The Costs
of Violence
Masters of Mankind
By Noam
Chomsky
[This
piece, the second of two parts, is excerpted
from Noam Chomsky’s new book,
Who Rules the World? (Metropolitan
Books). Part 1 can be found by
clicking here.]
May 12,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Tom
Dispatch"
- In
brief, the Global War on Terror sledgehammer
strategy has spread jihadi terror from a tiny corner
of Afghanistan to much of the world, from Africa
through the Levant and South Asia to Southeast Asia.
It has also incited attacks in Europe and the United
States. The invasion of Iraq made a substantial
contribution to this process, much as intelligence
agencies had predicted. Terrorism specialists Peter
Bergen and Paul Cruickshank estimate that the Iraq
War “generated a stunning sevenfold increase in the
yearly rate of fatal jihadist attacks, amounting to
literally hundreds of additional terrorist attacks
and thousands of civilian lives lost; even when
terrorism in Iraq and Afghanistan is excluded, fatal
attacks in the rest of the world have increased by
more than one-third.” Other exercises have been
similarly productive.
A group of
major human rights organizations -- Physicians for
Social Responsibility (U.S.), Physicians for Global
Survival (Canada), and International Physicians for
the Prevention of Nuclear War (Germany) -- conducted
a study that sought "to provide as realistic an
estimate as possible of the total body count in the
three main war zones [Iraq, Afghanistan, and
Pakistan] during 12 years of ‘war on terrorism,'"
including an extensive review “of the major studies
and data published on the numbers of victims in
these countries,” along with additional information
on military actions. Their "conservative estimate"
is that these wars killed about 1.3 million people,
a toll that "could also be in excess of 2 million."
A database search by independent researcher David
Peterson in the days following the publication of
the report found virtually no mention of it. Who
cares?
More
generally, studies carried out by the Oslo Peace
Research Institute show that two-thirds of the
region’s conflict fatalities were produced in
originally internal disputes where outsiders imposed
their solutions. In such conflicts, 98% of
fatalities were produced only after outsiders had
entered the domestic dispute with their military
might. In Syria, the number of direct conflict
fatalities more than tripled after the West
initiated air strikes against the self-declared
Islamic State and the CIA started its indirect
military interference in the war -- interference
which appears to have drawn the Russians in as
advanced US antitank missiles were decimating the
forces of their ally Bashar al-Assad. Early
indications are that Russian bombing is having the
usual consequences.
The
evidence reviewed by political scientist Timo
Kivimäki indicates that the “protection wars [fought
by ‘coalitions of the willing’] have become the main
source of violence in the world, occasionally
contributing over 50% of total conflict fatalities.”
Furthermore, in many of these cases, including
Syria, as he reviews, there were opportunities for
diplomatic settlement that were ignored. That has
also been true in other horrific situations,
including the Balkans in the early 1990s, the first
Gulf War, and of course the Indochina wars, the
worst crime since World War II. In the case of Iraq
the question does not even arise. There surely are
some lessons here.
The general
consequences of resorting to the sledgehammer
against vulnerable societies comes as little
surprise. William Polk’s careful study of
insurgencies, Violent Politics, should be
essential reading for those who want to understand
today’s conflicts, and surely for planners, assuming
that they care about human consequences and not
merely power and domination. Polk reveals a pattern
that has been replicated over and over. The invaders
-- perhaps professing the most benign motives -- are
naturally disliked by the population, who disobey
them, at first in small ways, eliciting a forceful
response, which increases opposition and support for
resistance. The cycle of violence escalates until
the invaders withdraw -- or gain their ends by
something that may approach genocide.
Playing by the Al-Qaeda Game Plan
Obama’s
global drone assassination campaign, a remarkable
innovation in global terrorism, exhibits the same
patterns. By most accounts, it is generating
terrorists more rapidly than it is murdering those
suspected of someday intending to harm us -- an
impressive contribution by a constitutional lawyer
on the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta, which
established the basis for the principle of
presumption of innocence that is the foundation of
civilized law.
Another
characteristic feature of such interventions is the
belief that the insurgency will be overcome by
eliminating its leaders. But when such an effort
succeeds, the reviled leader is regularly replaced
by someone younger, more determined, more brutal,
and more effective. Polk gives many examples.
Military historian Andrew Cockburn has reviewed
American campaigns to kill drug and then terror
“kingpins” over a long period in his important study
Kill Chain and found the same results. And
one can expect with fair confidence that the pattern
will continue.
No doubt
right now U.S. strategists are seeking ways to
murder the “Caliph of the Islamic State” Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi, who is a bitter rival of al-Qaeda
leader Ayman al-Zawahiri. The likely result of this
achievement is forecast by the prominent terrorism
scholar Bruce Hoffman, senior fellow at the U.S.
Military Academy’s Combating Terrorism Center. He
predicts that “al-Baghdadi’s death would likely pave
the way for a rapprochement [with al-Qaeda]
producing a combined terrorist force unprecedented
in scope, size, ambition and resources.”
Polk cites
a treatise on warfare by Henry Jomini, influenced by
Napoleon’s defeat at the hands of Spanish
guerrillas, that became a textbook for generations
of cadets at the West Point military academy. Jomini
observed that such interventions by major powers
typically result in “wars of opinion,” and nearly
always “national wars,” if not at first then
becoming so in the course of the struggle, by the
dynamics that Polk describes. Jomini concludes that
“commanders of regular armies are ill-advised to
engage in such wars because they will lose them,”
and even apparent successes will prove short-lived.
Careful
studies of al-Qaeda and ISIS have shown that the
United States and its allies are following their
game plan with some precision. Their goal is to
“draw the West as deeply and actively as possible
into the quagmire” and “to perpetually engage and
enervate the United States and the West in a series
of prolonged overseas ventures” in which they will
undermine their own societies, expend their
resources, and increase the level of violence,
setting off the dynamic that Polk reviews.
Scott Atran,
one of the most insightful researchers on jihadi
movements, calculates that “the 9/11 attacks cost
between $400,000 and $500,000 to execute, whereas
the military and security response by the U.S. and
its allies is in the order of 10 million times that
figure. On a strictly cost-benefit basis, this
violent movement has been wildly successful, beyond
even Bin Laden’s original imagination, and is
increasingly so. Herein lies the full measure of
jujitsu-style asymmetric warfare. After all, who
could claim that we are better off than before, or
that the overall danger is declining?”And if we
continue to wield the sledgehammer, tacitly
following the jihadi script, the likely effect is
even more violent jihadism with broader appeal. The
record, Atran advises, “should inspire a radical
change in our counter-strategies.”
Al-Qaeda/ISIS are assisted by Americans who follow
their directives: for example, Ted “carpet-bomb ’em”
Cruz, a top Republican presidential candidate. Or,
at the other end of the mainstream spectrum, the
leading Middle East and international affairs
columnist of the New York Times,
Thomas Friedman, who in 2003 offered Washington
advice on how to fight in Iraq on the
Charlie Rose show: “There was what I would call
the terrorism bubble... And what we needed to do was
to go over to that part of the world and burst that
bubble. We needed to go over there basically, and,
uh, take out a very big stick, right in the heart of
that world, and burst that bubble. And there was
only one way to do it... What they needed to see was
American boys and girls going house to house from
Basra to Baghdad, and basically saying, which part
of this sentence don’t you understand? You don’t
think we care about our open society, you think this
bubble fantasy we’re going to just let it go? Well,
suck on this. Ok. That, Charlie, was what this war
was about.”
That’ll
show the ragheads.
Looking Forward
Atran and
other close observers generally agree on the
prescriptions. We should begin by recognizing what
careful research has convincingly shown: those drawn
to jihad “are longing for something in their
history, in their traditions, with their heroes and
their morals; and the Islamic State, however brutal
and repugnant to us and even to most in the
Arab-Muslim world, is speaking directly to that...
What inspires the most lethal assailants today is
not so much the Quran but a thrilling cause and a
call to action that promises glory and esteem in the
eyes of friends.” In fact, few of the jihadis have
much of a background in Islamic texts or theology,
if any.
The best
strategy, Polk advises, would be “a multinational,
welfare-oriented and psychologically satisfying
program... that would make the hatred ISIS relies
upon less virulent. The elements have been
identified for us: communal needs, compensation for
previous transgressions, and calls for a new
beginning.” He adds, “A carefully phrased apology
for past transgressions would cost little and do
much.” Such a project could be carried out in
refugee camps or in the “hovels and grim housing
projects of the Paris banlieues,” where,
Atran writes, his research team “found fairly wide
tolerance or support for ISIS’s values.” And even
more could be done by true dedication to diplomacy
and negotiations instead of reflexive resort to
violence.
Not least
in significance would be an honorable response to
the “refugee crisis” that was a long time in coming
but surged to prominence in Europe in 2015. That
would mean, at the very least, sharply increasing
humanitarian relief to the camps in Lebanon, Jordan,
and Turkey where miserable refugees from Syria
barely survive. But the issues go well beyond, and
provide a picture of the self-described “enlightened
states” that is far from attractive and should be an
incentive to action.
There are
countries that generate refugees through massive
violence, like the United States, secondarily
Britain and France. Then there are countries that
admit huge numbers of refugees, including those
fleeing from Western violence, like Lebanon (easily
the champion, per capita), Jordan, and Syria before
it imploded, among others in the region. And
partially overlapping, there are countries that both
generate refugees and refuse to take them in, not
only from the Middle East but also from the U.S.
“backyard” south of the border. A strange picture,
painful to contemplate.
An honest
picture would trace the generation of refugees much
further back into history. Veteran Middle East
correspondent Robert Fisk reports that one of the
first videos produced by ISIS “showed a bulldozer
pushing down a rampart of sand that had marked the
border between Iraq and Syria. As the machine
destroyed the dirt revetment, the camera panned down
to a handwritten poster lying in the sand. ‘End of
Sykes-Picot,’ it said.”
For the
people of the region, the Sykes-Picot agreement is
the very symbol of the cynicism and brutality of
Western imperialism. Conspiring in secret during
World War I, Britain’s Mark Sykes and France’s
François Georges-Picot carved up the region into
artificial states to satisfy their own imperial
goals, with utter disdain for the interests of the
people living there and in violation of the wartime
promises issued to induce Arabs to join the Allied
war effort. The agreement mirrored the practices of
the European states that devastated Africa in a
similar manner. It “transformed what had been
relatively quiet provinces of the Ottoman Empire
into some of the least stable and most
internationally explosive states in the world.”
Repeated
Western interventions since then in the Middle East
and Africa have exacerbated the tensions, conflicts,
and disruptions that have shattered the societies.
The end result is a “refugee crisis” that the
innocent West can scarcely endure. Germany has
emerged as the conscience of Europe, at first (but
no longer) admitting almost one million refugees --
in one of the richest countries in the world with a
population of 80 million. In contrast, the poor
country of Lebanon has absorbed an estimated 1.5
million Syrian refugees, now a quarter of its
population, on top of half a million Palestinian
refugees registered with the U.N. refugee agency
UNRWA, mostly victims of Israeli policies.
Europe is
also groaning under the burden of refugees from the
countries it has devastated in Africa -- not without
U.S. aid, as Congolese and Angolans, among others,
can testify. Europe is now seeking to bribe Turkey
(with over two million Syrian refugees) to distance
those fleeing the horrors of Syria from Europe’s
borders, just as Obama is pressuring Mexico to keep
U.S. borders free from miserable people seeking to
escape the aftermath of Reagan’s GWOT along with
those seeking to escape more recent disasters,
including a military coup in Honduras that Obama
almost alone legitimized, which created one of the
worst horror chambers in the region.
Words can
hardly capture the U.S. response to the Syrian
refugee crisis, at least any words I can think of.
Returning
to the opening question “Who rules the world?” we
might also want to pose another question: “What
principles and values rule the world?” That question
should be foremost in the minds of the citizens of
the rich and powerful states, who enjoy an unusual
legacy of freedom, privilege, and opportunity thanks
to the struggles of those who came before them, and
who now face fateful choices as to how to respond to
challenges of great human import.
Noam Chomsky is institute professor emeritus in the
Department of Linguistics and Philosophy at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. A
TomDispatch regular, among his
recent books are Hegemony or Survival and Failed
States. This essay, the second of two parts, is
excerpted from his new book,
Who Rules the World? (Metropolitan Books,
the
American Empire Project, 2016). To read part 1,
click here. His website is www.chomsky.info.
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Copyright
2016 Valeria Galvao Wasserman-Chomsky
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