Myth and Denial in the War Against Terrorism
By William Blum
ZNet, zmag.org, August 19, 2003
It dies
hard. It dies very hard. The notion that terrorist acts
against the
The fires were still burning intensely at Ground Zero when Colin
Powell declared: "Once again, we see terrorism, we see terrorists,
people who don't believe in democracy ..."{1}
George W. picked up on that theme and ran with it. He's been
its leading proponent ever since September 11 with his repeated
insistence, in one wording or another, that "those people hate
One of Bush's many subsequent versions of this incantation, delivered
more than a year after 9-11, was: "The threats we face are global
terrorist attacks. That's the threat. And the more you
love freedom, the more likely it is you'll be attacked."{2}
In September 2002, the White House released the "National Security
Strategy", purported to be chiefly the handiwork of Condoleezza Rice,
which speaks of the "rogue states" which "sponsor terrorism around
the globe; and reject basic human values and hate the
As recently as July of this year the spokesman for Homeland Security,
Brian Roehrkasse, declared: "Terrorists hate our freedoms. They
want to change our ways."{3}
Thomas Friedman the renowned foreign policy analyst of the New York
Times would say amen. Terrorists, he wrote in 1998 after
terrorists attacked two
This idée fixe -- that the rise of anti-American
terrorism owes nothing to American policies -- in effect postulates
an America that is always the aggrieved innocent in a treacherous
world, a benign United States government peacefully going about its
business but being "provoked" into taking extreme measures to defend
its people, its freedom and democracy. There consequently is no
good reason to modify
Thus it
was that
The word "terrorism" has been so overused in recent years that it's
now commonly used simply to stigmatize any individual or group one
doesn't like, for almost any kind of behavior involving force.
But the word's raison d'être has traditionally been to
convey a political meaning, something along the lines of: the
deliberate use of violence against civilians and property to
intimidate or coerce a government or the population in furtherance of
a political objective.
Terrorism is fundamentally propaganda, a very bloody form of
propaganda.
It follows that if the perpetrators of a terrorist act declare what
their objective was, their statement should carry credibility, no
matter what one thinks of the objective or the method used to achieve
it. Let us look at some actual cases.
The terrorists responsible for the bombing of the
Richard Reid, who tried to ignite a bomb in his shoe while aboard an
American Airline flight to
After the
October 2002 bombings in
In November 2002, a taped message from Osama bin Laden began: "The
road to safety begins by ending the aggression. Reciprocal
treatment is part of justice. The [terrorist] incidents
that have taken place ... are only reactions and reciprocal
actions."{8}
That same month, when Mir Aimal Kasi, who killed several people
outside of CIA headquarters in 1993, was on death row, he declared:
"What I did was a retaliation against the US government" for American
policy in the Middle East and its support of Israel.{9}
It should be noted that the State Department warned at the time that
the execution of Kasi could result in attacks against Americans
around the world.{10} It did not warn that the attacks would
result from foreigners hating or envying American democracy, freedom,
wealth, or secular government.
Similarly, in the days following the start of US bombing of
Another
example of the difficulty the Bush administration has in consistently
maintaining its simplistic idé fixe: In June
2002, after a car bomb exploded outside the US Consulate in Karachi,
killing or injuring more than 60 people, the Washington Post
reported that "US officials said the attack was likely the work
of extremists angry at both the United States and Pakistan's
president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, for siding with the United States
after September 11 and abandoning support for Afghanistan's ruling
Taliban."{12}
George W. and high officials of his administration may or may not
believe what they tell the world about the motivations behind
anti-American terrorism, but, as in the recent examples just given,
other officials have questioned the party line for years. A
Department of Defense study in 1997 concluded: "Historical data show
a strong correlation between
Jimmy
Carter told the New York Times in a 1989 interview: "We sent
Marines into Lebanon and you only have to go to Lebanon, to Syria or
to Jordan to witness first-hand the intense hatred among many people
for the United States because we bombed and shelled and unmercifully
killed totally innocent villagers -- women and children and farmers
and housewives -- in those villages around Beirut. ... As a result of
that ... we became kind of a Satan in the minds of those who are
deeply resentful. That is what precipitated the taking of our
hostages and that is what has precipitated some of the terrorist
attacks."{14}
Colin Powell has also revealed that he knows better. Writing of
this same
The USS
The ensuing terrorist attacks against US Marine barracks in Lebanon
took the lives of 241 American military personnel.
The assault upon
"How do I respond when I see that in some Islamic countries there is
vitriolic hatred for
To what extent do Americans really believe the official disconnect
between what the
In June, the
The Washington mentality about alleged terrorist motivations also
manifests itself in current
With such
language do American officials avoid dealing with the idea that any
part of the resistance is composed of Iraqi citizens who simply do
not like being bombed, invaded, occupied, and subjected to daily
humiliations, and are demonstrating their resentment. Some
officials convinced themselves that it was largely the most loyal
followers of Saddam Hussein and his two sons who were behind the
daily attacks on Americans, and that with the capture or killing of
the evil family, resistance would die out; tens of millions of
dollars were offered as reward for information leading to this joyful
prospect. Thus it was that the killing of the sons elated
military personnel. US Army trucks with loudspeakers drove
through small towns and villages to broadcast a message about the
death of Hussein's sons. "Coalition forces have won a great
victory over the Baath Party and the Saddam Hussein regime by killing
Uday and Qusay Hussein in
What followed was several days of some of the deadliest attacks
against American personnel since the guerrilla war began.
Unfazed, American officials in
Another way in which the political origins of terrorism are obscured
is by the common practice of blaming poverty or repression by Middle
Eastern governments (as opposed to
{The Middle East] is a region where hopelessness provides a
fertile ground for ideologies that convince promising youths to
aspire not to a university education, a career or family, but to
blowing themselves up, taking as many innocent lives with them as
possible. ... We must address the source of the problem.{22}
Many on the left speak in a similar fashion, apparently unconscious
of what they're obfuscating. This analysis confuses terrorism
with revolution.
In light of the several instances mentioned above -- and others can
be given -- of US officials giving the game away, in effect admitting
that terrorists and guerrillas may be, or in fact are, reacting to
perceived hurts and injustices, it may be that George W. is the only
true believer among them, if in fact he is one. The
leaders of the American Empire may well know -- at least occasionally
when they're sitting alone at midnight -- that all their expressed
justifications for invading
As I've written elsewhere: If I were the president, I could stop
terrorist attacks against the
That's what I'd do on my first three days in the White House.
On the fourth day, I'd be assassinated.
NOTES
1.
2. Agence
3. Washington Post, August 1, 2003, p.4
4. New York Times, August 22, 1998, p. 15
5. Jim Dwyer, et al., Two Seconds Under the World (New York,
1994), p.196; see also the statement made in court by Ramzi Ahmed
Yousef, who planned the attack, New York Times, January 9, 1998,
p.B4
6. Washington Post, October 3, 2002, p.6
7.
8. Los Angeles Times, November 13, 2002, p.6
9. Associated Press, November 7, 2002
10. Ibid.
11. Voice of
12.
13. US Department of Defense, Defense Science Board 1997 Summer
Study Task Force on DOD Responses to Transnational Threats, October
1997, Final Report, Vol.1. http://www.acq.osd.mil/dsb/trans.pdf,
p.31
14. New York Times, March 26, 1989, p.16
15. Colin Powell with Joseph E. Persico, My American Journey
(New York, 1995), p.291
16. Boston Globe, October 12, 2001, p.28
17.
18. Ibid., June 4, 2003, p.18
19. Pentagon briefing, June 30, 2003
20.
21. Ibid., July 24, 2003, p.7
22. Ibid., August 8, 2003, p.13
William Blum is the
author of "Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since
World War II" and "West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir"
See: www.killinghope.org






























