Editorial

As the Fires Die: The Terror of the Aftermath

As the smoke lifts from Mumbai, skepticism must prevail over those
conjectures which support the official state narrative. It is crucial to
increase the pressure for transparency and accountability at this moment to
ensure that India doesn't slide into the same state as post-9/11 USA.

By Biju Mathew
This piece originally appeared in Samar
31<http://www.samarmagazine.org/archive/issue.php?issue_num=31>,
published online December 1st, 2008.


(Please find excerpted text here, with highlighting done by me )

-Regards,

Venu.


"...None of the well educated masters of the media will write that the 7000
odd
kilometer coastline cannot be protected - that all it will translate to is
billions in contracts for all and sundry including Israeli and American
consultants. Nobody will write that a hundred POTAs will not prevent a
terror attack like this one; that Guantanamo Bay has not yielded a single
break through. Nobody will write that higher defense budgets have been more
often correlated with insecure and militarized lives for ordinary citizens.
Nobody will write that almost without exception all of US post-9/11 policies

have been disasters. Bin Laden is still around, I am told and so is the Al
Qaeda. The number of fundamentalist Christians, Muslims, Hindus and Jews
have probably gone up over the last decade. So much for good policy. But the

conjecture will go on.

The foreign hand and its internal partner will be floated without ever
naming anything precise. But the country will read it just as it is meant to

be read - Pakistan and the Indian Muslim. Everything will rest on the
supposed confession of the one gunman who has been captured. A Pakistani
from Faridkot, I am told. Why should we believe it? Didn't the same Indian
State frame all the supposed accomplices in the Parliament attack case?
Didn't the same Indian State claim that the assassins of Chattisinghpura
were from across the border until that story fell apart? And more recently,
didn't the same Indian State finally agree that all the accused in the Mecca

Masjid bombings were actually innocent? And even if Mr. Assassin supposedly
from Faridkot did say what he did say - why should we believe him? Why is it

so difficult to believe that he has his lines ready and scripted? If he was
willing to die for whatever cause he murdered for, then can he not lie? Oh
the lie detector test - that completely discredited science that every
militarized State trots out. And the media love the lie detector test
because it is the best scientific garb you can give to conjecture.

I certainly don't know the truth. But I do know that there is more than
enough reason for skepticism. The problem is that we need a new theory of
the State. We need to re-understand the State.

There is such unanimity when it comes to analyzing the Pakistani State -
that the ISI, and if not all of the ISI, at least a segment of it, is a
rogue element Furthermore, that its bosses may not be sitting in Islamabad,
but perhaps elsewhere in the country or even abroad. If we can accept that
about the Pakistani State, why is it so difficult to accept it about the
Indian State? We all know that Colin Powell was a kind of a patsy - a fall
guy, who trotted out some lies on behalf of a segment of the
neo-conservative movement firmly entrenched within the American State (which

Obama will not touch). We also know that if the ISI has a rogue element in
it, it was in good part created by the CIA. Then why do we think that the
same guys couldn't render another State - such as the US - itself hollow
from the inside.

The contemporary State is a different being. For every story of
money-corruption you hear, there could just as well be one of
political-corruption. Every vested interest who locates himself inside the
State apparatus is not just a vested interest going after money but could
just as well be securing the space for creating a certain politics. The RSS
has a long history of trying to take over the bureaucracy, doesn't it? So do

the neo-cons and so do the jamaatis. Then why do we believe in a theory of
the State that is unified and with liberal goals? *
*

The history of the liberal State and its relationship with capitalism of all

types is a simple one. The longer that relationship persists the more
corrupt and hollow the liberal State gets, leaving the space open for
political ideologies to occupy its very insides. The logic for this is
inherent in the very system. If profit is above all, then given the power
the State has, it must be bought. Cheney is no different from Shivraj Patil,

and Ambani is no different from Halliburton. They are both part of the story

of hollowing the State out. And once the hollowing process begins, every
ideological force can find its way in, as long as it has resources.The
archetypal bourgeois liberal State is over*.* It never really existed; but
what we have at the end of four decades of neo-liberalism bears no
resemblance to the ideal formulation whatsoever. What we have instead is a
series of hollowed out States with their nooks and crannies, their
departments and offices populated with specific neo-conservative ideological

interests. The US has its variant. India has its. And Israel its very own.
It is incapable of delivering the truth, and not just the truth, it is only
capable of producing lies.

If this story of skepticism makes sense then we have only one choice. To
understand that it is crucial to increase the pressure for transparency at
this moment, to be relentless in our demand for openness and detail, in our
call to ensure that no investigation or inquiry that was in place be halted
and that every one of these be subjected to public scrutiny. It is our
responsibility to reject the discourse of secrecy based on security and
demand specific standards of transparency. What we should demand is that
every senior minister and every senior intelligence officer be examined and
the records be made available to the public. What we must demand is that an
officer of impeccable record be found to replace Hemant Karkare. What we
must demand is that we get explanations of how a POTA clone would have
stopped this crime. What we must ask is how POTA or the Patriot Act could
have ever helped prevent terror? What we must do is support the Karkare
family in their demand for a full investigation of his death in the company
of the encounter specialist- Salaskar. What we must have is an open debate
on every single case of terror over the last decade in India.

When I am in Bombay, I always stay at a friend's on Third Pasta Lane. Each
afternoon I would walk out and see the Nariman House. I have wondered what
the decrepit building was. I have always contrasted the drabness of the
building with the colorful sign on the next building that announces Colaba
Sweet House. The next time I won't wonder. I will know that it was one of
the places where the drama that inaugurated India's renewed march towards
fascism unfolded. Unless we act. Unless we act with speed and determination
demanding transparency and accountability and a careful rewriting of the
story of terror in India. Only a renewed movement can ensure that India
doesn't slide into the same state as post 9/11 USA. ..."
[ Biju Mathew is a member of the Campaign to Stop Funding Hate and the
Coalition Against Genocide and is a co-founder of the New York Taxi Worker
Alliance ]

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