, but that we
 have to be incredibly careful about how we define terrorism,
  who defines it, and what tactics are used to uproot it.
  There is something truly chilling, as the Syrian Information
  Minister pointed out, in the apparent consensus within the
  United States that we stand for "Freedom" and all that is
  "Good" in the world, and that we are somehow entitled and
  equipped to mete out "infinite justice."


  Blowback

  As most of us have read at some point in the last few weeks,
  our current attacks on the Taliban and al'Qaeda are
  complicated, politically and morally, by our military and
  economic support for the Mujahideen war against the U.S.S.R.
  in the 1980s. We provided over $7 billion in arms and funds,
  plus training supplied through the Pakistani intelligence
  agency. The lesson: lines of distinction between "Good" and
  "Evil" are dramatically more blurred and complex than
  President Bush, Secretary Rumsfeld, and most voices in the
  media seem to want us to think. U.S. funding, training, and
  supply of arms -- literally, U.S. harboring of terrorists --
  were a crucial part of what enabled the Taliban to come to
  power in Afghanistan. This is what military analysts call
  "blowback."

  A less frequently discussed but equally important instance
  of blowback is the U.S. role in Iraq. Throughout the 1980s,
  the U.S. actively supported Iraq as an ally against Iran and
  as a potentially profitable future source for raw goods and
  market for exports. Though the U.S. government was clearly
  aware of Saddam Hussein's extermination of Kurds and his
  development of military and chemical weapons capacity (there
  is ample documentation of the extent of U.S. leaders'
knowledge ), the U.S. continued to support Hussein's
government with billions of dollars in export credit
insurance. This situation only changed when U.S. oil access
 was threatened (by the invasion of Kuwait). Up until then,
 no matter how extreme the fiscal duplicity, military
  build-up or outright genocide committed by Hussein's regime,
  U.S. officials urged "hard-headedness" and a recognition of
  Iraq's strategic and economic importance as an ally. Again,
  this brief outline of a piece of recent history complicates
  the current situation enormously: how can Hussein be "Evil"
  and "a terrorist," and we "Good" and the world's defenders
  of "Freedom," if we funded him through many of the
  atrocities he's committed, fully conscious that he was
  committing them? As with Afghanistan, a short memory on our
  part, together with a preference for black-and-white
  thinking, are likely to prove responsible for yet more
  suffering and violence now and down the road.

  The situation in Iraq is perhaps more complex and tragic
  than any other, in terms of the U.S. role past and future.
  U.S.-imposed sanctions (almost every country in the UN
  opposes them) against Iraq have so far led to the deaths of
  approximately one million people. Two Assistants to the
  Secretary-General of the UN responsible for humanitarian aid
  to Iraq have resigned in protest, calling the sanctions
  "genocide." Our government is waging a methodical, hugely
  violent, daily war against the people of Iraq -- attacking
  civilians in numbers that grotesquely dwarf the horrific
  tragedies of September 11th. When asked in 1996 what she
  felt about the deaths of 500,000 children caused by the
  sanctions, then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
  replied that it was "a very hard choice," but, all things
  considered, "we think the price is worth it." (It is worth
  pausing here, for a moment, perhaps, to try to take in the
  reality of such a statement.)


  Language's dangers

  In a world of such extreme violence, hypocrisy, and moral
  ambiguity, we need to be careful about whom we listen to,
  whom we believe, and whose wars we fight.

  The term "War on Terrorism" has been quickly picked up by
  political leaders seeking to advance a host of different
  agendas domestically and internationally. The phrase is
  likely to be with us for some time (Secretary Rumsfeld has
  described the war as "sustained, comprehensive, and
  unrelenting"), used as the justification for all sorts of
  military, political, and economic interventions abroad --
  not to mention the removal of civil liberties at home.

  Some examples of international uses:

  * Russia has been seeking, since September 11, to
  cast Chechen rebels as terrorists, and Georgia as a
  terrorist-harboring State, in order to legitimate its use of
  violence in those two arenas.

  * In mid-October, the U.S. sent military advisers to
  the Phillipines, to assist the government in what it
  describes as a campaign against Muslim "terrorists."

  * A Heritage Foundation report named Iraq, Iran,
  Syria, Sudan, and Libya as States which need to be "put on
  notice . . . that they will not escape America's wrath if
  they continue to support international terrorism."

  * Colombian army officials switched, within just a
  few days of September 11, from calling the FARC and ELN
  rebels "narcoguerrillas" to calling them "narcoterrorists."

  * Francis X. Taylor, head of the U.S. Department of
  State's Office of Counterterrorism, recently stated that
  these Colombian groups will "get the same treatment as other
  terrorist groups," including "where appropriate -- as we are
  doing in Afghanistan -- the use of military power."

  * The ongoing U.S. policy toward Colombia -- "Plan
  Colombia" -- involves chemical warfare, just what we fear so
  greatly now in this country: crop-duster planes spray
  broad-spectrum herbicides onto the Colombian countryside and
  the people who live there, leading to widespread illness,
  displacement, and hunger (as a result of the destruction of
  food crops).

  * Ariel Sharon has stepped up campaigns against
  Palestinians. The Israeli Cabinet, in blunt and ominous
  language, has issued statements like the following: "Failure
  to meet these demands . . . will leave us no choice but to
  view the Palestinian Authority as an entity supporting and
  sponsoring terror, and to act accordingly."

  * China is expected to use the justifying rhetoric
  of the "War on Terrorism" to further crack down on Uighur
  Muslims, Tibetans, and Taiwan.


  Final remarks

  On October 4, Amnesty International published a report on
  the tightening of security in the wake of September 11. In
  the report, Amnesty observed that "some of the definitions
  of terrorism under discussion are so broad that they could
  be used to criminalize anyone out of favor with those in
  power." We must be careful with definitions; we must know
  what we mean. When asked to define "terrorism," Sir Jeremy
  Greenstock, the British diplomat charged with leading UN
  efforts to combat terrorism, replied: "What looks, smells,
  and kills like terrorism is terrorism." It is, simply, not
  that simple. Such oversimplifications and appeals to
  "obviousness" are not only inaccurate but profoundly
  dangerous, as the Amnesty International report suggests. And
  clear delineation of definitions will become increasingly
  complicated and difficult to achieve over time, as more
  governments and special interests seek to advance the
  policies they favor by calling them "attacks on terrorism."

 Who are we, the United States, in the end, to tell the world
  what Good and Evil are, after our history of unlawful
  violence, double standards, and outright engagement in acts
  of terrorism? President Bush's explanation for anti-U.S.
  sentiment -- "These people can't stand freedom" -- is
  ludicrous, deplorable: it grotesquely misrepresents the
  realities of current world politics and the history of 20th
  century U.S. foreign policy. In light of that history, and
  of the fact that the definition of "terrorism" has been
  debated without resolution for decades, it is our
  responsibility as U.S. citizens and as human beings to think
  carefully, long and hard and well, about this war, to notice
  and question each use of the word "terrorism" that we come
  across and to educate ourselves, and one another, about the
  reality of suffering in the world in which we live -- its
  causes, and ways to uproot them. CP

  --

  Phillip Cryan works for the Pesticide Action Network of
  North America, challenging U.S.-funded "Plan Colombia"
  aerial herbicide fumigations in Colombia. He received a BA
  in English from UC-Berkeley. He is part of the Buddhist
  Alliance for Social Engagement and the Zen Hospice Project.

  --

  SOURCES:

  "Definitions of Terrorism," The United Nations Office for
  Drug Control and Crime Prevention, on October 9, 2001;

  "The algebra of infinite justice" by Arundhati Roy, on
  October 17, 2001; "Democratic Gains Falter With Tighter
  Security in Central Europe" New York Times October 4, 2001;

  "America Strikes Back: Looking Ahead" by Kim R. Holmes, The
  Heritage Foundation, October 8, 2001;

  "International Terrorism" by Stephen Zunes, on October 15,
  2001;

  "A Growing List of Foes Now Suddenly Friends" New York Times
  October 5, 2001;
  "Iraqgate: Saddam Hussein, U.S. Policy and the Prelude to
  the Persian Gulf War, 1980-1994," Digital National Security
  Archive, on October 15, 2001;

  "Legal Definition of Terrorism," GA: Legal Committee, on
  October 9, 2001; "Conventions Against Terrorism," The United
  Nations Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention, on
  October 9, 2001;

  "The Challenges of Alliance With Russia" New York Times
  October 5, 2001; "Terrorist Threats Against America,"
  testimony by Francis X. Taylor to the Committee on
  International Relations, on October 11, 2001;

  "U.S. Interventions in Latin America" by Mark Rosenfelder,
  on October 15, 2001;

  "Lessons from History: U.S. Policy Toward Afghanistan,
  1978-2001" by Reyko Huang, Center for Defense Information
  Terrorism Project, on October 15, 2001;

  "U.S. May Use Military in Hemisphere" Associated Press
  October 16, 2001;

  "Defining 'Terrorism'" by Nick Cooper, on October 15, 2001.

  Copyright (c) 2001 Phillip Cryan. All Rights Reserved.


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