WHY THE MEDIA LIE
America in Terror: The War
on Islam ©
By Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed
Part 2
Part 1
New Dawn No. 72 (July-August 2002)
America as Victim
Gaping Holes in the Official 9-11 Narrative
The
Function of Terrorism in US Policy
New Threats for an
Endless War
The Manufacture of
Enemies
Beyond
Images: Challenge Media Lies
In the first part
of this article, we reviewed in detail the principal
structural and institutional characteristics of the mass
media, and concluded that these characteristics entail that
the mass media is intrinsically subservient to elite
interests. This is basically due to the fact that the mass
media is ultimately an ideological institution framed by,
and rooted in, the wider matrix of corporate elite power in
society. As a consequence, the mass media largely propagates
news and information in a manner that is distorted – and
sometimes fabricated – in accordance with corporate elite
interests and the ideological requirements legitimising
those interests.
In this part, we intend to briefly
examine how the mass media pandered to elite interests in
reporting the September 11th terrorist
attacks, thus leading to the propagation of highly
distorted, and sometimes fabricated, news and information.
This will thus provide a clear example of how the mass media
usually operates, not as an impartial provider of untainted
facts, but rather as a highly partial provider of
ideological legitimacy to elite interests and policies.
America as Victim
Many opinion-makers deride the idea
that the September 11th terrorist
attacks could have been somehow linked to American foreign
policy. To seek such connections may be seen as adding
insult to injury, or unpatriotic. At the same time, it is
clear that such an outrage could not appear simply out of
the blue. We have the explanation of George W. Bush, that it
was an attack on freedom by terrorists who hate freedom.
While this makes an excellent formula for a speech to
elementary schoolers, little evidence can be found to
support such a simple theory.
In reality, the September 11th attacks
on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon constituted an
atrocious, and indeed predictable, backlash rooted in
decades if not centuries of oppression. To avert future acts
of terrorism such as this, it is essential to understand the
causes of this backlash in the West’s ongoing terrorisation
and repression of the majority of the world’s population.
But this is exactly what the mass
media has refused to do. On the contrary, in the immediate
aftermath of the attacks, many mainstream commentators
labelled Black Tuesday as the worst act of terrorism in
history.1 For
example, Ambassador L. Paul Bremer III, head of the US
National Commission on Terrorism, declared that “this is a
different order of magnitude... This is not only the worst
terrorist attack in American history, it is the worst
terrorist attack in history, period.”2
There is no doubt that what occurred
on September 11th 2001
was certainly the worst act of terrorism to be committed
against the United States. But this sort of irresponsible
commentary has served well to present a distorted a
historical portrayal of the attacks, the result of which is
that the United States is presented as an innocent victim of
terrorism. Few mainstream commentators have paused to remind
the public that, in reality, the United States itself has
carried out and supported some of the worst acts of
terrorism. The 11th September
attacks, horrendous as they were, can barely be compared to
the scale of atrocities carried out, for instance, by
US-backed terrorists in South America to secure US
interests, resulting in the mass murder of hundreds and
thousands of innocent civilians. The internationally
acclaimed American political analyst Dr. Michael Parenti
provides a particularly acute overview:
Since World War II, the US government
has given more than $200 billion in military aid to train,
equip, and subsidize more than 2.3 million troops and
internal security forces in more than eighty countries, the
purpose being not to defend them from outside invasions but
to protect ruling oligarchs and multinational corporate
investors from the dangers of domestic anti-capitalist
insurgency. Among the recipients have been some of the most
notorious military autocracies in history, countries that
have tortured, killed or otherwise maltreated large numbers
of their citizens because of their dissenting political
views… US leaders profess a dedication to democracy. Yet
over the past five decades, democratically elected reformist
governments… were overthrown by pro-capitalist militaries
that were funded and aided by the US national security
state.3
The ahistorical portrayal of the
United States as a victim of terrorism has served well to
justify a permanent posture of aggression as the defining
characteristic of US foreign policy. Absolving the US
government of any responsibility for its rich record of
terrorist atrocities against civilians and governments of
the Third World, the US elite is empowered to launch a new
crusade in order, supposedly, to wipe out international
terrorism.
Gaping
Holes in the Official 9-11 Narrative
Despite a total lack of evidence that
would stand up in a court of law, media and academic
commentators prompted by Western government hints
immediately speculated about the involvement of “Islamic
fanatics”. It was not long before, Osama Bin Laden was
labelled the chief culprit. The inconsistencies and vacuous
nature of the evidence presented by the Bush administration
and its allies to support its claims has, however, been
largely ignored by the mass media. But in a rare and
insightful piece published by the London Guardian, British
journalist George Monbiot highlights the ridiculous nature
of the proof of Bin Laden’s guilt:
Like almost everyone on earth, I want to believe that
the attack on New York was the work of a single despot
and his obedient commando. But the more evidence US
intelligence presents to this effect, the less credible
the story becomes.
First there was the car. A man had informed the
police, we were told, that he’d had a furious argument
with some suspicious-looking Muslims in the parking lot
at Boston airport. He led investigators to the car, in
which they found a copy of the Qur’an and a flight
manual in Arabic, showing that these were the
fundamentalists who had hijacked one of the planes. Now
flying an airliner is not one of those things you learn
in the back of a car on the way to the airport. Either
you know how to do it or you don’t. Leaving the Qu’ran
unattended, a Muslim friend tells me, is considered
sinful. And if you were about to perpetrate one of the
biggest terrorist outrages the world has ever seen,
would you draw attention to yourself by arguing over a
parking place?
Then there was the passport. The security services
claim that a passport belonging to one of the hijackers
was extracted from the rubble of the World Trade Centre.
This definitive identification might help them to track
the rest of the network. We are being asked to believe
that a paper document from the cockpit of the first
plane – the epicentre of an inferno which vapourised
steel – survived the fireball and fell to the ground
almost intact.
When presented with material like this, I can’t help
suspecting that intelligence agents have assembled the
theory first, then sought the facts required to fit it…
The West, in the name of civilisation, was insisting
that Bin Laden was guilty, and it would find the
evidence later.
For these reasons and many others
(such as the initial false certainties about the Oklahoma
bombing and the Sudanese medicine factory, and the
identification of live innocents as dead terrorists), I
think we have some cause to regard the new evidence against
Bin Laden with a measure of scepticism… [I]f the West starts
chasing the wrong man across the Hindu Kush while the real
terrorists are planning their next atrocity, this hardly
guarantees our security.4
It is worth noting that although one
of the hijacker’s passports, as Monbiot reports, allegedly
survived the WTC inferno – consisting of fire and heat over
a 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit – according to FBI officials, all
the Black Boxes were in contrast totally destroyed and
rendered unusable. The Black Boxes, constituting a Flight
Data Recorder and a Cockpit Voice Recorder in each plane,
are specifically designed to withstand massive explosions.
According to ABC News:
Although investigators look for an entire black box,
sometimes the only parts of the device that survive are
the recorder’s crash-survivable memory units (CSMU). The
CSMU is almost indestructible. It is housed within a
stainless-steel shell that contains titanium or
aluminium and a high-temperature insulation of dry
silica material.
It is designed to withstand heat of up
to 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit for one hour, salt water for at
least 30 days, immersion in a variety of liquids such as jet
fuel and lubricants, and an impact of 3,400 G’s. By
comparison, astronauts are typically exposed to up to six Gs
during a shuttle takeoff.5
Each plane has two separate Black
Boxes designed to be indestructible in the event of crashes,
which in total means that there were eight Black Boxes –
since there were four planes in total used in the attacks on
US targets. Yet the FBI is asking us to believe that while
all eight Black Boxes were completely and utterly destroyed
in the crashes, a mere paper passport survived to be
discovered a few blocks away.6 CNN
reported that: “The searchers found several clues, he said,
but would not elaborate. Last week, a passport belonging to
one of the hijackers was found in the vicinity of Vesey
Street, near the World Trade Centre. ‘It was a significant
piece of evidence for us,’ Mawn said.”7 “In
New York, several blocks from the ruins of the World Trade
Centre, a passport authorities said belonged to one of the
hijackers was discovered a few days ago, according to city
Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik.”8 Not
only then did a passport survive a plane crash that was
allegedly so intense it obliterated the virtually
indestructible Black Box, the same passport is also supposed
to have flown down a few blocks from the WTC. It is true
that due to the sudden shattering of the windows in the WTC,
all paper materials in the building were immediately ejected
out before incineration. Yet a passport in the pocket of a
hijacker sitting within a plane that explodes will naturally
undergo the same process as the hijacker and the plane he is
sitting in, along with the other passengers: absolute
cremation.9
This is only one anomaly out of many
that have been ignored, leaving the official story accepted
uncritically as unquestionable fact, by the vast majority of
mainstream media outlets.10 The
timely release of tapes depicting Bin Laden apparently
admitting involvement in 9-11, served as a convenient
propaganda exercise in buttressing the official narrative,
while pushing its inherent incoherence down the memory hole.
As usual with government claims in war-time, the mass media
simply assumed that the tapes released by the Defense
Department were genuine. But there is certainly reasonable
room for doubt.
Sean Broughton, director of the
London-based production company Smoke and Mirrors and one of
Britain’s leading experts on visual effects, has stated that
it would be relatively easy for a skilled professional to
fake a video of Bin Laden. He admitted that to fool top
experts would, however, be difficult, although he added
that: “There are perhaps 20 people in America who would be
good enough to fool everybody.” Another expert, Bob
Crabtree, editor of the magazine Computer Video, has gone
further, stating that it was impossible to judge whether or
not the video was a fake without more details of its source:
“The US seems simply to have asked the world to trust them
that it is genuine.”11 Dr.
Peter French, a forensic expert specialising in audio,
speech, and language, similarly confirms that using digital
technology, “it’s possible to edit or fabricate in ways that
completely defy forensic detection.”12 Canadian
foreign correspondent Eric Margolis, who believes that
Al-Qaeda was responsible for the 9-11 attacks, nevertheless
expresses scepticism with respect to the of authenticity the
Bin Laden tape, commenting in the Toronto Sun: “… two other
Arabic experts say the tape’s audio quality is so poor that
almost nothing bin Laden says on it can be verified…
To my ears, well accustomed to Arabic,
half of bin Laden’s words were inaudible. The translation
was sometimes out of sync with the action on screen. Bin
Laden’s statements looked cut up and edited. Cynics suggest
the tape was a forgery made by Russian intelligence or the
US government, with incriminating statements spliced into an
otherwise boring exchange of pleasantries between bin Laden
and a visiting admirer. This is possible. In 1990, the US
used retouched satellite photos to convince the Saudis that
Iraq was about to invade – which it was not.13
Indeed, even if one assumes that the
tape is genuine, whether it really does provide “smoking
gun” proof of Bin Laden’s culpability in the 9-11 attacks is
extremely unclear. Richard Thomas, Director of Public Policy
at the British law firm Clifford Chance argues that: “The
tape which we have so far seen doesn’t actually contain hard
evidence that Mr. bin Laden was the person who organized the
attacks. He simply talks about his reaction to the attacks
as they took place. And again, that wouldn’t be hard
evidence that he was the organizing mind behind these
dreadful attacks.”14
The
Function of Terrorism in US Policy
The vacuous nature of much of the
evidence presented by Bush & Co. for Bin Laden’s guilt –
which then justified the US invasion of Afghanistan –
indicates that finding the terrorists responsible for the
9-11 attacks was not an integral US objective. Indeed, the
absence of decisive proof of Bin Laden’s involvement
suggests that fighting against terrorism has never been the
real concern behind the subsequent militarisation of US
foreign policy. It seems that there is, rather, another more
dubious agenda. Whether or not Bin Laden is actually guilty
or not, in this respect, is besides the point – obviously,
the Bush administration was not interested in the facts, but
instead was more keen to hastily find a suitable scapegoat
which would provide an ample pretext for a permanently
aggressive US military posture.
In this respect, the scattered
continued existence of Al-Qaeda plays a functional role
within world order, at least for the next few years. The
London Guardian noted this functional role played by Osama
bin Laden within the matrix of US foreign policy objectives
in an 18th September
report:
If Osama bin Laden did not exist, it
would be necessary to invent him. For the past four years,
his name has been invoked whenever a US president has sought
to increase the defence budget or wriggle out of arms
control treaties. He has been used to justify even President
Bush’s missile defence programme, though neither he nor his
associates are known to possess anything approaching
ballistic missile technology. Now he has become the
personification of evil required to launch a crusade for
good: the face behind the faceless terror... [H]is
usefulness to western governments lies in his power to
terrify. When billions of pounds of military spending are at
stake, rogue states and terrorist warlords become assets
precisely because they are liabilities.15
To consolidate and expand US hegemony,
and to fully counter its Russian, Chinese and European
rivals, a massive threat is required to establish domestic
consensus on the unrelentingly interventionist character of
US foreign policy in the new and unlimited “war on terror.”
The bogeyman of Osama Bin Laden’s international terrorist
network thus plays, in the view of the Bush administration,
a functional role within the matrix of US plans to
increasingly subject the world order to its military,
political, strategic, and economic influence.
US officials have spoken of the need
to indiscriminately target states where terrorists are
suspected to reside or with a record of being implicated in
terrorist acts, rather than merely focus specifically on the
perpetrators of this particular crime. Speculation by
innumerable esteemed personalities including US officials,
academics and journalists about the role of Osama Bin Laden
and his legendary terror network has also been exploited to
fuel a more general anti-Muslim suspicion and hostility. The
hysteria harks back to the 1998 bombing of Sudan when the US
destroyed a pharmaceutical factory, killing an unknown
number of civilians, on the pretext that it was actually one
of Bin Laden’s chemical weapons factories. Not long after
this event it was revealed that the factory produced
essential medicines for the Sudanese people – not to mention
much of Africa – and had nothing to do with Bin Laden. The
US also blocked an inquiry by the UN into the bombing which
would have disclosed the exact number of civilian
casualties.16
The reaction of the United States
speaks volumes about the real nature of the new programme
targeting the entire Muslim world. Former spokesman for the
US State Department James Rubin outlined the future vision
on BBC 2’s Newsnight: “We lead. We go around the world and
we make people be counted whether they’re on our side, or on
the side of the terrorists.”17 The
US solution it seems is to categorise “people” around the
world into two types: those who support US and Western
terrorism around the world whether they know it or not and
who are thus “on our side”; and those who do not, who will
inevitably be labelled those “on the side of the
terrorists”. And accordingly those who are not “on our side”
will be targeted indiscriminately. This simplistic division
of the world into “us” and “them” – firstly, the crusaders
against terrorism and secondly, the terrorists themselves –
collectively demonises all those who do not support American
foreign policy in the post-9-11 period and reduces them to
an alien “otherness” who must be indiscriminately destroyed.
This US government attempt at legitimisation of a policy
with unnervingly fascist – if not genocidal – overtones, has
been widely parroted by the mass media.
For example, on the same day as the
WTC and Pentagon terrorist attacks, a former US Secretary of
State was paraded on CNN, advocating that the US adopt the
very same policy of terrorism utilised by the 9-11
terrorists: “There is only one way to begin to deal with
people like this, and that is you have to kill some of them
even if they are not immediately directly involved in this
thing.”18
The next day, the New York Post echoed
CNN’s sentiments: “The response to this unimaginable
21st-century Pearl Harbor should be as simple as it is swift
– kill the bastards. A gunshot between the eyes, blow them
to smithereens, poison them if you have to. As for cities or
countries that host these worms, bomb them into basketball
courts.”19 The
Post was in agreement with the New York Daily News, which
was even more detailed in advocating the same fanatical
terrorist strategy pursued by Al-Qaeda: “This is no time to
be precious about locating the exact individuals directly
involved in this particular terrorist attack.... We should
invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert them
to Christianity. We weren’t punctilious about locating and
punishing only Hitler and his top officers. We carpet-bombed
German cities; we killed civilians. That’s war. And this is
war.”20
New Threats for an
Endless War
But the policy of worldwide mass
murder and pillage must be dressed up as a global
humanitarian crusade against terrorism in order to ensure
public support for the policy. And this means manufacturing
a suitable pretext for the policy. This procedure is deeply
entrenched in the structures of the foreign policy making
establishment. For instance, a mid-1941 memo from the War
and Peace Studies Project of the Council on Foreign
Relations during the Second World War – whose participants
included top government planners and members of the foreign
policy establishment – recognised that a formulation of a
statement of war aims for propaganda purposes is very
different from a formulation of one defining the true
national interest…
If war aims are stated, which seem to
be concerned solely with Anglo-American imperialism, they
will offer little to people in the rest of the world... Such
aims would also strengthen the most reactionary elements in
the United States and the British Empire. The interests of
other peoples should be stressed, not only those of Europe,
but also of Asia, Africa and Latin America. This would have
a better propaganda effect.21
Today, this effect is achieved through
dressing up military operations either as humanitarian
interventions or as a war for self-defence. The maintenance
of insanely high levels of military spending, in order to
support the unlimited militarisation of US foreign policy,
has thus entailed the manufacturing of new threats by which
to justify such spending. In the current world order, the
Soviet/Communist “threat” has become defunct. One of the
major new ideological constructions being highlighted as an
alleged threat to national security, and thus being utilised
as a pretext on which to maintain massive investment in the
military, is ‘Islamic fundamentalism’. This phenomenon can
be found within the Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Europe.22 The
current crisis has permitted the US to exaggerate the
alleged threat of “Islamic terrorism” beyond all proportion
to suit its drive towards military escalation to secure
strategic and economic interests. Professor of International
Law at the University of Illinois College of Law, Francis
Boyle, comments:
According to the facts in the public
record so far, this was not an act of war and NATO Article 5
does not apply. President Bush has automatically escalated
this national tragedy into something it is not in order to
justify a massive military attack abroad and an apparent
crackdown on civil liberties at home. We see shades of the
Tonkin Gulf Resolution, which the Johnson administration
used to provide dubious legal cover for massive escalation
of the Vietnam War.23
On this basis, it is evident that in
the near future, on the pretext of targeting scattered
terrorist cells connected to Al-Qaeda, various countries
around the world that are of strategic value to the United
States will fall victim to Bush’s ‘new war’ for US hegemony.
The escalating and contrived ‘clash of civilisations’ that
may result from this cynical US policy, and the
corresponding chaos and destruction, bear ominous
implications for the future of humanity.
Indeed, the new pretexts are already
being conjured up. President Bush Jr. virtually declared war
on any country deemed by the US to be a threat, in his State
of the Union address on Tuesday, 29th January
2002. Bush warned of “thousands of dangerous killers,
schooled in the methods of murder, often supported by outlaw
regimes,” and openly threatened an attack on Iran, Iraq and
North Korea in particular. Both the US government and media
have made concerted efforts to allege some sort of
connection between Al-Qaeda and the countries of Iran and
Iraq. “By seeking weapons of mass destruction, these regimes
pose a grave and growing danger. States like these and their
terrorist allies constitute an axis of evil, arming to
threaten the peace of the world.” Bush added that: “The
United States of America will not permit the world’s most
dangerous regimes to threaten us with the world’s most
destructive weapons.”
It is no coincidence that the Middle
East and Central Asia together hold over two-thirds of the
world’s reserves of oil and natural gas. After Saudi Arabia,
Iran and Iraq are respectively the second and third largest
oil-producers in the region. Both Iran and Iraq, in
accordance with their local interests, are fundamentally
opposed to the US drive to secure unimpeded access to
regional resources. The former, for instance, has been
attempting to secure its own interests in Afghanistan and
Central Asia, thus coming into direct conflict with regional
US interests, whereas the latter has for a decade now been
tolerated only because the US has been unable to replace
Saddam Hussein’s regime with a viable alternative.24 In
light of the results of the apparently successful ‘test
case’ provided by the war on Afghanistan – which has opened
up Central Asian resources to US corporate clutches – the US
seems intent on attempting a replay in Iraq by eliminating
Saddam, and enlisting the opposition to establish a
compliant new regime. Similar plans may be in the pipeline
for Iran. As for North Korea, this country borders China,
and is thus strategically located in terms of longstanding
US policy planning. China has long been viewed by US policy
planners as its principal rival in north and east Asia. The
military network being installed by the United States in the
wake of 11th September
systematically encircles China – Uzbekistan, Tajikistan,
Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, India, the Philippines, and now Korea.
The Guardian has also commented on
these developments and their military-strategic context:
“Every twist in the war on terrorism seems to leave a new
Pentagon outpost in the Asia-Pacific region, from the former
USSR to the Philippines. One of the lasting consequences of
the war could be what amounts to a military encirclement of
China.” In explanation, the London daily cites the
Pentagon’s Quadrennial Defense Review warning of the danger
that “a military competitor with a formidable resource base
will emerge in the region.” The journal recommended a US
policy that “places a premium on securing additional access
and infrastructure agreements.”25 The
expansion of the misnamed ‘war on terror’ is thus
specifically tailored to target regions of strategic and
economic interest to the United States, and thus to
consolidate unrivalled US hegemony in these regions – many
of which are predominantly Muslim.
The Manufacture of
Enemies
There is an important context to the
sudden discovery of such grave enemies to the United States.
US arms trade expert and Senior Fellow at the World Policy
Institute William Hartung points out that the massive
injections of public funds into military spending are not a
result of genuine threats to US security, but rather because
“the arms industry has launched a concerted lobbying
campaign aimed at increasing military spending and arms
exports… These initiatives are driven by profit and pork
barrel politics, not by the objective assessment of how to
best defend the United States in a post-cold war period.”26
It should be noted that during this
period, while US military spending rocketed steadily on the
pretext of the necessity of defending the nation against
international terrorism, acts of terrorism against the US
were in fact on the decrease since the beginning of the
1990s. In particular, the number of terrorist attacks
perpetrated by Muslims against the US has also decreased –
and are minute compared to the number of terrorist attacks
committed by other national, ethnic and religious groups.27
The new threat of ‘Islamic terror’
exemplified in the September 11th attacks
thus plays a particularly important role within world order,
permitting the United States to justify strategies by which
to enforce US hegemony within the Middle East, as well as in
Africa and Asia. The major reason that Western institutions
have taken it upon themselves to subtly demonise Islam in
this respect, is inseparable from the structure of the
global politico-economic order – in fact it is a logical
consequence of that order and its relations to the Muslim
people throughout the world.28
Thanks to the efforts of media and
academic commentators, it is commonly believed that there
exists a vast, and in many ways unbridgeable, Islam-West
divide, in which Islam at some significant level constitutes
a fundamental danger to Western civilisation. Harvard
political scientist Professor Samuel Huntington is
well-known for articulating this belief in the form of an
academically acceptable theory of international relations.
His ‘clash of civilisations’ thesis is a particularly stark
example of how Western academia attempt to justify the
concept of an unfathomable Islam-West divide and a new
inevitable Cold War with Islam.29 Tim
Hames, a leading politician in the Republican Party who is
very close to the Bush administration, claimed only one day
after the attacks that Huntington’s thesis was dominating
the US political scene.30 Huntington
has most recently presented a crass summary of his already
rather crass opinions in an article titled ‘The Age of
Muslim Wars’ for Newsweek magazine. The article’s
introductory synopsis asserts that:
Contemporary global politics is the
age of Muslim wars. Muslims fight each other and fight
non-Muslims far more often than do peoples of other
civilizations. Muslim wars have replaced the cold war as the
principal form of international conflict. These wars include
wars of terrorism, guerrilla wars, civil wars and interstate
conflicts. These instances of Muslim violence could congeal
into one major clash of civilizations between Islam and the
West or between Islam and the Rest.31
This is not the place to discuss in
detail the myriad of logical leaps, shoddy presumptions, and
lack of supportive data that hounds Huntington’s thesis, but
we should point out some essential facts that in themselves
point to the holes in the thinking behind the whole ‘clash
of civilisations’ project as such. We may note, for
instance, Professor Huntington’s extraordinary ignorance of
the “civilizations” he purports to discuss – he seems quite
unaware of the abundant scholarly literature disproving the
redundant thesis of the inherently aggressive nature of
Muslims. On page 256 of his study, The Clash of
Civilizations, for example, he asserts that: “Muslims have
problems living with their neighbours… The evidence is
overwhelming.” The “overwhelming evidence” he reviews,
however, appears to manifest only poor and prejudiced
scholarship. Huntington performs an exceedingly shallow
analysis of several cases of conflicts involving Muslims –
many of which were in fact deliberately engineered by the
United States – presents them in a historical and political
vacuum, and then generalises the conclusions without
warrant. The 20th century
conflicts relating to Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Bosnia,
Kosovo, Macedonia, Chechnya, Indonesia, Sudan, Palestine,
and so on, are in fact directly related to US foreign
policy, which has in all these cases escalated and supported
various actors in the respective conflicts to secure
economic and strategic interests. In the interests of
extending and consolidating global US hegemony, US policy
has systematically manipulated communities, played them off
against one another, generated wars and capitalised on the
results.32 Huntington’s
examples, in other words, in reality demonstrate the extent
to which US foreign policy has contributed to conflict and
war – and has often manipulated Muslim groups and hijacked
Islamic symbols to the same end.
The fact that history is full of wars
does not indicate that they were the result of differences
in religions or cultures between civilizations. Rather, a
scientific historical analysis demonstrates that the causes
were power politics and aspirations for hegemony, a fact
deliberately played down by Huntington. Wars have always
been ultimately instigated by a handful of people in
positions of power, who pit one nation against another in
order to secure their own geostrategic and hegemonic
objectives.
Indeed, directly contradicting
Huntington’s emphasis of the alleged potential rivalry from
Islamic civilization is an authoritative study by the US
Commission on National Security/21st Century,
which records how the unique adaptability of Islamic to
modernity is the very factor ensuring that such a
confrontation will not occur as a simple result of
civilizational dichotomies.33 Other
Middle East specialists concur that “like their secular
counterparts, on most issues many [Islamic-oriented
political actors] would operate on the basis of national
interests and demonstrate a flexibility that reflects
acceptance of the realities of a globally interdependent
world.”34
It is certainly a shame that the
esteemed Harvard scholar has to resort to regurgitating
chauvinistic myths to support his untenable position. There
is, however, a deeper context and pattern to this act of
regurgitation by anti-Muslim academics such as Huntington.
The background has been noted by political scientist Nadia
Weiss in the monthly Zurich-based journal Current Concerns:
“As soon as one delves into Huntington’s background, the
first thing one notices is that one of his chief political
allies is none other than Zbigniew Brzezinski, America’s
chief geostrategist and author of ‘The Grand Chessboard’…
Zbigniew Brzezinski is well known as the creator of
the American strategy to achieve hegemony, which lies at
the heart of American foreign policy. That battle for
global hegemony is going to be fought in Eurasia.
Therefore America needs access to geopolitically
important countries like Ukraine, Turkey, Iran and the
countries in the Caucasus. Both the expansion of the EU
to the East and the expansion of NATO in the same
direction are part of this strategy.
In reading Huntington, one often has the impression
of reading Brzezinski. Huntington, for example, writes
that the maintenance of American hegemony is just as
important for the entire world as it is for the United
States. The world needs a superpower, and America is the
only one left that can assume this role, and that is
also necessary for American interests. In this context
the American dominance in the world economy is crucial:
‘America is now being challenged by Japan, and in the
future she will probably be challenged by Europe as
well.’
Brzezinski and Huntington are pursuing
the same political plan: They want the world to be ruled by
one power and they want to be part of that power ruling the
world. It is no coincidence that Brzezinski sings the praise
of Huntington’s book calling it ‘a monumental work which
will revolutionize our view of foreign affairs.’ At another
point he characterizes Huntington as the ‘democratic
Machiavelli’.35
All of this is merely the latest stage
in a historic pattern, according to J. A. Progler –
Assistant Professor of Social Studies at the School of
Education in the City University of New York, Brooklyn
College – who notes that the demonisation of Islam and
Muslims is rooted in a long record of self-serving Western
encounters with Islam and Muslims:
The long history of encounters between Western
civilization and Islam has produced a tradition of
portraying, in largely negative and self-serving ways,
the Islamic religion and Muslim cultures. There is a lot
of literature cataloguing (and sometimes correcting)
these stereotypes… Images of the Other are prevalent in
Western civilization, and have become firmly ensconced
in the discourse of colonization and conquest, whoever
the victims may be. Some images are rooted in Greek
notions of barbarians, others born of the Middle Ages.
They have been carried through the Reconquista and
Inquisition, picked up during the age of colonial
expansion, developed by Orientalists in the 19th and
early 20th century, and continue on into the age of mass
media and globalized political economy. But images don’t
exist in a vacuum. They have uses…
Western image-makers, including religious
authorities, political establishments, and
corporate-media conglomerates, conceptualize for their
consumers images of Muslims and/or Arabs in sometimes
amusing and other times cruel or tragic ways. Upon
closer examination, these images seem to serve essential
purposes throughout the history of Western civilization.
At times these purposes are benign, at others quite
sinister. Often, there are tragic consequences for
Muslims resulting from the socio-political climate
fostered by images…
If Arabs and Muslims are extremists in
anything, I believe that it is in the patience and tolerance
they have shown toward persistent Western interventions
until very recently. Islamic movements have much more
important characteristics than intolerance and violence. A
central concept is social justice.36
Beyond Images:
Challenge Media Lies
The victims of the system of global
apartheid – in which the Western powers control the world’s
resources while the majority of the population toils under
regimes of extreme oppression and deprivation propped up by
the international community – are becoming increasingly
intolerant of the inhumane conditions in which they are
forced to attempt to survive. If we are to genuinely stop
such acts of terror from being repeated, then we must
dismantle the unjust system that creates such inhumane
conditions from which individuals arise with so little hope
that they feel compelled to use violence. A US response
calculated to label and target everyone not “on our side”
indiscriminately – parroted and trumpeted by a
corporate-dominated media which is institutionally dependent
upon the elite agenda and based on the same elite strategic
principles and economic interests – will only exacerbate the
systematic injustices of world order and create conditions
conducive to a spiral of violence and war, from which no one
will benefit. It is our responsibility to challenge media
lies, and thereby challenge the ideological base of
legitimacy that the media grants the unaccountable
activities of the self-interested corporate elite. In doing
so, we are challenging the very foundations of US/Western
imperial policy throughout the world.
Footnotes:
1. See for instance
Wattie, Chris, ‘U.S. vows revenge’, National Post, 12
September 2001; Luxton, Peter, ‘Amid the Chaos, What’s Next
for the Market’, Business Week, 11 September 2001; Gee,
Marcus, The Globe and Mail, cited in ‘What the world’s press
says’, The Guardian, 14 December 2001,
http://media.guardian.co.uk/attack/story/0,1301,618880,00.html;
National Geographic,
www.nationalgeographic.com/traveler/related.html.
2. Editor’s Note, ‘A
Different Order of Magnitude’, Security Management, October
2001,
www.securitymanagement.com/library/001128.html.
3. Parenti, Michael,
Against Empire, City Light Books, 1995. See Chapter 3
‘Intervention: Whose gain? Whose pain?’.
4. Monbiot, George,
‘Collateral Repair: How to Win the War with Peace’, The
Guardian, 25 September 2001.
5. ABC News report,
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/scitech/TechTV/techtv_blackboxes010917.html.
6. It is worth noting
that United Airlines flight 93 crashed into a field in
Pennsylvania, without any explosion or impact into a
building, thus escaping the same inferno that engulfed the
WTC. Amazingly, both its Black Boxes are supposed to have
been destroyed or unusable.
7. CNN report,
http://asia.cnn.com/2001/US/09/17/inv.investigation.terrorism/index.html.
8. CNN,
http://asia.cnn.com/2001/US/09/16/gen.america.under.attack/index.html.
9. See Zaman, Shibli,
‘FBI’s Investigation of the WTC Tragedy Exposed’, Houston Tx,
18 September 2001,
Shibli@Zaman.Net.
10. U.S.
investigative journalist William Thomas has analysed a whole
host of inconsistencies in the official story of 9-11 in his
recently released book, All Fall Down: The Politics of Mass
Persuasion,
www3.bc.sympatico.ca/Willthomas/AFD/AFD.htm.
11. Morris, Stephen,
‘U.S. urged to detail origin of tape’, The Guardian, 15
December 2001,
www.guardian.co.uk/september11/story/0,11209,619188,00.html.
12. BBC News, ‘Could
the Bin Laden video be a fake?’, 14 December 2001,
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/newsid_1711000/1711288.stm.
13. Margolis, Eric,
‘Is the Gun Smoking? “Experts” Disagree on bin Laden Home
Video’, Toronto Sun, 17 December 2001.
14. Knox, Kathleen,
‘Afghanistan: Would Bin Laden Videotape Be Admissible In
Court?’, Radio Free Europe/Liberty, 19 December 2001,
www.rferl.org/nca/features/2001/12/19122001091511.asp.
15. Monbiot, George,
‘The need for dissent,’ The Guardian, 18 Sept. 2001.
16. For extensive
discussion of the US bombing of Al-Shifa in the context of
US relations with Sudan, see Ahmed, Nafeez M., ‘United
States Terrorism in the Sudan: The Bombing of Al-Shifa and
its Strategic Role in US-Sudan Relations,’ Media Monitors
Network, 22 October 2001,
www.mediamonitors.net/mosaddeq16.html.
17. BBC 2, Newsnight,
London, 11 September 2001.
18. Former Secretary
of State Lawrence Eagleburger, CNN, 11 September 2001.
19. Dunleavy, Steve,
New York Post, 12 September 2001.
20. Coulter, Ann, New
York Daily News, 12 September 2001.
21. Shoup, Laurence
H., ‘Shaping the Postwar World’, Insurgent Sociologist, Vol.
5, No. 3, Spring 1975.
22. For discussion
see Said, Edward, Covering Islam: How the Media and the
Experts Determine How We See the Rest of the World, Vintage,
London, 1997.
23. IPA News Release,
‘Another Gulf of Tonkin Resolution? Because We Embrace
Freedom?’, Institute for Public Accuracy, Washington DC, 13
September 2001,
www.accuracy.org.
24. See Ahmed, Nafeez
M., ‘The 1991 Gulf Massacre: The Historical and Strategic
Context of Western Terrorism in the Gulf,’ Media Monitors
Network, Los Angeles, CA, 2 October 2001,
www.mediamonitors.net/mosaddeq14.html.
25. The Guardian,
29th January 2002.
26. Hartung, William,
Milwaukee Sentinel & Journal, 11 January 1999.
27. A skillful online
dissection of the myth of Islamic terrorism supported by the
media and academia, see the cutting edge web-site of the
University of Colorado’s Religious Studies Deparment
established by Kevin Choi, True Lies: The Construction of
“Islamic” Terrorism in Politics and Academia,
www.colorado.edu/ReligiousStudies/TheStrip/features/truelies/title.htm.
Also see Masud, Enver, ‘Islamic Fundamentalism $500 Billion
Bogey: Welfare `reform` expected to save $55 billion in six
years’, The Wisdom Fund (TWF), 2 August 1996; Enver, ‘Facts
Belie Hype About `Islamic Terrorism`’, TWF, 31 December
1999.
28. For some insight
into what is meant by this, see especially Said, Edward,
Orientalism, Random House, New York, 1979; also see Said,
Covering Islam, Pantheon, New York.
29. Huntington,
Samuel, Clash of Civilizations: Remaking of World Order,
Simon & Schuster, New York, 1996.
30. The Times, 12
September 2001.
31. Huntington,
Samuel P., ‘The Age of Muslim Wars’, Newsweek, January 2002,
www.msnbc.com/news/672440.asp.
32. These policies
and the countries in which they have operated have been
discussed extensively by this author in thousands of pages
worth of documentation, contained in successive research
papers. These are available online at the author’s homepage,
hosted by the Los Angeles-based Media Monitors Network,
http://nafeez.mediamonitors.net.
33. U.S. Commission
on National Security/21st Century, New World Coming:
Supporting Research and Analysis, No. 88. A National
Security Strategy for a New Century, December 1999 version.
34. See for example
Esposito, John L., ‘The Islamic Factor’, in Marr, Phebe ed.,
Egypt at the Crossroads: Domestic Stability and Regional
Role, National Defense University Press, Washington, DC
1999, p. 61-62.
35. Weiss, Nadia,
‘The Islamic World Targeted by the West? Clash of, or
Dialogue Between, Civilizations?’, Current Concerns, No.
11/12, November 2001-January 2002,
www.currentconcerns.ch/archive/20011103.php.
36. Progler, J. A.,
‘The Utility of Islamic Imagery in the West: An American
Case Study’, Winter 1997, Al-Tawhid: A Journal of Islamic
Thought & Culture, Vol. XIV, No. 4.
_________________________________________________________________________________
Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed is a political analyst and
human rights activist, specialising in Western foreign
policy and its impact on human rights. He is Executive
Director of the Institute for Policy Research & Development
(IPRD), an independent, interdisciplinary, non-profit think
tank based in Brighton, UK. The IPRD conducts research and
analysis of local and global society for the promotion of
human rights, justice and peace. For further information,
visit
www.globalresearch.org. Also see
www.thewaronfreedom.com for Nafeez’s new book on
September 11. |