Sanctioned Terrorism
By Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich
September 11, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Who is a terrorist? Undoubtedly, what comes to
mind is Daesh (ISIL), al-Qaeda, MKO, Boko Haram, etc. What is
terrorism? The events of 9/11 and the gruesome beheadings carried
out by Daesh shape our visual perception of terrorism. What is left
unmentioned and unrecognized in our collective psyche is the kind of
terrorism that has been deliberately obfuscated: sanctioned
terrorism or terrorism with a license—sanctions.
The fact that scholars
have identified over 100 definitions of the term terrorism
demonstrates that there is no universally accepted definition. There
is general consensus that terrorism
is “viewed as a method of violence in
which civilians are targeted with the objective of forcing a
perceived enemy into submission by creating
fear, demoralization, and political friction in the population under
attack.”i
In 1937, the
League of Nations Convention
defined terrorism
as: “All criminal acts directed against a State and intended or
calculated to create a state of terror in the minds of particular
persons or a group of persons or the general public.”
Article 1.2
of The Arab Convention on the Suppression of Terrorism signed in
Cairo in 1998 describes terrorism as: “Any act
or threat of violence, whatever its motives or purposes, that occurs
for the advancement of an individual or collective criminal agenda,
causing terror among people, causing fear by harming them, or
placing their lives, liberty or security in danger, or aiming to
cause damage to the environment or to public or private
installations or property or to occupy or to seize them, or aiming
to jeopardize a national resource”.
In the aftermath of the September 11
attacks, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1373, licensing
the United States to wage war against terrorism without first
defining terrorism. However, Section 1.B of
18 U.S. Code § 2331 on international terrorism includes the
following: (i)
to intimidate or coerce a civilian population; (ii)
to influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion;
or (iii) to affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction,
assassination, or kidnapping.
In spite of these clear definitions, sanctions—sanctioned terrorism
is dubbed as “diplomacy”, “an alternate to war”, etc.
The reality of sanctioned terrorism
is denied even by the UN from whence the most important definition
terrorism was delivered in a seminal speech by Kofi Annan, the
former Secretary-General of the United Nations. Annan conveyed the
findings of a high level UN panel “A More
Secure World: Our Shared Responsibility”(2004)ii
as having defined terrorism to be: “[A]ny action intended to kill or
seriously harm civilians or non-combatants, with the purpose of
intimidating a population or compelling action by a government or
international organization”.
Shamelessly,
even after sanctioned terrorism took the life of one million Iraqis,
the UNSC licensed terrorism against Iran—sanctions, without any
remorse for the lost lives of one million Iraqi victims of
sanctioned terrorism and untold numbers or other victims across the
globe.
The terror inflicted by way of
sanctions could not have been made more clear than what Kofi Annan
reported of the 2004 UN panel’s findings stating that
prevention was a vital part of any strategy to
protect people against terrorism adding that “in today’s world, any
threat to one is truly a threat to all” and that “any event or
process that leads to deaths on a large scale or the lessening of
life chances, and which undermines states as the basic unit of the
international system, should be viewed as a threat to international
peace and security. Such threats included “economic and social
threats”.iii
“Security” in terms of international relations is understood to be
human security. There are six sectors to security: physical,
military, economic, ecological, societal and political. Any change
from “secure” to “insecure” or a general deterioration in any one or
more of these sectors, increases the potential for violence (Buzan
2009). In spite of it all, the UNSC licensed terrorism.
The overall failure to identify and deliberately
obfuscate this act of terrorism has enabled this premeditated act of
terrorism to continue with impunity.
The success of this deception is owed to
controlling the narrative with complicity from the media.
This has been so effective that even the victims of sanctioned
terrorism fail to grasp that they are being subjected to terrorism.
As Walter Laquer famously wrote in his 1977
piece “Terrorism”: “The success of a terrorist operation depends
almost entirely on the amount of publicity it receives.” Sanctioned
terrorism has received no publicity.
Our present day understanding of terrorism was initially introduced
by Hollywood that often borrows its story ideas from the U.S.
foreign policy agenda and has at times reinforced these policies.
Hollywood rarely touched the topic of terrorism in the late 1960s
and 1970s when the phenomenon was not high on the U.S. foreign
policy agenda, in news headlines or in the American public
consciousness. In the 1980s, in the footsteps of the Reagan
administration, the commercial film industry brought terrorist
villains to the big screen, making terrorism a blockbuster film
product in the 1990s, painting Arabs (and now Moslems) as
terrorists.iv
Thus the movie industry defined and projected terrorism to the world
at large in a manner consistent with US foreign policy. The news
media continues to play an even bigger role.
News media has consistently framed terrorism by presenting sudden,
shocking scenes of carnage and blood in order to shock the viewer
and drive home the narrative of what terrorism should entail—by
implication, ruling out all other terrorist acts. So while the
imagery creates fear and loathing, and a total rejection of
terrorism as identified by the media, a parallel loathing of
unidentified terrorism—of sanctioned terrorism has been deliberately
precluded. This is
propaganda at its finest.
It goes without saying that the aim of propaganda is to change
people’s opinion and attempt to influence their future actions and
decisions. What is common about propaganda is that it seldom shows
the situation from different points of view and seldom gives the
full picture. Images of sanctioned terrorism are sorely missing from
the picture as the culprits make every effort to present sanctions
as diplomacy, a tool of statecraft, and have even convinced the
general public that it is a better alternative to war. In fact,
sanctioned terrorism is the cowardly alternate to war for the victim
is deprived of an unidentifiable enemy to fight. Sanctions, like
other terrorists, don’t wear military uniforms.
It is incumbent upon every individual opposed to terrorism to take
ownership of the falsely presented narrative about sanctions and
refer to sanctions as sanctioned terrorism at all times. Terrorism,
like pollution, does not recognize boundaries. Russia has learnt
this the hard way. By Hillary
Clinton’s own admission, the terrorists America is fighting
today were created by the US. We cannot send our uniformed men and
women to fight unidentified terrorism, sanctions. We must be the
champions of this war on terror. Whether we want to speak for
yesterday’s victims, or defend today’s victims of sanctioned
terrorism, or whether we want to prevent future victims, we must
fight sanctioned terrorism today.
Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich is an independent researcher
and writer with a focus on US foreign policy.
i
Alex P. Schmid, Albert J.
Jongman, et al., Political Terrorism: A New Guide to Actors,
Authors, Concepts, Data Bases, Theories, and Literature, New
Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, 1988, pp. 5-6.
iii
Kofi Annan, “Special Report: Courage to fulfill our
responsibilities”, The Economist Intelligence Unit, December 4,
2004.
iv
Helena Vanhala – “Hollywood portrayal of modern international
terrorism in blockbuster action-adventure films: From the Iran
hostage crisis to September 11, 2001”. Dissertations and theses.
University of Oregon; 2005.