Who Are the Terrorists
by F.H. Knelman, Ph.D., October 2001
The horrendous
events of September 11, 2001 in the U.S. have set into motion
unprecedented changes in the world. Terrorism is a scourge of
our times and must be eliminated. But elimination of the terrorists
themselves will be insufficient if we do not eliminate the causes
of their violent actions. We believe these causes lie in the gross
inequities that exist in our world, accelerated by the process
of globalized capital and the U.S. policy of corporate welfare
supported by its adherents in the industrialized world. Still
another cause is the failure to create a Palestinian state in
the troubled land of Israel and a mode of living side by side
in peace. And a further cause is the antiquated kingdoms of the
Middle East, coupled to U.S. dependency on their oil reserves
in an atmosphere where oil and politics do not mix. Finally, there
is the dedicated programs and policies of the U.S. for the ideological
cleansing of the world, supported by their operationalized nuclear
threat.
To all of the above, the U.S. response
was predictable: "Dead or Alive" - this is the kind
of juvenile rhetoric one might expect from a Texas vigilante.
"You are either with us or against us" - nothing is
that simple except to a simpleton. This is, yet again, a juvenile
statement by the robotic president of the United States, who confuses
ends and means. One can agree with the ends of stopping the terrorists,
whose acts are totally unacceptable. But we disagree with the
means the global bully has chosen. Once again he has attempted
coalition building outside the rightful role of the United Nations
while side-stepping international law. There is a relevant article
of the Charter of the United Nations which applies, i.e. Article
51.
Article 51
Nothing in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right
of individual or collective self-defence if an armed attack occurs
against a Member of the United Nations, until the Security Council
has taken measures necessary to maintain international peace and
security. Measures taken by Members in the exercise of this right
of self-defence shall be immediately reported to the Security
Council and shall not in any way affect the authority and responsibility
of the Security Council under the present Charter to take at any
time such action as it deems necessary in order to maintain or
restore international peace and security. Reading Article 51 carefully
one can only conclude that the U.S. action is in contravention
of the U.N. Charter as well as international law, for example
the 1971 Montreal Sabotage Convention, of which it is a signatory,
together with one hundred and seventy-three other states and which
requires mediation through the International Court of Justice.
But as the ultimate world bully, the U.S. dictates the terms of
conflict resolution in a unilateral uncompromising way that suits
its consistent interventionist position. In fact it deliberately
bypasses the international security regime, including the United
Nations, preferring NATO, a military organization it controls.
The right to self-defence in Article 51 is similar to that of
individual rights. It does not permit the individual to bypass
the law, once they have defended themselves.
It has been reliably reported, including in U.S.
Congressional committee reports, that the U.S. has consistently
supported terrorist groups all over the world. Throughout Central
and South America it has helped to overthrow democratically-elected
regimes in support of military juntas and dictators. It gave aid
to terrorist groups in the Honduras army who murdered hundreds,
including American nuns. It used the CIA to assassinate the democratically-elected
Allende in Chile and his Chief of Staff, General Schneider. In
fact the General's son has lodged a case against Henry Kissinger
who, together with Richard Nixon, ordered these murders. It poisoned
the people of North Viet Nam with Agent Orange. Through its sanctions,
some million Iraqis, many of them children, have died in the U.S.'s
terror of hunger. In fact it has directly supported Asama bin
Ladin in the war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, as well
as by the terrorist Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) in Kosovo and
Macedonia. It has supported the extreme right in Greece, the Philippines,
Chile, Iran, Panama, Indonesia, Angola, El Salvador, Nicaragua,
Bolivia, Grenada, Cambodia, etc. In all of these actions not thousands
but millions of civilians were killed. In its earlier history
it carried out a genocidal war against its Native peoples, destroying
their culture and seizing their lands. Then, on August 6th and
9th, 1945, it incinerated 200,000 civilians in Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
followed by decades of radiation damage. And this was no more
than a military experiment since Japan was prepared to surrender
under acceptable conditions. Together with NATO, it committed
war crimes in Serbia and Kosovo. It has refused to support a UN
International Criminal Court, preferring to control the War Crimes
Tribunal, its own creation. And the U.S. condoned the killing
of a large proportion of the people of East Timor by the Indonesian
military. Adding to this were the murders in Chile by Pinochet,
involving thousands. The total of all these victims adds up to
millions and the U.S. is largely culpable for their deaths.
But there is still another kind of terrorism of
which the U.S. is guilty. This is internal or structural terrorism
derived from poverty, disease, murder, hunger and deprivation
of all kinds. The U.S. has the highest rate of permanent poor
among all the highly industrialized Western countries. Examining
the arithmetic of structural terrorism, some 40 million Americans
have no health coverage whatsoever, one in five children are born
in and live in poverty. It has the highest infant mortality rate
among nineteen industrialized countries. The U.S. is twenty-ninth
in the world in population per physician (Cuba is eleventh in
this category). The U.S. has the lowest life expectancy among
the nineteen most industrialized nations. Twenty-one per cent
of all Black Americans go to sleep hungry in "the land of
the free and the home of the brave". All of this adds up
to lives of hopelessness, hunger and disease for many millions
of Americans. The U.S. also has the highest murder rate among
the highly industrialized countries, and the only one that has
the legal right to bear arms and the only one with capital punishment.
The inverse ratio between the latter two is hardly ever acknowledged.
The hypocrisy of the U.S. about these matters knows no bounds,
with a co-opted media indulging in a shameful cover-up.
But the greatest terrorist threat in the history
of humankind is embodied in the U.S.'s nuclear warfighting policies,
plans and programs. We have established beyond any possible dispute
that not only does the U.S. (and NATO) have a "first use"
policy, but in fact the U.S. has operationalized plans to fight
a nuclear war against Russia, considered to still be the major
obstacle to the completion of the U.S.¹s global hegemony.
In the Reagan administration, when this policy first evolved,
a nuclear war with the Soviet Union was first operationalized
despite the realization that it would lead to the death of twenty
million Americans and one hundred million Russians. More recently,
following the demise of the Soviet Union, the U.S. has operationalized
plans to launch a devastating pre-emptive strike against Russia.
The counterforce strike is directed against all Russian nuclear
launchers - on land, on and under the sea and in the air. It is
guided by an elaborate list of strategic targets embodied in a
single integrated operational plan (SIOP). This includes Russia¹s
command, control, communications and intelligence centres (C½I).
Such a counterforce strike would kill fifteen million Russian
civilians, an act of terrorism that dwarfs what happened to the
U.S. on September 11, 2001 (see W.M. Arkin, "SIOP - forever
immoral"; The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Sept.-Oct.,
2000, p.72). When we add the above fifteen million deaths to our
calculations of murders, killings and assassinations, plus the
internal structural terrorism described in the previous paragraphs,
we can only conclude that the U.S. is the greatest terrorist nation
in the world.
But, not satisfied that some Russian missiles might
escape destruction, the U.S. is committed to a national missile
defense (NMD) system, despite the violation of the 1972 Anti-Ballistic
Missile (ABM) treaty and the 1967 Outer Space treaty. Their intention
is to rule the world from space, universalizing free enterprise
and investment and completing the ideological cleansing of the
world, converting it to universal capitalism. The U.S. would be
the CEO of this global enterprise. Yet such an NMD system would
be totally ineffective against the kind of attacks that took place
on Sept. 11, 2001 or against chemical and biological warfare.
George W. Bush and Company have asserted that their NMD system
is designed against so-called "rogue states". This is
a transparent scam that has been discredited by authoritative
figures.
The coalition that Bush pressed into in his declared
war against terrorism is not as solid as he had hoped. For one
thing, Saudi Arabia balked at permitting the U.S. to launch its
attack against the Taliban from its territory. "In this case,
you are with us", did not mean you are against us. This is
how oil talks. His staunchest supporter is Tony Blair, who must
have had a sex change and is really Margaret Thatcher. For Tony
Blair to praise the courage and bravery of the early attacks on
the Taliban is misguided, when most of the launches came from
cruise missiles 1,000 miles away. The question of whether the
U.S. is prepared to use nuclear weapons against the Taliban deserves
a resounding affirmative. It is an essential part of their strategic
posture. Russia and China have their own reasons for supporting
the U.S., which will quickly collapse if Iraq is attacked, a plan
now in place.
Richard Perle, the superhawk and former adviser
to Ronald Reagan, now to George Bush, was asked if the U.S. might
use nuclear weapons in its "war on terrorism" (CNN,
7 Oct., 2001). His answer was both interesting and predictable.
He said the U.S. should use whatever weapons are appropriate to
win this war. This is a predictable response but has subtle undertones
which are a clear affirmative.
One positive fallout of the terrorist attacks on
America is that the U.S. budget is in a state of chaos. Bush's
huge tax reductions, mainly for corporate welfare, are now revealed
as a risk not worth taking. Also, given the budget crisis, it
is unlikely that NMD will proceed as planned, i.e. by the U.S.
dropping out of the ABM treaty before the end of the year. However,
for the victims of September 11th there can be no benefits, only
the terrible disbenefit of their grieving families.
The predictable is occurring yet again. As reported
in the London Observer of October 21, 2001, U.N. officials in
Afghanistan have reported that a disaster is looming with 7.5
million Afghans threatened by starvation directly attributable
to the bombing. The bombing seriously threatens delivery of the
humanitarian supplies into Afghanistan. The British charity, Christian
Aid, has reported that six hundred people have already died in
the Dar-e-Suf region from starvation and related diseases. All
of this is exacerbated by the three-year drought that has hit
Afghanistan. None of this is reported in the U.S. media, which,
as always, is managing consent with American terrorism. Finally,
how can the U.S. lead a campaign based on common security when
it is the leading obstacle to the radical reduction of nuclear
weapons, let alone their elimination.
|