Terrorists or “Freedom
Fighters”? Recruited by the CIA
By Professor John Ryan
February 07, 2015
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The barbarous phenomenon we recently
witnessed in France has roots that go back
to at least 1979 when the mujahedeen made
their appearance in Afghanistan. At that
time their ire was directed at the leftist
Taraki government that had come into power
in April of 1978. This government’s
ascension to power was a sudden and totally
indigenous happening – with equal surprise
to both the USA and the USSR.
In April of 1978 the Afghan
army deposed the country’s government
because of its oppressive measures, and then
created a new government, headed by a
leftist, Nur Mohammad Taraki, who had been a
writer, poet and professor of journalism at
the University of Kabul. Following this, for
a brief period of time, Afghanistan had a
progressive secular government, with broad
popular support. As I pointed out in an
earlier publication, this government “. . .
enacted progressive reforms and gave equal
rights to women. It was in the process of
dragging the country into the 20th
century, and as British political scientist
Fred Halliday stated in May 1979 (1),
‘probably more has changed in the
countryside over the last year than in two
centuries since the state was established.’”
The Taraki government’s
first course of action was to declare
non-alignment in foreign affairs and to
affirm a commitment to Islam within a
secular state. Among the much needed
reforms, women were given equal rights, and
girls were to go to school and be in the
same classroom as boys. Child marriages and
feudal dowry payments were banned. Labour
unions were legalized, and some 10,000
people were released from prisons. Within a
short time hundreds of schools and medical
clinics were built in the countryside.
The landholding system
hadn’t changed much since the feudal period;
more than three-quarters of the land was
owned by landlords who composed only 3
percent of the rural population. Reforms
began on September 1, 1978 by the abolition
all debts owed by farmers – landlords and
moneylenders had charged up to 45 percent
interest. A program was being developed for
major land reform, and it was expected that
all farm families (including landlords)
would be given the equivalent of equal
amounts of land. (2)
What happened to this
progressive government? In brief, it was
undermined by the CIA and the mujahedeen,
which triggered a series of events that
destroyed the country – and ironically led
to the disaster of September 11, 2001 in the
USA and to the present chaos and tragedy in
Afghanistan.
Even before the CIA got
involved, as would be expected, the rich
landlords and mullahs objected to not only
land reform but to all the reforms. Most of
the 250,000 mullahs were rich landlords who
in their sermons told people that only Allah
could give them land, and that Allah would
object to giving women equal rights or
having girls go to school. But the reforms
were popular, so these reactionary elements
left for Pakistan, as “refugees.” With
assistance from Pakistan, they proceeded to
conduct raids on the Afghan countryside
where they burned clinics and schools, and
if they found teachers teaching girls, they
would kill the teachers, often
disembowelling them in the presence of the
children – to instill fear and panic in the
population.
Although having no right
to interfere in another country’s affairs,
the USA viewed the new government as being
Marxist and was determined to subvert it. At
first unofficially, but officially after
July 3, 1979 with President Carter’s
authorization, the CIA, along with Pakistan
and Saudi Arabia, began to provide military
aid and training to the Muslim extremists,
who became known as the mujahedeen and
“freedom fighters.”
In addition, the CIA
recruited Hafizullah Amin, an Afghan Ph.D.
student in the USA, and got him to act as a
hard-line Marxist. He successfully worked
his way up in the Afghan government and in
September of 1979 he carried out a coup, and
had Taraki killed. With Amin in charge, he
jailed thousands of people and undermined
the army and discredited the government. To
ward off the thousands of well-armed
mujahedeen invaders, many being foreign
mercenaries, Amin was forced by his
government to invite some Soviet troops.(3)
Shortly afterwards, Amin was killed and was
replaced as president by Babrak Karmal, a
former member of the Taraki government who
had been in exile in Czechoslovakia.
Although still clouded by cold war politics
and uncertain history, Karmal “invited” the
USSR to send in thousands of troops to deal
with the mujahedeen forces. What’s not
widely known is that the USA through the CIA
had been actively involved in Afghan affairs
for at least a year, and it was in response
to this that the Soviets arrived on the
scene.
As I stated some years
ago:
“The advent of Soviet
troops on Afghan soil tragically set the
stage for the eventual destruction of
the country. Zbigniew Brzezinski,
president Carter’s National Security
Advisor, afterwards bragged that he had
convinced Carter to authorize the CIA to
set a trap for the Russian bear and to
give the USSR the taste of a Vietnam
war.(4) Brzezinski saw this as a golden
opportunity to fire up the zeal of the
most reactionary Muslim fanatics — to
have them declare a jihad (holy war) on
the atheist infidels who defiled Afghan
soil — and to not only expel them but to
pursue them and “liberate” the
Muslim-majority areas of the USSR. And
for the next 10 years, with an
expenditure of billions of dollars from
the USA and Saudi Arabia, and with the
recruitment of thousands of non-Afghan
Muslims into the jihad (including Osama
bin Laden), this army of religious
zealots laid waste to the land and
people of Afghanistan.”
Sending in troops to
Afghanistan was a colossal blunder on the
part of the USSR. If the Soviets had simply
provided weapons for the Afghan government,
they may have survived the “barbarians at
the gates” – because ordinary Afghan people
were not fanatics and most of them had
supported the government’s progressive
reforms.
Being unable to entice
enough Afghanis for this war, the CIA, Saudi
Arabia and Pakistan recruited about 35,000
Muslim radicals, from 40 Islamic countries
to conduct the war against the Afghan
government and the Soviet forces. The CIA
covertly trained and sponsored these foreign
warriors, hence the fundamentalism that
emerged in Afghanistan is a CIA construct.
Although the mujahedeen were referred to as
“freedom fighters,” they committed horrific
atrocities and were terrorists of the first
order.
As reported in US media, a
“favourite tactic” of the mujahedeen was “to
torture victims [often Russians] by first
cutting off their noses, ears, and genitals,
then removing one slice of skin after
another,” leading to “a slow, very painful
death.” The article describes Russian
prisoners caged like animals and “living
lives of indescribable horror.” (5) Another
publication cites a journalist from the
Far Eastern
Economic Review reporting that “one
[Soviet] group was killed, skinned and hung
up in a butcher’s shop”. (6)
Despite these graphic
reports, President Reagan continued to refer
to the mujahedeen as “freedom fighters” and
in 1985 he invited a group of them to
Washington where he entertained them in the
Whitehouse. Afterwards, while introducing
them to the media, he stated, “These
gentlemen are the moral equivalents of
America’s founding fathers.” (7)
Surely Soviet soldiers
were every bit as human as American soldiers
– just suppose it had been American soldiers
who had been skinned alive. Would President
Reagan in such an instance still refer to
the mujahedeen as “freedom fighters” . . .
or might he have referred to them correctly
as terrorists, just as the Soviets had done?
Indeed, how these actions are portrayed
depends on whose ox is gored.
The Soviets succumbed to
their Vietnam and withdrew their troops in
February of 1989, but the war raged on, with
continuing American military aid, but it
took until April of 1992 before the Afghan
Marxist government was finally defeated.
Then for the next four years the mujahedeen
destroyed much of Kabul and killed some
50,000 people as they fought amongst
themselves and conducted looting and rape
campaigns until the Taliban routed them and
captured Kabul in September of 1996. The
Taliban, trained as fanatic Muslims in
Pakistan, “liberated” the country from the
mujahedeen, but then established an
atrocious reactionary regime. Once in power
the Taliban brought in a reign of Islamist
terror, especially on women. They imposed an
ultra-sectarian version of Islam, closely
related to Wahhabism, the ruling creed in
Saudi Arabia.
The US “communist
paranoia” and their policy to undermine the
USSR was such that they supported and
recruited the most reactionary fanatic
religious zealots on the earth — and used
them as a proxy army to fight communism and
the USSR — in the course of which
Afghanistan and its people were destroyed.
But it didn’t end there. The mujahedeen
metastasized and took on a life of their
own, spreading to various parts of the
Muslim world. They went on to fight the
Serbs in Bosnia and Kosovo, with the full
knowledge and support of the USA. But then,
ironically, having defeated what they called
Soviet imperialism, these “freedom fighters”
turned their sights on what they perceive to
be American imperialism, particularly its
support for Israel and its attacks on Muslim
lands.
And so a creation of the
USA’s own making turned on them – the
progeny of Reagan’s wonderful “freedom
fighters” lashed out and America experienced
September 11, 2001. But what have the US
government and most American people learned
from this? From their inflated opinion of
themselves as the world’s “exceptional” and
“indispensible” nation, as President Obama
arrogantly keeps reminding the world,
neither the American government nor its
people have ever connected the dots. Is
there anything in their recent history that
could explain 9/11 to them? In a nutshell,
it never occurs to them that if the USA had
left the progressive Afghan Taraki
government alone, there would have been no
army of mujahedeen, no Soviet intervention,
no war that destroyed Afghanistan, no Osama
bin Laden, and hence no September 11 tragedy
in the USA.
Instead of reflecting on
the possible causes of what occurred, and
learning from this, the USA immediately
resorted to war, to be followed by a series
of additional wars, which brings to mind
Marx’s sardonic comment in which he
corrected Hegel’s observation that history
repeats itself, adding that it does so “the
first time as tragedy, the second as farce.”
In response to the USA’s
demand for Osama bin Laden, the Afghan
Taliban government offered to turn him over
to an international tribunal, but they
wanted to see evidence linking him to
9/11.(8) The USA had no such evidence and
bin Laden denied having anything to do with
9/11.(9) To corroborate bin Laden’s denial,
the FBI has in its records that “. . . the
FBI has no hard evidence connecting bin
Laden to 9/11.”(10) Right till the present
time, the FBI has never changed its position
on this.
As became known later, the
9/11 plot was hatched in Hamburg, Germany by
an Al-Qaeda cell so the 9/11 attack had
nothing to do with Afghanistan. Despite the
fact that 15 of the 19 hijackers were from
Saudi Arabia and that the USA had no
evidence linking Afghanistan or bin Laden to
the 9/11 attack, the US launched a war on
Afghanistan, and of course without UN
approval, so this was an illegal war.
Even if the USA wanted to
depose the Taliban government, there was no
need for a war. In rare unanimity, all the
anti-Taliban Afghan groups pleaded with the
US government not to bomb or invade the
country. (11) They pointed out that to
remove the Taliban government all that the
USA had to do was to force Saudi Arabia and
Pakistan to stop funding the Taliban, and
shortly after the regime would collapse on
its own. So the USA could have had its
regime change without destroying the country
and killing hundreds of thousands of
Afghanis as well as thousands of its own
troops, and having the war continue from
2001 into 2015 . . . America’s longest war.
If this is not farce, what is it?
And the farce continued.
Once in war mode, in 2003 the US launched
another illegal war, this time on Iraq, a
war based on outright lies and deception – a
war crime of the first order. This war was
even more tragic. It killed over a million
Iraqis, basically destroyed the country, and
destroyed a secular society, replacing it
with on-going religious fratricide. In the
course of this war, the Afghan al-Qaeda
moved into Iraq and served as a model for
young Iraqis to fight the American invaders.
Although the American forces conquered Iraq
quickly, they were faced with unrelenting
guerrilla warfare, which eventually led to
their departure in 2011. During these years
the Americans jailed thousands of young
Iraqi men, and inadvertently turned most of
them into fervent jihadists. Prisons such as
Abu Ghraib and Bucca had an incendiary
effect on the ongoing insurgency, but now
these jihadists weren’t called “freedom
fighter” – they lost this endearing
appellation in Afghanistan when American
soldiers replaced Soviet soldiers.
As if the wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq weren’t enough, in the
spring of 2011 the US surreptitiously
launched the beginnings of a further war,
long in planning, and this one was on Syria.
Somehow “spontaneously” there was an
uprising of “freedom fighters” whose
objective was to overthrow Syria’s secular
government, which displeased the USA. Right
from the beginning it was suspected that the
USA was behind the uprising, since as early
as 2007 General Wesley Clark stated in an
interview that in 2001, a few weeks after
9/11, he was told by an American high
ranking general about plans “to take out
seven countries in five years, starting with
Iraq, and then Syria, Lebanon, Libya,
Somalia, Sudan and, finishing off, Iran.”
Also in 2007, Seymour Hersh, in a much cited
article, stated that “the Saudi government,
with Washington’s approval, would provide
funds and logistical aid to weaken the
government of President Bashir Assad of
Syria.”
The so-called “Free Syrian
Army” was a creation of the US and NATO, and
its objective was to provoke the Syrian
police and army and once there was a
deployment of tanks and armored vehicles
this would supposedly justify outside
military intervention under NATO’s mandate
of “responsibility to protect” – with the
objective of doing to Syria what they had
done to Libya. However, with Russia’s veto
at the UN this didn’t work out as planned.
To resolve this setback,
the CIA, together with Saudi Arabia and
Qatar, proceeded to do exactly what had
been done in Afghanistan – hordes of foreign
Salafist Muslim “freedom fighters” were
brought into Syria for the express purpose
of overthrowing its secular government. With
unlimited funds and American weapons, the
first mercenaries were Iraqi al-Qaeda who,
ironically, came into existence in the
course of fighting the American army in
Iraq. They were then followed by dozens of
al-Qaeda’s other groups, notably al-Nusra,
with its plans to change Syria’s
multi-racial secular society into a Sunni
Islamic state.
Right from the beginning
of the uprising in Syria, the US was telling
the world that “Assad had to go” and that
they were intervening by helping “moderates”
in the Free Syrian Army to overthrow the
Syrian “regime.” However, to no one’s
surprise, the ineffective “moderate” Free
Syrian Army was soon inundated with Salafist
Muslim groups who proceeded to launch a
series of terrorist attacks throughout
Syria. The Syrian government correctly
identified these attacks as being the work
of terrorists, but this was dismissed by the
mainstream media as propaganda. The fact
that the country was beset by suicide
bombings and the beheading of soldiers,
civilians, journalists, aid workers, and
public officials was simply ignored.
Despite these reports, the
USA insisted it was only providing
“assistance” to those who identified
themselves as being part of the Free Syrian
Army. As reported in June 2012 by the New
York Times, “CIA officers are operating
secretly in southern Turkey, helping allies
decide which Syrian opposition fighters
across the border will receive arms to fight
the Syrian government… The weapons,
including automatic rifles, rocket-propelled
grenades, ammunition and some antitank
weapons, are being funneled mostly across
the Turkish border by way of a shadowy
network of intermediaries including Syria’s
Muslim Brotherhood and paid for by Turkey,
Saudi Arabia and Qatar, the officials said.”
In addition, after the
Gaddafi Libyan government was deposed in
August 2011 by al-Qaeda forces, supported by
NATO bombing, the CIA arranged for the
transfer of Libyan weapons to Syrian rebels.
As reported in the UK Times and by Seymour
Hersh, a Libyan ship docked in Turkey with
400 tonnes of armaments, including forty
SAM-7 surface-to-air anti-aircraft missiles,
rocket-propelled grenades, and other
munitions. Then in early 2013 a further
major arms shipment, known as the Great
Croatian Weapons Airlift, consisted of 3,000
tonnes of military weaponry from Croatia,
Britain and France, coordinated by the CIA.
This was flown out of Zagreb, Croatia, in 75
transport planes to Turkey for distribution
to “worthy” Syrian mercenaries. In a further
report, the New York Times (March 24, 2013)
stated that it was Saudi Arabia that paid
for these weapons and that there were
actually 160 military cargo flights.
Despite all the efforts of
the USA, NATO, Saudi Arabia and Qatar to
support the various groups that formed the
Free Syrian Army, Syrian government forces
continued to rout and defeat them. Moreover,
many of these ‘moderate’ forces were
defecting and joining militant jihadist
groups. Then in early 2014 an apparently
unknown military force appeared on the
scene, seemingly from “out of nowhere” and
began to make spectacular military gains. It
had a number of names, one being the Islamic
State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) but then it
became simply the Islamic State (IS) or
Daesh in Arabic. It got worldwide attention
when in a matter of days it took over a
quarter of Iraq, including the second
largest city, Mosul – caused the Iraqi army
to flee and disintegrate, and threatened to
attack Baghdad. Shortly after, the beheading
of two American journalists baited the US to
once again send forces to Iraq and to begin
a bombing campaign on ISIS forces in both
Iraq and Syria.
Before its attack on Iraq,
ISIS already had a strong base in Syria, and
then with tanks and artillery captured from
the Iraqi army in Mosul, ISIS now controls
almost a third of Syria. Hence at present it
covers an area almost the size of Britain,
with a population of about six million. ISIS
does not recognize the borders of Syria and
Iraq and considers the area under its
control to be the frontiers of a Caliphate
state with a militant vision of Islam. This
is the direct result of the desert storm of
Saudi cash that has been spent on global
Wahhabi proselytizing and indoctrination,
resulting in a reactionary medieval, toxic
“religion” – that has nothing to do with
legitimate Islam.
At the beginning, the
“Islamic State” was nothing more than an
appendage of al-Qaeda – with al-Qaeda itself
being directly armed, funded, and backed by
stalwart US allies, Saudi Arabia and Qatar,
with the full support Turkey. And behind all
this was the desire of the USA and NATO to
undermine and destroy the secular government
of Syria. As Patrick Cockburn stated in a
recent perceptive article,
”The foster parents of
Isis and the other Sunni jihadi
movements in Iraq and Syria are Saudi
Arabia, the Gulf monarchies and Turkey.”
He cites the former head of MI6 saying
that ‘Such things do not happen
spontaneously.’ Cockburn states further
that “It’s unlikely the Sunni community
as a whole in Iraq would have lined up
behind Isis without the support Saudi
Arabia . . . . Turkey’s role has been
different but no less significant than
Saudi Arabia’s in aiding Isis and other
jihadi groups. Its most important action
has been to keep open its 510-mile
border with Syria. This gave Isis,
al-Nusra and other opposition groups a
safe rear base from which to bring in
men and weapons. . . . Turkish military
intelligence may have been heavily
involved in aiding Isis when it was
reconstituting itself in 2011.”
Following its policy of
trying to have full spectrum dominance in
the world, the US has not hesitated to
support terrorist groups when it was in
their interests, e.g., the creation of the
mujahedeen and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan.
While they fought the Soviets they were
“freedom fighters,” but then came the
blowback of 9/11 . . . and they instantly
became terrorists, resulting in America’s
“War on Terror.” The illegal war of
aggression on and military occupation of
Iraq resulted in the creation of a
resistance movement – a new variant of
al-Qaeda, viewed of course as terrorists.
Then came the “attack” on the Assad
government in Syria, launched by American,
NATO, Saudi, Qatar and Turkish campaigns. At
first it was in the guise of indigenous
“freedom fighters”, the Free Syrian Army,
but when they made little headway,
additional “freedom fighters” appeared, in
the form of al-Qaeda, in all its varieties,
culminating in ISIS. These erstwhile
terrorists now became allies in the campaign
to depose Syria’s Assad government. Although
Syria viewed them correctly as foreign
terrorists, their claims were largely
ignored . . . until two American journalists
were beheaded.
At about the same time
that the American journalists were beheaded
there was fierce fighting going on in Syria
and wherever Syrian soldiers were captured
they were summarily executed, with many
being beheaded, all this being meticulously
filmed. A large number of websites show this
but one in particular, entitled
“Syrianfight: Documenting War Crimes in
Syria” shows dozens of gruesome execution
scenes, including the mass execution in
August 2014 of 220 Syrian soldiers near the
Tabqa airbase. Just imagine if 220 American
soldiers had been executed and beheaded what
an outcry there would have been. Instead,
the mainstream media concentrated solely on
the two beheaded journalists, which indeed
was an outrage, but where was the outrage
for the hundreds of beheaded Syrian
soldiers? Basically, nothing was said about
what ISIS was doing in Syria.
Although there was outrage
in the USA about what ISIS had done to two
American citizens, there was practically no
soul searching about the cause of this
religious extremism and the possibility that
this was just another case of blowback from
what the USA had done to Afghanistan, Iraq,
Libya and Syria.
Not surprisingly, the
USA’s response was to announce a series of
air strikes to “degrade” the capability of
ISIS, but there were also to be “no boots on
the ground” so actually the military defeat
of ISIS was left unresolved – perhaps
purposefully. In reality, the sudden
military power of ISIS left the West and its
regional allies – Saudi Arabia, Qatar and
Turkey – with a quandary: their official
policy is to depose Assad, but ISIS is now
the only effective military force in Syria
so if the Syrian government is deposed, it
would be ISIS that would fill the vacuum.
So, was the invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the
assault on Syria in 2011 going to result in
the creation of a powerful jihadi state
spanning northern Iraq and Syria? Under such
a fanatic Wahhabi regime, what would happen
to the multicultural and multi-religious
society of Syria?
In the face of this stark
reality, as summed up by Patrick Cockburn:
“. . . the US and its
allies have responded to the rise of
Isis by descending into fantasy. They
pretend they are fostering a ‘third
force’ of moderate Syrian rebels to
fight both Assad and Isis, though in
private Western diplomats admit this
group doesn’t really exist outside a few
beleaguered pockets.”
Moreover, as soon as such
forces are trained and equipped great
numbers of them proceed to join al-Nusra or
ISIS, e.g., 3,000 of them this past January.
But is there method behind this obvious
delusion? Is it really the intent of the US
and its allies to bumble along and let ISIS
proceed to defeat the Syrian army? And once
this fanatic Sunni Wahhabi regime takes over
Syria, is the next stage to be an attack on
Shiite Iran, the next Muslim country to be
destroyed? The boots on the ground in such a
venture would be those of ISIS.
To counter this
Machiavellian possibility, there has
recently been evidence that perhaps at some
level there is the realization that the
permanent establishment of a fanatic
Caliphate state with a militant vision of
Islam is perhaps not such a good idea. What
until recently has seemed to be a matter
beyond the realm of possibility, there now
appears evidence the US may be prepared to
actually deal with President Assad of Syria.
As reported in the New York Times (Jan. 15
and Jan. 19, 2015) the UN envoy for the
crisis in Syria is trying to convince the
Syrian government and ISIS to “freeze” the
fighting on the ground, in area by area, and
then somehow try to end the war. President
Assad has been receptive to the idea, but
there has been no response from ISIS. Also,
on Russia’s initiative, a meeting is taking
place in Moscow to prepare for a conference
that will try to resolve the Syria crisis.
The good news is that the US has become
supportive of both courses of action.
Another sign of
encouragement has been the publication in
Foreign Affairs (Jan 27, 2015) of a lengthy
wide-ranging interview with President Assad.
This is important for both the members of
the US government and the American public in
general. Assad has stated that he would be
prepared to meet with anyone but not with “a
puppet of Qatar or Saudi Arabia or any
Western country, including the United
States, paid from the outside. It should be
Syrian.” Also he stated that any resolution
that comes from a conference would have to
“go back to the people through a referendum”
before it would be adopted. What could be
more democratic than such a procedure?
Through such a course of action Syria could
retain its secular status and evolve into a
true democratic state.
Hence despite the
viciousness of the ongoing war in Syria,
these events offer a glimmer of hope that
might end this foreign-inspired
conflagration that has left over 220,000
dead, a million wounded and millions more
displaced. But if it turns out that ISIS
will refuse to end its attacks on Syria, the
rational thing for the US to do would be to
stop its campaign to overthrow the Syrian
government and to then cooperate with Syria
to defeat the ISIS forces. With coordinated
US and Syrian air strikes, the Syrian army
would provide the necessary “boots on the
ground” to defeat Saudi Arabia’s Wahhabi
gift to this area. But is this simply beyond
the realm of possibility?
A short summary is in
order. First, to what extent are the US and
its allies responsible for the creation of
ISIS and its co-partner al-Qaeda as well as
its various spin-off groups? At the very
beginning, we must recall that it was the
USA that created the mujahedeen and al-Qaeda
in Afghanistan to fight the Soviets, and
later got the blowback of 9/11. It was the
US invasion of Iraq that created al-Qaeda as
a resistance movement. It was the USA that
fomented the uprising in Syria and when
their Free Syrian Army was facing defeat, to
the rescue came Iraqi al-Qaeda, with
unlimited financial support and direction
from the USA’s allies Saudi Arabia and
Qatar, and tactical assistance from Turkey.
And it’s this al-Qaeda that metastasized
into ISIS. Also, the US has generated
additional enemies through its drone
campaign, especially in Yemen and Pakistan.
But is this all there is
to this story? An offshoot from it is the
recent attack in Paris on
Charlie Hebdo
magazine that left 12 people dead, including
its editor and prominent cartoonists. It was
apparently done by men connected to al-Qaeda
who had been outraged by the magazine’s
derogatory cartoons about the Prophet
Muhammad. The attack sparked a massive
outcry, with millions in France and across
the world taking to the streets to support
freedom of the press behind the rallying cry
of “Je suis Charlie,” or “I am Charlie.”
It’s instructive to put
this matter in historical context. In Nazi
Germany, there was an anti-Semitic newspaper
called Der
Stürmer, noted for its
morbid caricatures of Jews. Its editor,
Julius Streicher, was put on trial at
Nürnberg and hanged because of his stories
and cartoons about Jews. In 1999 during its
bombing campaign on Serbia, NATO
deliberately bombed a Radio/TV station in
Belgrade, killing 16 journalists. The US
bombed the Al Jazeera headquarters in Kabul
in 2001 and in 2003 Al Jazeera was bombed in
Baghdad, killing journalists. In its attacks
on Gaza, Israel has deliberately killed a
large number of journalists.
The issue of “freedom of
the press” was hardly raised in the above
instances – certainly there were no mass
street protests. In the case of Charlie
Hebdo, this
was not a model of freedom of speech. In
reality,
Charlie Hebdo’s political pornography
of Muslims is hardly any different from the
way Jews were portrayed in
Der Stürmer.
The US and its various
allies have launched wars, death and
destruction in many Muslim countries –
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Gaza, Yemen,
Syria. To add to this, Saudi Arabia has
apparently spent more than $100 billion
trying to propagate its fanatical Wahhabism,
a relatively small sect that is despised in
the Muslim world at large, but which has
nevertheless tarnished the Muslim image. And
because of this, for some people in the West
it’s somehow become acceptable to degrade,
demean, humiliate, mock and insult Muslims.
It was in this spirit that the cartoonists
chose to mock Mohammad, under the guise of
freedom of expression. It’s noteworthy that
Charlie Hebdo
had once fired a journalist because of
one line he had written that was criticized
by a Zionist lobby, but when it comes to
Muslims, it was open season on them. In a
judgment issued by US Supreme Court Justice
Oliver Wendell Holmes, freedom of speech
does not give one the right to “falsely
shout fire in a crowded theater.” Also there
is a provision in the US constitution that
prohibits publishing “fighting words” which
could result in violence. All this was
ignored by the editors and publishers of
Charlie Hebdo.
The penalty should not have been death but
they bear considerable responsibility for
what happened. Sadly, the West’s
uncritical embrace of the
Charlie Hebdo
caricatures was because the drawings were
directed at and ridiculed Muslims. There is
no question that the “desperate and
despised people” of today are Muslims.
When ISIS beheaded two
American journalists, there was outrage and
denunciation throughout the West, but when
the same ISIS beheaded hundreds of Syrian
soldiers, and meticulously filmed these war
crime, this was hardly reported anywhere. In
addition, almost from the very beginning of
the Syrian tragedy, al-Qaeda groups have
been killing and torturing not only soldiers
but police, government workers and
officials, journalists, Christian church
people, aid workers, women and children, as
well as suicide bombings in market places.
All this was covered up in the mainstream
media, and when the Syrian government
correctly denounced this as terrorism, this
was ignored or denounced as “Assad’s
propaganda.”
So why weren’t these
atrocities reported in the western media? If
this was reported it would have run counter
to Washington’s proclaimed agenda that
“Assad has to go,” so the mainstream media
followed the official line. There is nothing
new in this. History shows that the media
supported every Western-launched war,
insurrection and coup – the wars on Vietnam,
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, and coups
such as those on Iran, Guatemala, Indonesia,
Chile, and most recently in Ukraine.
And so when terrorist acts
are carried out against “our enemies” they
are often viewed as the actions of “freedom
fighters”, but when the same types of acts
are directed at “us” they are denounced as
“terrorism.” So it all depends on whose ox
is gored.
John Ryan, Ph.D.,
Retired Professor of Geography and Senior
Scholar, University of Winnipeg.
jryan13@mymts.net
Notes:
-
Fred Halliday,
“Revolution in Afghanistan,”
New Left
Review, No. 112, pp. 3-44, 1978.
- I was in Afghanistan
in November 1978 working on an
agricultural research project while on
sabbatical leave and all these reforms
and government measures were explained
to me at considerable length by the Dean
of Agriculture and some of the
professors during a lengthy session at
Kabul University. Halliday (cited above)
also reported on the land-redistribution
program.
-
Washington Post,
December 23, 1979, p.A8. Soviet troops
had started arriving in Afghanistan on
December 8, to which the article states:
“There was no charge [by the State
Department] that the Soviets had invaded
Afghanistan, since the troops apparently
were invited.”
- “How Jimmy Carter and
I Started the Mujahideen”: Interview of
Zbigniew Brzezinski
Le Nouvel
Observateur (France), Jan 15-21,
1998, p. 76
http://www.counterpunch.org/brzezinski.html
-
Washington Post,
January 13, 1985.
- John Fullerton,
The Soviet Occupation of
Afghanistan, (London), 1984.
- Eqbal Ahmad,
“Terrorism: Theirs and Ours,” (A
Presentation at the University of
Colorado, Boulder, October 12, 1993)
http://www.sangam.org/ANALYSIS/Ahmad.htm;
Cullen Murphy, “The Gold Standard: The
quest for the Holy Grail of
equivalence,”
Atlantic
Monthly, January 2002
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/prem/200201/murphy
- “Taliban repeats call
for negotiations,”
CNN.com,
October 2, 2001, includes comment:
“Afghanistan’s ruling Taiban
repeated its demand for evidence before
it would hand over suspected terrorist
leader Osama bin Ladin.”
http://archives.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/asiapcf/central/10/02/ret.afghan.taliban/;
Noam Chomsky, “The War on Afghanistan,”
Znet,
December 30, 2001
http://www.globalpolicy.org/wtc/targets/1230chomsky.htm
- “Bin Laden says he
wasn’t behind attacks,”
CNN.com,
September 17, 2001.
http://archives.cnn.com/2001/US/09/16/inv.binladen.denial/
- Ed Haas, “FBI says,
it has ‘No hard evidence connecting Bin
Laden to 9/11’,”
Muckraker
Report, June 6, 2006.
http://www.teamliberty.net/id267.html
-
Noam Chomsky, “The War on
Afghanistan,”
Znet,
December 30, 2001
http://www.globalpolicy.org/wtc/targets/1230chomsky.htm;
Barry Bearak, “Leaders of the Old
Afghanistan Prepare for the New,”
NYT,
October 25, 2001; John Thornhill and
Farhan Bokhari, “Traditional leaders
call for peace jihad,”
FT,
October 25, 2001; “Afghan peace assembly
call,” FT,
October 26, 2001; John Burns, “Afghan
Gathering in Pakistan Backs Future Role
for King,”
NYT,
October 26, 2001; Indira Laskhmanan,
“1,000 Afghan leaders discuss a new
regime,
BG, October 25, 26, 2001.
Copyright ©
Professor John Ryan, Global Research,
2015