http://www.rockfordinstitute.org/News/News091901Benoist.htm
September 19, 2001

JIHAD VS. McWORLD
an Interview with Alain de Benoist

[The following interview with Alain de Benoist, a prominent and
controversial leader of the French intellectual right, was given to
Northern Italy�s "Padania." The questions were in Italian and the
answers in French.]

1) How do you judge the destruction of the WTC towers in America? Is a
symbolic explanation for what happened possible?  

The United States is experiencing a terrible human tragedy.  This
tragedy cannot be isolated from the political context, which alone can
explain it. 
To condemn terrorism against civilian populations is obviously
necessary. 
But it is also necessary to take an interest in the causes that produce
terrorism.  The truth is that the American people are currently
suffering, physically but without understanding it, the consequences of
the detestable international policy conducted for decade by their
leaders. This policy has produced in the world so great a sum of misery,
unhappiness, and disasters that one part of the world has interpreted
American policy as a declaration of war upon itself.  

Today the most extreme point of this part of the world has responded by
making war on the United States.  They do it with their own methods -
without any concern for limits, without consideration for their own
lives nor for the lives of others - and with their own means - the
counter- arguments used by the weak against the strong.

2) What do you think has actually inspired the action of the terrorists?


The terrorists� objective was, as all the evidence suggests, to
humiliate America, by showing that its territory was no longer a safe
haven and by striking in a spectacular fashion at the most
representative symbols of its power.  This objective, as all the
evidence shows, was attained.  For America the humiliation was without
precedent.  The consequences are still difficult to evaluate.  The most
notable consequences will be manifest initially in the area of the
economy, finances and international relations.

3) Do you think that reprisals will set off a chain reaction? 

There is no doubt that Americans are expecting reprisals to be made with
exemplary force and terrible strength.  The attack on Pearl Harbor, on
December 7, 1941 (with 2,400 dead) was paid back a hundred times over by
the atomic bombs dropped on the civilian populations of Japan.  The
comparison with what has happened to New York and Washington is not
false. 
The problem these days is that we do not know who is playing the role of
the Japanese.  The first phase of the investigation holds the Islamic
Movement responsible.  They are putting forward the name of Osama Bin
Laden, who has obsessed the Americans for months.  But a movement is
never bound up exclusively nor even fundamentally with one man, one
group, or one country.  It is nebulous, an elusive network. The
elimination of bin Laden would give pleasure to Washington, but it would
obviously not make the "terrorist threat" go away.  America has been
struck by an invisible enemy which does not have a name.  It has been
attacked by "networks."  In the age of networks the figure of the
partisan is revealed in all its fullness. The attacks on New York and
Washington are acts of postmodern warfare

4) Does there exist a serious danger for Europe?  Can there be another
symbolic objective that terrorists can strike with similar
effectiveness?

No country is a refuge from terrorism.  That is what we have just seen. 
There is no longer any inviolable sanctuary.  But each country has well
understood the need to insure the security its dependents.  The best
means of reaching that object is to decide on its own policies with
complete independence, to conduct, if necessary, its own wars, but not
the wars of others.  For Europe the greatest risk is to find itself
constrained in the future to take part, because of solidarity with
America, in a policy of poorly targeted reprisals which will only
aggravate the situation, the only
result being that Europe will suffer in turn.   

The Europeans must certainly be resolute in struggling against
terrorism. 
But they must also have the courage to tell the United States, a nation
that has constantly practiced state-terrorism for decades, that they are
today reaping the fruits of their policies. The fate of the civilian
victims of US bombings of Iraq, the fate of Iraqi children killed en
masse by the blockade decreed against their country, the fate of
civilians massacred in Serbia under NATO bombings, the fate of the
Palestinian people--these are also human tragedies.

5)  How do you judge how international politics will develop, especially
the relations between the USA, Europe, and Rusia?

The US is not going to fail to utilize these recent events as a pretext
for reaffirming its hegemony over its allies and for silencing the
criticisms which have been raised against it for some time (in regard to
the Near East, the death penalty, the environment, the global listening
network "Echelon" etc.)  Consistent with their past behavior, they will
claim to incarnate and to defend the cause of "civilization."  It is the
duty of Europeans to say firmly that this "civilization" is not
necessarily theirs, and that does not exclude, in any case, other models
of civilization.  The worst thing to happen, which is probably also the
most probable, would be to slip by successive stages into a struggle
that goes beyond the "Islamic terrorist movement" to include Arab-Muslim
countries in general, then all states or peoples judged sufficiently
arrogant to challenge the dominant
American model.   

6) Do you think that, from what happened at the Durban Conference, that
terrorism can sharpen the Middle-Eastern crisis--and with what results?

The principal beneficiary of the terrorist attacks seems to be the
Israeli government.  It is going to be able to disarm the criticisms
which have been accumulating for months against it, and it is going to
win acceptance, in the name of the struggle against terrorism, for
virtually any coercive measures to be employed against the Palestinians
- economic blockade, �targeted� assassinations, bombing of civilians,
demolition of houses etc.

Every effort for a reasonable settlement of the conflict will be
suspect. 
We are paying the price for American inconsistencies vis-�-vis the Arab-
Muslim world. Let us not forget that the Taleban in Afghanistan were
first supported and armed by Washington in order to struggle against the
Russian army, and that Osama Bin Laden himself, the ultimate irony, was
trained by the CIA.  In the long run there is the risk of ending up in a
planetary and military version of the scenario - Jihad vs. McWorld. My
hunch is that we must reject the Jihad without being the tools of
"McWorld."

                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

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