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Noam Chomsky on Failed
States
The Abuse of Power and the
Assault on Democracy
Professor Chomsky thinks that the United
States is beginning to resemble a failed state that cannot
protect its citizens from violence and has a government that
regards itself as beyond the reach of domestic or international
law.
Professor Noam Chomsky presents a series of
solutions to help rescue the nation from turning into a failed
state.
Part 2 Here
Transmission date: 03/31/06
Democracy Now!
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AMY GOODMAN: In this first broadcast interview upon
publication of his book, Professor Noam Chomsky joins us today
from Boston for the hour. We welcome you to Democracy Now!,
Noam.
NOAM CHOMSKY: Glad to be with you again.
AMY GOODMAN: It's good to have you with us. Failed
States, what do you mean?
NOAM CHOMSKY: Well, over the years there have been a
series of concepts developed to justify the use of force in
international affairs for a long period. It was possible to
justify it on the pretext, which usually turned out to have very
little substance, that the U.S. was defending itself against the
communist menace. By the 1980s, that was wearing pretty thin.
The Reagan administration concocted a new category: terrorist
states. They declared a war on terror as soon as they entered
office in the early 1980s, 1981. ‘We have to defend ourselves
from the plague of the modern age, return to barbarism, the evil
scourge of terrorism,’ and so on, and particularly
state-directed international terrorism.
A few years later -- this is Clinton -- Clinton devised the
concept of rogue states. ‘It’s 1994, we have to defend ourselves
from rogue states.’ Then, later on came the failed states, which
either threaten our security, like Iraq, or require our
intervention in order to save them, like Haiti, often
devastating them in the process. In each case, the terms have
been pretty hard to sustain, because it's been difficult to
overlook the fact that under any, even the most conservative
characterization of these notions -- let's say U.S. law -- the
United States fits fairly well into the category, as has often
been recognized. By now, for example, the category -- even in
the Clinton years, leading scholars, Samuel Huntington and
others, observed that -- in the major journals, Foreign
Affairs -- that in most of the world, much of the world, the
United States is regarded as the leading rogue state and the
greatest threat to their existence.
By now, a couple of years later, Bush years, same journals’
leading specialists don't even report international opinion.
They just describe it as a fact that the United States has
become a leading rogue state. Surely, it's a terrorist state
under its own definition of international terrorism, not only
carrying out violent terrorist acts and supporting them, but
even radically violating the so-called "Bush Doctrine," that a
state that harbors terrorists is a terrorist state. Undoubtedly,
the U.S. harbors leading international terrorists, people
described by the F.B.I. and the Justice Department as leading
terrorists, like Orlando Bosch, now Posada Carriles, not to
speak of those who actually implement state terrorism.
And I think the same is true of the category “failed states.”
The U.S. increasingly has taken on the characteristics of what
we describe as failed states. In the respects that one
mentioned, and also, another critical respect, namely the --
what is sometimes called a democratic deficit, that is, a
substantial gap between public policy and public opinion. So
those suggestions that you just read off, Amy, those are
actually not mine. Those are pretty conservative suggestions.
They are the opinion of the majority of the American population,
in fact, an overwhelming majority. And to propose those
suggestions is to simply take democracy seriously. It's
interesting that on these examples that you've read and many
others, there is an enormous gap between public policy and
public opinion. The proposals, the general attitudes of the
public, which are pretty well studied, are -- both political
parties are, on most of these issues, well to the right of the
population.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, Professor Chomsky, in the early
parts of the book, especially on the issue of the one
characteristic of a failed state, which is its increasing
failure to protect its own citizens, you lay out a pretty
comprehensive look at what the, especially in the Bush years,
the war on terrorism has meant in terms of protecting the
American people. And you lay out clearly, especially since the
war, the invasion of Iraq, that terrorist, major terrorist
action and activity around the world has increased
substantially. And also, you talk about the dangers of a
possible nuclear -- nuclear weapons being used against the
United States. Could you expand on that a little bit?
NOAM CHOMSKY: Well, there has been a very serious
threat of nuclear war. It's not -- unfortunately, it's not much
discussed among the public. But if you look at the literature of
strategic analysts and so on, they're extremely concerned. And
they describe particularly the Bush administration aggressive
militarism as carrying an “appreciable risk of ultimate doom,”
to quote one, “apocalypse soon,” to quote Robert McNamara and
many others. And there's good reasons for it, I mean, which
could explain, and they explain. That's been expanded by the
Bush administration consciously, not because they want nuclear
war, but it's just not a high priority. So the rapid expansion
of offensive U.S. military capacity, including the
militarization of space, which is the U.S.'s pursuit alone. The
world has been trying very hard to block it. 95% of the
expenditures now are from the U.S., and they're expanding.
All of these measures bring about a completely predictable
reaction on the part of the likely targets. They don't say, you
know, ‘Thank you. Here are our throats. Please cut them.’ They
react in the ways that they can. For some, it will mean
responding with the threat or maybe use of terror. For others,
more powerful ones, it's going to mean sharply increasing their
own offensive military capacity. So Russian military
expenditures have sharply increased in response to Bush
programs. Chinese expansion of offensive military capacity is
also beginning to increase for the same reasons. All of that
threatens -- raises the already severe threat of even -- of just
accidental nuclear war. These systems are on computer-controlled
alert. And we know that our own systems have many errors, which
are stopped by human intervention. Their systems are far less
secure; the Russian case, deteriorated. These moves all sharply
enhance the threat of nuclear war. That's serious nuclear war
that I'm talking about.
There's also the threat of dirty bombs, small nuclear
explosions. Small means not so small, but in comparison with a
major attack, which would pretty much exterminate civilized
life. The U.S. intelligence community regards the threat of a
dirty bomb, say in New York, in the next decade as being
probably greater than 50%. And those threats increase as the
threat of terror increases.
And Bush administration policies have, again, consciously
been carried out in a way, which they know is likely to increase
the threat of terror. The most obvious example is the Iraq
invasion. That was undertaken with the anticipation that it
would be very likely to increase the threat of terror and also
nuclear proliferation. And, in fact, that's exactly what
happened, according to the judgment of the C.I.A., National
Intelligence Council, foreign intelligence agencies, independent
specialists. They all point out that, yes, as anticipated, it
increased the threat of terror. In fact, it did so in ways well
beyond what was anticipated.
To mention just one, we commonly read that there were no
weapons of mass destruction found in Iraq. Well, it's not
totally accurate. There were means to develop weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq and known to be in Iraq. They were under
guard by U.N. inspectors, who were dismantling them. When
Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and the rest sent in their troops, they
neglected to instruct them to guard these sites. The U.N.
inspectors were expelled, the sites were left unguarded. The
inspectors continued their work by satellite and reported that
over a hundred sites had been looted, in fact, systematically
looted, not just somebody walking in, but careful looting. That
included dangerous biotoxins, means to hide precision equipment
to be used to develop nuclear weapons and missiles, means to
develop chemical weapons and so on. All of this has disappeared.
One hates to imagine where it's disappeared to, but it could end
up in New York.
AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Noam Chomsky, and we're
going to come back with him. His new book, just published, is
called Failed States: The Abuse of Power and the Assault on
Democracy. We'll be back with Professor Chomsky in a minute.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Professor Noam Chomsky,
upon the release of his new book, Failed States: The Abuse of
Power and the Assault on Democracy. Noam Chomsky, a
professor of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. I'm Amy Goodman, here with Juan Gonzalez. Juan?
JUAN GONZALEZ: Professor Chomsky, in your book you
also talk about how Iraq has become almost an incubator or a
university now for advanced training for terrorists, who then
are leaving the country there and going around the world, very
much as what happened in the 1980s in Afghanistan. Could you
talk about that somewhat?
NOAM CHOMSKY: Actually, that's -- actually, these are
just quotes from the C.I.A. and other U.S. intelligence agencies
and analysts. Yes, they describe Iraq now as a training ground
for highly professionalized terrorists skilled in urban contact.
They do compare it to Afghanistan, but say that it's much more
serious, because of the high level of training and skill. These
are almost entirely Iraqis. There's a small number of foreign
fighters drawn to Iraq. Estimates are maybe 5% to 10%. And they
are, as in the case of Afghanistan, are expected to spread into
throughout many parts of the world and to carry out the kinds of
terrorism that they're trained in, as a reaction to -- clearly
reaction to the invasion. Iraq was, whatever you thought about
it, was free from connections to terror prior to the invasion.
It's now a major terror center.
It's not as President Bush says, that terrorists are being
concentrated in Iraq so that we can kill them. These are
terrorists who had no previous record of involvement in
terrorism. The foreign fighters who have come in, mostly from
Saudi Arabia, have been investigated extensively by Saudi and
Israeli and U.S. intelligence, and what they conclude is that
they were mobilized by the Iraq war, no involvement in terrorist
actions in the past. And undoubtedly, just as expected, the Iraq
war has raised an enormous hostility throughout much of the
world, and particularly the Muslim world.
It was the most -- probably the most unpopular war in
history, and even before it was fought. Virtually no support for
it anywhere, except the U.S. and Britain and a couple of other
places. And since the war itself was perhaps one of the most
incredible military catastrophes in history, has caused utter
disaster in Iraq and has -- and all of that has since simply
intensified the strong opposition to the war of the kind that
you heard from that Indonesian student of a few moments ago. But
that's why it spread, and that's a -- it increases the reservoir
of potential support for the terrorists, who regard themselves
as a vanguard, attempting to elicit support from others, bring
others to join with them. And the Bush administration is their
leading ally in this. Again, not my words, the words of the
leading U.S. specialists on terror, Michael Scheuer in this
case. And definitely, that's happened.
And it's not the only case. I mean, in case after case, the
Bush administration has simply downgraded the threat of terror.
One example is the report of the 9/11 Commission. Here in the
United States, the Bush administration didn't want the
commission to be formed, tried to block it, but it was finally
formed. Bipartisan commission, gave many recommendations. The
recommendations, to a large extent, were not carried out. The
commission members, including the chair, were appalled by this,
set up their own private commission after their own tenure was
completed, and continued to report that the measures are simply
not being carried out.
There are many other examples. One of the most striking is
the Treasury Department has a branch, the Office of Financial
Assets Control, which is supposed to monitor suspicious funding
transfers around the world. Well, that's a core element of the
so-called war on terror. They've given reports to Congress. It
turns out that they have a few officials devoted to al-Qaeda and
Saddam Hussein, but about -- I think it was -- six times that
many devoted to whether there are any evasions of the totally
illegal U.S. embargo against Cuba.
There was an instance of that just a few months ago, when the
U.S. infuriated even energy corporations by ordering a Sheraton
Hotel in Mexico City to cancel a meeting between Cuban oil
specialists and U.S. oil companies, including some big ones,
seeking to explore the development of offshore Cuban oil
resources. The government ordered -- this OFAC ordered the
hotel, the U.S. hotel, to expel the Cubans and terminate the
meeting. Mexico wasn't terribly happy about this. It’s a
extraordinary arrogance. But it also reveals the hysterical
fanaticism of the goal of strangling Cuba.
And we know why. It's a free country. We have records going
from way back, and a rich source of them go back to the
Kennedy-Johnson administrations. They had to carry out a
terrorist war against Cuba, as they did, and try to strangle
Cuba economically, because of Cuba's -- what they called Cuba's
successful defiance of U.S. policies, going back to the Monroe
Doctrine. No Russians, but the Monroe Doctrine, 150 years back
at that time. And the goal was, as was put very plainly by the
Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations, to make the people of
Cuba suffer. They are responsible for the fact that the
government is in place. We therefore have to make them suffer
and starve, so that they'll throw out the government. It's a
policy, which is pretty consistent. It’s being applied right now
in Palestine. It was applied under the Iraqi sanctions, plot in
Chile, and so on. It’s savage.
AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Noam Chomsky, his new
book, after he wrote Hegemony or Survival, one of scores
of books, if not a hundred books that Professor Chomsky has
written, his new one is called Failed States: The Abuse of
Power and the Assault on Democracy.
You mention Israel, Palestine, and I wanted to ask you about
this new study that's come out. A dean at Harvard University and
a professor at the University of Chicago are coming under
intense criticism for publishing an academic critique of the
pro-Israel lobby in Washington. The paper charges that the
United States has willingly set aside its own security and that
of many of its allies, in order to advance the interests of
Israel. In addition, the study accuses the pro-Israel lobby,
particularly AIPAC, the America Israel Public Affairs Committee,
of manipulating the U.S. media, policing academia and silencing
critics of Israel by labeling them as anti-Semitic. The study
also examines the role played by the pro-Israel neoconservatives
in the lead-up to the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
The authors are the Stephen Walt, a dean at Harvard's Kennedy
School of Government, and John Mearsheimer of the University of
Chicago. They, themselves, are now being accused of
anti-Semitism. In Washington, a Democratic congressman, Eliot
Engle of New York, described the professors as dishonest
so-called intellectuals and anti-Semites. The Harvard professor,
Ruth Wisse, called for the paper to be withdrawn. Harvard Law
School professor, Alan Dershowitz, described the study as trash
that could have been written by neo-Nazi David Duke. The New
York Sun reported Harvard has received several calls from
pro-Israel donors, expressing concern about the paper, and
Harvard has already taken steps to distance itself from the
report. Last week, it removed the logo of the Kennedy School of
Government from the paper and added a new disclaimer to the
study. The report is 81 pages. It was originally published on
Harvard's website and an edited version appeared in the
London Review of Books.
The controversy comes less than a year after Harvard law
professor Alan Dershowitz attempted to block the publication of
Norman Finkelstein’s book Beyond Chutzpah: On the Misuse of
Anti-Semitism and the Abuse of History. Now, this goes into
a lot of issues: the content of the study, what you think of it,
the response to it and also the whole critique. In this country,
what happens to those who criticize the policies of the state of
Israel? Noam Chomsky.
NOAM CHOMSKY: Well, the answer to your last question
is well described in Norman Finkelstein's quite outstanding book
and also in the record of Dershowitz’s attempts to prevent its
publication. Some of the documents were just published in the
Journal of Palestine Studies. Finkelstein's book gives an
extensive detailed account, the best one we have, of a
frightening record of Israeli crimes and abuses, where he relies
on the most respectable sources, the major human rights
organizations, Israeli human rights organizations and others,
and demonstrates, just conclusively, that Alan Dershowitz's
defense of these atrocities, based on no evidence at all, is
outrageous and grotesque.
Nevertheless, Finkelstein comes under tremendous attack for
being anti-Semitic, and so on. Now that's pretty normal. It goes
back, I suppose, to the distinguished diplomat, Abba Eban -- it
must be thirty years ago -- wrote in an American Jewish journal
that “the task of Zionists,” he said, “is to show that all
political anti-Zionism” – that means criticism of the policies
of the state of Israel – “is either anti-Semitism or Jewish
self-hatred.” Well, okay, that excludes all possible criticism,
by definition. As examples of neurotic Jewish self-hatred, I
should declare an interest. He mentioned two people. I was one;
the other was Izzy Stone.
Once you release the torrent of abuse, you don't need
arguments and evidence, you can just scream. And Professors Walt
and Mearsheimer deserve credit for publishing a study, which
they knew was going to elicit the usual streams of abuse and
hysteria from supporters of Israeli crimes and violence.
However, we should recognize that this is pretty uniform. Try to
say a sane and uncontroversial word about any other issue dear
to the hearts of the intellectual elite that they've turned into
holy writ, you get the same reaction. So – and there's no lobby,
which does raise one of a few minor points that raises questions
about the validity of the critique.
It's a serious, careful piece of work. It deserves to be
read. They deserve credit for writing it. But it still it leaves
open the question of how valid the analysis is, and I notice
that there's a pretty subtle question involved. Everyone agrees,
on all sides, that there are a number of factors that enter into
determining U.S. foreign policy. One is strategic and economic
interests of the major power centers within the United States.
In the case of the Middle East, that means the energy
corporations, arms producers, high-tech industry, financial
institutions and others. Now, these are not marginal
institutions, particularly in the Bush administration. So one
question is to what extent does policy reflect their interests.
Another question is to what extent is it influenced by domestic
lobbies. And there are other factors. But just these two alone,
yes, they are – you find them in most cases, and to try to sort
out their influence is not so simple. In particular, it's not
simple when their interests tend to coincide, and by and large,
there's a high degree of conformity. If you look over the
record, what's called the national interest, meaning the special
interests of those with -- in whose hands power is concentrated,
the national interest, in that sense, tends to conform to the
interests of the lobbies. So in those cases, it's pretty hard to
disentangle them.
If the thesis of the book – the thesis of the book is that
the lobbies have overwhelming influence, and the so-called
“national interest” is harmed by what they do. If that were the
case, it would be, I would think, a very hopeful conclusion. It
would mean that U.S. policy could easily be reversed. It would
simply be necessary to explain to the major centers of power,
like the energy corporations, high-tech industry and arms
producers and so on, just explain to them that they've – that
their interests are being harmed by this small lobby that
screams anti-Semitism and funds congressmen, and so on. Surely
those institutions can utterly overwhelm the lobby in political
influence, in finance, and so on, so that ought to reverse the
policy.
Well, it doesn't happen, and there are a number of reasons
for it. For one thing, there's an underlying assumption that the
so-called national interest has been harmed by these policies.
Well, you know, you really have to demonstrate that. So who's
been harmed? Have the energy corporations been harmed by U.S.
policy in the Middle East over the last 60 years? I mean,
they're making profits beyond the dream of avarice, as the main
government investigation of them reported. Even more today –
that was a couple years ago. Has the U.S. – the main concern of
the U.S. has been to control what the State Department 60 years
ago called “a stupendous source of strategic power,” Middle East
oil. Yeah, they’ve controlled it. There have been – in fact, the
invasion of Iraq was an attempt to intensify that control. It
may not do it. It may have the opposite effect, but that's a
separate question. It was the intent, clearly.
There have been plenty of barriers. The major barrier is the
one that is the usual one throughout the world: independent
nationalism. It’s called “radical nationalism,” which was
serious. It was symbolized by Nasser, but also Kassem in Iraq,
and others. Well, the U.S. did succeed in overcoming that
barrier. How? Israel destroyed Nasser. That was a tremendous
service to the United States, to U.S. power, that is, to the
energy corporations, to Saudi Arabia, to the main centers of
power here, and in fact, it's in – that was 1967, and it was
after that victory that the U.S.-Israeli relations really
solidified, became what's called a “strategic asset.”
It's also then that the lobby gained its force. It's also
then, incidentally, that the educated classes, the intellectual
political class entered into an astonishing love affair with
Israel, after its demonstration of tremendous power against a
third-world enemy, and in fact, that's a very critical component
of what's called the lobby. Walt and Mearsheimer mention it, but
I think it should be emphasized. And they are very influential.
They determine, certainly influence, the shaping of news and
information in journals, media, scholarship, and so on. My own
feeling is they're probably the most influential part of the
lobby. Now, we sort of have to ask, what's the difference
between the lobby and the power centers of the country?
But the barriers were overcome. Israel has performed many
other services to the United States. You can run through the
record. It's also performed secondary services. So in the 1980s,
particularly, Congress was imposing barriers to the Reagan
administration's support for and carrying out major terrorist
atrocities in Central America. Israel helped evade congressional
restrictions by carrying out training, and so on, itself. The
Congress blocked U.S. trade with South Africa. Israel helped
evade the embargo to all the – both the racist regimes of
Southern Africa, and there have been many other cases. By now,
Israel is virtually an offshore U.S. military base and high-tech
center in the Middle East.
AMY GOODMAN: Noam Chomsky, we have to break for
stations to identify themselves, but we'll come back. Professor
Noam Chomsky is our guest for the hour. His latest book has just
been published, and it’s called Failed States: The Abuse of
Power and the Assault on Democracy.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: Our guest today is Professor Noam
Chomsky. His new book is Failed States: The Abuse of Power
and the Assault on Democracy. Noam Chomsky, longtime
professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
world-renowned linguist and political analyst. I'm Amy Goodman,
here with Juan Gonzalez. Juan?
JUAN GONZALEZ: Professor Chomsky, in your book you
have a fascinating section, where you talk about the historical
basis of the Bush doctrine of preemptive war, and also its
relationship to empire or to the building of a U.S. empire. And
you go back, you mention a historian, John Lewis Gaddis, who the
Bush administration loves, because he's actually tried to find
the historical rationalization for this use, going back to John
Quincy Adams and as Secretary of State in the invasion by
General Andrew Jackson of Florida in the Seminole Wars, and how
this actually is a record of the use of this idea to continue
the expansionist aims of the United States around the world.
NOAM CHOMSKY: Yeah, that's a very interesting case,
actually. John Lewis Gaddis is not only the favorite historian
of the Reagan administration, but he's regarded as the dean of
Cold War scholarship, the leading figure in the American Cold
War scholarship, a professor at Yale. And he wrote the one, so
far, book-length investigation into the roots of the Bush
Doctrine, which he generally approves, the usual qualifications
about style and so on. He traces it is back, as you say, to his
hero, the great grand strategist, John Quincy Adams, who wrote a
series of famous state papers back in 1818, in which he gave
post facto justification to Andrew Jackson's invasion of
Florida. And it's rather interesting.
Gaddis is a good historian. He knows the sources, cites all
the right sources. But he doesn't tell you what they say. So
what I did in the book is just add what they say, what he
omitted. Well, what they describe is a shocking record of
atrocities and crimes carried out against what were called
runaways Negros and lawless Indians, devastated the Seminoles.
There was another major Seminole war later, either exterminated
them or drove them into the marshes, completely unprovoked.
There were fabricated pretexts. Gaddis talks about the threat of
England. There was no threat from England. England didn't do a
thing. In fact, even Adams didn't claim that. But it was what
Gaddis calls an -- it established what Gaddis calls the thesis
that expansion is the best guarantee of security. So you want to
be secure, just expand, conquer more. Then you'll be secure.
And he says, yes, that goes right through all American
administrations -- he's correct about that -- and is the
centerpiece of the Bush Doctrine. So he says the Bush Doctrine
isn't all that new. Expansion is the key to security. So we just
expand and expand, and then we become more secure. Well, you
know, he doesn't mention the obvious precedents that come to
mind, so I'll leave them out, but you can think of them. And
there's some truth to that, except for what he ignores and, in
fact, denies, namely the huge atrocities that are recorded in
the various sources, scholarly sources that he cites, which also
point out that Adams, by giving this justification for Jackson's
war -- he was alone in the administration to do it, but he
managed to convince the President -- he established the doctrine
of executive wars without congressional authorization, in
violation of the Constitution. Adams later recognized that and
was sorry for it, and very sorry, but that established it and,
yes, that's been consistent ever since then: executive wars
without congressional authorization. We know of case after case.
It doesn't seem to bother the so-called originalists who talk
about original intent.
But that aside, he also -- the scholarship that Gaddis cites
but doesn't quote also points out that Adams established other
principles that are consistent from then until now, namely
massive lying to the public, distortion, evoking hysterical
fears, all kinds of deceitful efforts to mobilize the population
in support of atrocities. And yes, that continues right up to
the present, as well. So there's very interesting historical
record. What it shows is almost the opposite of what Gaddis
claims and what the Reagan -- the Bush administration -- I think
I said Reagan -- the Bush administration likes. And it's right
out of the very sources that he refers to, the right sources,
the right scholarship. He simply ignores them. But, yes, the
record is interesting.
AMY GOODMAN: Noam Chomsky, I wanted to ask you a
question. As many people know, you're perhaps one of the most
cited sources or analysis in the world. And I thought this was
an interesting reference to these citations. This was earlier
this month, program, Tim Russert, Meet the Press,
questioning the head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Peter
Pace.
TIM RUSSERT: Mr. Jaafari said that one of his
favorite American writers is Professor Noam Chomsky, someone
who has written very, very strongly against the Iraq war and
against most of the Bush administration foreign policy. Does
that concern you?
GEN. PETER PACE: I hope he has more than one book
on his nightstand.
TIM RUSSERT: So it troubles you?
GEN. PETER PACE: I would be concerned if the only
access to foreign ideas that the Prime Minister had was that
one author. If, in fact, that's one of many, and he's
digesting many different opinions, that's probably healthy.
AMY GOODMAN: That's General Peter Pace, head of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, being questioned by Tim Russert, talking
about Jaafari, who at this very moment is struggling to be --
again, to hold on to his position as prime minister of Iraq.
Your response, Noam Chomsky?
NOAM CHOMSKY: Well, I, frankly, rather doubt that
General Pace recognized my name or knew what he was referring
to, but maybe he did. The quote from Tim Russert, if I recall,
was that this was a book that was highly critical of the Iraq
war. Well, that shouldn't surprise a prime minister of Iraq.
After all, according to U.S. polls, the latest ones I've seen
reported, Brookings Institution, 87%, 87% of Iraqis want a
timetable for withdrawal. That's an astonishing figure. If it
really is all Iraqis, as was asserted. That means virtually
everyone in Arab Iraq, the areas where the troops are deployed.
I, frankly, doubt that you could have found figures like that in
Vichy, France, or, you know, Poland under -- when it was a
Russian satellite.
What it means essentially is that virtually everyone wants a
timetable for withdrawal. So, would it be surprising that a
prime minister would read a book that's critical of the war and
says the same thing? It's interesting that Bush and Blair, who
are constantly preaching about their love of democracy,
announce, declare that there will be no timetable for
withdrawal. Well, that part probably reflects the contempt for
democracy that both of them have continually demonstrated, them
and their colleagues, virtually without exception.
But there are deeper reasons, and we ought to think about
them. If we're talking about exit strategies from Iraq, we
should bear in mind that for the U.S. to leave Iraq without
establishing a subordinate client state would be a nightmare for
Washington. All you have to do is think of the policies that an
independent Iraq would be likely to pursue, if it was mildly
democratic. It would almost surely strengthen its already
developed relations with Shiite Iran right next door. Any degree
of Iraqi autonomy stimulates autonomy pressures across the
border in Saudi Arabia, where there's a substantial Shiite
population, who have been bitterly repressed by the U.S.-backed
tyranny but is now calling for more autonomy. That happens to be
where most of Saudi oil is. So, what you can imagine -- I'm sure
Washington planners are having nightmares about this -- is a
potential -- pardon?
JUAN GONZALEZ: I would like to ask you, in terms of
this whole issue of democracy, in your book you talk about the
democracy deficit. Obviously, the Bush administration is having
all kinds of problems with their -- even their model of
democracy around the world, given the election results in the
Palestinian territories, the situation now in Iraq, where the
President is trying to force out the Prime Minister of the
winning coalition there, in Venezuela, even in Iran. Your
concept of the democracy deficit, and why this administration is
able to hold on in the United States itself?
NOAM CHOMSKY: Well, there are two aspects of that. One
is, the democracy deficit internal to the United States, that
is, the enormous and growing gap between public opinion and
public policy. Second is their so-called democracy-promotion
mission elsewhere in the world. The latter is just pure fraud.
The only evidence that they're interested in promoting democracy
is that they say so. The evidence against it is just
overwhelming, including the cases you mentioned and many others.
I mean, the very fact that people are even willing to talk about
this shows that we're kind of insisting on being North Koreans:
if the Dear Leader has spoken, that establishes the truth; it
doesn't matter what the facts are. I go into that in some detail
in the book.
The democracy deficit at home is another matter. How have --
I mean, they have an extremely narrow hold on political power.
Their policies are strongly opposed by most of the population.
How do they carry this off? Well, that's been through an
intriguing mixture of deceit, lying, fabrication, public
relations. There's actually a pretty good study of it by two
good political scientists, Hacker and Pearson, who just run
through the tactics and how it works. And they have barely
managed to hold on to political power and are attempting to use
it to dismantle the institutional structure that has been built
up over many years with enormous popular support -- the limited
benefits system; they’re trying to dismantle Social Security and
are actually making progress on that; to the tax cuts,
overwhelmingly for the rich, are creating -- are purposely
creating a future situation, first of all, a kind of fiscal
train wreck in the future, but also a situation in which it will
be virtually impossible to carry out the kinds of social
policies that the public overwhelmingly supports.
And to manage to carry this off has been an impressive feat
of manipulation, deceit, lying, and so on. No time to talk about
it here, but actually my book gives a pretty good account. I do
discuss it in the book. That's a democratic deficit at home and
an extremely serious one. The problems of nuclear war,
environmental disaster, those are issues of survival, the top
issues and the highest priority for anyone sensible. Third issue
is that the U.S. government is enhancing those threats. And a
fourth issue is that the U.S. population is opposed, but is
excluded from the political system. That's a democratic deficit.
It's one we can deal with, too.
AMY GOODMAN: Noam Chomsky, we're going to have to
leave it there for now. But part two of our interview will air
next week.
Professor Noam Chomsky's new book, just published, is called
Failed States: The Abuse of Power and the Assault on
Democracy.
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