From: Miroslav Antic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: MAKE NO MISTAKE: AMERICA FAR FROM INNOCENT  [WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]

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MAKE NO MISTAKE: AMERICA FAR FROM INNOCENT

I suspect 10 days ago, if George W. Bush had soberly observed the United
States was engaged in a "monumental struggle of good versus evil," the
comment would have elicited howls of laughter from a wide spectrum of
Americans. After all, this esteemed President had only recently
withdrawn U.S. support for the Kyoto Protocol - admittedly a flawed
document, though for its limitations, not its excesses - essentially
telling the international community the fate of the planet is of no
concern to the United States.
He had announced his intention to dispose of the international arms
control structure by proceeding with "national missile defense" and the
militarization of outer space. He had followed his predecessor's
rejection of an International Criminal Court. He had jettisoned a U.N.
conference seeking restrictions on the trafficking of small arms, and he
had withdrawn the American delegation from a U.N. conference on racism.
He had unequivocally pledged his allegiance to the ruling butchers of
Russia and Israel and he had begun filling his administration with
apologists for terror like Elliott Abrams and John Negroponte. In
essence, the president of the United States shouted to the world, "we"
don't care what "you" want or think.
Yet eight days ago, when George W. Bush did, in fact, proclaim "America"
was engaged in a "monumental struggle of good versus evil," the
statement's reception was rather bizarre. Following the president's
lead, a number of so-called "patriots" decided overnight it was taboo to
even suggest reality was more complex than a simplistic struggle between
the "civilized world" and its discontents.
To posit there might have been a reason for the events of Sept. 11,
however inexcusable they were, was apparently to engage in anti-American
propaganda and justify the attacks. And to remark that the events might
have been grounded in the quite legitimate resentment with which most
people around the world react to American hubris and violence - whether
military or economic - was to render oneself traitorous, pathetic,
parasitical, or an intellectual defender of terrorism.
Make no mistake: The president's good and evil designations are not only
ridiculous but dangerous. Human rights scholars have pointed to the
establishment of an "us and them" binary as a psychological precondition
for widespread abuses and genocide. Given the probability the United
States will soon embark on a campaign that might kill thousands of
civilians, I seriously question those who argue it is inappropriate or
untimely to challenge the moral basis for what might become large-scale
mass murder. As persons presumably concerned with the loss of life, we
should be encouraging critical examinations of the United States, not
denouncing or belittling them. Silently acquiescing in Washington's
march to war is not demonstrating "patriotism" or solidarity with last
week's victims; it is ensuring more innocent people will die. And one
can be certain, many will die.
Over the last several days, the administration has informed the Arab
world "[t]he time has come to choose sides," threatened "ending states
who sponsor terrorism," and warned the "full wrath of the United States"
will fall upon those who fail to join its crusade. The term "terrorism"
must be qualified. What's being referred to by Washington is not
actually terrorism per se, but rather terrorism directed at "us." While
appropriate, it of course takes little courage to denounce the terror of
one's enemies and assert it must end. It is far more difficult, but far
more necessary, to denounce the terror of one's own government and
actively work to stop it. This must be done by all Americans.
So exactly what, then, does Washington mean by "terrorism"? Certainly
Washington doesn't mean the 1988 downing of an Iranian civilian airliner
by the U.S. warship Vincennes, killing 290 people. In fact, two years
later, the commander of the Vincennes was given a Legion of Merit award
for "exceptionally meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding
service." 
Nor would the Administration have in mind the 1985 CIA-sponsored
car-bomb attack in Lebanon that killed 80 people and injured 200. And of
course they don't mean the present strangling of Iraq, America's nearly
unequivocal support for the Saudi Arabian torture state, the destruction
of Yugoslavia, the subsidizing of the increasingly brutal Israeli
occupation, the billions of dollars benefiting right-wing thugs in
Colombia - none of these qualify as terrorism.
No, for purposes of good and evil, terrorism can only be attacks on
American and Israeli civilians.
Almost as if taking orders, the U.S. mass media have in recent days
parroted countless official assertions about the reach and direction of
the Al Qaeda "network" headed by Osama bin Laden. Quickly and
conveniently forgotten has been the portrait that emerged during the
African embassy bombings trial in New York earlier this year. The New
York Times stated in a front-page report, "The trial ... revealed
evidence that tended to counter long-held assumptions about Mr. bin
Laden's followers, who have long been portrayed as marching in
ideological lock step, ready to pay any price, including death, for his
cause". 
Contrary to the image of a highly-coordinated "network," which the Bush
administration has been shamefully finessing, a much different view of
the group was presented by government prosecutors at the trial. A former
deputy director of the State Department's Office of Counterterrorism
remarked, "To listen to some of the news reports a year or two ago, you
would think bin Laden was running a top Fortune 500 multinational
company - people everywhere, links everywhere. He continued, "What the
evidence at trial has correctly portrayed is that it's really a loose
amalgam of people with a shared ideology, but a very limited direction."

How quickly the reporting has changed. The reason for this is not
difficult to comprehend. Put simply, the evil afflicting the United
States must have a face in order to become a target. Washington cannot
launch a war against an unknown enemy and expect Americans to blindly go
along. And the United States must go to war - we are repeatedly told.
Yet if bin Laden is indeed responsible for the events in New York City,
Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania - and the administration's
unverifiable assertions should not be trusted on this matter - the media
has yet to highlight the incredible irony in the current logic of war.
When the United States last
attacked Afghanistan and Sudan, the government claimed bin Laden must
know "we" will not stand for terror.
Did he get this message? If it is true he was responsible for the
attacks last week, he reacted by upping the ante. And the U.S. response?
Hit him again. What will he do after Washington next responds
militarily? Will he lay down his arms and give up? Don't count on it.
And even if bin Laden were to be killed, would the anger that motivated
his "network" disappear? If anything, the United States could expect
further and escalated instances of terror.
As I heretically suggested last Wednesday ("Holistic perspective
required in the aftermath," Sept. 12), terrorism cannot be defeated
militarily. As a nation, we must consider why so many people hate the
United States if we hope to minimize the horrific slaughter of American
civilians, not to mention the widespread suffering of people around the
world. 
And while it is critical the perpetrators of last week's attacks be
brought to justice, this must be done in accordance with human rights
principles, humanitarian law, and international criminal procedures. It
will require the cooperation of other countries. Yet the United States
can expect little meaningful assistance and little resolution if it
doesn't also begin to address the extreme hypocrisy dividing American
rhetoric from its global reality.

SCOTT LADERMAN 
The Minnesota Daily

http://english.pravda.ru/main/2001/09/25/16130.html


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