‘Terrorism': The Indefinable Word
By John V. Whitbeck
The Western world has reacted to the “terrorist”
shooting spree in Paris with near-hysteria, immediately intensifying
its own lethal violence in the Middle East.
Israel is branding as a wave of “terrorism” the
continuing suicidal attacks by hope-deprived Palestinian children
armed only with knives and scissors.
In the new “peace process” for Syria, Jordan has
accepted the thankless task of deciding which of the many armed
groups in Syria are “terrorists” and, as such, are to be excluded
from the process and bombed.
And Americans have been fiercely debating whether
the latest in a long line of domestic gun rampages, carried out by a
Muslim married couple, deserves to be deemed an act of “terrorism”.
In this context, it may be enlightening to recall
the last international effort to define this indefinable word.
At the UN’s 60th anniversary summit in September
2005, the 191 member states tried but failed to agree on a
convention defining the word “terrorism”. Some commentators actually
sounded surprised, even saying that there had been a failure “even”
to agree on a definition. No one should have been surprised.
The definition being proposed by then UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan would have defined “terrorism” as “any action
intended to cause death or serious bodily harm to civilians or
non-combatants, when the purpose of such an act, by its nature or
context, is to intimidate a population or to compel a government or
an international organization to carry out or to abstain from any
act.”
A fair and reasonable definition, surely. Read it
again. Think about it. What are the odds that the United States
would ever have permitted “terrorism” to be so defined?
For starters, if this proposed definition had been
accepted and if George W. Bush and Tony Blair were correct in their
repeated assertions that the motivations behind the 9/11 attacks and
the 2005 London bombings were “because they hate our freedoms” or
some other form of blind, mindless malevolence or sick desire to
kill innocent people for the sake of it, then the term “terrorism”
could not properly be applied to these events. To make the label
fit, Bush and Blair would have had to admit that the motivations
were fundamentally political – to intimidate their populations or
governments into carrying out major changes in their Middle East
policies.
Furthermore, this proposed definition was not
limited to acts by “non-state actors”. It would have applied not
only to the low-technology violence of the weak but also to the
high-technology violence of the strong, which has always been vastly
more destructive and deadly.
If this proposed definition had been accepted, the
attacks on the US Marine barracks in Beirut and Al-Khobar in 1983
and 1996 and on the USS Cole in Aden harbor in 2000, as well as any
and all attacks against American and Israeli military forces in
Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine or elsewhere, would clearly not
constitute acts of “terrorism”. On the other hand, the dropping of
atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki would clearly have
constituted “terrorism” on a massive scale. Indeed, in the 21st
century, the American and Israeli governments would have been – and
would still be – among the world’s leading practitioners of
“terrorism”.
If this proposed definition had been accepted,
even the United Nations itself would have spent the 12 years between
the two wars against Iraq as a “terrorist” organization. How could
it be characterized otherwise in light of the “genocidal” sanctions
regime against Iraq (so called by two successive coordinators of the
UN’s “humanitarian” program in Iraq), which, by UNICEF’s own
calculation, had killed half a million Iraqi children under the age
of five by 1996 yet which, on the insistence of the United States
and Britain and in full knowledge of the deadly consequences in the
relevant “context”, was maintained until their 2003 invasion? The
ostensible “purpose” of these deadly sanctions was clearly to
“intimidate a population or compel a government … to carry out or
abstain from [an] act” – specifically, to give up the “weapons of
mass destruction” which Iraq did not possess.
The word “terrorism” has always been the ultimate
subjective epithet, and the popularity and utility of the word for
all its users and abusers around the world has been based largely on
this subjectivity. Until the world is of one mind as to what
constitutes good and evil, right and wrong and justice and
injustice, it is inconceivable that the world could agree on a
precise and legally binding definition of what actions are always,
in all circumstances, under all conditions, on any grounds and
regardless of who is doing it to whom, unjustifiable, impermissible
and criminal.
However, “terrorism” did not escape unchastised at
the 2005 UN summit. In what the BBC then trumpeted as a major
success, Tony Blair did get the Security Council to adopt
unanimously a resolution urging all states to pass laws making
“incitement to terrorism” a crime. Since every state remained free
to define “terrorism” as it pleased, so as to demonize whatever
behavior or ideas its government disliked, while “incitement” is
simply a pejorative synonym for “advocacy”, if this resolution
proved to be of any relevance at all, it could only have been to
provide a cover of international legitimacy for the worldwide trend
(even in countries like Britain and America which once enjoyed high
standards of civil liberties) toward restricting (indeed, toward
criminalizing) freedom of speech and toward the totalitarianization
of societies.
Actually, it cannot have been very difficult to
achieve unanimous agreement on this resolution. People may not be
able to agree on what “terrorism” is, but, whatever it may be,
politicians readily recognize that it is risky to appear less than
resolute in opposing this ultimate evil, and getting governments to
agree that they should silence and quash their critics and opponents
as they see fit is pushing against an open door.
The word “terrorism” does not enhance
understanding. It stifles rational thought and discussion and, all
too often, is used and abused to excuse one’s own illegal and
immoral behavior.
Perhaps, rather than seeking an international
convention agreeing on what the overused word “terrorism” should
mean, it would have been more constructive ten years ago – and would
be more constructive today – to seek an international convention
obligating governments, government officials and media to stop using
the word entirely, to focus rationally on the nature and causes of
violent behavior by both the strong and the weak and to work toward
reducing all forms of violent behavior and reversing the
accelerating trend toward a more vicious, less free and increasingly
fear-infested world.
– John V. Whitbeck is an international lawyer
who writes frequently on the Middle East. He contributed this
article to PalestineChronicle.com.