Why the
Islamic State Is the Minor Leagues of Terror
Putting Threats into Perspective for 2016
By Tom Engelhardt
January 06,
2015 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Tom
Dispatch"
It’s time to
panic!
As 2015
ended, this country was certifiably terror-stricken.
It had the Islamic State (IS) on the brain. Hoax
terror threats or terror imbroglios shut down
school systems from
Los Angeles to
New Hampshire,
Indiana to a
rural county in Virginia. The Dallas Symphony
Orchestra, citing terror attacks in Paris and San
Bernardino,
cancelled a prospective tour of Europe thanks to
terror fears, issuing a statement that “orchestra
management believes there is an elevated risk to the
safety of musicians and their families, guest
artists, DSO personnel, and travelling patrons.” By
year's end, the Justice Department had charged an
”unprecedented”
60 people with terrorism-related crimes (often
linked to social media exchanges).
While just
north of the border Canada’s new government and its
citizens were
embracing the first of 25,000 Syrian refugees in
an atmosphere of near celebration, citizens and
government officials in the lower 48 were
squabbling and panicking about the few who had
made it here. (“Sid Miller, the Texas agriculture
commissioner, compared Syrian refugees to
rattlesnakes, posting on Facebook images of snakes
and refugees and asking, ‘Can you tell me which of
these rattlers won’t bite you?’”)
In the two
presidential
debates that ended the year, focusing in whole
or part on “national security,” the only global
subject worthy of discussion was -- you guessed it
-- the Islamic State and secondarily immigration and
related issues. Media panelists didn’t ask a single
question in either debate about China or Russia
(other than on the IS-related issue of who
might shoot down Russian planes over Syria) or
about the relative success of the French right-wing,
anti-Islamist National Front Party and its
presidential candidate, Marine Le Pen (even though
her American analog,
Donald Trump, was on stage in one debate and a
significant subject of the other). And that just
begins a long list of national security issues that
no one felt it worth bringing up, including the fact
that in Paris 195 countries had agreed on a
potentially
path-breaking climate change deal.
As the
Dallas Symphony Orchestra signaled, “Paris” now
means only one thing in this country: the bloody
terror attack on the Eagles of Death Metal concert
at the Bataclan theater and related assaults. In
fact, if you were following the “news” here as 2015
ended, you might be forgiven for thinking that we
Americans lived in a land beset by, and under siege
from, Islamic terror and the Islamic State. The
latest polls indicate that striking numbers of
Americans now
view the threat of terrorism as the country’s
number one danger,
see it as a (if not the) critical issue facing
us,
believe that it and national security should be
the government’s top priorities, and are convinced
that the terrorists are at present “winning.”
You would
never know that, if you left out what might be
called self-inflicted pain like death by vehicle (more
than 33,000 deaths annually), suicide by gun (more
than 21,000 annually) or total gun deaths (30,000
annually), and fatal drug overdoses (more
than 47,000 annually), this is undoubtedly one
of the safest countries on the planet. Over these
years, the American dead from Islamic terror outfits
or the “lone wolves” they inspire have added up to
the
most modest of figures, even if you include that
single great day of horror, September 11, 2001.
Include deaths from non-Islamic right-wing acts of
terror (including, for instance, Dylann Roof’s
murders in a black church in Charleston), a
slightly more impressive figure in recent years,
and you still have next to nothing. Even if you add
in relatively commonplace
mass shootings, from school campuses to malls to
workplaces, that are not defined as “terror,” and
accept the broadest possible definition of such
shootings (a minimum of
four killed or injured), you would still have
the sort of danger that couldn’t be more modest
compared to death by vehicle, suicide, or drugs --
phenomena that obsess few Americans.
The
Islamic State in Perspective
Still, as
2016 begins, terror remains the 800-pound gorilla
(in reality, a marmoset) in the American room and
just about the only national security issue that
truly matters. So why shouldn’t I join the crowd?
Who wants to be left in the lurch? But first, I
think it makes sense to put the Islamic State in
perspective.
Yes, it’s a
brutal, extreme religious-cum-political outfit, the
sort of movement that probably could only arise on a
shattered landscape in a shattered region filled
with desperate souls looking for any explanation
for, or solution to, nightmarish lives. There can be
no question that it’s had remarkable success. Its
self-proclaimed “caliphate” now controls territory
the size of (to choose a common comparison)
Great Britain with a population of perhaps a few
million people. Since there are seldom reporters on
the scene (for obvious reasons of health and
well-being), we have no idea whether IS has 20,000,
30,000, 40,000, or 50,000 fighters and potential
suicide bombers under arms. We do know that those
arms (despite a couple of
captured tanks) are generally light and the
bombs largely of the homemade variety.
The Islamic
State has shown quite a knack for generating a
stream of revenue from black market oil sales,
ransoms from kidnappings, the
ransacking of the region’s archeological
heritage, and wealthy Sunnis elsewhere in the
region. In addition, it's been skilled at promoting
its “brand” in other parts of the Greater Middle
East and Africa, from
Afghanistan to
Libya,
Yemen to
Nigeria, where local populations are also facing
shattered landscapes, failed states, oppressive
governments, and desperation. Finally, thanks to the
talents of its social media militants, it’s shown a
facility for attracting disaffected (and sometimes
whacked-out) young Muslims from Europe and even the
United States, as well as for inspiring “lone
wolves” to acts meant to unnerve its enemies in
Europe, the U.S., and elsewhere.
So give
credit where it’s due. Compared to a few training
camps in Afghanistan -- the al-Qaeda model before
2001 (and
again recently) -- this is no small thing. But
the Islamic State should also be put in some
perspective. It’s not Nazi Germany. It’s not the
Soviet Union. It’s not an existential threat to the
United States. It’s a distinctly self-limited
movement, probably only capable of expanding its
reach if even more of the region is laid to waste
(as is, for instance,
happening in Yemen right now, thanks in large
part to a U.S.-backed Saudi war on the
Iranian-inclined Houthi rebels).
IS is so
deeply sectarian that it can never gain the support
of a single Shia, Christian, Alawite, or Yazidi.
Its practices, religious and political, are too
extreme for many of the Sunnis it might want to
appeal to. It is also an embattled movement. It
has already
lost some of the lands it captured to
U.S.-backed Kurds in both Syria and Iraq and to
the U.S.-backed, U.S.-equipped, and U.S.-trained
Iraqi Army as well as Shiite militias. Its
extremity has clearly alienated some of the Sunnis
under its control. It’s unlikely to take seven
decades, as in the case of the Soviet Union, to
implode and disappear.
On the
other hand, if the Islamic State, at least in its
present form, is crushed or driven into some corner
and the region is “liberated,” one thing is
guaranteed -- as images of the rubble and landscapes
of skeletal buildings left behind at the
“victorious” battle sites of
Kobane,
Sinjar,
Homs, and
Ramadi will tell you. Combine the massively
bomb-laden, booby-trapped urban areas under Islamic
State control,
American air power (or, in parts of Syria, the
barrel-bombing air force of the government of Bashar
al-Assad and now the firepower of Russia), and
fierce urban combat, and what may be left in the
moment of “victory” could be a region in utter
ruins. One expert
suggests that it may take decades and cost $200
billion -- three times Syria’s prewar gross domestic
product -- to rebuild that country, bringing to mind
the famed line from Tacitus: “They make a desert and
call it peace.”
And just
remind me, who’s going to help with the
reconstruction of that shattered land? Donald
Trump? Don’t count on it. And don’t for a second
believe that from such devastated worlds nothing
worse than the Islamic State can arise.
While we
may be talking about a terror machine, IS represents
a far more modest and embattled one than its social
media propaganda would indicate. Its ability to
threaten the U.S. bears little relation to the
bogeyman version of it that at present occupies the
American imagination. The sole advantage the
Islamic State has when it comes to this country is
that it turns out to be so easy to spook us.
“A
Republic of Insects and Grass”
Still,
don’t for a second think that terror isn’t on the
American agenda. You really want terror? Let me
tell you about terror. And I’m not talking about 14
dead (San Bernardino) or 130 dead (Paris). What
about up to
140,000 dead? (The toll from Hiroshima.) What
about 285 million dead? (The official estimate of
the dead, had the U.S. military’s Single Integrated
Operational Plan, or SIOP, of 1960 been
carried out via more than 3,200 nuclear weapons
delivered to 1,060 targets in the Communist world,
including at least 130 cities -- and that didn’t
include casualty figures from whatever the Soviet
Union might have been able to launch in response.)
Or what
about -- to move from past slaughters and projected
slaughters to future ones -- a billion dead?
Despite the recent
surprise visit of Indian Prime Minister Narendra
Modi to his Pakistani counterpart, that remains a
perfectly “reasonable” possibility, were a nuclear
war ever to develop in South Asia. India and
Pakistan, after all, face each other across a
heavily armed and fortified 1,800 mile border,
having fought three major wars since 1947. Small
armed incidents are
commonplace. Imagine that -- to take just one
possible scenario -- extreme elements in the
Pakistani military (or other extremist elements) got
their hands on some part of that country’s
ever-expanding nuclear arsenal, now believed to be
at about
130 weapons, and loosed one or more of them on
India, starting a nuclear exchange over issues that
no one else on Earth gives a damn about.
Imagine
that, in the course of the war that followed, each
side released “only” 50 Hiroshima-sized weapons on
the other’s cities and industrial areas (“0.4%
of the world’s more than 25,000 warheads”). One
study suggests that, along with the 20 million
or so inhabitants of South Asia who would die in
such an exchange, this “modest” local nuclear
conflagration would send enough smoke and
particulates into the stratosphere to cause a
planetary “nuclear winter” lasting perhaps a
decade. The ensuing failure of agricultural systems
globally could, according to experts, lead a
billion or more people to starve to death. (And
once you’re talking about a crisis of that
magnitude, one humanity has never experienced, god
knows what other systems might fail at the same
time.)
I hope by
now you’re feeling a little shudder of fear or at
least anxiety. Perhaps not, though, since we’re
remarkably well protected from thinking about the
deeper terrors of our planet. And mind you, if
you’re talking terror, that South Asian war is penny
ante compared to the sort of event that would be
associated with the thousands of nuclear weapons
in
the arsenals of the United States and Russia.
Since the Cold War ended, they have more or less
been hidden in plain sight. Call it an irony of
sorts, then, that nuclear weapons have loomed large
on the American landscape in these years, just not
the ones that could truly harm us. Instead,
Americans have largely focused in the usual
semi-hysterical fashion on a nuclear weapon -- the
Iranian bomb -- that never existed, while
Russian and American arsenals undoubtedly capable of
destroying more than one Earth-sized planet have
remained in place,
heavily funded and largely unnoted.
When you
look at what might be posssible under unknown future
conditions, there is no reason to stop with mere
millions or even a billion dead human beings. A
major nuclear exchange, it is believed, could lead
to the shredding of the planetary environment and a
literal liquidation of humanity: the wiping out,
that is, of ourselves and the turning of this
country into, in the phrase of
Jonathan Schell, “a republic of insects and
grass.” As he explained so famously in his
international bestseller of 1982,
The Fate of the Earth, this became a
genuine possibility in the post-Hiroshima decades
and it remains so today, though given scant
attention in a world in which tensions between the
U.S. and Russia have been on the rise.
Apocalypses, Fast or Slow-Mo
It’s not
that we don’t live on an increasingly terrifying
planet. We do. It’s that terror fears, at least in
our American world, are regularly displaced onto
relatively minor threats.
If you want
to be scared, consider this unlikelihood: in the
course of just a few centuries, humanity has
stumbled upon two uniquely different ways of
unleashing energy -- the burning of fossil fuels and
the splitting of the atom -- that have made the sort
of apocalypse that was once the property of the gods
into a human possession. The splitting of the atom
and its application to war was, of course, a
conscious scientific discovery. Its apocalyptic
possibilities were grasped almost immediately by
some of its own creators, including physicist Robert
Oppenheimer who played a key role in the Manhattan
Project that produced the atomic bomb during World
War II. As he witnessed its awesome power in its
initial test in the New Mexican desert, this line
from the Bhagavad Gita came to his mind:
“Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds."
The
destroyer of worlds indeed -- or at least,
potentially, of the one world that matters to
humanity.
The other
method of wrecking the planet was developed without
the intent to destroy: the discovery that coal, oil,
and later natural gas could motor economies. It was
not known until the final decades of the last
century that the release of greenhouse gases from
the burning of such forms of energy could heat the
planet in startling ways and undermine the very
processes that promoted life as we had always
experienced it. It’s worth adding, however, that
the executives of the giant oil companies
knew a
great deal about the dangers their products
posed to Earth way before most of the rest of us
did,
suppressed that information for a surprisingly
long time, and then
invested
prodigious
sums in
promoting the public denial of those very
dangers. (In the process, they left the Republican
Party
wrapped in a straightjacket of climate change
denial unique on the planet.) Someday, this will
undoubtedly be seen as one of the
great crimes of history, unless of course there
are no historians left to write about it.
In other
words, if enough fossil fuels continue to be burned
in the many decades to come, another kind of
potential extinction event can be imagined, a
slow-motion apocalypse of extreme weather --
melting, burning, flooding, sea-level rise,
storming, and who knows what else.
And if
humanity has already managed to discover two such
paths of utter destruction, what else, at present
unimagined, might someday come into focus?
In this
context, think of the Islamic State as the minor
leagues of terror, though at the moment you wouldn’t
know it. If we are all now the children of the
holocaust -- of, that is, our own possible
extinction -- and if this is the inheritance we are
to leave to our own children and grandchildren,
perhaps it’s understandable that it feels better to
fear the Islamic State. Its evil is so specific, so
“other,” so utterly alien and strangely distant.
It’s almost comforting to focus on its depredations,
ignoring, of course, the
grotesquely large
hand our country had in its creation and in the
more
general spread of terror movements across the
Greater Middle East.
It’s so
much more comfortable to fear extreme Islamist
movements than to take in two apocalyptic terrors
that are clearly part of our own patrimony -- and,
to make matters harder, one of which is likely to
unfold over a time period that's hard to grasp, and
the other under as yet difficult to imagine
political circumstances.
It’s clear
that neither of these true terrors of our planet and
our age has to happen (or at least, in the case of
climate change, come to full fruition). To ensure
that, however, we and our children and grandchildren
would have to decide that the fate of our Earth was
indeed at stake and act accordingly. We would have
to change
the world.
Tom Engelhardt is a co-founder of the
American Empire Project and the
author of The United States of Fear as well
as a history of the Cold War,
The End of Victory Culture. He is a fellow
of the Nation Institute and runs
TomDispatch.com. His latest book is
Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a
Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.
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Copyright
2016 Tom Engelhardt |