From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Sid Shniad
Sent: Thursday, April 25, 2013 2:39 PM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: The same motive for anti-US 'terrorism' is cited over and over.
Ignoring the role played by US actions is dangerously self-flattering and
self-delusional.

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/apr/24/boston-terrorism-motives
-us-violence

The Guardian   24 April 2013


The same motive for anti-US 'terrorism' is cited over and over


It should go without saying that the issue here is causation, not
justification or even fault. It is inherently unjustifiable to target
innocent civilians with violence, no matter the cause (just as it is
unjustifiable to recklessly kill civilians with violence). But it is
nonetheless vital to understand why there are so many people who want to
attack the US as opposed to, say, Peru, or South Africa, or Brazil, or
Mexico, or Japan, or Portugal. Ignoring the role played by US actions is
dangerously self-flattering and self-delusional. 

Glenn Greenwald

A banner reading 'United We Stand For Peace on Earth' outside the Islamic
Society of Boston mosque in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Photograph: Allen
Breed/AP

(updated below - Update II - Update III)

News reports purporting to describe what Dzhokhar Tsarnaev told US
interrogators should, for several reasons, be taken with a huge grain of
salt. The sources for this information are anonymous, they work for the US
government, the statements were obtained with no lawyer present and no
Miranda warnings given, and Tsarnaev is
<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/23/us/boston-marathon-bombings-developments.
html?hp&_r=1&> "grievously wounded", presumably quite medicated, and barely
able to speak. That the motives for these attacks are still unclear has been
acknowledged even by Alan Dershowitz last week
<http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/obamas-rush-judgment-was-b
oston-bombing-really-terrorist-act>  ("It's not even clear under the federal
terrorism statute that this qualifies as an act of terrorism") and Jeffrey
Goldberg on Friday
<http://mobile.bloomberg.com/news/2013-04-19/five-things-to-remember-as-bost
on-crisis-unfolds.html>  ("it is not yet clear, despite preliminary
indications, that these men were, in fact, motivated by radical Islam"). 

Those caveats to the side, the reports about what motivated the Boston
suspects
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/23/boston-bombing-suspects-motive-afg
hanistan-iraq_n_3140547.html>  are entirely unsurprising and, by now, quite
familiar:

"The two suspects in the Boston bombing that killed three and injured more
than 260 were motivated by the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, officials
told the Washington Post.

"Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 'the 19-year-old suspect in the Boston Marathon
bombings, has told interrogators that the American wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan motivated him and his brother to carry out the attack,' the Post
writes, citing 'US officials familiar with the interviews.'"

In the last several years, there have been four other serious attempted or
successful attacks on US soil by Muslims, and in every case, they
emphatically all say the same thing: that they were motivated by the
continuous, horrific violence brought by the US and its allies to the Muslim
world - violence which routinely kills and oppresses innocent men, women and
children:


Attempted
<http://www.freep.com/article/20111012/NEWS01/111012038/Transcript-Read-Abdu
lmutallab-s-statement-guilty-plea> "underwear bomber" Umar Farouk
Abdulmutallab upon pleading guilty:


"I had an agreement with at least one person to attack the United States in
retaliation for US support of Israel and in retaliation of the killing of
innocent and civilian Muslim populations in Palestine, especially in the
blockade of Gaza, and in retaliation for the killing of innocent and
civilian Muslim populations in Yemen, Iraq, Somalia, Afghanistan and beyond,
most of them women, children, and noncombatants."


Attempted Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad, the first Pakistani-American
involved in such a plot, upon pleading guilty
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/21/AR201006210
2468.html?hpid=moreheadlines> :


"If the United States does not get out of Iraq, Afghanistan and other
countries controlled by Muslims, he said, 'we will be attacking US', adding
that Americans 'only care about their people, but they don't care about the
people elsewhere in the world when they die' . . . .

"As soon as he was taken into custody May 3 at John F. Kennedy International
Airport, onboard a flight to Dubai, the Pakistani-born Shahzad told agents
that he was motivated by opposition to US policy in the Muslim world,
officials said."

When he was asked by the federal judge presiding over his case how he could
possibly have been willing to detonate bombs that would kill innocent
children, he replied:

"Well, the drone hits in Afghanistan and Iraq, they don't see children, they
don't see anybody. They kill women, children, they kill everybody. It's a
war, and in war, they kill people.. They're killing all Muslims. . . .

"I am part of the answer to the US terrorizing the Muslim nations and the
Muslim people. And, on behalf of that, I'm avenging the attack. Living in
the United States, Americans only care about their own people, but they
don't care about the people elsewhere in the world when they die."

Emails and other communications
<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/16/nyregion/16suspect.html?pagewanted=all>
obtained by the US document how Shahzad transformed from law-abiding,
middle-class naturalized American into someone who felt compelled to engage
in violence as a result of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, drone attacks,
Israeli violence against Palestinians and Muslims generally, Guantanamo and
torture, at one point asking a friend: "Can you tell me a way to save the
oppressed? And a way to fight back when rockets are fired at us and Muslim
blood flows?"


Attempted NYC subway bomber Najibullah Zazi, the first Afghan-American
involved in such a plot, upon pleading guilty
<http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/najibullah-zazi-reveals-chilling-deta
ils-al-qaeda-training-terrorist-plot-blow-subways-article-1.169311#ixzz2ROGQ
b6Fz> :


"Your Honor, during the spring and summer of 2008, I conspired with others
to travel to Afghanistan to join the Taliban and fight against the U.S.
military and its allies. . . . During the training, Al Qaeda leaders asked
us to return to the United States and conduct martyrdom operation. We agreed
to this plan. I did so because of my feelings about what the United States
was doing in Afghanistan."


Fort Hood shooter Nidal Hasan
<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/15/us/15hasan.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1> :


"Part of his disenchantment was his deep and public opposition to the wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan, a stance shared by some medical colleagues but
shaped for him by a growing religious fervor. The strands of religion and
antiwar sentiment seemed to weave together in a PowerPoint presentation he
made at Walter Reed in June 2007. . . . For a master's program in public
health, Major Hasan gave another presentation to his environmental health
class titled 'Why The War on Terror is a War on Islam.'"

Meanwhile, the American-Yemeni preacher accused (with no due process) of
inspiring both Abdulmutallab and Hasan - Anwar al-Awalaki - was once
considered such a moderate American Muslim imam
<http://www.salon.com/2011/07/27/awlaki_5/>  that the Pentagon included him
in post-9/11 events and the Washington Post invited him to write a column on
Islam. But, by all accounts, he became increasingly radicalized in
anti-American sentiment by the attack on Iraq and continuous killing of
innocent Muslims by the US, including in Yemen. And, of course, Osama bin
Laden, when justifying violence against Americans
<http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Terrorism/fatwa.html> , cited
US military bases in Saudi Arabia, US support for Israeli aggression against
its neighbors, and the 1990s US sanctions regime that killed hundreds of
thousands of Iraqi children, while Iranians who took over the US embassy in
1979 cited decades of brutal tyranny from the US-implanted-and-enabled Shah.

It should go without saying that the issue here is causation, not
justification or even fault. It is inherently unjustifiable to target
innocent civilians with violence, no matter the cause (just as it is
unjustifiable to recklessly kill civilians with violence). But it is
nonetheless vital to understand why there are so many people who want to
attack the US as opposed to, say, Peru, or South Africa, or Brazil, or
Mexico, or Japan, or Portugal. It's vital for two separate reasons.

First, some leading American opinion-makers love to delude themselves and
mislead others into believing that the US is attacked despite the fact that
it is peaceful, peace-loving, freedom-giving and innocent. As these
myth-makers would have it, we don't bother anyone; we just mind our own
business (except when we're helping and liberating everyone), so why would
anyone possibly want to attack us? 

With that deceitful premise in place, so many Americans, westerners,
Christians and Jews love to run around insisting that the only real cause
for Muslim attacks on the US is that the attackers have this primitive,
brutal, savage, uncivilized religion (Islam) that makes them do it.
Yesterday, Andrew Sullivan favorably cited
<http://dish.andrewsullivan.com/2013/04/22/the-greenwald-harris-debate/?utm_
source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+andrewsullivan%2FrApM
+%28The+Dish%29>  Sam Harris as saying that "Islamic doctrines ... still
present huge problems for the emergence of a global civil society" and then
himself added: "All religions contain elements of this kind of fanaticism.
But Islam's fanatical side - from the Taliban to the Tsarnaevs - is more
murderous than most." 

These same people often love to accuse Muslims of being tribal without
realizing the irony that what they are saying - Our Side is Superior and
They are Inferior - is the ultimate expression of rank tribalism. They also
don't seem ever to acknowledge the irony of Americans and westerners of all
people accusing others of being uniquely prone to violence, militarism and
aggression (Juan Cole yesterday, using indisputable statistics, utterly
destroyed <http://www.juancole.com/2013/04/terrorism-other-religions.html>
the claim that Muslims are uniquely violent, including by noting the massive
body count piled up by predominantly Christian nations and the fact that
"murder rates in most of the Muslim world are very low compared to the
United States"). 

As the attackers themselves make as clear as they can, it's not religious
fanaticism but rather political grievance that motivates these attacks.
Religious conviction may make them more willing to fight (as it does
<http://www.thenation.com/article/general-boykins-comments-his-gods-bigger-i
slam-god>  for many in the west
<http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/1004/p13s02-lire.html> ), but the motive is
anger over what is being done by the US and its allies to Muslims. Those who
claim otherwise are essentially saying: gosh, these Muslims sure do have
this strange, primitive, inscrutable religion whereby they seem to get angry
when they're invaded, occupied, bombed, killed, and have dictators
externally imposed on them. It's vital to understand this causal
relationship simply in order to prevent patent, tribalistic, self-glorifying
falsehoods from taking hold.

Second, it's crucial to understand this causation because it's often asked
"what can we do to stop Terrorism?" The answer is right in front of our
faces: we could stop embracing the polices in that part of the world which
fuel anti-American hatred and trigger the desire for vengeance and return
violence. Yesterday at a Senate hearing on drones, a young Yemeni citizen
whose village was bombed by US drones last week (despite the fact that the
targets could easily have been arrested), Farea Al-Muslimi, testified
<http://www.judiciary.senate.gov/pdf/04-23-13Al-MuslimiTestimony.pdf> .
Al-Muslimi has always been pro-American in the extreme, having spent a year
in the US due to a State Department award, but he was brilliant in
explaining these key points
<http://news.antiwar.com/2013/04/23/drone-war-terrorizes-yemenis-expert-tell
s-senate-committee/> :


"Just six days ago, my village was struck by a drone, in an attack that
terrified thousands of simple, poor farmers. The drone strike and its impact
tore my heart, much as the tragic bombings in Boston last week tore your
hearts and also mine.

"What radicals had previously failed to achieve in my village one drone
strike accomplished in an instant: there is now an intense anger and growing
hatred of America."

He added that anti-American hatred is now so high as a result of this drone
strike that "I personally don't even know if it is safe for me to go back to
Wessab because I am someone who people in my village associate with America
and its values." And he said that whereas he never knew any Yemenis who were
sympathetic to al-Qaida before the drone attacks, now:

"AQAP's power and influence has never been based on the number of members in
its ranks. AQAP recruits and retains power through its ideology, which
relies in large part on the Yemeni people believing that America is at war
with them" . . . 

"I have to say that the drone strikes and the targeted killing program have
made my passion and mission in support of America almost impossible in
Yemen. In some areas of Yemen, the anger against America that results from
the strikes makes it dangerous for me to even acknowledge having visited
America, much less testify how much my life changed thanks to the State
Department scholarships. It's sometimes too dangerous to even admit that I
have American friends."

He added that drone strikes in Yemen "make people fear the US more than
al-Qaida".

There seems to be this pervasive belief in the US that we can invade, bomb,
drone, kill, occupy, and tyrannize whomever we want, and that they will
never respond. That isn't how human affairs function and it never has been.
If you believe all that militarism and aggression are justified, then fine:
make that argument. But don't walk around acting surprised and bewildered
and confounded (why do they hate us??) when violence is brought to US soil
as well. It's the inevitable outcome of these choices, and that's not
because Islam is some sort of bizarre or intrinsically violent and
uncivilized religion. It's because no group in the world is willing to sit
by and be targeted with violence and aggression of that sort without also
engaging in it (just look at the massive and ongoing violence unleashed by
the US in response to a single one-day attack on its soil 12 years ago:
imagine how Americans would react
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKfuS6gfxPY>  to a series of relentless
attacks on US soil over the course of more than a decade, to say nothing of
having their children put in prison indefinitely with no charges, tortured,
kidnapped, and otherwise brutalized by a foreign power). 

Being targeted with violence is a major cost of war and aggression. It's a
reason not do it. If one consciously decides to incur that cost, then that's
one thing. But pretending that this is all due to some primitive and
irrational religious response and not our own actions is dangerously
self-flattering and self-delusional. Just listen to what the people who are
doing these attacks are saying about why they are doing them. Or listen to
the people who live in the places devastated by US violence about the
results. None of it is unclear, and it's long past time that we stop
pretending that all this evidence does not exist.


Dirty Wars


Several weeks ago, I wrote about
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/mar/31/dirty-wars-terrorism-vi
ctims>  the soon-to-be-released film, "Dirty Wars", that chronicles
journalist Jeremy Scahill's investigation of US violence under President
Obama in Yemen, Afghanistan, Somalia and elsewhere. That film makes many of
the same points here (including the fact that many Yemenis never knew of any
fellow citizens who were sympathetic to al-Qaida until the US began
drone-bombing them with regularity). Scahill's book by the same title
<http://www.amazon.com/Dirty-Wars-The-World-Battlefield/dp/156858671X/ref=sr
_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1366817052&sr=8-1&keywords=jeremy+scahill>  was just
released yesterday and it is truly stunning and vital: easily the best
account of covert US militarism under Obama. I highly recommend it. See
Scahill here on Democracy Now
<http://www.democracynow.org/2013/4/24/the_world_is_a_battlefield_jeremy>
yesterday discussing it, with a focus on Obama's killing of both Anwar
Awlaki and, separately, his 16-year-son Abdulrahman in Yemen. He also
discussed his book this week with MSNBC's Chris Hayes
<http://video.msnbc.msn.com/all-in-/51627063>  and Morning Joe
<http://video.msnbc.msn.com/morning-joe/51630465/>  (where he argued that
Obama has made assassinations standard US policy).


UPDATE


The incorrect day was originally cited for Goldberg's column. It has now
been edited to reflect that it was published on Friday.


UPDATE II


I was interviewed at length this week by the legendary Bill Moyers about
Boston, US foreign policy, government secrecy and a variety of related
matters. The program will air repeatedly on PBS, beginning this Friday night
(see here <http://billmoyers.com/schedule/>  for local listings). You can
see a preview for the show they released today - here
<http://billmoyers.com/episode/preview-trading-democracy-for-%E2%80%98securi
ty%E2%80%99/>  - as well as one short excerpt from the interview on the
recorder below:


UPDATE III


Here's one more excerpt released today by the Moyers show, this one
pertaining to exactly the questions raised in today's column:

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