Twin Towers
by Uri Avnery*, September 15, 2001
After the smoke
has cleared, the dust has settled down and the initial fury blown
over, humankind will wake up and realize a new fact: there is
no safe place on earth. A handful of suicide-bombers has brought
the United States to a standstill, caused the President to hide
in a bunker under a far-away mountain, dealt a terrible blow to
the economy, grounded all aircraft, and emptied government offices
throughout the country. This can happen in every country. The
Twin Towers are everywhere. Not only Israel, but the whole world
is now full of gibberish about "fighting terrorism".
Politicians, "experts on terrorism" and their likes
propose to hit, destroy, annihilate etc., as well as to allocate
more billions to the "intelligence community". They
make brilliant suggestions. But nothing of this kind will help
the threatened nations, much as nothing of this kind has helped
Israel. There is no patent remedy for terrorism. The only remedy
is to remove its causes. One can kill a million mosquitoes, and
millions more will take their place. In order to get rid of them,
one has to dry the swamp that breeds them. And the swamp is always
political. A person does not wake up one morning and tell himself:
Today I shall hijack a plane and kill myself. Nor does a person
wake up one morning and tell himself: Today I shall blow myself
up in a Tel-Aviv discotheque. Such a decision grows in a person's
mind through a slow process, taking years. The background to the
decision is either national or religious, social and spiritual.
No fighting underground can operate
without popular roots and a supportive environment that is ready
to supply new recruits, assistance, hiding places, money and means
of propaganda. An underground organization wants to gain popularity,
not lose it. Therefore it commits attacks when it thinks that
this is what the surrounding public wants. Terror attacks always
testify to the public mood.
That is true in this case, too. The initiators
of the attacks decided to implement their plan after America has
provoked immense hatred throughout the world. Not because of its
might, but because of the way it uses its might. It is hated by
the enemies of globalization, who blame it for the terrible gap
between rich and poor in the world. It is hated by millions of
Arabs, because of its support for the Israeli occupation and the
suffering of the Palestinian people. It is hated by multitudes
of Muslims, because of what looks like its support for the Jewish
domination of the Islamic holy shrines in Jerusalem. And there
are many more angry peoples who believe that America supports
their tormentors. Until September 11, 2001 - a date to remember
- Americans could entertain the illusion that all this concerns
only others, in far-away places beyond the seas, that it does
not touch their sheltered lives at home. No more.
That is the other side of globalization: all the
world's problems concern everyone in the world. Every case of
injustice, every case of oppression. Terrorism, the weapon of
the weak, can easily reach every spot on earth. Every society
can easily be targeted, and the more developed a society is, the
more it is in danger. Fewer and fewer people are needed to inflict
pain on more and more people. Soon one single person will be enough
to carry a suitcase with a tiny atomic bomb and destroy a megalopolis
of tens of millions.
This is the reality of the 21st century that started
this week in earnest. It must lead to the globalization of all
problems and the globalization of their solutions. Not in the
abstract, by fatuous declarations in the UN, but by a global endeavor
to resolve conflicts and establish peace, with the participation
of all nations, with the US playing a central role.
Since the US has become a world power, it has deviated
from the path outlined by its founders. It was Thomas Jefferson
who said: No nation can behave without a decent respect for the
opinion of mankind. (I quote from memory). When the US delegation
left the world conference in Durban, in order to abort the debate
about the evils of slavery and in order to court the Israeli right,
Jefferson must have turned over in his grave. If it is confirmed
that the attack on New York and Washington was perpetrated by
Arabs - and even if not! - the world must at long last treat the
festering wound of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which is
poisoning the whole body of humanity. One of the wise guys in
the Bush administration said only a few weeks ago: "Let them
bleed!" - meaning the Palestinians and the Israelis. Now
America is bleeding. He who runs away from the conflict is followed
by it, even into his home. Americans, and Europeans too, should
learn this lesson. The distance from Jerusalem to New York is
small, and so is the distance from New York to Paris, London and
Berlin. Not only multi-national corporations embrace the globe,
but terror organizations do so, too. In the same way, the instruments
for the solution of conflicts must be global. Instead of the destroyed
New York edifices, the twin towers of Peace and Justice must be
built.
* Uri Avnery is an Israeli Journalist.
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