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EXCERPT:
There's basically two principles that define the Bush administration
policies: stuff the pockets of your rich friends with dollars, and
increase your control over the world. Almost everything follows from
that. If you happen to blow up the world, well, you know, it's somebody
else's business. Stuff happens, as Rumsfeld said.
Chomsky: 'There Is
No War on Terror'
By Geov Parrish
AlterNet
Saturday 14 January 2006
For over 40 years,
MIT
professor Noam Chomsky has been one of the world's leading intellectual
critics of U.S. foreign policy. Today, with America's latest imperial
adventure in trouble both politically and militarily, Chomsky - who
turned 77 last month - vows not to slow down "as long as I'm
ambulatory." I spoke with him by phone, on Dec. 9 and again on Dec. 20,
from his office in Cambridge.
Geov Parrish: Is
George Bush in political trouble? And if so, why?
Noam Chomsky: George
Bush would be in severe political trouble if there were an opposition
political party in the country. Just about every day, they're shooting
themselves in the foot. The striking fact about contemporary American
politics is that the Democrats are making almost no gain from this. The
only gain that they're getting is that the Republicans are losing
support. Now, again, an opposition party would be making hay, but the
Democrats are so close in policy to the Republicans that they can't do
anything about it. When they try to say something about Iraq, George
Bush turns back to them, or Karl Rove turns back to them, and says,
"How can you criticize it? You all voted for it." And, yeah, they're
basically correct.
How could the
Democrats distinguish themselves at this point, given that they've
already played into that trap?
Democrats
read the
polls way more than I do, their leadership. They know what public
opinion is. They could take a stand that's supported by public opinion
instead of opposed to it. Then they could become an opposition party,
and a majority party. But then they're going to have to change their
position on just about everything.
Take, for
example,
take your pick, say for example health care. Probably the major
domestic problem for people. A large majority of the population is in
favor of a national health care system of some kind. And that's been
true for a long time. But whenever that comes up - it's occasionally
mentioned in the press - it's called politically impossible, or
"lacking political support," which is a way of saying that the
insurance industry doesn't want it, the pharmaceutical corporations
don't want it, and so on. Okay, so a large majority of the population
wants it, but who cares about them? Well, Democrats are the same.
Clinton came up with some cockamamie scheme which was so complicated
you couldn't figure it out, and it collapsed.
Kerry in the
last
election, the last debate in the election, October 28 I think it was,
the debate was supposed to be on domestic issues. And the New York
Times had a good report of it the next day. They pointed out,
correctly, that Kerry never brought up any possible government
involvement in the health system because it "lacks political support."
It's their way of saying, and Kerry's way of understanding, that
political support means support from the wealthy and the powerful.
Well, that doesn't have to be what the Democrats are. You can imagine
an opposition party that's based on popular interests and concerns.
Given the lack of
substantive differences in the foreign policies of the two parties -
Or domestic.
Yeah, or domestic.
But I'm setting this up for a foreign policy question. Are we being set
up for a permanent state of war?
I don't
think so.
Nobody really wants war. What you want is victory. Take, say, Central
America. In the 1980s, Central America was out of control. The U.S. had
to fight a vicious terrorist war in Nicaragua, had to support murderous
terrorist states in El Salvador and Guatemala, and Honduras, but that
was a state of war. All right, the terrorists succeeded. Now, it's more
or less peaceful. So you don't even read about Central America any more
because it's peaceful. I mean, suffering and miserable, and so on, but
peaceful. So it's not a state of war. And the same elsewhere. If you
can keep people under control, it's not a state of war.
Take, say,
Russia
and Eastern Europe. Russia ran Eastern Europe for half a century,
almost, with very little military intervention. Occasionally they'd
have to invade East Berlin, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, but most of the
time it was peaceful. And they thought everything was fine - run by
local security forces, local political figures, no big problem. That's
not a permanent state of war.
In the War on
Terror, however, how does one define victory against a tactic? You
can't ever get there.
There are
metrics.
For example, you can measure the number of terrorist attacks. Well,
that's gone up sharply under the Bush administration, very sharply
after the Iraq war. As expected - it was anticipated by intelligence
agencies that the Iraq war would increase the likelihood of terror. And
the post-invasion estimates by the CIA, National Intelligence Council,
and other intelligence agencies are exactly that. Yes, it increased
terror. In fact, it even created something which never existed - new
training ground for terrorists, much more sophisticated than
Afghanistan, where they were training professional terrorists to go out
to their own countries. So, yeah, that's a way to deal with the War on
Terror, namely, increase terror. And the obvious metric, the number of
terrorist attacks, yeah, they've succeeded in increasing terror.
The fact of
the
matter is that there is no War on Terror. It's a minor consideration.
So invading Iraq and taking control of the world's energy resources was
way more important than the threat of terror. And the same with other
things. Take, say, nuclear terror. The American intelligence systems
estimate that the likelihood of a "dirty bomb," a dirty nuclear bomb
attack in the United States in the next ten years, is about 50 percent.
Well, that's pretty high. Are they doing anything about it? Yeah.
They're increasing the threat, by increasing nuclear proliferation, by
compelling potential adversaries to take very dangerous measures to try
to counter rising American threats.
This is even
sometimes discussed. You can find it in the strategic analysis
literature. Take, say, the invasion of Iraq again. We're told that they
didn't find weapons of mass destruction. Well, that's not exactly
correct. They did find weapons of mass destruction, namely, the ones
that had been sent to Saddam by the United States, Britain, and others
through the 1980s. A lot of them were still there. They were under
control of U.N. inspectors and were being dismantled. But many were
still there. When the U.S. invaded, the inspectors were kicked out, and
Rumsfeld and Cheney didn't tell their troops to guard the sites. So the
sites were left unguarded, and they were systematically looted. The
U.N. inspectors did continue their work by satellite and they
identified over 100 sites that were systematically looted, like, not
somebody going in and stealing something, but carefully, systematically
looted.
By people who knew
what they were doing.
Yeah, people
who
knew what they were doing. It meant that they were taking the
high-precision equipment that you can use for nuclear weapons and
missiles, dangerous biotoxins, all sorts of stuff. Nobody knows where
it went, but, you know, you hate to think about it. Well, that's
increasing the threat of terror, substantially. Russia has sharply
increased its offensive military capacity in reaction to Bush's
programs, which is dangerous enough, but also to try to counter
overwhelming U.S. dominance in offensive capacity. They are compelled
to ship nuclear missiles all over their vast territory. And mostly
unguarded. And the CIA is perfectly well aware that Chechen rebels have
been casing Russian railway installations, probably with a plan to try
to steal nuclear missiles. Well, yeah, that could be an apocalypse. But
they're increasing that threat. Because they don't care that much.
Same with
global
warming. They're not stupid. They know that they're increasing the
threat of a serious catastrophe. But that's a generation or two away.
Who cares? There's basically two principles that define the Bush
administration policies: stuff the pockets of your rich friends with
dollars, and increase your control over the world. Almost everything
follows from that. If you happen to blow up the world, well, you know,
it's somebody else's business. Stuff happens, as Rumsfeld said.
You've been tracking
US
wars of foreign aggression since Vietnam, and now we're in Iraq. Do you
think there's any chance in the aftermath, given the fiasco that it's
been, that there will be any fundamental changes in US foreign policy?
And if so, how would it come about?
Well, there
are
significant changes. Compare, for example, the war in Iraq with 40
years ago, the war in Vietnam. There's quite significant change.
Opposition to the war in Iraq is far greater than the much worse war in
Vietnam. Iraq is the first war I think in the history of European
imperialism, including the U.S., where there was massive protest before
the war was officially launched. In Vietnam it took four or five years
before there was any visible protest. Protest was so slight that nobody
even remembers or knows that Kennedy attacked South Vietnam in 1962. It
was a serious attack. It was years later before protest finally
developed.
What do you think
should be done in Iraq?
Well, the
first
thing that should be done in Iraq is for us to be serious about what's
going on. There is almost no serious discussion, I'm sorry to say,
across the spectrum, of the question of withdrawal. The reason for that
is that we are under a rigid doctrine in the West, a religious
fanaticism, that says we must believe that the United States would have
invaded Iraq even if its main product was lettuce and pickles, and the
oil resources of the world were in Central Africa. Anyone who doesn't
believe that is condemned as a conspiracy theorist, a Marxist, a
madman, or something. Well, you know, if you have three gray cells
functioning, you know that that's perfect nonsense. The U.S. invaded
Iraq because it has enormous oil resources, mostly untapped, and it's
right in the heart of the world's energy system. Which means that if
the U.S. manages to control Iraq, it extends enormously its strategic
power, what Zbigniew Brzezinski calls its critical leverage over Europe
and Asia. Yeah, that's a major reason for controlling the oil resources
- it gives you strategic power. Even if you're on renewable energy you
want to do that. So that's the reason for invading Iraq, the
fundamental reason.
Now let's
talk
about withdrawal. Take any day's newspapers or journals and so on. They
start by saying the United States aims to bring about a sovereign
democratic independent Iraq. I mean, is that even a remote possibility?
Just consider what the policies would be likely to be of an independent
sovereign Iraq. If it's more or less democratic, it'll have a Shiite
majority. They will naturally want to improve their linkages with Iran,
Shiite Iran. Most of the clerics come from Iran. The Badr Brigade,
which basically runs the South, is trained in Iran. They have close and
sensible economic relationships which are going to increase. So you get
an Iraqi/Iran loose alliance. Furthermore, right across the border in
Saudi Arabia, there's a Shiite population which has been bitterly
oppressed by the U.S.-backed fundamentalist tyranny. And any moves
toward independence in Iraq are surely going to stimulate them, it's
already happening. That happens to be where most of Saudi Arabian oil
is. Okay, so you can just imagine the ultimate nightmare in Washington:
a loose Shiite alliance controlling most of the world's oil,
independent of Washington and probably turning toward the East, where
China and others are eager to make relationships with them, and are
already doing it. Is that even conceivable? The U.S. would go to
nuclear war before allowing that, as things now stand.
Now, any
discussion of withdrawal from Iraq has to at least enter the real
world, meaning, at least consider these issues. Just take a look at the
commentary in the United States, across the spectrum. How much
discussion do you see of these issues? Well, you know, approximately
zero, which means that the discussion is just on Mars. And there's a
reason for it. We're not allowed to concede that our leaders have
rational imperial interests. We have to assume that they're
good-hearted and bumbling. But they're not. They're perfectly sensible.
They can understand what anybody else can understand. So the first step
in talk about withdrawal is: consider the actual situation, not some
dream situation, where Bush is pursuing a vision of democracy or
something. If we can enter the real world we can begin to talk about
it. And yes, I think there should be withdrawal, but we have to talk
about it in the real world and know what the White House is thinking.
They're not willing to live in a dream world.
How will the US deal
with China as a superpower?
What's the
problem with China?
Well, competing for
resources, for example.
Well, if you
believe in markets, the way we're supposed to, compete for resources
through the market. So what's the problem? The problem is that the
United States doesn't like the way it's coming out. Well, too bad. Who
has ever liked the way it's coming out when you're not winning? China
isn't any kind of threat. We can make it a threat. If you increase the
military threats against China, then they will respond. And they're
already doing it. They'll respond by building up their military forces,
their offensive military capacity, and that's a threat. So, yeah, we
can force them to become a threat.
What's your biggest
regret over 40 years of political activism? What would you have done
differently?
I would have
done more. Because the problems are so serious and overwhelming that
it's disgraceful not to do more about it.
What gives you hope?
What gives
me hope
actually is public opinion. Public opinion in the United States is very
well studied, we know a lot about it. It's rarely reported, but we know
about it. And it turns out that, you know, I'm pretty much in the
mainstream of public opinion on most issues. I'm not on some, not on
gun control or creationism or something like that, but on most crucial
issues, the ones we've been talking about, I find myself pretty much at
the critical end, but within the spectrum of public opinion. I think
that's a very hopeful sign. I think the United States ought to be an
organizer's paradise.
What sort of
organizing should be done to try and change some of these policies?
Well,
there's a
basis for democratic change. Take what happened in Bolivia a couple of
days ago. How did a leftist indigenous leader get elected? Was it
showing up at the polls once every four years and saying, "Vote for
me!"? No. It's because there are mass popular organizations which are
working all the time on everything from blocking privatization of water
to resources to local issues and so on, and they're actually
participatory organizations. Well, that's democracy. We're a long way
from it. And that's one task of organizing.
--------
Geov Parrish is a Seattle-based columnist and reporter for
Seattle
Weekly, In These Times and Eat the State! He writes the "Straight Shot"
column for WorkingForChange. Noam Chomsky is an acclaimed linguist and
political theorist. Among his latest books are Hegemony or Survival
from Metropolitan Books and Profit Over People: Neoliberalism and the
Global Order published by Seven Stories Press.
Jennifer Loewenstein amadea311@earthlink.net Stay up to date: write to have your name added to the mailing list.
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