Our George
Orwell/Noam Chomsky Paradox: Let’s Decipher the
Doublethink Media and Government Peddles About U.S.
Foreign Policy
Our policies and actions routinely go against our
oft-stated ideals. Here's how to examine the lies
and spin
By Dana E. Abizaid
January
02, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Salon"
- Despite what politicians say, understanding
U.S. foreign policy is much more difficult than
applying a black and white, good and evil, us versus
them approach. To begin to comprehend the maze of
conflicting interests involved and how the U.S. acts
against its oft-stated ideals, one needs to lean on
George Orwell’s definition of “doublethink,” or
“the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in
one’s mind simultaneously, and accepting both of
them.”
The
central means of population control in Orwell’s
“1984,” doublethink is also essential to
the U.S. government and media’s ability to craft
counterproductive foreign policies and narratives
that go largely unquestioned by the mainstream media
and American public.
Doublethink allows
the U.S. government and media to apply its attention
and ire selectively while maintaining that the U.S.
supports democracy and opposes human rights abuses
in the Middle East. It also facilitates the
implementation of policies that blatantly contradict
each other.
Glaring
areas where doublethink has triumphed in
U.S. foreign policy include American support for the
draconian Saudi monarchy, the hardline Egyptian
military dictatorship and the Iraqi regime allied
closely with Iran. Doublethink is also
conspicuously at play in U.S. condemnation of their
enemies’ transgressions while ignoring its own as
well as those of its allies. This is most clearly
illustrated in U.S. support of Israel and
condemnation of Russia.
Regarding
Saudi Arabia, it is astounding that an America
founded on the Enlightenment ideals of separation of
church and state and individual liberty could
blindly lend material and moral support to an
Islamic monarchy noted for outdoing
ISIS in beheadings. That the American media does
not lambaste the U.S. government for honoring
the princes of Saudi Arabia when they visit
Washington speaks volumes about the influence
that doublethink has on American
society. The U.S. proclaims to support freedom
while facilitating the worst aspects of medieval Saudi
tyranny.
In Egypt’s
case it would be hard to argue that the Obama
administration does not agree with Winston
Churchill’s claim that, “The best argument
against democracy is a five-minute conversation with
the average voter.” Although the U.S. government
initially withheld aid in 2013 to the Egyptian
military junta that overthrew the democratically
elected Muslim Brotherhood, it is currently
supplying the repressive Sisi regime with $1.3
billion in weapons precisely to stifle
democratic dissent. Employing doublethink, the U.S.
government preaches liberal democracy but keeps
dictatorship afloat in Egypt by turning a blind eye
to the thousands
killed under General Sisi.
Another
troubling application of doublethink is
manifest in Iraq, where a Shia government is allied
closely with Iran. Despite the fact the U.S.
government and media persistently trumpet the evil
existential threat that Iran poses, in the Iraqi
case Iran’s evilness must be overlooked. How else
could the U.S. justify the billions of dollars and
thousands of lives wasted in Iraq?
This takes
on sharper resonance when one does the Middle
Eastern math. In Iraq, the U.S. created the Iranian
allied government that is in a death struggle with
the Islamic State, a Sunni terrorist group that
arose out of the ashes of the 2003 U.S. “shock and
awe” campaign to democratize the Middle East. The
opposite is true in Syria where the U.S. indirectly
supports ISIS in its attempts to overthrow Assad’s
Iranian backed government. Famously, Orwell had the
government manipulate Oceania’s citizens to believe
that two plus two equals five. In the Iraq and
Syria cases the equivalent equation would be the
belief that two plus two equals one
million. Clearly contradictory and
counterproductive policies swallowed uncritically by
the American masses. Big Brother would be proud.
A more
complicated and lesser focused on use of doublethink is
the hypercritical U.S. stance on human rights
embodied in the criticism of Russian bombing in
Syria while remaining mum regarding heavy-handed Israeli
tactics in Gaza in 2014 (with U.S. weapons). To
support Israel after the UN reported that its 2014
Operation Protective Edge killed 1,426 civilians,
including 495 children, while condemning Russian
efforts to defeat ISIS in Syria requires a callous
level of doublethink. Moreover, in light
of the criticism of indiscriminate U.S.
bombing in Afghanistan and Iraq any discussion
of Russian civilian bombing in Syria requires faith
in an Orwellian doublethink that is
“conscious, or it would not be carried out with
sufficient precision.” Orwell continues, “it also
has to be unconscious, or it would bring with it a
feeling of falsity and hence of guilt.” Thus, the
U.S. can self-righteously criticize Russia for
bombing civilians while denying America or Israel
uses similar tactics.
It is
quite clear that doublethink pervades
U.S. government pronouncements, media
reports and school textbooks. This use
of doublethink relegates
perspective and context to what Trotsky
called the “ashbin of History.” In Orwell’s
Oceania the government claimed that, “Who
controls the past control the future; who
controls the present controls the past.”
Sadly, such manipulative control also exists
in the U.S. and makes a mockery of
historical memory while denying the slimmest
notions of justice.
Dana E. Abizaid is a history teacher and
writer based in Istanbul. She has published
articles in the San Francisco Chronicle,
Baltimore Sun, Radio Free Europe/Radio
Liberty and Moscow Times.
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