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Trust,
War and Terrorism
by
Norman Solomon
June
7, 2003
The following is an excerpt from
presentation made by Norman Solomon on June 5, 2003, to the “Communicating the
War on Terror” conference in London at the Royal Institution of Great Britain.
In
a democracy, leaders must earn and retain the public’s trust. No matter how
loudly those leaders proclaim their dedication to fighting terrorism, we must
not flinch from examining whether they are trustworthy.
On
March 17, 2003, in a major address to the American people, President George W.
Bush declared: “Intelligence gathered by this and other governments leaves no
doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal some of the most
lethal weapons ever devised.” On April 10, in a televised message to the people
of Iraq, Prime Minister Tony Blair said: “We did not want this war. But in
refusing to give up his weapons of mass destruction, Saddam gave us no choice
but to act.”
Before
and during the war on Iraq, we heard many other such statements from top
officials in Washington and London. Ostensibly they justified the war.
Among
the horrors of that war are weapons known as cluster bombs. I use the present
tense because now months after the Pentagon and the British military dropped
thousands of cluster bombs on Iraq they continue to explode, sometimes in the
hands of children who pick them up. At high velocity, those bombs fire shards
that slice into human flesh.
We
might say that the cluster bombs are terrifying weapons. We might say that they
and the leaders who authorized their use are still terrorizing people in
Iraq.
In
the long run, if leaders want to gain and maintain trust, it’s helpful for
their logic to be reasonably plausible rather than Orwellian. But when there is
no single standard that reliably condemns “terrorism,” then the word serves as
a political football rather than a term to be used with integrity.
Unfortunately, in common usage of the word, it is not the wanton cruelty or the
magnitude of murderous actions that determines condemnation, but rather the
nationalistic and political contexts of those actions.
It
would be bad enough if the leaders of the Washington-London axis of
“anti-terrorism” were merely duplicitous in their rationales for going to war.
Or it would be bad enough if those leaders were honest about their reasons
while ordering their own activities that terrorize civilians. But flagrant
dishonesty is integral to broader and deeper problems with basic policies that
tacitly distinguish between “worthy” and “unworthy” victims that encourage
us, in effect, to ask for whom the bell tolls. The official guidance needn’t be
explicit to be well understood or at least widely internalised: Do not let too
much empathy move in unauthorised directions.
For
instance: One searches in vain for a record of Washington condemning its ally
Turkey while, in recent years, Turkey’s government drove millions of Kurdish
people from their homes, destroyed thousands of villages, killed many thousands
of Kurds and inflicted horrific torture. To take another example: The war on
Iraq has been praised for closing down the regime’s torture chambers.
Meanwhile, billions of dollars in aid continue to flow from Washington to the
Egyptian government, which operates torture chambers for political prisoners.
One might think that an appropriate way to oppose torture would be to stop
financing it.
President
Bush routinely denounces terrorists who engage in deadly attacks that take the
lives of Israeli civilians. But he never applies similar denunciations to the
U.S.-backed Israeli government leaders, who often order attacks that
predictably take the lives of Palestinian civilians.
Years
before the crime against humanity known as 9/11, the scholar Eqbal Ahmed
pointed out: “A superpower cannot promote terror in one place and reasonably
expect to discourage terrorism in another place. It won’t work in this shrunken
world.” To deserve public trust, anything called a “war on terrorism” would
need to be guided by genuine moral precepts rather than public relations
maneuvers to mask ongoing patterns of hypocrisy.
On
May 28, a report by Amnesty International condemned the American and British
governments for a so-called war on terror that actually emboldens many regimes
to engage in terrible abuses of human rights. Amnesty’s Secretary-General Irene
Khan said that “what would have been unacceptable on September 10, 2001, is now
becoming almost the norm” while Washington promotes “a new doctrine of human
rights a la carte.” She added: “The United States continues to pick and choose
which bits of its obligations under international law it will use, and when it
will use them.”
Worldwide,
it will be impossible to sustain public trust in anti-terrorist efforts without
adhering to standards that consistently reject terrorism. Launching aggressive
wars and providing massive support to abusers of human rights are themselves
acts of terrorism by the strong. They are sure to heighten rage and provoke
acts of terrorism by the weak.
When
a country particularly a democracy goes to war, the consent of the governed
lubricates the machinery of killing. Silence is a key form of co-operation, but
the war-making system does not insist on quietude or agreement. Mere passivity
or self-restraint will suffice.
The
world is now shadowed by a special relationship between two governments the
superpower and its leading enabler. In the name of moral leadership, they
utilize deception. In the name of peace, they inflict war. In the name of
fighting terrorism, they engage in terrorism. Such policies demand trust but
deserve unyielding opposition.
Norman Solomon is Executive
Director of the Institute for Public Accuracy (www.accuracy.org) and a syndicated
columnist. His latest book is Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn’t Tell
You (Context Books, 2003) with Reese Erlich. For an excerpt and other
information, go to: www.contextbooks.com/new.html#target. Email: mediabeat@igc.org