The Unmourned: Another
Mass Killing by the Peace Prize Prez
By Chris Floyd
January 13, 2015 "ICH"
- In keeping with the concept of "unmournable
bodies"
limned by Teju Cole in the New Yorker
(more on this below), news arrives today of
yet another clutch of unimportant,
unmournable deaths at the hands of extremist
violence.
From McClatchy:
A U.S.-led coalition
airstrike killed at least 50 Syrian
civilians late last month when it targeted a
headquarters of Islamic State extremists in
northern Syria [the town of Al Bab, near the
Turkish border], according to an eyewitness
and a Syrian opposition human rights
organization.
… The Syrian Network for Human Rights, an
independent opposition group that tracks
casualties in Syria, said it has documented
the deaths of at least 40 civilians in
airstrikes in the months between the start
of U.S. bombing in Syria Sept. 23 through
the Dec. 28 strike on Al Bab. The deaths
include 13 people killed in Idlib province
on the first day of the strikes. Other
deaths include 23 civilians killed in the
eastern province of Deir el Zour, two in
Raqqa province and two more in Idlib
province.
The issue of civilian deaths in U.S. strikes
is a critical one as the United States hopes
to win support from average Syrians for its
campaign against the Islamic State. The
deaths are seen by U.S.-allied moderate
rebel commanders as one reason support for
their movement has eroded in northern Syria
while support for radical forces such as al
Qaida’s Nusra Front and the Islamic State
has gained. Rebel commanders say they have
intelligence that could avoid civilian
casualties, but that U.S. officials refuse
to coordinate with them.
McClatchy located two sources who confirmed
a high civilian death toll from the strike.
One witness, an activist in Al Bab, gave the
death toll as 61 civilian prisoners and 13
Islamic State guards. The Syrian Network for
Human Rights estimated the death toll at 80,
and said 25 of those were Islamic State
Guards and another 55 were either civilians
or imprisoned fighters from non-Islamic
State rebel groups. Either number would make
the Al Bab strike the single worst case of
civilian deaths since the U.S. began bombing
targets in Syria.
… [A witness] said some 35 of the prisoners
had been jailed shortly before the airstrike
for minor infractions of the Islamic State’s
harsh interpretation of Islamic law, such as
smoking, wearing jeans or appearing too late
for the afternoon prayer….
Huda al Ali, a spokeswoman for the Syrian
Network, said its investigation had found
that in addition to violators of Sharia law,
the two-story building also was being used
as a prison for fighters from groups opposed
to the Islamic State.
In other words, the
unilateral, illegal bombing campaign of the
Peace Prize Laureate killed dozens of
victims of Islamic extremism. But unlike the
Charlie Hebdo case, there is no worldwide
mourning for these nobodies, these brown
nobodies from the back of beyond. Islamic
State denied their "free speech" by
imprisoning them; then Barack Obama ended it
entirely, by killing them. An excellent
example of bipartisanship in action, where
both sides find common ground and work
together! Then again, we see a lot of that
in the Terror War.
Meanwhile in Paris, more than a million
people marched in a moving -- if highly
selective -- show of solidarity against
violent extremism and the repression of free
speech. Unfortunately, the moral high ground
of the march was lowered somewhat by the
presence of several purveyors of violent
extremism and repression of free speech in
its ranks. Such as that well-known avatar of
tolerance and free speech, Benjamin
Netanyahu, who, as Cole notes, had killed
more than a dozen journalists in Gaza last
year, in his American-supported (and
American-armed, American-funded) devastation
of Gaza last year.
Not far from him was
Palestinian Authority chief Mahmoud Abbas,
the Holocaust denier who became a darling of
the West when he instigated a civil war
among the Palestinians after his party lost
a free and open democratic election to
Hamas. Abbas is the still the "president" of
the PA, although his term ended years ago;
and despite being forced by internal
politics to make dissenting noises from time
to time, he continues to serve the Israelis
well by sternly policing the West Bank for
them. There were officials from the horrific
Saudi regime -- who had, that very weekend,
given 50 lashes to a journalist, the blogger
Raif Badawi, for exercising his free speech.
These lashes were just the first of a weekly
series of 50 lashes until Badawi has been
given 1,000 strokes to punish him for having
opinions that the elite don't like.
Daniel Wickham provides an excellent rogues'
gallery of the free speech repressors --
including, most emphatically, the chief
mourner at the rally, French President
Francois Hollande -- who paraded their moral
virtue at the Charlie Hebdo march.
But while the whole word lamented the
murders at the magazine (see this striking
graphic of a world engulfed with
JeSuisCharlie twitter messages in the hours
after the attack), there are whole classes
of people who are, literally, unmournable in
the discourse of our society, as Tejo Cole
notes
in his New Yorker article. Here are a
few excerpts:
Western societies are not,
even now, the paradise of skepticism and
rationalism that they believe themselves to
be. The West is a variegated space, in which
both freedom of thought and tightly
regulated speech exist, and in which
disavowals of deadly violence happen at the
same time as clandestine torture. But, at
moments when Western societies consider
themselves under attack, the discourse is
quickly dominated by an ahistorical fantasy
of long-suffering serenity and fortitude in
the face of provocation. Yet European and
American history are so strongly marked by
efforts to control speech that the
persecution of rebellious thought must be
considered among the foundational buttresses
of these societies. Witch burnings, heresy
trials, and the untiring work of the
Inquisition shaped Europe, and these ideas
extended into American history as well and
took on American modes, from the breaking of
slaves to the censuring of critics of
Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Rather than posit that the Paris attacks are
the moment of crisis in free speech—as so
many commentators have done—it is necessary
to understand that free speech and other
expressions of liberté are already in crisis
in Western societies; the crisis was not
precipitated by three deranged gunmen. The
U.S., for example, has consolidated its
traditional monopoly on extreme violence,
and, in the era of big data, has also
hoarded information about its deployment of
that violence. There are harsh consequences
for those who interrogate this monopoly. The
only person in prison for the C.I.A.’s
abominable torture regime is John Kiriakou,
the whistle-blower. Edward Snowden is a
hunted man for divulging information about
mass surveillance. Chelsea Manning is
serving a thirty-five-year sentence for her
role in WikiLeaks. They, too, are
blasphemers, but they have not been
universally valorized, as have the
cartoonists of Charlie Hebdo.
The killings in Paris were an appalling
offense to human life and dignity. The
enormity of these crimes will shock us all
for a long time. But the suggestion that
violence by self-proclaimed Jihadists is the
only threat to liberty in Western societies
ignores other, often more immediate and
intimate, dangers. The U.S., the U.K., and
France approach statecraft in different
ways, but they are allies in a certain
vision of the world, and one important thing
they share is an expectation of proper
respect for Western secular religion.
Heresies against state power are monitored
and punished. People have been arrested for
making anti-military or anti-police comments
on social media in the U.K. Mass
surveillance has had a chilling effect on
journalism and on the practice of the law in
the U.S. Meanwhile, the armed forces and
intelligence agencies in these countries
demand, and generally receive, unwavering
support from their citizens. When they
commit torture or war crimes, no matter how
illegal or depraved, there is little
expectation of a full accounting or of the
prosecution of the parties responsible.
…This focus [on the Hebdo victims] is part
of the consensus about mournable bodies, and
it often keeps us from paying proper
attention to other, ongoing, instances of
horrific carnage around the world:
abductions and killings in Mexico, hundreds
of children (and more than a dozen
journalists) killed in Gaza by Israel last
year, internecine massacres in the Central
African Republic, and so on. And even when
we rightly condemn criminals who claim to
act in the name of Islam, little of our
grief is extended to the numerous Muslim
victims of their attacks, whether in Yemen
or Nigeria—in both of which there were
deadly massacres this week—or in Saudi
Arabia, where, among many violations of
human rights, the punishment for journalists
who “insult Islam” is flogging. We may not
be able to attend to each outrage in every
corner of the world, but we should at least
pause to consider how it is that mainstream
opinion so quickly decides that certain
violent deaths are more meaningful, and more
worthy of commemoration, than others.
… We mourn with France. We ought to. But it
is also true that violence from “our” side
continues unabated. By this time next month,
in all likelihood, many more “young men of
military age” and many others, neither young
nor male, will have been killed by U.S.
drone strikes in Pakistan and elsewhere. If
past strikes are anything to go by, many of
these people will be innocent of wrongdoing.
… Those of us who are writers will not
consider our pencils broken by such
killings. But that incontestability, that
unmournability, just as much as the massacre
in Paris, is the clear and present danger to
our collective liberté.
Chris blogs at
http://www.chris-floyd.com/