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Fog Watch

By Edward S. Herman
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By any generally
applicable standardi.e., excluding the fraudulent
but widely used terrorism is what somebody else
does criterionstate terrorism is vastly
more destructive than anti-state and individual and
small group terrorism. This is the basis for distinguishing
between the two as wholesale versus retail
terrorism. Wholesale trade implies large scale business
operations that deal with many smaller retail operators.
The retailers have little capital and do business with
a small set of local customers. State terrorists apply
their violence over a wide terrain using the large resources
of the state, and they can employ a broader and more
cruel range of techniques of intimidation, including
devastating weapons like napalm, phosphorus, depleted
uranium munitions; cluster, thermobaric and 500-pound
bombs; advanced delivery systems like helicopter gun-ships
and cruise missiles; and torture.
Retail terrorists operate more narrowly in space, with
fewer personnel, limited resources, and working with
relatively unsophisticated weaponry and delivery systems.
As the Argentinian National Commission on Disappeared
Persons stated in the aftermath of that countrys
era of military rule and state terrorism (1976-1983),
the terrorism of the military regime was infinitely
worse than that which they were combatting. The
9/11 attack was an extreme outlier in the record of
retail terror, whereas massacres of similar or larger
size by state terrorists have been numerous.
Retail terrorists also use torture only occasionally
and on a small scale. But for state terrorists torture
is big business and is an important part of their overall
effort at intimidation. In Argentina under military
rule, there were an estimated 60 separate detention
centers at which torture was administered to the victims
of this terrorist state (Amnesty International, Testimony
on secret detention centers in Argentina, 1980).
As is well known, the United States today practices
torture at Guantanamo Bay, Abu Ghraib and other prisons
in Iraq, and the Bagram air base in Afghanistan, and
sends many others to torture centers in Morocco, Egypt,
Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and elsewhere in the process of
extraordinary rendition. Israel has used
torture on an administrative basis for decades, compellingly
exposed in a major Sunday Times (London) study
almost 30 years ago (Israel and Torture: An Insight
Inquiry, June 19, 1977), but already long-standing
and institutionalized. Noam Chomsky and I showed back
in 1979 that 26 of the 35 countries that were then using
torture on an administrative basis were U.S. client
states. This was rampant state terrorism, carried out
under U.S. sponsorship (see Chomsky and Herman, The
Washington Connection and Third World Fascism, South
End Press, 1979). Under U.S. auspices
torture is now once again flourishing and has
even become a growth industry.
As
noted, state terrorists also kill on a much larger scale
than anti-state and private terrorists. In an admittedly
crude computation I did some years ago, the ratio of
major killings of state terrorists to the CIAs
estimate of all terrorist killings from 1968-1980 was
found to be over 500 to 1 (Killings by State and
Nonstate Terrorists: Numbers and Orders of Magnitude,
Herman and OSullivan, The Terrorism
Industry, Pantheon, 1990). The ratio of Israeli
state killings of Palestinians to Palestinian killings
of Israelis was long over 20 to 1, and only declined
to 3 to 1 in the second Intifada. New York Times
reporter James Bennet claimed a decline from 25-1 in
the first Intifada to 3-1 in the second (Mideast
Turmoil: Mideast Balance Sheet, NYT, March
12, 2002). In Iraq, Saddam Hussein undoubtedly killed
scores of thousands of his own citizens and ran a notorious
torture operation, but the United States beats Saddam
even in his home state, with credit for a million or
more Iraqi civilian dead via sanctions that killed more
civilians than all the weapons of mass destruction
in human history (Karl and John Mueller, Sanctions
of Mass Destruction, Foreign Affairs, May/June
1999), and a shock and awe and follow-up
capital intensive pacification program that all independent
analysts estimate to have killed many more civilians
than the insurgency. U.S. operatives simply stepped
into Saddams shoes as torture managers in Abu
Ghraib and elsewhere.
State terrorism is also preeminent, not only because
of its vastly larger scale and use of more ferocious
tactics and weapons, but also because it is very commonly
either causal, inducing a derivative retail terrorism,
or the mechanism that protects intolerable conditions
that might themselves be considered a form of terrorism.
It was evident in Latin America from the 1950s onward
that the National Security States that were emerging
in the U.S. backyard, and with U.S. sponsorship, were
supporting and enforcing terrible economic conditions
for the masses, to the advantage of transnationals and
local businesses. These states were regularly denounced
by representatives of the indigenous Catholic church
in documents with evocative titles like The Cry
of the People and The Marginalization of
the People that focused on what they described
as the forced atomization and fragmentation
of the people, referred to now as flexible
labor markets. (A classic account is Penny Lernouxs
book entitled Cry of the People, Penguin, 1980.)
After the U.S.-organized overthrow of the democratic
government of Guatemala in 1954, unions and peasant
organizations were destroyed by a repressive and militarized
state serving local and expatriate elites. As historian
Piero Gliejeses has written, Only violence could
maintain the status quo. In one telling church
document it was asserted that the National Security
State was creating a revolution that did not previously
exist. In other words, the military regimes in
power were helping the business community brutalize
the populace to the point of provoking a violent response.
This would then be quelled by terrorisms infinitely
worse than those the inhuman and arguably terroristic
economic policies provokedbut only the derivative
and lesser violence would be called terrorism.
This process of creating terrorists and then killing
themand decimating the civilian population sea
in which the terrorist fish swimwas
clearly evident in Vietnam and is also conspicuous in
Iraq today. In Vietnam the United States, struggling
to avoid popularly supported rule by Ho Chi Minh and
his Communist Party, imported a dictator from the U.S.
and supported him in a vicious war of pacification that
literally forced the South Vietnamese Viet Minh into
armed resistance (a major theme in Gareth Porters
The Perils of Dominance). When that pacification
war failed, the United States stepped in with a direct
aggression that not only destroyed the country in order
to save it, but by its murderous tactics
and weaponry, which included the deliberate destruction
of peasant rice crops by chemical warfare (Operation
Ranch Hand) and killing several million people, kept
creating new cadres ready to die fighting the savage
aggressor.
A similar dynamic has been evident in Iraq, where
the initial joy at the removal of Saddam Hussein was
rapidly transformed by the U.S. failure to provide security
or the means of life to the citizenry and by its self-serving
economic and political actions, but also and increasingly
in response to the brutal tactics and racist behavior
of the U.S. invaders-occupiers. Abu Ghraib was a dramatic
manifestation of the attitude and behavior of the invaders,
but more important was the daily invasion of homes and
the bullying and humiliation of Iraqis in the streets
and at checkpoints, and the lavish use of firepower
that killed or injured tens of thousands of civilians
standing in the way. As
Congressperson John Murtha recently stated, We
put 150,000 people outside their homes in Fallujah.
If you remember in Jordan, the bomber said the reason
she became a bomber was because two of her relatives
were killed in Fallujah. We lost the hearts and minds
of the people.
These murderous effects are increasing as the Bush administration
steps up its air war to try once again to quell the
insurgency while keeping U.S. casualties down as it
struggles for victory before the next election.
Seymour Hersh notes, A key element of the drawdown
plans, not mentioned in the Presidents public
statements, is that the departing American troops will
be replaced by American airpower, with the likelihood
that the overall level of violence and the number
of Iraqi fatalities would increase unless there are
stringent controls over who bombs what. Airstrikes
by U.S. forces rose almost fivefold in 2005, and more
are likely to follow in 2006.
State Terrorism in the 7th Century BC
State terrorism
goes back a long way, but in its most dramatic earlier
manifestations it has a clear family resemblance to
state terrorism today. Assyria in the 8th and 7th centuries
BC was a militarized state, with advanced military technology
for the time that pioneered shock and awe
tactics. The Assyrians brought to perfection a
systematic terrorization of their adversaries
.
The accounts of their campaigns enumerate with wearisome
monotony the punishments inflicted after each victory;
to flay men alive, to impale them by hundreds, to cut
off arms, legs, noses, and ears, and then to keep their
mutilated rivals shut up in cagessuch was the
invariable custom of their generals. Small wonder that
the very names of the Assyrians inspired panic terror,
and that the mere approach of their armies often forced
strong kingdoms and cities to surrender and beg for
mercy (M. Rostovtzeff, The Ancient World,
vol. 1).
Have we progressed in humanistic behavior in warfare
since the Assyrians? Certainly the United States and
Israel intend that their military prowess and threats
will terrify people who stand in their way and induce
quiescence. Both recognize that it is sometimes necessary
to use military force to teach troublesome peoples a
lesson on the futility of resistance. Shock and
awe in the initial attack on Iraq was openly designed
to induce surrender, and so was the 1999 bombing war
against Yugoslavia.
Of course our generals do not flay men alive,
impale them, cut off arms, legs and noses, and keep
mutilated rivals shut up in cages (although they keep
damaged torture victims in cages). On the other hand,
modern technology makes it possible to do the equivalent
of flaying men alive and cutting off their limbs and
noses, at a distance, via napalm, phosphorus, fragmentation
bombs, fuel-air and large bombs, cannon, and rapid fire
guns. One only has to explore the Internet or watch
Al Jazeera to see numerous hospital cases or street
or grave scenes of people burned beyond recognition
or with body damage that would equal or exceed anything
the Assyrians could produce. And what can be seen via
these non-mainstream media information sources is clearly
a small fraction of the burned, crushed, and dismembered.
One humanistic advance is that in the more
democratic world of today, flaying or napalming enemy
soldiers and civilians would horrify and arouse into
an opposition force large numbers in the countries dispensing
this violence. So at this point in the evolution of
human society such military behavior would not be acceptableif
it could be seen and understood. But now we arrive at
the role of the media and the humanitarian intervention
intellectuals in keeping the flayed, impaled, and limbless
equivalents out of sight and putting the deadly enterprises
that damage and kill them in a positive light.
It works as follows. First, the leaders of the targeted
people are demonized and the populations themselves
are often condemned as willing executioners.
Their leaders may be brought to trial and their crimes,
real and alleged, will be heavily publicized with gruesome
details, real and alleged. The media and establishment
intellectuals play a crucial role here in focusing on
the demons with great indignation, accepting official
claims of sincere efforts to settle matters peaceably,
the ominous threat that the demon target will commit
local genocide or might attack the United States itself
with his weapons of mass destruction, and the benevolent
and humanitarian intent of the government once again
about to unleash massive state terror. This regular
pattern of apologetics, that includes the acceptance
and dissemination of serious disinformation, makes it
easier for the home public to accept harsh treatment
of the population about to be attacked.
Second, the government-media-intellectuals axis uses
(and misuses) words that put the attack and attacker
in a favorable light and denigrate their targets. The
word terrorism is used only to designate
retail terrorist actions and retail responses to state
violence, at least where the state terrorism is carried
out by the United States or one of its allies or clients.
Argentinas infinitely worse state
terrorism was never designated terrorism by U.S. officials
or in the New York Times in the years 1976-1983;
only the retail terrorism was so named, and the paper
even had flattering articles on the moderates
among the generals who were ruling and managing the
infinitely worse terrorism. Argentina was a U.S. client
state. Similarly, Israel never commits terrorit
only retaliates and engages in counter-terror.
This is pure ideological bias, but is an important part
of the management of public opinion.
Third,
and supporting the use of terrorism only
in reference to retail terror, is the distinction between
deliberate killing and collateral damage.
Retail terrorists, like suicide bombers, deliberately
kill civilians, whereas with bombing raids on suspected
Vietcong, Taliban, Hamas, or Iraqi insurgent hideouts,
any civilian killings are allegedly inadvertent rather
than deliberate, hence in a different and higher moral
class. This is a fallacy in terms of practice, logic,
morality, and the law. As regards practice, many bombing
raids have been clearly intended to killthe civilian
deaths at Hiroshima, Dresden, and Tokyo in World War
II were clearly deliberate, and in many other cases
civilian deaths are either more than acceptable (as
in areas supporting the enemy) or of no concern except
as a public relations problem. As General Gregory Newbold
said about the killings at the wedding ceremony at Kakrak
in Afghanistan in July 2002, This is an area of
enormous sympathy for the Taliban and Al Qaeda,
and many similar statements, as well as the evidence
of many hundreds of attacks on civilian sites, indicate
something other than concern for civilian casualties
in all three recent U.S. wars of aggression. It is good,
even essential PR to claim an interest in avoiding civilian
casualties, but only apologists for state terror will
take these assurances at face value.
In terms of logic and morality, if bombing raids on
civilian sites, based frequently on unverified rumor
and dubious sources, regularly kill large numbers of
civilians, the fact that the individual victims were
not targeted doesnt make the deaths inadvertent
and undeliberatethey occurred with a high probability
value, which makes them intended in logic and also in
the law. As Michael Mandel points out in his excellent
discussion of the collateral damage apologetic for killings,
the laweven in the state of Texashas long
found that killing a third party while intending to
kill somebody else does not exempt the killer from being
guilty of murder (How America Gets Away With Murder,
Pluto, 2004). But in the Western media and for Western
establishment intellectuals killings under the rubric
collateral damage are treated differently than those
of retail terrorists, giving an aura of innocence if
not virtue to the state terrorists slaughter of
large numbers of inadvertent victims.
Fourth, the word bias runs parallel with the level of
attention and indignation. The victims of terrorism
are worthy victims and get extensive and
sympathetic treatment that can arouse public sympathy
and help justify the attacks on the officially-identified
terrorists in programs of counter-terror.
In the case of Argentina, 1976-1983, there was minimal
attention in the U.S. media to the plight of the many
thousands tortured in those 60 detention centers or
slaughtered by the state terrorists. The New York
Times, for example, never reviewed or even mentioned
the 1980 Amnesty International reports Testimony
on secret detention centers in Argentina, or Guatemala:
A Government Program of Political Murder, and
Disappearances: A Workbook. Nor did it ever
review Penny Lernouxs Cry of the People.
This was the U.S. backyard and the terror states were
U.S. clients, so powerful exposes of the horrors taking
place in these states would be attending to unworthy
victims, and the New York Times and its media
colleagues largely avoid this.
The same is true of the medias and establishment
intellectuals treatment of the unworthy victims
of Israeli terrorism on the West Bank and U.S. terror
in Iraq. The Israeli case is remarkable as Israel has
been pretty straightforwardly stealing Palestinian land
and water and ethnically cleansing for years in gross
violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention and numerous
UN Security Council and International Court rulings.
But in the U.S. media the Palestinians are terrorists
and the ethnically-cleansing Israelis are the victims.
This miracle of racist and immoral bias is built into
the media treatment of these issuesthe Palestinian
victims get slight attention and little sympathy, with
regular demands that they cease attacking those who
the international community allows to ethnically
cleanse them. The attention and sympathy go to the victims
of the suicide bombers; and there is no demand that
the Israelis cease their ongoing dispossession, let
alone return stolen land and water to the untermenschen.
The Medias Service to the State
In dealing with
Iraq, the media had already established a remarkable
record of service to the state before the March 2003
invasion by swallowing disinformation on Iraqs
WMD and links to Al Qaeda. It is a crushing indictment
of the media that at the time of the U.S. attack a large
fraction of U.S. citizens believed that Saddam had WMD,
had links to Al Qaeda, was involved in 9/11, and posed
a serious security threat to the United States. (Even
now 48 percent still think that Saddam was a serious
threat to U.S. security, Wall Street Journal
Online, December 29, 2005.) The media also simply ignored
the fact that the Bush administration had violated the
UN Charter and committed the supreme crime
in its invasion, and they soon took it as fact that
creating a democracy in Iraq was now the Bush aim. The
causal link between U.S. violence and the growth of
the insurgency was rarely suggested in the media, and
they quickly made the insurgents into terrorists
fighting a U.S. striving to bring stability
and democracy to Iraq.
As always, the media played down and kept largely out
of sight the fact that most Iraqi civilian casualties
were victims of U.S. violence. Of course the fact that
all the fighting flowed from the invasion was unmentioned.
The stress has been on deaths caused by the insurgents,
and in parallel with the official silence on overall
casualties, those numbers have been largely kept out
of sight. When a major study of civilian casualties
was published in the Lancet, which gave a conservative
estimate of 100,000 civilians deaths attributable to
the invasion-occupation, the media largely ignored it,
and where they did discuss it on a back page, they went
to pains to criticize its methodology, although that
same methodology had been used and cited earlier without
criticism by U.S. and British officials. When Bush recently
acknowledged publicly that 30,000 Iraq civilians had
died in the fighting, the media reported the Bush figure
on the front page without debating the number or methodology,
and without comparing it with the now 15-month-old (and
thus even more understated) Lancet figure.
The
destruction of Fallujah was a major event in a now operative
U.S. policy that has been called urbicidethe
killing of cities. Town after insurgent-friendly town
has been attacked furiously and with heavy fire-power,
with minimal media attention. One critical report notes
that the pleas of American victims [of Katrina]
were eventually heard loud and clear but those of people
trapped inside Tal Afar or forgotten around its peripheries
[90 percent of the inhabitants fled the town] are lost
in the ether.... There are no convoys of aid-bearing
trucks and planes, stuffed with food and blankets headed
in their direction. Even to be acknowledged at all would
be a step up (Linda Heard, Tal Afar Under
Media Carpet, September 13, 2005).
The media treatment of Fallujah is a microcosm of the
abysmal totality. This was a Guernica on a vast scale,
in which numerous war crimes were committed, a sizable
city destroyed, several thousand civilians killed, several
hundred thousand people made homeless, illegal weapons
employed, hospitals destroyed and medical personnel
and patients mistreated, among other matters. The embedded
journalists didnt even uncover the story of the
use of phosphorusthat was dug up by an outsiderand
when it was forced into the public domain journalists
treated it not as a war crime but as a PR setback for
our side. A classic is the press treatment
of the takeover of the Fallujah General Hospital, where
the troops kicked the doors in with patients
and hospital employees rushed out of rooms by armed
soldiers and ordered to sit or lie on the floor while
troops tied their hands behind their backs. It
was alleged that the hospital presented a problem in
that they provide inflated casualty figures
propaganda
they believe for the Iraqi insurgents (Richard
A. Oppel, Jr., Early Target Of Offensive Is a
Hospital, NYT, November 8, 2005; a photo
accompanies the article showing patients and doctors
being tied up and questioned).
Nowhere in this article is it mentioned that such
treatment of a hospital and its patients and personnel
violates international law (nor does it or any accompanying
article mention a nearby hospital destroyed by bombs,
in an even more obvious violation of international law),
nor is there any editorial page questioning of this
tactic or the rest of the Guernica treatment. That the
media can normalize the murder of Fallujah and the escalating
urbicides across Sunni territory shows clearly how the
medias work underpins state violence and can allow
that violence to go very far in violation of both the
law and widely accepted morality.
Modern weapons and cooperative media institutions have
worked together to facilitate state terrorism and the
commission of acts of violence against distant civilians
that are easily competitive with the Assyrians flaying
men alive and cutting off limbs and noses. The
incentives to do this on the part of contemporary state
terrorists rests on motives not far off from those of
the Assyrians: material gain, the desire to possess
land and resources held by others, and a mix of racist
and religious feelings and power hunger.
It may be true that democratic sentiment today militates
against such horrible behavior, but that humanizing
force is kept at bay by oligarchic institutions: governments
representing elite interests lie about their true aims
and create demons and threats that must be destroyed
and removed; a military establishment, weapons contractors,
and transnational business collective provides the primary
support base for these governments and their policies
and lies; and an elite-dominated media and small body
of establishment intellectuals work hard to keep their
own states victims out of sight and convince the
majority that their states terror is counter-terror
reacting to a real threat, and that any nasty results
of their own states terror are regrettable collateral
damage.
Thus, under contemporary conditions, despite an impressive
and growing but as yet ineffective democratic resistance,
state terrorism flourishes, and shock and awe,
which was only regional in the time of Assyrian hegemony
(and even the Roman), has been globalized. The hope
of the future is that the only remaining contesting
superpowerdemocratic opinionalong with pockets
of local or regional resistance, will gain strength
sufficient to halt the predations of the militarized
superpower, now out of control and so zealously striving
to impose its will, its domination and privileged position,
and its favored neoliberal rules on others across the
globe that the response it provokes is becoming equally
global.
Edward
S. Herman is a professor emeritus of finance, Wharton
School, University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of
numerous books including The Political Economy of
Human Rights (with Noam Chomsky). His lastest is The
Myth of the Liberal Media.
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