Refusal to Call Charleston Shootings
“Terrorism” Again Shows It’s a Meaningless Propaganda Term
By Glenn Greenwald
June 20, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept" -
In February 2010, a man named Joseph Stack
deliberately flew his small airplane into the side of a
building that housed a regional IRS office in Austin, Texas,
just as 200 agency employees were starting their workday. Along
with himself, Stack killed an IRS manager and injured 13 others.
Stack was an anti-tax, anti-government
fanatic, and chose his target for exclusively political reasons.
He left behind a lengthy manifesto cogently setting forth his
largely libertarian political views (along with, as I
wrote at
the time, some anti-capitalist grievances shared by the
left, such as “rage over bailouts, the suffering of America’s
poor, and the pilfering of the middle class by a corrupt
economic elite and their government-servants”; Stack’s
long note ended: “the communist creed: From each according to
his ability, to each according to his need. The capitalist
creed: From each according to his gullibility, to each according
to his greed”). About Stack’s political grievances,
his manifesto declared that “violence not only is the answer, it
is the only answer.”
The attack had all of the elements of iconic
terrorism, a model for how it’s most commonly understood: down
to flying a plane into the side of a building. But Stack was
white and non-Muslim.
As a result, not only was the word “terrorism” not applied to
Stack, but it was
explicitly
declared inapplicable by media outlets and government
officials alike.The New York Times’s report
on the incident stated that while the attack “initially inspired
fears of a terrorist attack” — before the identity of the pilot
was known — now “in place of the typical portrait of a terrorist
driven by ideology, Mr. Stack was described as generally
easygoing, a talented amateur musician with marital troubles and
a maddening grudge against the tax authorities.”
As a result, said the Paper of Record,
“officials ruled out any connection to terrorist groups or
causes.” And “federal officials emphasized the same message,
describing the case as a criminal inquiry.” Even when
U.S. Muslim groups called for the incident to be declared
“terrorism,” the FBI continued to insist it “was handling the
case ‘as a criminal matter of an assault on a federal officer’
and that it was not being considered as an act of terror.”
By very stark contrast, consider the October
2014, shooting in Ottawa by a single individual, Michael
Zehaf-Bibeau, at the Canadian Parliament building. As soon as it
was known that the shooter was a convert to Islam, the
incident was instantly and universally declared to be
“terrorism.” Less than 24 hours afterward, Prime Minister
Stephen Harper
declared it a terror attack and
even demanded new “counter-terrorism” powers in its name
(which he has
now obtained). To bolster the label, the government claimed Zehaf-Bibeau
was on his way to Syria to fight with jihadists, and the media
trumpeted this “fact.”
In his address to the nation the day after the
shooting, Harper vowed
to learn more about the “terrorist and any accomplices he may
have had” and intoned: “This is a grim reminder that Canada is
not immune to the types of terrorist attacks we have seen
elsewhere around the world.” Twitter users around the world
en masse used the hashtag of solidarity reserved (for some
reason) only for cities attacked by a Muslim (but not cities
attacked by their own governments):
#OttawaStrong.
In sum, that this was a “terror attack” was mandated
conventional wisdom before anything was known other than the
Muslim identity of the perpetrator.
As it turns out, other than the fact that the
perpetrator was Muslim and was aiming his violence at
Westerners, almost nothing about this attack had the classic
hallmarks of “terrorism.” In the days and weeks that followed,
it
became clear that Zehaf-Bibeau suffered from serious mental
illness and “seemed to have become mentally unstable.” He had a
history of arrests for petty offenses and had received
psychiatric treatment. His friends recall him expressing no real
political views but instead claiming he was possessed by the
devil.
The Canadian government was ultimately forced
to admit that their prior media claim about him preparing to
go to Syria was totally false, dismissing it as “a mistake.” Now
that Canadians know the truth about him — rather than the mere
fact that he’s Muslim and committed violence — a
plurality no longer believe the “terrorist” label applies,
but believe the attack was motivated by mental illness. The term
“terrorist” got instantly applied by know-nothings for one
reason: he was Muslim and had committed violence, and that, in
the post-9/11 West, is more or less the only working definition
of the term (in the rare cases when it is applied to non-Muslims
these days, it’s typically
applied to minorities engaged in acts that have no
resemblance to what people usually think of when they hear the
term).
That is the crucial backdrop for yesterday’s
debate over whether the term “terrorism” applies to the heinous
shooting by a white nationalist of nine
African-Americans praying in a predominantly black church in
Charleston, South Carolina. Almost immediately, news reports
indicated there was “no sign of terrorism” — by which they
meant: it does not appear that the shooter is Muslim.
Yet other than the perpetrator’s non-Muslim
identity, the Charleston attack from the start had the indicia
of what is commonly understood to be “terrorism.” Specifically,
the suspected shooter was clearly a vehement racist who told
witnesses at the church that he was acting out of racial hatred
and a desire to force African-Americans “to go.” His violence
was the byproduct of and was intended to publicize and forward
his warped political agenda, and was clearly designed to
terrorize the community he hates.
That’s why
so many African-American and Muslim commentators and
activists
insisted that the term “terrorist” be applied: because it
looked, felt and smelled exactly like other acts that are
instantly branded “terrorism” when the perpetrator is Muslim and
the victims largely white. It was very hard — and still is — to
escape the conclusion that the term “terrorism,” at least as
it’s predominantly used in the post-9/11 West, is about
the identity of those committing the violence and the identity
of the targets. It manifestly has nothing to do with
some neutral, objective assessment of the acts being labelled.
The point here is not, as
some very confused commentators suggested, to seek an
expansion of the term “terrorism” beyond its current
application. As someone who has spent the last decade more or
less exclusively devoted to documenting the abuses and
manipulations that term enables, the last thing I want is an
expansion of its application.
But what I also don’t want is for non-Muslims
to rest in their privileged nest, satisfied that the term and
its accompanying abuses is only for that marginalized group. And
what I especially don’t want is to have this glaring, damaging
mythology persist that the term “terrorism” is some sort of
objectively discernible, consistently applied designation of a
particularly hideous kind of violence. I’m eager to have the
term recognized for what it is: a completely malleable,
manipulated, vapid term of propaganda that has no consistent
application whatsoever. Recognition of that reality is vital to
draining the term of its potency.
The examples proving the utter malleability of
the term “terrorism” are far too numerous to chronicle here. But
over the past decade alone, it’s been used by Western political
and media figures to condemn Muslims who used violence
against an invading and occupying force in Afghanistan,
against others who
raised funds to help Iraqis fight against an invading and
occupying military in their country, and for others who attack soldiers
in an army that is fighting many wars. In other words, any
violence by Muslims against the West is inherently “terrorism,”
even if targeted only at soldiers at war and/or designed to
resist invasion and occupation.
By stark contrast, no violence by the West
against Muslims can possibly be “terrorism,” no matter how
brutal, inhumane or indiscriminately civilian-killing. The U.S.
can call its invasion of Baghdad “Shock and Awe” as a
classic declaration of terrorism intent, or
fly killer drones
permanently over terrorized villages and cities, or engage
in
generation-lasting atrocities in Fallujah, or arm and fund
Israeli and Saudi destruction of helpless civilian populations,
and none of that, of course, can possibly be called “terrorism.”
It just has the wrong perpetrators and the wrong victims.
Then there is all the game-playing the U.S.
does with the term right out in the open. Nelson Mandela, now
widely regarded as a moral hero, was officially a “terrorist” in
U.S. eyes for decades (and the
CIA thus helped its allied apartheid regime capture him).
Iraq was on the terrorist list and then off it and then on it
based on whatever designation best suited U.S. interests at the
moment. The Iranian cult MEK was long decreed a “terror group”
until they paid enough influential people in Washington
to get off the list, coinciding with the U.S. desire to
punish Tehran. The Reagan administration
armed and funded classic terror groups in Latin America
while demanding sanctions on the Soviets and Iranians for being
state sponsors of terrorism. Whatever this is, it is not the
work of a term that has a consistent, objective meaning.
Ample scholarship proves
that the term “terrorism” is empty, definition-free and
invariably manipulated. Harvard’s Lisa Stampnitzky has
documented “the inability of researchers to establish a suitable
definition of the concept of ‘terrorism’ itself.” The concept of
“terrorism” is fundamentally plagued by ideological agendas and
self-interested manipulation, as Professor Richard Jackson at
the the National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies in New
Zealand has explained: “most of what is accepted as well-founded
‘knowledge’ in terrorism studies is, in fact, highly debatable
and unstable” and is “biased towards Western state
priorities.” Remi Brulin is a scholar who specializes
in the discourse of “terrorism” and has
long
documented that, from the start, it was a highly manipulated
term of propaganda more than it was a term of fixed meaning —
largely intended to justify violence by the West and Israel
while delegitimizing the violence of its enemies.
What is most amazing about all of this is that
“terrorism” — a term that is so easily and frequently
manipulated and devoid of fixed meaning — has now become central
to our political culture and legal framework, a staple of how we
are taught to think about the world. It is constantly invoked,
as though it is some sort of term of scientific precision, to
justify an endless array of radical policies and powers.
Everything from the attack on Iraq to torture to endless drone
killings to mass surveillance and beyond are justified in its
name.
In fact, it is, as I have
often
argued, a term that justifies everything yet means
nothing. Perhaps the only way people will start to see
that, or at least be bothered by it, is if it becomes clear that
not just marginalized minority groups but also their own group
can be swept up by its elasticity and meaninglessness. There is
ample resistance to that, which is why repulsive violence
committed by white non-Muslims such as yesterday’s church
massacre is so rarely described by the term. But that’s all the
more reason to insist on something resembling fair and
consistent application.
Photos: Dylann Roof: Charleston County
Sheriff’s Office via Getty Images; IRS building: Tony
Gutierrez/AP; Harper: Adrian Wyld/AP Photo/The Canadian Press