We must hold accountable our Middle Eastern "allies"—the states and
bankers and political elites—who persist in funding mass murder.
By Charles P. Pierce
November 16,
2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Esquire"
- There was a strange stillness in the news on Saturday morning, a
Saturday morning that came earlier in Paris than it did in Des
Moines, a city in Iowa, one of the United States of America. The
body count had stabilized. The new information came at a slow,
stately pace, as though life were rearranging itself out of quiet
respect for the dead. The new information came at a slow and stately
pace and it arranged itself in the way that you suspected it would
arrange itself when the first accounts of the mass murder began to
spread out over the wired world. There has been the
predictable howling from predictable people. (Judith Miller?
Really? This is an opinion the world needed to hear?) There has been
the straining to wedge
the events of Friday night into the Procrustean nonsense of an
American presidential campaign. There will be a debate among the
three Democratic candidates for president in Des Moines on Saturday
night. I suspect that the moderators had to toss out a whole raft of
questions they already had prepared. Everything else is a
distraction. It is the stately, stillness of the news itself that
matters.
The attacks were a brilliantly coordinated act of
war. They were a brilliantly coordinated act of pure terrorism,
beyond rhyme but not beyond reason. They struck at the most
cosmopolitan parts of the most cosmopolitan city in the world. They
struck out at assorted sectors of western popular culture. They
struck out at sports, at pop music, and at simple casual dining.
They struck out at an ordinary Friday night's entertainment. The
attacks were a brilliantly coordinated statement of political and
social purpose, its intent clear and unmistakable. The attacks were
a brilliantly coordinated act of fanatical ideological and
theological Puritanism, brewed up in the dark precincts of another
of mankind's monotheisms. They were not the first of these. (The
closest parallel to what happened in Paris is what happened in
Mumbai in 2008. In fact, Mumbai
went on alert almost immediately after the news broke.) They,
alas, are likely not going to be the last.
The stillness of the news is a place of refuge and of
reason on yet another day in which both of these qualities are
predictably in short supply. It is a place beyond unfocused rage,
and beyond abandoned wrath, and beyond unleashed bigotry and hate.
It is a place where Friday night's savagery is recognized and
memorialized, but it is not put to easy use for trivial purposes.
The stillness of the news, if you seek it out, is a place where you
can think, sadly and clearly, about what should happen next.
These are a few things that will not solve the
terrible and tangled web of causation and violence in which the
attacks of Friday night were spawned. A 242-ship Navy will not stop
one motivated murderous fanatic from emptying the clip of an AK-47
into the windows of a crowded restaurant. The F-35 fighter plane
will not stop a group of motivated murderous fanatics from
detonating bombs at a soccer match. A missile-defense shield in
Poland will not stop a platoon of motivated murderous fanatics from
opening up in a jammed concert hall, or taking hostages, or taking
themselves out with suicide belts when the police break down the
doors. American soldiers dying in the sands of Syria or Iraq will
not stop the events like what happened in Paris from happening again
because American soldiers dying in the sands of Syria or Iraq will
be dying there in combat against only the most obvious physical
manifestation of a deeper complex of ancient causes and ancient
effects made worse by the reach of the modern technology of
bloodshed and murder. Nobody's death is ever sacrifice enough for
that.
Abandoning the Enlightenment values that produced
democracy will not plumb the depths of the vestigial authoritarian
impulse that resides in us all, the wish for kings, the desire for
order, to be governed, and not to govern. Flexing and posturing and
empty venting will not cure the deep sickness in the human spirit
that leads people to slaughter the innocent in the middle of a
weekend's laughter. The expression of bigotry and hatred will not
solve the deep desperation in the human heart that leads people to
kill their fellow human beings and then blow themselves up as a
final act of murderous vengeance against those they perceive to be
their enemies, seen and unseen, real and imagined. Tough talk in the
context of what happened in Paris is as empty as a bell rung at the
bottom of a well.
Francois Hollande, the French president who was at
the soccer game that was attacked, has promised that
France will wage "pitiless war" against the forces that
conceived and executed the attacks. Most wars are pitiless, but not
all of them are fought with the combination of toughness and
intelligence that this one will require. This was a lesson that the
United States did not learn in the aftermath of the attacks of
September 11, 2001. There are things that nations can do in response
that are not done out of xenophobic rage and a visceral demand for
revenge. There are things that nations can do in response that do
not involve scapegoating the powerless and detaining the innocent.
There is no real point in focusing a response on the people whose
religion makes us nervous. States should retaliate against states.
It is long past time for the oligarchies of the
Gulf states to stop paying protection to the men in the suicide
belts. Their societies are stunted and parasitic. The main job of
the elites there is to find enough foreign workers to ensla…er…indenture
to do all the real work. The example of Qatar and
the interesting business plan through which that country is
building the facilities for the 2022 World Cup is instructive here.
Roughly the same labor-management relationship exists for the people
who clean the hotel rooms and who serve the drinks. In Qatar, for
people who come from elsewhere to work, passports have been known to
disappear into thin air. These are the societies that profit from
terrible and tangled web of causation and violence that played out
on the streets of Paris. These are the people who buy their safety
with the blood of innocents far away.
It's not like this is any kind of secret. In
2010, thanks
to WikiLeaks, we learned that the State Department, under the
direction of then-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton,
knew full well where the money for foreign terrorism came from. It
came from countries and not from a faith. It came from sovereign
states and not from an organized religion. It came from politicians
and dictators, not from clerics, at least not directly. It was paid
to maintain a political and social order, not to promulgate a
religious revival or to launch a religious war. Religion was the
fuel, the ammonium nitrate and the diesel fuel.
Authoritarian oligarchy built the bomb. As long as people are
dying in Paris, nobody important is dying in Doha or Riyadh.
Saudi Arabia
is the world's largest source of funds for Islamist
militant groups such as the Afghan Taliban and
Lashkar-e-Taiba – but the Saudi government is reluctant
to stem the flow of money, according to Hillary Clinton.
"More needs to be done since
Saudi Arabia remains a critical financial support base
for al-Qaida, the Taliban, LeT and other terrorist
groups," says a secret December 2009 paper signed by the
US secretary of state. Her memo urged US diplomats to
redouble their efforts to stop Gulf money reaching
extremists in Pakistan and Afghanistan. "Donors in Saudi
Arabia constitute the most significant source of funding
to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide," she said. Three
other Arab countries are listed as sources of militant
money: Qatar, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. The
cables highlight an often ignored factor in the
Pakistani and Afghan conflicts: that the violence is
partly bankrolled by rich, conservative donors across
the Arabian Sea whose governments do little to stop
them. The problem is particularly acute in Saudi Arabia,
where militants soliciting funds slip into the country
disguised as holy pilgrims, set up front companies to
launder funds and receive money from
government-sanctioned charities.
It's time for this to stop. It's time to be pitiless
against the bankers and against the people who invest in murder to
assure their own survival in power. Assets from these states should
be frozen, all over the west. Money trails should be followed,
wherever they lead. People should go to jail, in every country in
the world. It should be done state-to-state. Stop funding the murder
of our citizens and you can have your money back. Maybe. If we're
satisfied that you'll stop doing it. And, it goes without saying,
but we'll say it anyway – not another bullet will be sold to you,
let alone advanced warplanes, until this act gets cleaned up to our
satisfaction. If that endangers your political position back home,
that's your problem, not ours. You are no longer trusted allies.
Complain, and your diplomats will be going home. Complain more
loudly, and your diplomats will be investigated and, if necessary,
detained. Retaliate, and you do not want to know what will happen,
but it will done with cold, reasoned and, yes, pitiless calculation.
It will not be a blind punch. You will not see it coming. It will
not be an attack on your faith. It will be an attack on how you
conduct your business as sovereign states in a world full of
sovereign states.
And the still, stately progress of the news from
Paris continues. There
are arrests today in Brussels, of alleged co-conspirators. The
body count has stabilized. New information comes at its own pace, as
if out of respect for the dead. In the stillness of the news itself,
there is refuge and reason and a kind of wounded, ragged peace, as
whatever rolled up from the depths of the sickness of the human
heart rolls back again, like the tide and, like the tide, one day
will return.
It is unacceptable to slander, smear or engage in personal attacks on authors of articles posted on ICH.
Those engaging in that behavior will be banned from the comment section.
In accordance
with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational
purposes. Information Clearing House has no
affiliation whatsoever with the originator of
this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)