Noam Chomsky on Charlie
Hebdo
We Are All - Fill in the Blank
Terrorism is not terrorism when a much more
severe terrorist attack is carried out by
those who are Righteous by virtue of their
power
By Noam Chomsky
January 11, 2015 "ICH"
- THE WORLD reacted with horror to the
murderous attack on the French satirical
journal Charlie Hebdo. In the New York
Times, veteran Europe correspondent Steven
Erlanger graphically described the immediate
aftermath, what many call France’s 9/11, as
“a day of sirens, helicopters in the air,
frantic news bulletins; of police cordons
and anxious crowds; of young children led
away from schools to safety.
It was a day, like the
previous two, of blood and horror in and
around Paris.” The enormous outcry worldwide
was accompanied by reflection about the
deeper roots of the atrocity. “Many Perceive
a Clash of Civilizations,” a New York Times
headline read.
The reaction of horror and
revulsion about the crime is justified, as
is the search for deeper roots, as long as
we keep some principles firmly in mind. The
reaction should be completely independent of
what thinks about this journal and what it
produces.
The passionate and
ubiquitous chants “I am Charlie,” and the
like, should not be meant to indicate, even
hint at, any association with the journal,
at least in the context of defense of
freedom of speech. Rather, they should
express defense of the right of free
expression whatever one thinks of the
contents, even if they are regarded as
hateful and depraved.
And the chants should also
express condemnation for violence and
terror. The head of Israel’s Labor Party and
the main challenger for the upcoming
elections in Israel, Isaac Herzog, is quite
right when he says that “Terrorism is
terrorism. There’s no two ways about it.” He
is also right to say that “All the nations
that seek peace and freedom [face] an
enormous challenge” from murderous terrorism
– putting aside his predictably selective
interpretation of the challenge.
Erlanger vividly describes
the scene of horror. He quotes one surviving
journalist as saying that “Everything
crashed. There was no way out. There was
smoke everywhere. It was terrible. People
were screaming. It was like a nightmare.”
Another surviving journalist reported a
“huge detonation, and everything went
completely dark.” The scene, Erlanger
reported, “was an increasingly familiar one
of smashed glass, broken walls, twisted
timbers, scorched paint and emotional
devastation.” At least 10 people were
reported at once to have died in the
explosion, with 20 missing, “presumably
buried in the rubble.”
These quotes, as the
indefatigable David Peterson reminds us, are
not, however, from January 2015. Rather,
they are from a story of Erlanger’s on April
24 1999, which made it only to page 6 of the
New York Times, not reaching the
significance of the Charlie Hebdo attack.
Erlanger was reporting on the NATO (meaning
US) “missile attack on Serbian state
television headquarters” that “knocked Radio
Television Serbia off the air.”
There was an official
justification. “NATO and American officials
defended the attack,” Erlanger reports, “as
an effort to undermine the regime of
President Slobodan Milosevic of Yugoslavia.”
Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon told a
briefing in Washington that “Serb TV is as
much a part of Milosevic's murder machine as
his military is,” hence a legitimate target
of attack.
The Yugoslavian government
said that “The entire nation is with our
President, Slobodan Milosevic,” Erlanger
reports, adding that “How the Government
knows that with such precision was not
clear.”
No such sardonic comments
are in order when we read that France mourns
the dead and the world is outraged by the
atrocity. There need also be no inquiry into
the deeper roots, no profound questions
about who stands for civilization, and who
for barbarism.
Isaac Herzog, then, is
mistaken when he says that “Terrorism is
terrorism. There’s no two ways about it.”
There are quite definitely two ways about
it: terrorism is not terrorism when a much
more severe terrorist attack is carried out
by those who are Righteous by virtue of
their power. Similarly, there is no assault
against freedom of speech when the Righteous
destroy a TV channel supportive of a
government that they are attacking.
By the same token, we can
readily comprehend the comment in the New
York Times of civil rights lawyer Floyd
Abrams, noted for his forceful defense of
freedom of expression, that the Charlie
Hebdo attack is “the most threatening
assault on journalism in living memory.” He
is quite correct about “living memory,”
which carefully assigns assaults on
journalism and acts of terror to their
proper categories: Theirs, which are
horrendous; and Ours, which are virtuous and
easily dismissed from living memory.
We might recall as well
that this is only one of many assaults by
the Righteous on free expression. To mention
only one example that is easily erased from
“living memory,” the assault on Fallujah by
US forces in November 2004, one of the worst
crimes of the invasion of Iraq, opened with
occupation of Fallujah General Hospital.
Military occupation of a hospital is, of
course, a serious war crime in itself, even
apart from the manner in which it was
carried out, blandly reported in a
front-page story in the New York Times,
accompanied with a photograph depicting the
crime. The story reported that “Patients and
hospital employees were rushed out of rooms
by armed soldiers and ordered to sit or lie
on the floor while troops tied their hands
behind their backs.” The crimes were
reported as highly meritorious, and
justified: “The offensive also shut down
what officers said was a propaganda weapon
for the militants: Fallujah General
Hospital, with its stream of reports of
civilian casualties.”
Evidently such a
propaganda agency cannot be permitted to
spew forth its vulgar obscenities.
Source:
Telesur