The
Deceptive Debate Over What Causes Terrorism Against
the West
By Glenn Greenwald
January 09,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"The
Intercept"
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Ever since
members of the U.K. Labour Party in September
elected Jeremy Corbyn as party leader
by a landslide, British political and
media elites have acted as though their stately
manors have been invaded by hordes of gauche,
marauding serfs. They have waged a relentless and
undisguised war to
undermine Corbyn in every way possible, and that
includes — first and foremost — the Blairite wing of
his party, who have
viciously maligned him in ways they would never
dare for David Cameron and his Tory followers.
In one
sense, that’s all conventional politics:
Establishment guardians never appreciate having
their position and entitlements threatened by
insurgents, and they are thus uniting — Tory and
Labour mavens alike — to banish the lowly intruders
from their Oxbridge court (class and caste loyalty
often outweighs supposed ideological differences).
Corbyn’s reaction to all of this is also
conventional politics: He quite reasonably wants to
replace his Blairite shadow ministers who have been
vilifying him as a Terrorist-loving extremist with
those who are supportive of his agenda, a
perfectly rational response that the British media
is treating
as proof that
he’s a
cultish Stalinist tyrant (even though Blairites,
when they controlled the party, threatened
to de-select left-wing MPs who failed to
prove sufficient loyalty to Prime Minister Blair).
In response to the
dismissal of a couple of anti-Corbyn ministers
yesterday, several other Labour MPs have
announced their protest-resignations with the
gestures of melodrama and martyrdom at which banal
British politicians excel.
Rather than
wallow in all that internal power jockeying of a
former world power, I want to focus instead on one
specific argument that has arisen as part of
Corbyn’s cabinet “re-shuffling” because it has
application far beyond Her Majesty’s realm. One of
the shadow ministers replaced yesterday by Corbyn is
a total mediocrity and non-entity named Pat
McFadden. He
claims (plausibly
enough) that he was replaced by Corbyn because
of remarks he made in the House of Commons after the
Paris attack, which the British media and public
widely viewed as disparaging Corbyn as
a terrorist apologist for recognizing the role
played by Western foreign policy in terror attacks.
(Can you fathom the audacity of a Party leader not
wanting ministers who malign him as an
ISIS apologist?)
Other
Labour MPs resigning from their positions today in
protest of McFadden’s dismissal have expressly
defended the substance of McFadden’s remarks about
terrorism; one of them, Stephen Doughty,
tweeted this today, with the key excerpt of
McFadden’s statement about terrorism:
This claim —
like the two ousted shadow ministers themselves — is
so commonplace as to be a cliché. One hears this all
the time from self-defending jingoistic Westerners
who insist that their tribe in no way plays any
causal role in what it calls terrorist violence.
They insist that those who posit a causal link
between endless Western violence in the Muslim world
and return violence aimed at the West are
“infantilizing the terrorists and treating them like
children” by suggesting that terrorists
lack autonomy and the capacity for choice, and are
forced by the West to engage in terrorism. They
bizarrely claim — as McFadden did before being fired
— that to recognize this causal link is to deny that
terrorists have agency and to instead believe that
their actions are controlled by the West. One hears
this claim constantly.
The claim
is absurd: a total reversal of reality and a
deliberate distortion of the argument. That some
Muslims attack the West in retaliation for Western
violence (and external imposition of tyranny) aimed
at Muslims is so well-established that it’s barely
debatable. Even the 2004 task
force report commissioned by the Rumsfeld
Pentagon on the causes of terrorism decisively
concluded this was the case:
Beyond such
studies, those who have sought to bring violence to
Western cities have made
explicitly clear that they were doing so out of
fury and a sense of helplessness over Western
violence that continuously kills innocent Muslims.
“The drone hits in Afghanistan and Iraq, they don’t
see children, they don’t see anybody. They kill
women, children, they kill everybody,” Faisal
Shahzad, the attempted Times Square bomber,
told his sentencing judge when she expressed
bafflement over how he could try to kill innocent
people. And then there’s just common sense about
human nature: If you spend years bombing, invading,
occupying, and imposing tyranny on other people,
some of them will want to bring violence back to
you.
There’s a
reason the U.S. and NATO countries are the targets
of this type of violence but South Korea, Brazil,
and Mexico are not. Terrorists don’t place pieces of
paper with the names of the world’s countries in a
hat and then randomly pick one out and attack that
one. Only pure self-delusion could lead one to
assert that Spain’s and the U.K.’s participation in
the 2003 invasion of Iraq played no causal role in
the 2004 train bombing in Madrid and 2005 bombing in
London. Even British intelligence officials
acknowledge that link. Gen. David Petraeus
frequently described how U.S. policies — such as
Guantanamo and torture — were key factors in how
Muslims become radicalized against the U.S. In June,
Tony Blair’s former deputy prime minister, John
Prescott,
made this as clear as it can be made when he
admitted the Iraq War was “wrong”:
When I
hear people talking about how people are
radicalized, young Muslims. I’ll tell you how
they are radicalized. Every time they watch the
television where their families are worried,
their kids are being killed or murdered and
rockets, you know, firing on all these people,
that’s what radicalizes them.
Can that be
any clearer?
Obviously,
none of this is to say that Western interference in
that part of the world is the only cause of
anti-Western “terrorism,” nor is it to say that it’s
the principal cause in every case, nor is
to deny that religious extremism plays some role.
Most people need some type of fervor to be willing
to risk their lives and kill other people: It can
be nationalism, xenophobia, societal pressures,
hatred of religion, or religious convictions.
But typically, such dogmatic fervor is necessary but
not sufficient to commit such violence; one still
needs a cause for the targets one selects.
In its
statement claiming responsibility for the attack
on Paris, ISIS invoked multiple ostensibly religious
justifications for the violence but also said the
targeting of the French was due to “their war
against Islam in France and their strikes against
Muslims in the lands of the Caliphate with their
jets” (France had been bombing ISIS in Iraq since
January 2015 and
in Syria since September). In the same month,
ISIS claimed responsibility for an attack on a
Russian jet as retaliation for Russian airstrikes in
Syria, as well as an attack on Lebanon as a response
to Hezbollah’s violence. Here’s beloved-by-the-D.C.-establishment
Will McCants of the Brookings Institution
telling Vox why ISIS attacked Paris:
Even in
those cases where religious extremism rather than
anger over Western violence seems to be the primary
cause — such as the Charlie Hebdo murders,
done to avenge what the attackers regarded as
blasphemous cartoons — the
evidence is clear that the attackers were
radicalized by indignation over U.S. atrocities in
Iraq, including at Abu Ghraib. Pointing out that
Western violence is a key causal
factor in anti-Western terrorism is not to say it is
the only cause.
But
whatever one’s views are on that causal question,
it’s a total mischaracterization to claim that those
who recognize a causal connection are denying that
terrorists have autonomy or choice. To the contrary,
the argument is that they are engaged in a
decision-making process — a very expected and
predictable one — whereby they conclude that
violence against the West is justified as a result
of Western violence against predominantly Muslim
countries. To believe that is not to deny that
terrorists possess agency; it’s to attribute agency
to them.
The whole
point of the argument is that they are not
forced or compelled or acting out of reflex; the
point is that they have decided that the only valid
and effective response to Western attacks on and
interference in Muslim societies is to attack back.
When asked by a friend about the prospect of
“peaceful protest” against U.S. violence and
interference in Muslim countries, Shahzad, the
would-be Times Square bomber,
replied: “Can you tell me a way to save the
oppressed? And a way to fight back when rockets are
fired at us and Muslim blood flows?”
One can,
needless to say, object to the validity of that
reasoning. But one cannot deny that the decision to
engage in this violence is the reasoning process in
action.
By pointing
out the causal connection between U.S. violence and
the decision to bring violence to the West, one is
not denying that the attackers lack agency, nor is
one claiming they are “forced” by the West to do
this, nor is one “infantilizing” them. To recognize
this causation is to do exactly the opposite: to
point out that some human beings will decide
— using their rational and reasoning faculties and
adult decision-making capabilities — that violence
is justified and even necessary against those who
continually impose violence and aggression on others
(and, for the logically impaired, see the update
here on explaining — yet again — that causation is
not the same as justification).
It’s
understandable that self-loving tribalistic
Westerners want to completely absolve themselves and
their own violent societies of having any role in
the terrorist violence they love to denounce. That’s
the nature of the tribalistic instinct in humans: My
tribe is not at fault; it’s the other tribe to which
we’re superior that is to blame. But blatantly
distorting the debate this way — by ludicrously
depicting recognition of this decision-making
process and causal chain as a denial of agency or
autonomy — is not an acceptable (or effective) way
to achieve that. |