Chomsky confronts these rulers in "Interventions" as he's always done
in his writings and public appearances. As the Editor's Note says:
"Chomsky believes that the freedom to challenge power is not just an
opportunity, it's a responsibility." He does it as effectively in
concise essays on selected issues as in expanded versions in more
extended articles and books. Chomsky is also an optimist believing
people can change things saying "One of the clearest lessons of
history... is that rights are not granted; they are won" but not by
being passive or timid. On the broad range of issues in
"Interventions," Chomsky isn't timid, and that's why his views aren't
allowed in the dominant corporate-controlled media because speaking
truth to power and the public just might catch on.
"Interventions" - 44 Op-Ed Essays Critical of Bush Administration Foreign and Domestic Policies
This review covers a healthy sampling of Chomsky's book dealing mostly
with foreign policies but also some domestic ones in a post-9/11 world.
It's under an administration former President Jimmy Carter recently
called "the worst in history (because we) endorsed the concept of
pre-emptive (in fact, preventive meaning illegal aggression) war...
even though our own security is not directly threatened." In an
interview with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Carter elaborated
further, like no other former president ever did. He almost sounded
like Noam Chomsky from what he said about George Bush and British Prime
Minister Tony Blair. The UK leader's equally culpable and shortly
leaving office in disgrace with a public approval rating lower than
George Bush's.
Chomsky's first essay is titled "9/11: Lessons Unlearned" in which he
addresses George Bush's question: "Why do they (Arabs/Muslims) hate
us?" Fifty years ago Dwight Eisenhower's National Security Council
explained it's because we support Middle East despots and "oppos(e)
political or economic progress" wanting only control of the region's
vast oil reserves. It's no different today with people everywhere
respecting our freedoms but hating our policies, especially toward
them. With good reason, they view the US as a "terrorist regime," which
it is.
Feelings on the Arab street stem for Washington's longtime one-sided
support for Israel's repressive policies toward Palestinians. It fueled
a six-decade conflict because Israel, with US backing, wants it kept
unresolved until it achieves the goal noted Israeli historian, Ilan
Pappe, and other courageous observers explain - to ethnically cleanse,
by any means, all parts of Palestine Israelis want for themselves
leaving Palestinians the right to move elsewhere or live only on
cantonized worthless scrub land Israel doesn't value.
Twelve horrendous years of harsh Iraqi economic and political sanctions
also fueled extreme Arab and Muslim anti-US sentiment now far worse
since March, 2003. It boils over daily in the country and around the
world reflected in Canadian General Andrew Leslie's comment made in
summer, 2005. Explaining why the Afghan war will be long, he said:
(because) "every time you kill an angry young man (or his family),
you're creating 15 more who will come after you." He might have
finished his thought that the way to stop them killing us is stop
killing them.
Before the March, 2003 invasion alone, the toll on Iraqis was horrific.
Twelve years of inhumane, unjustifiable sanctions caused the deaths of
as many as 1.5 million victims of US genocidal policy and likely close
to another million since then. They were aimed at removing Saddam it
took an illegal aggression and occupation to achieve. It proved a
recruiting bonanza for all sorts of resistance evident throughout Iraq
today and around the world targeting America and our allies. It won't
stop till repressive policies do beginning with the illegal occupations
of Iraq and Palestine. Until then, the worst may be yet to come.
It proves what what former Israeli military intelligence chief,
Yesoshaphat Harkabi, said 25 years ago on how to end the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It's as true today in Israel and applies
to Iraq and everywhere else. "To offer an honorable solution to the
Palestinians (or other repressed peoples) respecting their right to
self-determination: That is the solution of the problem of terrorism.
When the swamp disappears, there will be no more mosquitos." It goes
without saying respecting peoples' human and civil rights everywhere is
a good way to end wars, too, and justifiable resistance they and
illegal occupations spawn.
The current Iraq war dominates much of the book including the early
March, 2003 article before it began titled "The Case Against the War in
Iraq." In it, Chomsky explained the Bush administration's National
Security Strategy's belligerent "imperial grand strategy" intentions to
control the world by force and reign supreme through a policy of
"preventive war." The Nuremberg Tribunal called that "the supreme
international crime" against peace with guilty Nazis convicted of it
hanged. Warnings this agenda could lead to terrorist attacks far worse
than 9/11 weren't allowed to interfere with the administration's
imperial ambitions. That was their policy in 2003. It remains unchanged
now, whatever the consequences.
Chomsky continued his analysis in his late March, 2003 essay "Now That
the War Has Begun." In it, he explained what's evident now - that
"There is no reason to doubt the near-universal judgment that the war
in Iraq will only increase the threat of terror and development and
possible use of weapons of mass destruction, for revenge or
deterrence." With the US now an international pariah, hated and
condemned by ordinary people nearly everywhere, it may only be a matter
of time before the WMD threat, in fact, happens. It won't be pleasant
when it does if it takes the form of a "dirty bomb" making a large US
city uninhabitable forever from radiation contamination.
Chomsky continues saying "the stakes of the war and its aftermath
almost couldn't be higher (with one possibility being) destabilization
in Pakistan (making) 'loose nukes' (available) to the global network of
terrorist groups (and) other possibilities, no less grim." But he notes
a promising sign from the unprecendented world opposition to war in
Iraq before it began that's continued since but not with enough
intensity to stop the horrific conflict now in its fifth year. It's
longer in duration than WW II with no signs it's ending after the
pathetic Democrat-led Congress surrendered to the Bush administration's
demands. Defying growing public sentiment, it passed the largest ever
supplemental funding bill ($120 billion) in the nation's history with
more assured for the asking - at least so far.
Chomsky noted in March, 2003 what's still true today - that the US is
pursuing "new and dangerous paths over near-unanimous world
opposition." Instead of responding to threats by addressing legitimate
grievances, the Bush administration chose permanent aggressive wars and
a policy of constructing "even more awesome instruments of destruction
and domination." It guarantees responses to them, if used, will be
unpleasant at least and awesome and horrific if worst case predictions
come true.
In his August, 2003 "Road Map to Nowhere" piece, Chomsky addresses the
long-festering Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He quoted Oxford
University Middle East scholar Hussein Agha and former Clinton
administration Arab-Israeli affairs special assistant Robert Malley
saying "the outlines of a solution have been basically understood for
some time now" and entail "a territorial divide on the international
border, now with a 1 - 1 land swap." Chomsky explains it never happened
nor will it because Israel, with US backing, rejects it even in modest
form.
Rhetoric aside, "road maps" and other past peace initiatives have all
been cruel hoaxes going nowhere nor will any now barring a huge change
in policy only mass world condemnation and forceful action with teeth
can achieve. In deference to Chomsky's contrary view, it must include
boycotts, divestment, political and economic sanctions, and isolation
of Israel from the community of civilized states. It's not a fit member
of them as long as it continues pursuing barbaric policies best
characterized as slow-motion genocide with the US equally culpable in
Iraq and Afghanistan and for providing Israel unlimited aid.
Chomsky notes "a just peace could come" citing Northern Ireland as a
recent example and South Africa another, although no one should assume
those countries now resemble paradise as facts on the ground prove
otherwise. It's especially true in South Africa where noted journalist
John Pilger's new book "Freedom Next Time" explains how life there
today is harder than under apartheid. It's because "Thatcherism" and
New World Order Washington Consensus neoliberalism moved in making
things worse. It happened under Nelson Mandela's presidency who signed
on to it telling Pilger "You can put any label on it you like... but,
for this country, privatization (deregulation and free market
capitalism) is the fundamental policy."
In October, 2003, Chomsky wrote about "The United States and the United
Nations," that's little more than a wholly-owned subsidiary of the
nation where it's been headquartered on Manhattan's east side since
1952. Whenever the US can't bully or co-opt the world body, it just
ignores it doing what it wants like waging illegal wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Only the Security Council can authorize them or Article 51
of the UN Charter allowing the "right of individual or collective
self-defense if an armed attack occurs against a Member... until the
Security Council (acts) to maintain international peace and security."
The Bush administration has contempt for international law using it
only when it serves its imperial interests and condemning or ignoring
it otherwise as "quaint and obsolete." At an early March, 2003 news
conference, George Bush made his position clear saying "when it comes
to security (meaning US imperial interests) we really don't need
anyone's permission." So when it comes to Iraq and Afghanistan,
Washington's position is unbending - "The United States must end up in
effective control (of these countries using) some facade of democracy
if that proves feasible." It means "democratic" elections can go ahead
as long as the lord and master of the universe controls things no
matter how they turn out.
And that's exactly how it is now in Iraq and Afghanistan from
US-orchestrated "demonstration elections." They installed puppet
governments having no say over their own affairs except what Washington
allows. As Chomsky puts it: "Washington must be in charge, not the
United Nations, not the Iraqi (or Afghan) people," and that's the way,
in fact, it is today in both countries.
Indeed, it will be in Iraq if the puppet parliament passes the
US-drafted new "Hydrocarbon Law." It's a blueprint for plunder, giving
foreign investors (US and UK Big Oil mainly) a bonanza of resources,
leaving Iraqis a sliver for themselves. Oil giants, like Exxon-Mobil
and BP Amoco, will get exclusive control of 63 of the country's 80
known oil fields plus all newly discovered deposits. Even worse, Big
Oil will get long-term contracts up to 35 years and be free to
expropriate all revenues, investing none of them in Iraq's economy.
Foreign investors will also have no obligation to partner with Iraqi
companies, hire local workers, respect union rights, or share new
technologies. Iraqis only get the right to take it, or else.
Iraqi oil workers aren't taking it. They went on strike for three days
over a range of issues. Prime Minister al-Maliki then shamelessly
issued arrest warrants for Iraqi Federation of Oil Unions (IFOU)
leaders sending his military to surround the workers. He then had to
back down June 8 when an Iraqi general in charge disobeyed his orders,
demanded his government "sort it all out," or he'd resign and join the
strikers. In response, IFOU suspended the strike saying it will be
resumed and expanded in a week unless an agreement is reached.
Washington and Big Oil aren't happy, but this issue is far from
resolved.
In November, 2003, Chomsky wrote about "Dilemmas of Dominance" noting
in George Bush's "axis of evil" North Korea and Iran (unlike Iraq since
1991) aren't defenseless. It's a lesson to all other potential
US-targeted nations. "If you want to defend yourself from us, you had
better mimic North Korea and pose a credible military threat" because
the Kim Jong-il regime may have nuclear weapons while Iran does not,
claims no intent to develop them, but no one in the West knows for
sure.
Iran's importance, however, lies in its having the world's third or
fourth largest proved oil reserves (depending on who's measuring what
reserves) while North Korea is "one of the poorest and most miserable
countries in the world," except for one other thing. It has great
geostrategic importance within Northeast Asia (including China, Japan,
South Korea and resource-rich Siberia in Russia's East). It's now "the
world's most dynamic economic region, with close to 30% of global gross
domestic product," compared to 19% for the US, plus "half of global
foreign exchange reserves."
"The US and Europe now trade more with Northeast Asia than with one
another," and Washington's concern is that integrated regions like
Europe and Northeast Asia may choose an independent course from
Washington. Today, that may be more likely given the state of things
under George Bush with worldwide alienation growing in the face of
aggressive US policies getting harder to accept or endorse.
Chomsky also wrote about "Saddam Hussein Before the Tribunal" in
December, 2003 before this writer did it in November, 2006 in an
article called "A Trial Giving Kangaroos A Bad Name." It covered the 11
month travesty of justice ending November 5 with his conviction already
decided before proceedings began.
He then addressed "Saddam Hussein and Crimes of State" in January, 2004
citing the "long, tortuous association between (Saddam) and the West"
and how embarrassing it would be for that relationship to come out at
trial, so it didn't. Even at Nuremberg (Chomsky calls "the least
defective" post-conflict tribunal), war or other crimes were only what
losing sides did, never winning ones under a long-standing policy of
victor's justice meaning none at all.
So voices of UN humanitarian coordinators Denis Halliday and Hans von
Sponek could never be publicly heard explaining why they resigned in
protest. In 1998, Halliday said he "had been instructed to implement a
policy that satisfies the definition of genocide: a deliberate policy
that has effectively killed well over one million individuals, children
and adults," and that 5000 Iraqi children were dying needlessly every
month. That's inconsequential to the Bush administration in its openly
stated National Security Strategy (NSS) policy. It's a scheme to
"dismantle much of what remained of the system of world order" and rule
by force "with Iraq as a demonstration project." It tells the world we
mean business, so stand aside or you're next.
Chomsky also covered Israel's Annexation/Apartheid wall in an article
called "A Wall as a Weapon" with Israel (with US financial and
political backing) continuing to build it in defiance of international
law. The World Court in the Hague ruled 14 - 1 construction must end at
once, the existing portion already built must be dismantled, and
affected Palestinians must be compensated for their losses. Israel
flouts the decision.
He also wrote about "The United States: Terrorist Sanctuary" with
Washington notorious for granting safe haven to ousted tinpot despots
and "a rogues' gallery of people whose actions qualify them as
terrorists." That's never a problem, however, when their crimes aided
this country's imperial agenda. Two noted examples Chomsky cites are
Orlando Bosch, and Bosch accomplish Luis Posada Carriles. They
masterminded the bombing of a Cuban airliner in 1976 (among their many
terrorist acts) killing 73 on it, but never answered for it and now
live freely in the US.
Chomsky also wrote on "Iraq: The Roots of Resistance" explaining US
intelligence knew well in advance "Washington's most formidable foe
(would be) the resentment of ordinary Iraqis... hostile to the American
occupation." The Bush administration ignored the warning feeling that
price was minor compared to its greater goal to establish permanent
military bases in a client state "at the heart of the world's major
energy sources."
Chomsky addressed "Who Is to Run the World and How" in June, 2004
noting former Carter administration National Security Advisor Zbiigniew
Brzezinski writing "America's security role in the (Middle East) region
(meaning military dominance) gives it indirect but politically critical
leverage on the European and Asian economies" (also dependent on)
energy exports from the region." That would keep those regions from
opting for a course independent from us, so controlling Iraq's oil and
reorganizing the Middle East under US control prevents that from
happening. Uppermost for US policy makers is preventing successful
defiance of US policy. Costly wars spawning terrorist fallout is of
lesser importance and a price worth paying for unchallengeable imperial
dominance, provided we can get and keep it. That's very much in doubt
today, however, with things falling apart in the Middle East and
Central Asia.
Chomsky addresses a crucial domestic issue in "Democracy Building Must
Begin at Home" in August, 2004 and in October in "The Disconnect in
American Democracy." He did it with the presidential elections
approaching and things in disarray on the ground in Iraq and soon to be
in Afghanistan as well. He observed the campaign pointed up "the severe
democratic deficit in the world's most powerful (nominally democratic)
state" where true democracy is more illusion than reality. He noted how
detached the candidates were in their common agenda from issues
mattering most to ordinary people. They pay little more than lip
service to vital concerns like health care ranking at the top with
costs exploding and 47 million people having no insurance because they
can't afford any.
Bush and Kerry got to run with enough funding by "similar
concentrations of private power" controlling everything. That includes
picking the candidates and, practically openly since 2000, which one
wins, decided in advance making a mockery of the whole system.
Investigative journalist, Greg Palast, covered it in his 2006 book,
"Armed Madhouse," and his 2003 one, "The Best Democracy Money Can Buy."
In them, he showed how elections today are more like auctions than a
serious exercise of democracy. He documented how the 2000 and 2004
elections were stolen and 2008 is already shaping up for more of the
same.
Chomsky explains changing things when they're not right is the way it's
always been. It has to be from the grassroots that against long odds
ended slavery, and won rights for labor, women and minorities. It also
helped end the Vietnam war through mass energized opposition on the
streets to it. So even though Chomsky urges voters to make "sensible
choices" at the polls (limited as they are), the "main task is to
create a genuinely responsive democratic culture, and that effort goes
on before and after electoral extravaganzas, whatever their outcome."
Two articles in November and December, 2004 help unmask the benevolent
facade we present to the world, no longer needing Chomsky to do it two
and half years later. The first is titled "We Are Good" and the second
the "Imperial Presidency and Its Consequences." The first essay
observes "the fundamental principle (in international relations) that
'we are good' - 'we' being the government... benevolent, seeking peace
and justice" even though, in practice, the opposite is true. However,
the Bush agenda of permanent war "carr(ies) an appreciable risk of
ultimate doom" according to some straregic analysts like John D.
Steinbruner and Nancy Gallagher. They wrote in the summer 2004 issue of
"Daedalus," the journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,
Chomsky says isn't given to hyperbole.
The administration's contempt for international law, scorched earth war
agenda, and future intent to use nuclear weapons, like they're just
king-sized hand grenades, means the fate of the human species and most
everything else some day may be up for grabs. Chomsky observes that
"the world is in awful shape today" although better off for an
"unwillingness to tolerate aggression." It's because the Bush
administration's "conception of presidential sovereignty (the imperial
presidency) is so extreme (it's drawn) unprecendented criticism from
the most sober and respected journals."
It's based on the "unitary executive theory of the presidency." Lawyer,
academic and author Jennifer Van Bergen wrote about it at length in her
January 9, 2006 FindLaw Legal News and Commentary article titled "The
Unitary Executive: Is the Doctrine Behind the Bush Presidency
Consistent with a Democratic State?" Her conclusion is unequivocally
no. The "doctrine violates the separation of powers" fundamental to our
system. It puts the chief executive above the law, in effect, making
him a dictator.
George Bush usurped this power claiming the law is what he says it is
and proved it around 800 times (more than all past presidents combined)
attaching "signing statements" to congressional legislation. In doing
so, he illegally annulled provisions in them because nothing in the
Constitution allows such practice. Chomsky asks how can we best respond
to a situation so dire? He notes our "legacy of great privilege and
freedom" saying we have a choice - abandon all hope or "further a
democratic culture in which the culture plays some role in (political
and economic) policies." Saying these are hardly radical ideas, he
stresses history shows "rights are not granted; they are won" by going
for them from the grassroots.
In April, 2005, Chomsky addressed "The Universality of Human Rights."
He cited the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights as the "modern
standard" including Article 25 in it stating - "Everyone has the right
to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of
himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and
medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security
in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age
or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control (with)
Motherhood (and children born in or out of wedlock)... entitled to
special care and assistance."
Needless to say, the Bush administration rejects these rights by its
policies alone. Earlier, undersecretary of state for democracy and
global affairs, Paula Dobriansky, while serving under Ronald Reagan and
G.H.W. Bush, refuted what she called the "myth (that) economic and
social rights constitute human rights," even though the majority
population feels otherwise. Surveys clearly show popular preferences
favor sharp cuts in military spending along with large increases for
education, health care, medical research, job training, conservation,
renewable energy and other essential social programs enhancing life.
The current power structure wants no public involvement in policy
choices pointing to what Chomsky calls a "growing democratic deficit."
In 1973, banker David Rockefeller (grandson of oil tycoon and
mega-corporate predator John D.), Zbigniew Brzezinski and others
founded the Trilateral Commission that included notable members like
Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton. It's purpose was to counter a "crisis of
democracy" from the 1960s. That meant too much of it as sectors of the
population (called "special interests") became active politically while
these rulers of the world expect them to remain inert. So action was
needed to restore them to their proper status - quiescent, letting "the
people who own the country... run it" (for their own benefit). Those
were Founding Father John Jay's words, our first Supreme Court Chief
Justice, showing his contempt for ordinary people. Today, things are so
extreme under George Bush even Jay might be shocked enough to think we
went too far and say change is needed to soften things.
He and the other Founders would likely be alarmed by Chomsky's April,
2005 essay called "Dr. Strangelove Meets the Age of Terror" with the
title alone pretty scary. The subject addressed is a real nuclear
threat with the 1970 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) "never...
weaker or its future less certain" according to Thomas Graham, former
US special representative for arms control, nonproliferation and
armament. He warned in the April, 2005 issue of "Current History" if
the treaty fails, a "nuclear nightmare world" may become reality. His
concern is that Bush administration policy is the main threat. It
effectively renounced NPT and its crucial Article VI pledging nuclear
nations make "good faith" efforts to eliminate these weapons because
having them heightens the risk they'll be used endangering the planet.
However, it's even worse than that as the Bush administration:
— claims the right to develop new type nuclear weapons, not work to eliminate ones we have;
— ignores NPT intending to test new weapons developed;
— ended the protection of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty;
— rescinded and subverted the Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention;
— spends more on the military than the rest of the world combined with large future increases planned;
— refuses to consider a Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty preventing more
nuclear bombs being added to present stockpiles already dangerously too
high; and
— claims the right to wage preventive wars under the doctrine of
"anticipatory self-defense" using first strike nuclear weapons.
As a result, former NATO planner, Michael McGuire, thinks a "nuclear
exchange is ultimately inevitable," and Harvard international relations
specialist, Graham Allison agrees with a "consensus in the national
security community (that a) dirty bomb (attack is) near-certain" given
current policy and the fact that fissionable materials aren't secured.
Chomsky also wrote about "The Social Security Non-Crisis." It was about
the Bush administration concocting a propaganda blitz in 2005 (no
longer heard lately) of an impending phony Social Security "fiscal
crisis" to convince the public to let Wall Street sharks control their
financial future. Meanwhile, he noted, a real Medicare crisis looms
with medical costs spiraling out of control and the US having the most
unfair, inefficient system in the industrialized world. Reforming it
through more efficient, lower cost national health care is off the
table because insurers and Big Pharma won't tolerate any public benefit
harming their right to run the system their way earning huge profits
from it.
Then, there's Chomsky's take on "The Bush Administration during
Hurricane Season." In it, he noted "a long-gathering storm of misguided
policies and priorities preceded the tragedy, citing a pre-9/11 FEMA
report. It listed the three most likely catastrophes to strike the
country - a terrorist attack in New York, an earthquake in San
Francisco, and a major hurricane striking New Orleans with the latter
becoming an urgent FEMA priority in 2005. Elaborate plans and a
successful simulated hurricane drill were conducted, but the war,
budget cuts, other preventive measures and overall Bush administration
indifference meant the Katrina disaster was inevitable.
Four Chomsky essays deal with Latin America, the first in December,
2005 called "South America at the Tipping Point." In it, he says "From
Venezuela to Argentina, the hemisphere is falling out of control, with
left-center governments almost all the way through. Even in Central
America... the lid is barely on."
The view from mid-2007 looks different with only Venezuela and
hopefully Ecuador (still a work in progress under new President Rafeal
Correa, barely six months in office) very much embracing a left-center
social democratic agenda. In contrast, Brazil, Argentina and Bolivia
have mostly followed Washington Consensus neoliberal dictates. That's
in spite of their distancing themselves from US one-way FTAA trade
deals and IMF and World Bank crushing debt slavery from their
Faustian-imposed rules assuring debtor nations always get a raw deal.
But Chomsky noted in 2005 indigenous populations were more active and
influential, especially in Ecuador and Bolivia. Today they're still
active there and in other Latin countries but have modest influence, at
best. He also observed internal integration was strengthening,
including South-South interaction with Venezuela in the lead
responsible for most positive results in how it deals with its
neighbors and other world trading partners like China.
In March, 2006, Chomsky's op-ed piece was called "Asia, the Americas,
and the Reigning Superpower." In September he wrote "Latin America
Declares its Independence," and in December his article was titled
"Alternatives for the Americas." In these, he noted Washington's
concern that Europe, Asia and Latin America might move toward more
independence away from US dominance, and, to a degree, there are some
hopeful signs, it's happening. Middle East misadventurism consumes the
Bush administration, unable to admit what every sensible political
analyst knows - the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are lost. In addition,
the longer we stay embroiled, the worse things get and more likely US
world influence will wane encouraging other nations to become more
independent, less fearful of the consequences.
Central to policy everywhere is energy, and aims to control it create
the possibility of shifting alliances and more potential nightmares for
Washington. Crucially ahead is who lines up with whom, and one
relationship Washington fears is greater India-China cooperation. Add
Venezuela, Russia and Iran to the mix and Washington's fears will be
huge if those ties become strong and solidified enough to counter US
dominance. Throw in a couple of other Middle East and Central Asia
producers, and it spells potential big trouble for Washington planners.
Another Washington fear is if Latin states ever, in fact, unite in a
"continent community similar to the European Union." It would give them
far more clout together than any single regional state could have on
its own, even one as large and important as Brazil. Washington has long
dominated Latin America it dismissively calls its "backyard." It's done
it through "violence... economic strangulation," and brutal
exploitation through installed or co-opted governments profiting as
junior partners in the savage exploitation of their own populations for
profit, the way it's been for 500 years going back to conquistador
rule.
Today, Hugo Chavez is a symbol of change and courage standing up to the
ruling hegemon. That makes him the single greatest threat Washington
faces - a good example that's spreading enough to cause alarm in the
Capitol. Since taking office in February, 1999, the US tried and failed
three times to oust him by different means. The current
Washington-orchestrated made-for-media street protests over the RCTV
Channel 2 shuttering may indicate a fourth attempt is now underway.
Chavez apparently thinks so accusing the Bush administration and
internal opposition of planning a "soft coup with a slow fuse." He
compares it to the same US scheme used in Ukraine's 2004-05 Orange
Revolution and Georgia's Rose one in 2003. Both times, leaders allied
with Russia were deposed and replaced with ones favoring the West.
Chavez is standing firm and is actively moving ahead with his socially
democratic agenda while solidifying ties with regional neighbors and
other states. He seeks integrated alliances (a "prerequisite for
genuine independence" from Washington) and relations with other
countries based on cooperation, solidarity, complementarity and respect
for each nation's sovereignty. He wants it to be free from the
strangling control Washington imposes in its relations with the Global
South, especially in Latin America it feels it owns. The
confrontational lines are drawn with the spirit of democracy alive in
Latin America, headquartered in Venezuela, and the Bush administration
determined to crush it.
It's one reason Washington seeks bilateral deals in the region and
elsewhere and just signed one last December with India. It's called the
United States-India Peaceful Atomic Energy Cooperation Act, the name
itself reeking in Orwellian Newspeak. The act is another blow to NPT
effectively authorizing India's nuclear weapons development along with
other nuclear-related assistance enough to cause nuclear weapons
specialist Gary Milhollin alarm. The deal violates "cardinal
principle(s)" established to reduce nuclear weapons proliferation and
delivery systems for them. They undermine the barriers to nuclear war
and "may hasten the day when a nuclear explosion destroys a US city."
Hedging its bets to "become equidistant between the US and China,"
India agreed to a similar deal with the Asian giant the US fears most
as a future challenger to its supremacy. It's because of China's size
and fact it's unintimidated by US dominance. But while Washington
gambles with our future, the potential threat from an eventual nuclear
holocaust get greater. The Bush administration is giving India "a free
pass around nuclear controls," says nuclear threat expert Michael
Krepon. It means "other states will be lining up to profit from
proliferation," export controls are now off the table, and the safety
of NPT enforcement is null and void. It points to a potential
frightening future ahead thanks to reckless US policy putting
geopolitics and corporate profits ahead of common sense security.
In June, 2006 Chomsky wrote on "Disarming the Iran Nuclear Showdown."
He observed "The urgency of halting the proliferation of nuclear
weapons, and moving toward their elimination, could hardly be greater.
Failure to do so is very likely to lead to grim consequences (and) a
near meltdown (a year ago and now) seems... imminent over Iran('s)"
commercial nuclear enrichment program. It conforms to NPT standards
while countries like India, Pakistan and Israel are nuclear outlaws.
Under George Bush, so is the US, by far the worst one of all.
Washington, with help from the West it bullies, demands Iran stop its
program in contrast to its strong support for it under the Shah before
1979. Today, it's different with Washington wanting NPT's Article IV
strengthened. It grants non-nuclear states the right to produce fuel
for commercial nuclear energy use. Chomsky believes that because of
today's technological advances, tightening Article IV "would have to
ensure unimpeded access for nonmilitary use" but prevent it from being
for weapons. That's not easy as nuclear expert Helen Caldicott
explains. She calls operating commercial nuclear reactors atom bomb
factories as a single 1000 megawatt reactor produces 500 pounds of
plutonium annually, while a mere 10 pounds can produce a bomb powerful
enough to devastate a large city.
Despite the heated Western rhetoric targeting Iran's nuclear program
and its claimed interference in Iraq, only one country poses a real
threat to what Chomsky calls "the end of biology's only experiment with
higher intelligence" and most everything else. He means the US,
especially in the age of George Bush. So Washington is in the lead
pointing fingers at phony nuclear threats from other countries while
never admitting it's the greatest one of all. It's the only country
with a publicly stated policy to freely use these first strike weapons
under its doctrine of "anticipatory self-defense" meaning preventive
illegal aggression international law bans.
Chomsky revisted Iran in March, 2007 in his essay titled "The Cold War
Between Washington and Tehran." He noted Iran and Syria are enemies
because they "failed to subordinate themselves to Washington's basic
demands. Iran by far (is) the most important" because of its vast oil
reserves we want control over the way things were after the CIA-led
coup ousted democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh in
1953. It reinstated the US-backed Shah Reza Pahlavi's generation-long
fascist reign of terror. It lasted until the 1979 Iranian revolution
deposed him, setting up a confrontation between Iran and this country
ever since. It now threatens to erupt in open war, possibly a nuclear
one.
Iran's importance goes beyond oil as its "influence in the 'crescent'
challenges US control" there. Chomsky notes "By an accident of
geography, the world's major oil resources are in largely Shiite areas
of the Middle East: southern Iraq, adjacent regions of Saudi Arabia and
Iran, with some of the major reserves of natural gas as well." He
continues explaining "Washington's worst nightmare would be a loose
Shiite alliance controlling most of the world's oil" independent of the
US. If such a bloc ever emerges and links with the Asian Energy
Security Grid and Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in China, US
power in the world will be seriously and potentially permanently
undermined.
The Bush administration will do everything possible to prevent this,
but Chomsky doubts it will attack Iran. World leaders and three-fourths
of the US public are strongly opposed. So is the Baker Commission
representing a more conciliatory position, but no less hard line on
controlling the world's energy resources.
While not able to withstand overwhelming US power, Iran is three times
the size of Iraq and no pushover. It would be crushed in a head-to-head
confrontation with Washington but could put up a fight and inflict some
heavy damage in the process not likely to go down well at home. It
would also inflame the Middle East far more than already. Iran can also
"respond in other ways," Chomsky notes, "inciting even more havoc in
Iraq" and throughout the region. The public is already fed up with
endless wars, demands they end, so anything is possible on US streets
and the next election if George Bush starts another one with his
toughest opponent so far.
Instead of war, Chomsky thinks Washington may try destabilizing Iran
from within stirring up trouble and "secessionist tendencies" from much
of the population that isn't Persian, including in oil-rich areas like
Khuzestan on the Gulf that's largely Arab. It's also urging harsher
sanctions wanting to isolate and "strangle Iran economically" that
won't likely work because China and Russia won't buy it and Europe only
will part way. For years, Iran sought a negotiated settlement to
long-standing differences, but Washington always rebuffed diplomatic
efforts because it demands unconditional surrender to its agenda. Iran,
under its present leadership won't ever buy that, and why should it, or
any other nation.
Following Israel's brutal, illegal assault on Lebanon last summer
(planned months in advance with US backing), Chomsky wrote about
"Viewing Lebanon as if through a Bombsight." He noted in August, 2006
"a fragile truce remains in effect," but it may be near a tipping point
now in the wake of days of savage fighting pitting the US-backed Fouad
Sinora's Lebanese army against non-Palestinian Fath al-Islam fighters
holed up in the northern Lebanese Nahr al-Bared Palestinian refugee
camp. Dozens, maybe hundreds, of soldiers, fighters and innocent
civilians have been killed and many thousands displaced risking this
will spread to other parts of the country reigniting a civil war like
the one that raged from 1975 - 1990. It tore apart a country tormented
as well by repeated Israeli assaults and invasions including the
infamous 1982 one killing 18,000 or more Lebanese and many Palestinians
living there.
A year ago Chomsky wrote about the "US-Israeli invasion of Lebanon,
with only a cynical pretense to legitimacy" because there was none. The
reason for it had nothing to do with the phony one given about the
capture of two Israeli soldiers. Never mentioned was that for decades
Israel made a practice of "kidnapping and killing civilians in Lebanon
or on the high seas, Lebanese and Palestinians, holding them in Israel
for long periods, sometimes as hostages, sometimes in secret torture
chambers like Camp 1391."
Israel's summer, 2006 assault on Gaza was also planned well in advance
just waiting for a convenient pretext to unleash that happened to be
the capture of one Israeli corporal, hardly reason to declare war. Just
like in Lebanon, Israel's reaction was unjustifiable and savagely
extreme, but as long as the US backed and funded it, Western and Arab
world complaints were barely audible before ending altogether. It left
targeted Lebanese and Palestinians devastated to this day and now
victims of new fighting.
Israel and the US want to destroy Hezbollah and Hamas, but it's no
secret they helped create them both to use against other past enemies
like Yasser Arafat and the PLO in the 1980s until he was co-opted by
the Oslo Accords in 1993 to become Israel's enforcer. Today, conflict
continues in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT), Lebanon is
teetering on the edge of the unknown, and Chomsky notes "new
generations of bitter and angry jihadis" likely are being created the
way Israeli Chief of Staff, Dan Halutz's said they would be. What else
could warrior states like the US or Israel expect, "view(ing) the world
through a bombsight."
But Saad-Ghorayeb warned a year ago what's as true today, stated in
slightly different terms. US and Israel's unending wars on Iraqis,
Afghans, Palestinians, Lebanese and any other designated Arab or Muslim
targets may cause "all hell (to) be let loose (from) the Shiite
community... seething with resentment" and determined to get revenge
violently. And Sunnis may join them if the Muslim world unites against
the US, Israel, and the West. As Chomsky puts it: "viewing the world
through a bombsight will bring further misery and suffering, perhaps
even in 'apocalyptic terms.' "
The book's final essay was written in July, 2006 called "The Great Soul
of Power." In it, Chomsky deals with two themes borrowed from the life
and work of the late Palestinian American scholar and activist Edward
Said - the "culture of empire (and) responsibility of intellectuals."
He condemns "obedient intellectuals" for what Hans Morgenthau called
"conformist subservience to those in power." He notes a "clear
doctrine... reign(ing) in Western journalism and almost all
scholarship, even among critics of policies - 'American exceptionalism'
(or) the thesis that the United States is unlike other great powers,
past and present, because it has a 'transcendent purpose:' 'the
establishment of equality and freedom in America' and... throughout the
world."
Policy must then conform to "interests," but not those of the
population. It means the "national interest" or those of the privileged
who dominate society running things. In America and the West, the major
influence is "internationally oriented business corporations," no
surprise. In contrast, public opinion has "little or no significant
effect on government officials" beholden solely to wealth and power.
"Interventions" ends with Chomsky explaining how hard it is striking "a
proper balance between citizenship and common purpose, on the one hand,
and communal autonomy and cultural variety on the other." These
questions should be "high on the agenda of people who do not worship at
the shrine... of power." These are people, including Chomsky's readers,
wanting to "save the world from the destructive forces" threatening our
survival. They want to change it believing "a more civilized society
can be envisioned and even brought into existence." Why not, if enough
committed people become dedicated to achieving it.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The
Steve Lendman News and Information Hour on TheMicroEffect.com Saturdays
at noon US central time.