Fearing the Aftermath
by Richard Falk, September 2001
America and Americans on September 11th experienced
the full horror of the greatest display of grotesque cunning in
human history. Its essence consisted in transforming the benign
everyday technology of commercial jet aircraft into malignant
weapons of mass destruction. There has been much talk about Americans
discovering the vulnerability of their heartland in a manner that
far exceeds the collective trauma associated with the attack on
Pearl Harbor. But the new vulnerability is radically different
and far more threatening. It involves the comprehensive vulnerability
of technology so closely tied to our global dominance, pervading
every aspect of our existence. To protect ourselves against such
the range of threats that could be mounted by those of fanatical
persuasion is a mission impossible. The very attempt would turn
America quickly into a prison state.
And yet who could blame the government for doing
what it can in the coming months to reassure a frightened citizenry.
Likely steps seem designed to make it more difficult to repeat
the operations that produced the WTC/Pentagon tragedy, but it
seems highly unlikely that a terrorist machine intelligent enough
to pull off this gruesome operation would suddenly become so stupid
as to attempt the same thing soon again.
The atrocity of September 11th must be understood
as the work of dark genius, a penetrating tactical insight that
endangers our future in fundamental respects that we are only
beginning to apprehend. This breakthrough in terrorist tactics
occurred in three mutually reinforcing dimensions: (1) the shift
from extremely violent acts designed to shock more than to kill
to onslaughts designed to make the enemy's society into a bloody
battlefield, in this instance, symbolically (capitalism and militarism)
and substantively (massive human carnage and economic dislocation);
(2) the use of primitive capabilities by the perpetrators to appropriate
technology that can be transformed into weaponry of mass destruction
through the mere act of seizure and destruction; (3) the availability
of competent militants willing to both carry out such crimes against
humanity at the certain cost of their own lives. Such a lethal,
and essentially novel, combination of elements poses an unprecedented
challenge to civic order and democratic liberties. It is truly
a declaration of war from the lower depths.
It is important to appreciate this transformative
shift in the nature of the terrorist challenge both conceptually
and tactically. Without comprehending these shifts, it will not
be possible to fashion a response that is either effective or
legitimate, and we need both. It remains obscure on the terrorist
side whether an accompanying strategic goal accompanies this tactical
escalation. At present it appears that the tactical brilliance
of the operation will soon be widely regarded as a strategic blunder
of colossal proportions. It would seem that the main beneficiaries
of the attack in the near future are also the principal enemies
of the perpetrators. Both the United States globally and Israel
regionally emerge from this disaster with greatly strengthened
geopolitical hands. Did the sense of hatred and fanaticism of
the tactical masterminds induce this seeming strategic blindness?
There is no indication that the forces behind the attack on the
11th were acting on any basis beyond their extraordinary destructive
intent.
And so we are led to the pivotal questions: what
kind of war? What kind of response? It is, above all, a war without
military solutions. Indeed it is a war in which the pursuit of
the traditional military goal of "victory" is almost
certain to intensify the challenge and spread the violence. Such
an assessment does not question the propriety of the effort to
identify and punish the perpetrators, and to cut their links to
governmental power. In our criticism of the current war fever
being nurtured by an unholy alliance of government and media we
should not forget that the attacks on the 11th were massive crimes
against humanity in a technical legal sense, and those guilty
of their commission should be punished to the extent possible.
Having acknowledged this legitimate right of response is by no
means equivalent to an endorsement of unlimited force. Indeed,
an overreaction may be what the terrorists were seeking to provoke
so as to mobilize popular resentment against the United States
on a global scale. We need to act effectively, but within a framework
of moral and legal restraints.
First of all, there should be the elementary due
process of identifying convincingly the perpetrators, and their
backers. Secondly, there should be a maximal effort to obtain
authorization for any use of force in a specific form through
the procedures of the United Nations Security Council. Unlike
the Gulf War model, the collective character of the undertaking
should be integral at the operational level, and not serve merely
as window-dressing for unilateralism. Thirdly, any use of force
should be consistent with international law and with the just
war tradition governing the use of force- that is, discriminating
between military and civilian targets, proportionate to the challenge,
and necessary to achieve a military objective, avoiding superfluous
suffering. If retaliatory action fails to abide by these guidelines,
with due allowance for flexibility depending on the circumstances,
then it will be seen by most others as replicating the fundamental
evil of terrorism. It will be seen as violence directed against
those who are innocent and against civilian society. And fourthly,
the political and moral justifications for the use of force should
be accompanied by the concerted and energetic protection of those
who share an ethnic and religious identity with the targets of
retaliatory violence.
Counseling such guidelines does not overcome a
dilemma that is likely to grow more obvious as the days go by:
something must be done but there is nothing to do. What should
be done if no targets can be found that are consistent with the
guidelines of law and morality? We must assume that the terrorist
network has anticipated retaliation even before the attack, and
has taken whatever steps it can to "disappear" from
the planet, to render itself invisible. The test then is whether
our leaders have the forbearance to refrain from uses of forces
that are directed toward those who are innocent in these circumstances,
and whether our citizenry has the patience to indulge and accept
such forbearance. It cannot be too much stressed that the only
way to win this "war" (if war it is) against terrorism
is by manifesting a respect for the innocence of civilian life,
and to reinforce that respect by a credible commitment to the
global promotion of social justice.
The Bush Administration came to Washington with
a resolve to conduct a more unilateralist foreign policy that
abandoned the sorts of humanitarian pretenses that led to significant
American-led involvements in sub-Saharan Africa and the Balkans
during the 1990s. The main idea seemed to be to move away from
a kind of liberal geopolitics and downsize the American international
role by limiting overseas military action to the domain of strategic
interests and to uphold such interests by a primary reliance on
its own independent capabilities. Behind such thinking was the
view that the United States did not need the sort of help that
it required during the cold war, and at the same time it should
not shoulder the humanitarian burdens of concern for matters that
were remote from its direct interests. Combined with its enthusiasm
for missile defense and weapons in space, such a repositioning
of US foreign policy was supposed to be an adjustment to the new
realities of the post-cold war world. Contrary to many commentaries,
such a repositioning was not an embrace of isolationism, but represented
a revised version of internationalism based on a blend of unilateralism
and militarism.
In the early months of the Bush presidency this
altered foreign policy was mainly expressed by repudiating a series
of important, widely supported multilateral treaty frameworks,
including the Kyoto Protocol dealing with global warming, the
ABM Treaty dealing with the militarization of space, and Biological
Weapons Convention Protocol dealing with implementing the prohibition
on developing biological weaponry. Allies of the United States
were stunned by such actions, which seemed to reject the need
for international cooperation to address global problems of a
deeply threatening nature.
And then came the 11th, and an immediate realization
in Washington that the overwhelming priority of its foreign policy
now rested upon soliciting precisely the sort of cooperative international
framework it had worked so hard to throw into the nearest garbage
bin. Whether such a realization goes deeper than a mobilization
of support for global war only time will tell. Unlike the Gulf
War or Kosovo War, which were rapidly carried to their completion
by military means, a struggle against global terrorism even in
its narrowest sense would require the most intense forms of inter-governmental
cooperation ever experienced in the history of international relations.
Hopefully, the diplomacy needed to receive this cooperation might
set some useful restraining limits on the current American impulse
to use force excessively and irresponsibly.
A root question underlying the American response
is the manner with which it deals with the United Nations. There
is reportedly a debate within the Bush Administration between
those hardliners who believe that the United States should claim
control over the response by invoking the international law doctrine
of "the inherent right of self-defense" and those more
diplomatically inclined, who favor seeking a mandate from the
Security Council to act in collective self-defense. Among the
initiatives being discussed in the search for meaningful responses
is the establishment through UN authority of a special tribunal
entrusted with the prosecution of those indicted for the crime
of international terrorism, possibly commencing with the apprehension
and trial of Osama bin Laden. Such reliance on the rule of law
would be a major step in seeking to make the struggle against
terrorism enjoys the genuine support of the entire organized international
community.
It needs to be understood that the huge challenge
posed by the attacks can only be met effectively by establishing
the greatest possible distance between the perpetrators and those
who are acting on behalf of their victims. And what is the content
of this distance? An unconditional respect for the sacredness
of life, and the dignity of the human person. One of the undoubted
difficulties in the weeks and months ahead will be to satisfy
the bloodthirst that has accompanied the mobilization of America
for war while satisfying the rest of the world that it is acting
in a manner that displays respect for civilian innocence and human
solidarity. A slightly related problem, but with deeper implications,
is to avoid seeming to exempt state violence from moral and legal
limitations, while insisting that such limitations apply to the
civic violence of the terrorists. Such double standards will damage
the indispensable effort to draw a credible distinction between
the criminality of the attack and the legitimacy of the retaliation.
There are contradictory ways to address the atrocities
of the 11th: the prevailing mood is to invoke the metaphor of
cancer, and to preach military surgery of a complex and globe-girdling
character that needs to be elevated to the status of a world war,
and bears comparison with World War I and II; the alternative,
which I believe is far more accurate as diagnosis and cure, is
to rely on the metaphor of an iceberg. The attack on America was
the tip of an iceberg, the submerged portions being the mass of
humanity that is not sharing in the fruits of modernity, but finds
itself under the heel of American economic, military, cultural,
and diplomatic power. To eliminate the visible tip of the iceberg
of discontent and resentment may bring us a momentary catharsis,
but it will at best create an illusion of "victory."
What needs to be done is to extend a commitment to the sacredness
of life to the entire human family, in effect, joining in a collective
effort to achieve what might be called "humane globalization."
The Israel/Palestine conflict, its concreteness
and persistence, is part of this new global reality. All sides
acknowledge relevance, but the contradictory narratives deform
our understanding in serious respects. Israel itself has seized
the occasion to drop any pretense of sensitivity to international
criticism and calls for restraint in its occupation of the Palestinian
Territories. Israeli spokespersons have been active in spreading
the word that now America and the world should appreciate what
sorts of adversaries Israel has faced for decades, and should
learn from Israel's efforts to control and destroy its terrorist
enemies. Those supporting Palestinian rights in contrast argue
that the sorts of violence generated by Israeli oppression and
refusal to uphold international law and human rights gives rise
to a politics of desperation that includes savage attacks on Israeli
civilian society. They argue that giving a suppressed people the
choice between terrorism and surrender is abusive, as well as
dangerous.
On the deepest levels, the high tech dominance
achieved by American power, so vividly expressed in the pride
associated with "zero casualties" in the 1999 NATO War
over Kosovo, is giving to the peoples of the world a similar kind
of choice between poverty and subjugation and vindictive violence.
Is our civil society robust enough to deliver such
a message in some effective form? We cannot know, but we must
try, especially if we value the benefits of discussion and debate
as integral to the health of democracy. Such an imperative seems
particularly urgent because of the vacuum at the top. There has
been in these terrible days of grieving for what has been lost,
no indication of the sort of political, moral, and spiritual imagination
that might begin to help us all better cope with this catastrophe.
We should not fool ourselves by blaming George W. Bush or Republicans.
The Democratic Party and its leaders have shown no willingness
or capacity to think any differently about what has occurred and
what to do about it. Mainstream TV has apparently seen its role
as a war-mobilizing and patrioteering mechanism with neither interest
nor capacity to include alternative voices and interpretations.
The same tired icons of the establishment have been awakened once
more to do the journeyman work of constructing a national consensus
in favor of all-out war, a recipe for spreading chaos around the
world and bringing discredit to ourselves.
We are poised on the brink of a global inter-civilizational
war without battlefields and borders, a war seemingly declared
against the enigmatic and elusive solitary figure of Osama bin
Laden stalking remote mountainous Afghanistan while masterminding
a holy war against a mighty superpower. To the extent that this
portrayal is accurate it underscores the collapse of world order
based on the relations among sovereign, territorial states. But
it also suggests that the idea of national security in a world
of states is obsolete, and that the only viable security is what
is being called these days "human security." Yet, the
news has not reached Washington, or for that matter, the other
capitals of the world. There is still present the conviction that
missile defense shields, space weaponry, and anti-terrorist grand
coalitions can keep the barbarians at bay. In fact, this conviction
has turned into a frenzy in the aftermath of the 11th, giving
us reason to fear the response almost as much as the initial,
traumatizing provocations. As the sun sets on a world of states,
the sun of its militarism appears ready to burn more brightly
than ever!
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