Articles Archive - Opposition to War

 

 

Noam Chomsky Interview
BBC
05/20/04
If George Bush were to be judged by the standards of the Nuremberg
Tribunals, he'd be hanged. So too, mind you, would every single American
President since the end of the second world war, including Jimmy Carter.
The suggestion comes from perhaps the most feted liberal intellectual in
the world - the American linguist Noam Chomsky. His latest attack on the
way his country behaves in the world is called Hegemony or Survival,
America's Quest for Global Dominance.

Jeremy Paxman met him at the British Museum, where they talked in the
Assyrian Galleries. He asked him whether he was suggesting there was
nothing new in the so-called Bush Doctrine.

NOAM CHOMSKY:
Well, it depends. It is recognised to be revolutionary. Henry Kissinger
for example described it as a revolutionary new doctrine which tears to
shreds the Westphalian System, the 17th century system of international
order and of course the UN Charter, and has been very widely criticised
within the foreign policy elite. But on narrow ground the doctrine is not
really new, it's extreme.

JEREMY PAXMAN:
What was the United States supposed to do after 9/11? It had been the
victim of a grotesque, intentional attack, what was it supposed to do but
try...?

NOAM CHOMSKY:
Why pick 9/11? Why not pick 1993. Actually the fact that the terrorist
act succeeded in September 11th did not alter the risk analysis. In 1993,
similar groups, US trained Jihadi's came very close to blowing up the
World Trade Center; with better planning, they probably would have killed
tens of thousands of people. Since then it was known that this is very
likely. In fact right through the 90's there was technical literature
predicting it, and we know what to do. What you do is police work. Police
work is the way to stop terrorist acts and it has succeeded.

JEREMY PAXMAN:
But you are suggesting the United States in that sense is the author of
Its own Nemesis.

NOAM CHOMSKY:
Well, first of all this is not my opinion. It's the opinion of just
about every specialist on terrorism. Take a look, say at Jason Burke's
recent book on Al-Qaeda which is just the best book there is. What he
points out is, he runs through the record of how each act of violence has
increased recruitment financing mobilisation, what he says is, I'm quoting
him, that each act of violence is a small victory for Bin Laden.

JEREMY PAXMAN:
But why do you imagine George Bush behaves like this?

NOAM CHOMSKY:
Because I don't think they care that much about terror, in fact we know
that. Take say the invasion of Iraq, it was predicted by just about every
specialist by intelligence agencies that the invasion of Iraq would
increase the threat of Al-Qaeda-style terror, which is exactly what
happened. The point is that...

JEREMY PAXMAN:
Then why would he do it?

NOAM CHOMSKY:
Because invading Iraq has value in Itself, I mean establishing...

JEREMY PAXMAN:
Well what value?

NOAM CHOMSKY:
What value? Establishing the first secure military base in a dependent
client state at the heart of the energy producing region of the world.

JEREMY PAXMAN:
Don't you even think that the people of Iraq are better off having got
rid of a dictator?

NOAM CHOMSKY:
That, they got rid of two brutal regimes, one that we are supposed to
talk about, the other one we are not suppose to talk about. The two brutal
regimes were Saddam Hussein's and the US-British sanctions, which were
devastating society, had killed hundreds of thousands of people, were
forcing people to be reliant on Saddam Hussein. Now the sanctions could
obviously have been turned to weapons rather than destroying society
without an invasion. If that had happened it is not at all impossible that
the people of Iraq would have sent Saddam Hussein the same way, to the
same fate as other monsters supported by the US and Britain -
Ceausescu, Suharto, Duvalier, Marcos, there's a long list of them. In
fact the people, the westerners who know Iraq best, were predicting this
all along.

JEREMY PAXMAN:
You seem to be suggesting or implying, perhaps I'm being unfair to you,
but you seem to be implying there is some equivalence
between democratically elected heads of state like George Bush or Prime
Ministers like Tony Blair and regimes in places like Iraq.

NOAM CHOMSKY:
The term moral equivalence is an interesting one. It was invented I think
by Jeanne Kirkpatrick as a method of trying to prevent criticism of foreign
policy and state decisions. It is a meaningless notion, there is no moral
equivalence whatsoever.

JEREMY PAXMAN:
Is it a good thing if it is preferable for an individual to live in a
liberal democracy, is there benefit to be gained by spreading the values
of that democracy however you can?

NOAM CHOMSKY:
That reminds me of the question that Gandhi was once asked about western
civilisation, what did he think of it. He said yeah, it would be a good
idea. In fact it would be a good idea to spread the values of liberal
democracy. But that's not what the US and Britain are trying to do, it's
not what they've done in the past. I mean take a look at the regions under
their domination. They don't spread liberal democracy. What they spread is
dependence and subordination. Furthermore it's well-known that is a large
part of the reason for the great opposition to the US policy within the
Middle East. In fact this was known in the 1950's.

JEREMY PAXMAN:
But there is a whole slew of countries in eastern Europe right now that
would say we are better off now than we were when we were living under the
Soviet Empire. As a consequence of how the West behaved.

NOAM CHOMSKY:
Well, and there is a lot of countries in US domains, like
Central America, the Caribbean who wish that they could be free of
American domination. We don't pay much attention to what happens there but
they do. In the 1980s when the current incumbents were in their Reaganite
phase, hundreds of thousands of people were slaughtered in Central
America. The US carried out a massive terrorist attack against Nicaragua,
mainly as a war on the church. They assassinated an Archbishop and
murdered six leading Jesuit intellectuals. This is in El Salvador. It was
a monstrous period. What did they impose? Was it liberal democracies? No.

JEREMY PAXMAN:
You've mentioned on two or three occasions this relationship between the
United States and Britain. Do you understand why Tony Blair behaved as he
did over Afghanistan and Iraq?

NOAM CHOMSKY:
Well, if you look at the British diplomatic history, back in the 1940s,
Britain had to make a decision. Britain had been the major world power, the
United States though by far the richest country in the world was not a
major actor in the global scene, except regionally. By the Second World
War it was obvious the US was going to be the world's dominant power,
everyone knew that. Britain had to make a choice. Was it going to be part
of what would ultimately be a Europe that might move towards independence,
or would it be what the Foreign Office called a junior partner to the
United States? Well it essentially made that choice to be a junior partner
to the United States. The US leaders have no illusions about this. So
during the Cuban missile crisis for example, you look at the declassified
record, they treated Britain with total contempt. Harold McMillan wasn't
even informed of what was going on and Britain's existence was at stake.
It was dangerous. One high official, probably Dean Acheson - he's not
identified - described Britain as, in his words, "our lieutenant, the
fashionable word is partner". Well the British would like to hear the
fashionable word, but the masters use the actual word. Those are choices
Britain has to make. I mean, why Blair decided, I couldn't say.

JEREMY PAXMAN:

 

 

 

 


 

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