Wild Justice
Alexander Cockburn 

The Price 

It was bracing to see former Sen. Bob Kerrey, now president of the New
School, joining CNN's Paula Zahn for commentary Monday morning. Zahn,
whom I place only fractionally under Laura Bush in the pantheon of my
affections, made reference to Kerrey's expertise in military affairs.
This plunges us straight into the fierce debate about how much of an
historical context one is permitted to give the Sept. 11 attacks. 

Lest there be any doubt about this, by the way, maybe I should register
my own view that these were crimes against humanity. But I also think
it's very necessary to set them in a full historical perspective, not
least because one hears, often enough, questions like, "What are we to
tell our children?" or "Why does everyone hate us?" being answered in a
carefully circumscribed fashion. 

Take Nat Hentoff, in a recent column: "'How can I explain this horror to
them?' Jessica asks. 'How can I explain how people can do this?' What
I'd say to my grandchildren is that there are people everywhere in this
world who identify themselves totally with a system of belief-whether
political, religious, a poisonous fusion of both, or some other
overwhelming transcendence that has become their very reason for being.
These vigilantes of faith have unequivocally answered the question of
Duke Ellington's song 'What Am I Here For?' 

"Such people can be of any faith, color, and class. Palestinian
suicide-bombers; the self-exhilarating murderous fringe of the Weather
Underground here in the 'revolutionary' 1960s; John Brown, the
abolitionist executioner; and the self-betraying pro-lifers who urge the
killing of-and sometimes actually assassinate-doctors who perform
abortions. How can our American government-and how can we protect
ourselves against such 'holy' fanatics?" 

Surely Hentoff's grandkids deserve a little more than sneers about the
Weather People and the 60s, this by way of explanation of what prompted
those Muslim kamikazes to their terrible deeds? After all, around the
time the Weather folk blew themselves (and only themselves) up in that
house on W. 11th St. in the Village, the United States government, in
the name of freedom's war on evil, was incinerating Vietnamese peasants
with napalm and shooting them in their huts or in ditches. In Kerrey's
unit the techniques included throat-slitting as well as shooting. 

Mention of Vietnam or any other of the United States' less alluring
zones of engagement with the enemies of freedom makes Christopher
Hitchens seethe with fury, at a level of moral reproof almost surpassing
his venom against Clinton the molester of women and bombardier of
Khartoum. In a Bomb the Bastards outburst in the latest Nation he takes
a swipe at the "masochistic e-mail traffic that might start circulating
from the Chomsky-Zinn-Finkelstein quarter" and decrees that "Loose talk
about chickens coming home to roost is the moral equivalent of the
hateful garbage emitted by Falwell and Robertson, and exhibits about the
same intellectual content." 

We can safely say that the word "loose" is a purely formal device, and
what Hitchens means here is that any and all talk about homeward-bound
chickens is out of bounds, part of all the things we are not allowed to
talk about. In times of crisis, by the way, it's often liberals who are
quickest to set rules about what we should say and how we should say it.


"This nation is now at war," proclaimed Peter Beinart, editor-in-chief
of The New Republic , "and in such an environment, domestic political
dissent is immoral without a prior statement of national solidarity, a
choosing of sides." Well, obviously we're in total solidarity against
the fanatic terror that doomed just short of 7000 ordinary people that
Tuesday morning, and we're against the religious and political precepts
of those who were reverently described only a few short years ago in our
newspapers and in presidential proclamations as the Afghan or Saudi
"freedom fighters." 

But at what point is a fracture in national solidarity permitted by
Commissar Beinart? When the B-52s lay waste to Afghans in some slum on
the edge of Kandahar on the supposition that bin Laden was there? Or
when Attorney General Ashcroft moves to end all inhibitions on
electronic snooping or warrantless arrests? 

The time when the Bill of Rights, or the providing of historical context
or satire, is most precious and most necessary is always when it is
being deprecated as too dangerous, irrelevant or inappropriate at the
present time. 

What moved those kamikaze Muslims to embark, some many months ago, on
the training that they knew would culminate in their deaths as well of
those (they must have hoped) of thousands upon thousands of innocent
people? Was it the Koran plus a tape from Osama bin Laden? The dream of
a world in which all men wear untrimmed beards and women have to stay at
home or go outside only when enveloped in blue tents? I doubt it. If I
had to cite what steeled their resolve, the list would surely include
the exchange on CBS in 1996 between Madeleine Albright, then U.S.
ambassador to the United Nations, and Lesley Stahl. Albright was
maintaining that sanctions had yielded important concessions from Saddam
Hussein. "We have heard that half a million children have died," Stahl
said. "I mean, that's more children than died in Hiroshima. And you
know, is the price worth it?" 

"I think this is a very hard choice," Albright answered, "but the
price-we think the price is worth it." They read that exchange in the
Middle East. It was infamous all over the Arab world. I'll bet the Sept.
11 kamikazes knew it well enough, just as they could tell you the crimes
wrought against the Palestinians. So would it be unfair today to take
Madeleine Albright down to the ruins of the Trade Towers, remind her of
that exchange and point out that the price turned out to include that
awful mortuary as well? Was that price worth it too, Mrs. Albright? 

Mere nitpicking among the ruins and the dust of the 6500? I don't think
so. In many ways America has led a charmed life amid its wars on people.
The wars mostly didn't come home and the press made as sure as it could
that folks, including the ordinary workers in the Trade Towers, weren't
really up to speed on what was being wrought in Freedom's name. In
Freedom's name America made sure that any possibility of secular
democratic reform in the Middle East was shut off. Mount a coup against
Mossadegh in the mid-1950s, as the CIA did, and you end up with the
Ayatollah Khomeni 25 years later. Mount a coup against Kassim in Iraq,
as the CIA did, and you get the agency's man, Saddam Hussein. 

What about Afghanistan? In April of 1978 a populist coup overthrew the
government of Mohammed Daoud, who had formed an alliance with the man
the U.S. had installed in Iran, Reza Pahlavi, aka the Shah. The new
Afghan government was led by Noor Mohammed Taraki, and the Taraki
administration embarked on land reform, hence an attack on the
opium-growing feudal estates. Taraki went to the UN, where he managed to
raise loans for crop substitution for the poppy fields. 

Taraki also tried to bear down on opium production in the border areas
held by fundamentalists, since the latter were using opium revenues to
finance attacks on Afghanistan's central government, which they regarded
as an unwholesome incarnation of modernity that allowed women to go to
school and outlawed arranged marriages and the bride price. Accounts
began to appear in the Western press along the lines of this from The
Washington Post, to the effect that the mujahideen liked to "torture
victims by first cutting off their noses, ears and genitals, then
removing one slice of skin after another." 

At that time the mujahideen were not only getting money from the CIA but
from Libya's Muammar Qaddafi, who sent them $250,000. In the summer of
1979 the U.S. State Dept. produced a memo making it clear how the U.S.
government saw the stakes, no matter how modern-minded Taraki might be
or how feudal the muj. It's another passage Hentoff might read to the
grandkids: "The United States' larger interest...would be served by the
demise of the Taraki-Amin regime, despite whatever set backs this might
mean for future social and economic reforms in Afghanistan. The
overthrow of the DRA [Democratic Republic of Afghanistan] would show the
rest of the world, particularly the Third World, that the Soviets' view
of the socialist course of history being inevitable is not accurate." 

Taraki was killed by Afghan army officers in September 1979. Hafizullah
Amin, educated in the U.S., took over and began meeting regularly with
U.S. embassy officials at a time when the U.S. was arming Islamic rebels
in Pakistan. Fearing a fundamentalist, U.S.-backed regime in
Afghanistan, the Soviets invaded in force in December 1979. The stage
was set for Dan Rather to array himself in flowing burnoose and head for
the Hindu Kush to proclaim the glories of the muj in their fight against
the Soviet jackboot. Maybe I missed it, but has Dan offered any
reflections on that phase of his reportorial career? 

Looking back at that period, Robert Fisk wrote in the Independent
onSunday, "I was working for The Times in 1980, and just south of Kabul
I picked up a very disturbing story. A group of religious mujahedin
fighters had attacked a school because the communist regime had forced
girls to be educated alongside boys. So they had bombed the school,
murdered the head teacher's wife and cut off her husband's head. It was
all true. But when The Times ran the story, the Foreign Office
complained to the foreign desk that my report gave support to the
Russians. Of course. Because the Afghan fighters were the good guys.
Because Osama bin Laden was a good guy. Charles Douglas-Home, then
editor of The Times, would always insist that Afghan guerrillas were
called 'freedom fighters' in the headline. There was nothing you
couldn't do with words." 

Well, the typists and messenger boys and back office staffs throughout
the Trade Center didn't know that history. There's a lot of other
relevant history they probably didn't know but which those men on the
attack planes did. How could those people in the Towers have known, when
U.S. political and journalistic culture is a conspiracy to perpetuate
their ignorance? Those people in the Towers were innocent portions of
the price that-Albright insisted-in just one of its applications was
worth it. It would honor their memory to demand that in the future our
press offers a better accounting of how America's wars for Freedom are
fought, and what the actual price might include. 

http://www.nypress.com/14/39/news
<http://www.nypress.com/14/39/news&columns/wildjustice.cfm>
&columns/wildjustice.cfm
<http://www.nypress.com/static/archive.cfm?vol=14&no=39> 

THE END

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