In the aftermath of the unconscionable September 11 suicide attacks on the
Pentagon and the World Trade Centre, an American newscaster said: “Good
and evil rarely manifest themselves as clearly as they did last Tuesday.
People who we don’t know massacred people who we do. And they did
so with contemptuous glee.” Then he broke down and wept.
Here’s the rub: America is at war against people
it doesn’t know, because they don’t appear much on TV. Before
it has properly identified or even begun to comprehend the nature of its
enemy, the US government has, in a rush of publicity and embarrassing rhetoric,
cobbled together an “international coalition against terror”,
mobilised its army, its air force, its navy and its media, and committed
them to battle. The trouble is that once America goes off to war, it can’t
very well return without having fought one. If it doesn’t find its
enemy, for the sake of the enraged folks back home, it will have to manufacture
one. Once war begins, it will develop a momentum, a logic and a justification
of its own, and we’ll lose sight of why it’s being fought in
the first place. What we’re witnessing here is the spectacle of the
world’s most powerful country reaching reflexively, angrily, for an
old instinct to fight a new kind of war. Suddenly, when it comes to defending
itself, America’s streamlined warships, cruise missiles and F-16 jets
look like obsolete, lumbering things. As deterrence, its arsenal of nuclear
bombs is no longer
worth its weight in scrap. Box-cutters, penknives, and cold anger are the
weapons with which the wars of the new century will be waged. Anger is the
lock pick. It slips through customs unnoticed. Doesn’t show up in
baggage checks.
Who is America fighting? On September 20, the FBI said that it had doubts
about the identities of some of the hijackers. On the same day President
George Bush said, “We know exactly who these people are and which
governments are supporting them.” It sounds as though the president
knows something that the FBI and the American public don’t. In his
September 20 address to the US Congress, President Bush called the enemies
of America “enemies of freedom”. “Americans are asking,
‘Why do they hate us?’ “ he said. “They hate our
freedoms - our freedom of religion, our freedom of speech, our freedom to
vote and assemble and disagree with each other.” People are being
asked to make two leaps of faith here. First, to assume that The Enemy is
who the US government says it is, even though it has no substantial evidence
to support that claim. And second, to assume that The Enemy’s motives
are what the US government says they are, and there’s nothing to support
that either.
For strategic, military and economic reasons, it is vital for the US government
to persuade its public that their commitment to freedom and democracy and
the American Way of Life is under attack. In the current atmosphere of grief,
outrage and anger, it’s an easy notion to peddle. However, if that
were true, it’s reasonable to wonder why the symbols of America’s
economic and military dominance - the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon
- were chosen as the targets of the attacks. Why not the Statue of Liberty?
Could it be that the stygian anger that led to the attacks has its taproot
not in American freedom and democracy, but in the US government’s
record of commitment and support to exactly the opposite things - to military
and economic terrorism, insurgency, military dictatorship, religious bigotry
and unimaginable genocide (outside America)? It must be hard for ordinary
Americans, so recently bereaved, to look up at the world with their eyes
full of tears and encounter what
might appear to them to be indifference. It isn’t indifference. It’s
just augury. An absence of surprise. The tired wisdom of knowing that what
goes around eventually comes around. American people ought to know that
it is not them but their government’s policies that are so hated.
They can’t possibly doubt that they themselves, their extraordinary
musicians, their writers, their actors, their spectacular sportsmen and
their cinema, are universally welcomed. All of us have been moved by the
courage and grace shown by firefighters, rescue workers and ordinary office
staff in the days since the attacks.
America’s grief at what happened has been immense and immensely public.
It would be grotesque to expect it to calibrate or modulate its anguish.
However, it will be a pity if, instead of using this as an opportunity to
try to understand why September 11 happened, Americans use it as an opportunity
to usurp the whole world’s sorrow to mourn and avenge only their own.
Because then it falls to the rest of us to ask the hard questions and say
the harsh things. And for our pains, for our bad timing, we will be disliked,
ignored and perhaps eventually silenced. The world will probably never know
what motivated those particular hijackers who flew planes into those particular
American buildings. They were not glory boys. They left no suicide notes,
no political messages; no organisation has claimed credit for the attacks.
All we know is that their belief in what they were doing outstripped the
natural human instinct for survival, or any desire to be remembered. It’s
almost as though they could not scale down the enormity of their rage to
anything smaller than their deeds. And what they did has blown a hole in
the world as we knew it. In the absence of information, politicians, political
commentators and writers (like myself) will invest the act with their own
politics, with their own interpretations. This speculation, this analysis
of the political climate in which the attacks took place, can only be a
good thing.
But war is looming large. Whatever remains to be said must be said quickly. Before America places itself at the helm of the “international coalition against terror”, before it invites (and coerces) countries to actively participate in its almost godlike mission - called Operation Infinite Justice until it was pointed out that this could be seen as an insult to Muslims, who believe that only Allah can mete out infinite justice, and was renamed Operation Enduring Freedom- it would help if some small clarifications are made. For example, Infinite Justice/Enduring Freedom for whom? Is this America’s war against terror in America or against terror in general? What exactly is being avenged here? Is it the tragic loss of almost 7,000 lives, the gutting of five million square feet of office space in Manhattan, the destruction of a section of the Pentagon, the loss of several hundreds of thousands of jobs, the bankruptcy of some airline companies and the dip in the New York Stock Exchange? Or is it more than that? In 1996, Madeleine Albright, then the US secretary of state, was asked on national television what she felt about the fact that 500,000 Iraqi children had died as a result of US economic sanctions. She replied that it was “a very hard choice”, but that, all things considered, “we think the price is worth it”. Albright never lost her job for saying this. She continued to travel the world representing the views and aspirations of the US government. More pertinently, the sanctions against Iraq remain in place. Children continue to die.
So here we have it. The equivocating distinction between
civilisation and savagery, between the “massacre of innocent people”
or, if you like, “a clash of civilisations” and “collateral
damage”. The sophistry and fastidious algebra of infinite justice.
How many dead Iraqis will it take to make the world a better place? How
many dead Afghans for every dead American? How many dead women and children
for every dead man? How many dead mojahedin for each dead investment banker?
As we watch mesmerised, Operation Enduring Freedom unfolds on TV monitors
across the world. A coalition of the world’s superpowers is closing
in on Afghanistan, one of the poorest, most ravaged, war-torn countries
in the world, whose ruling Taliban government is sheltering Osama bin Laden,
the man being held responsible for the September 11 attacks.
The only thing in Afghanistan that could possibly count as collateral value
is its citizenry. (Among them, half a million maimed orphans. There are
accounts of hobbling stampedes that occur when artificial limbs are airdropped
into remote, inaccessible villages.) Afghanistan’s economy is in a
shambles. In fact, the problem for an invading army is that Afghanistan
has no conventional coordinates or signposts to plot on a military map -
no big cities, no highways, no industrial complexes, no water treatment
plants. Farms have been turned into mass graves. The countryside is littered
with land mines - 10 million is the most recent estimate. The American army
would first have to clear the mines and build roads in order to take its
soldiers in.
Fearing an attack from America, one million citizens have fled from their
homes and arrived at the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan. The UN
estimates that there are eight million Afghan citizens who need emergency
aid. As supplies run out - food and aid agencies have been asked to leave
- the BBC reports that one of the worst humanitarian disasters of recent
times has begun to unfold. Witness the infinite justice of the new century.
Civilians starving to death while they’re waiting to be killed. In
America there has been rough talk of “bombing Afghanistan back to
the stone age”. Someone please break the news that Afghanistan is
already there. And if it’s any consolation, America played no small
part in helping it on its way. The American people may be a little fuzzy
about where exactly Afghanistan is (we hear reports that there’s a
run on maps of the country), but the US government and Afghanistan are old
friends. In 1979, after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the CIA and
Pakistan’s ISI (Inter Services Intelligence) launched the largest
covert operation in the history of the CIA. Their purpose was to harness
the energy of Afghan resistance to the Soviets and expand it into a holy
war, an Islamic jihad, which would turn Muslim countries within the Soviet
Union against the communist regime and eventually destabilise it. When it
began, it was
meant to be the Soviet Union’s Vietnam. It turned out to be much more
than that. Over the years, through the ISI, the CIA funded and recruited
almost 100,000 radical mojahedin from 40 Islamic countries as soldiers for
America’s proxy war. The rank and file of the mojahedin were unaware
that their jihad was actually being fought on behalf of Uncle Sam. (The
irony is that America was equally unaware that it was financing a future
war against itself.)
In 1989, after being bloodied by 10 years of relentless conflict, the Russians
withdrew, leaving behind a civilisation reduced to rubble. Civil war in
Afghanistan raged on. The jihad spread to Chechnya, Kosovo and eventually
to Kashmir. The CIA continued to pour in money and military equipment, but
the overheads had become immense, and more money was needed. The mojahedin
ordered farmers to plant opium as a “revolutionary tax”. The
ISI set up hundreds of heroin laboratories across Afghanistan. Within two
years of the CIA’s arrival, the Pakistan-Afghanistan borderland had
become the biggest producer of heroin in the world, and the single biggest
source of the heroin on American streets. The annual profits, said to be
between $100bn and $200bn, were ploughed back into training and arming militants.
In 1995, the Taliban - then a marginal sect of dangerous, hardline fundamentalists
- fought its way to power in Afghanistan. It was funded by the ISI, that
old cohort of the CIA, and supported by many political parties in Pakistan.
The Taliban unleashed a regime of terror. Its first victims were its own
people, particularly women. It closed down girls’ schools, dismissed
women from government jobs, and enforced sharia laws under which women deemed
to be “immoral” are stoned to death, and widows guilty of being
adulterous are buried alive. Given the Taliban government’s human
rights track record, it seems unlikely that it will in any way be intimidated
or swerved from its purpose by the prospect of war, or the threat to the
lives of its civilians.
After all that has happened, can there be anything more
ironic than Russia and America joining hands to re-destroy Afghanistan?
The question is, can you destroy destruction? Dropping more bombs on Afghanistan
will only shuffle the rubble, scramble some old graves and disturb the dead.
The desolate landscape of Afghanistan was the burial ground of Soviet communism
and the springboard of a unipolar world dominated by America. It made the
space for neocapitalism and corporate globalisation, again dominated by
America. And now Afghanistan is poised to become the graveyard for the unlikely
soldiers who fought and won this war for America.
And what of America’s trusted ally? Pakistan too has suffered enormously.
The US government has not been shy of supporting military dictators who
have blocked the idea of democracy from taking root in the country. Before
the CIA arrived, there was a small rural market for opium in Pakistan. Between
1979 and 1985, the number of heroin addicts grew from zero to one-and-a-half
million. Even before September 11, there were three million Afghan refugees
living in tented camps along the border. Pakistan’s economy is crumbling.
Sectarian violence, globalisation’s structural adjustment programmes
and drug lords are tearing the country to pieces. Set up to fight the Soviets,
the terrorist training centres and madrasahs, sown like dragon’s teeth
across the country, produced fundamentalists with tremendous popular appeal
within Pakistan itself. The Taliban, which the Pakistan government has sup
ported, funded and propped up for years, has material and strategic alliances
with Pakistan’s own political parties. Now the US government is asking
(asking?) Pakistan to garotte the pet it has hand-reared in its backyard
for so many years. President Musharraf, having pledged his support to the
US, could well find he has something resembling civil war on his hands.
India, thanks in part to its geography, and in part to
the vision of its former leaders, has so far been fortunate enough to be
left out of this Great Game. Had it been drawn in, it’s more than
likely that our democracy, such as it is, would not have survived. Today,
as some of us watch in horror, the Indian government is furiously gyrating
its hips, begging the US to set up its base in India rather than Pakistan.
Having had this ringside view of Pakistan’s sordid fate, it isn’t
just odd, it’s unthinkable, that India should want to do this. Any
third world country with a fragile economy and a complex social base should
know by now that to invite a superpower such as America in (whether it says
it’s staying or just passing through) would be like inviting a brick
to drop through your windscreen.
Operation Enduring Freedom is ostensibly being fought to uphold the American
Way of Life. It’ll probably end up undermining it completely. It will
spawn more anger and more terror across the world. For ordinary people in
America, it will mean lives lived in a climate of sickening uncertainty:
will my child be safe in school? Will there be nerve gas in the subway?
A bomb in the cinema hall? Will my love come home tonight? There have been
warnings about the possibility of biological warfare - smallpox, bubonic
plague, anthrax - the deadly payload of innocuous crop-duster aircraft.
Being picked off a few at a time may end up being worse than being annihilated
all at once by a nuclear bomb.
The US government, and no doubt governments all over the
world, will use the climate of war as an excuse to curtail civil liberties,
deny free speech, lay off workers, harass ethnic and religious minorities,
cut backon public spending and divert huge amounts of money to the defence
industry. To what purpose? President Bush can no more “rid the world
of evil-doers” than he can stock it with saints. It’s absurd
for the US government to even toy with the notion that it can stamp out
terrorism with more violence and oppression. Terrorism is the symptom, not
the disease. Terrorism has no country. It’s transnational, as global
an enterprise as Coke or Pepsi or Nike. At the first sign of trouble, terrorists
can pull up stakes and move their “factories” from country to
country in search of a better deal. Just like the multi-nationals. Terrorism
as a phenomenon may never go away. But if it is to be contained, the first
step is for America to at least acknowledge that it shares the
planet with other nations, with other human beings who, even if they are
not on TV, have loves and griefs and stories and songs and sorrows and,
for heaven’s sake, rights. Instead, when Donald Rumsfeld, the US defence
secretary, was asked what he would call a victory in America’s new
war, he said that if he could convince the world that Americans must be
allowed to continue with their way of life, he would consider it a victory.
The September 11 attacks were a monstrous calling card
from a world gone horribly wrong. The message may have been written by Bin
Laden (who knows?) and delivered by his couriers, but it could well have
been signed by the ghosts of the victims of America’s old wars. The
millions killed in Korea, Vietnam and Cambodia, the 17,500 killed when Israel
- backed by the US - invaded Lebanon in 1982, the 200,000 Iraqis killed
in Operation Desert Storm, the thousands of Palestinians who have died fighting
Israel’s occupation of the West Bank. And the millions who died, inYugoslavia,
Somalia, Haiti, Chile, Nicaragua, El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Panama,
at the hands of all the terrorists, dictators and genocidists whom the American
government supported, trained, bankrolled and supplied with arms. And this
is far from being a comprehensive list.
For a country involved in so much warfare and conflict, the American people
have been extremely fortunate. The strikes on September 11 were only the
second on American soil in over a century. The first was Pearl Harbour.
The reprisal for this took a long route, but ended with Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
This time the world waits with bated breath for the horrors to come.
Someone recently said that if Osama bin Laden didn’t exist, America
would have had to invent him. But, in a way, America did invent him. He
was among the jihadis who moved to Afghanistan in 1979 when the CIA commenced
its operations there. Bin Laden has the distinction of being created by
the CIA and wanted by the FBI. In the course of a fortnight he has been
promoted from suspect to prime suspect and then, despite the lack of any
real evidence, straight up the charts to being “wanted dead or alive”.
From all accounts, it
will be impossible to produce evidence (of the sort that would stand scrutiny
in a court of law) to link Bin Laden to the September 11 attacks. So far,
it appears that the most incriminating piece of evidence against him is
the fact that he has not condemned them. From what is known about the location
of Bin Laden and the living conditions in which he operates, it’s
entirely possible that he did not personally plan and carry out the attacks
- that he is the inspirational figure, “the CEO of the holding company”.
The Taliban’s response to US demands for the extradition of Bin Laden
has been uncharacteristically reasonable: produce the evidence, then we’ll
hand him over. President Bush’s response is that the demand is “non-negotiable”.
(While talks are on for the extradition of CEOs - can India put in a side
request for the extradition of Warren Anderson of the US? He was the chairman
of Union Carbide, responsible for the Bhopal gas leak that killed
16,000 people in 1984. We have collated the necessary evidence. It’s
all in the files. Could we have him, please?)
But who is Osama bin Laden really? Let me rephrase that. What is Osama bin
Laden? He’s America’s family secret. He is the American president’s
dark doppelgänger. The savage twin of all that purports to be beautiful
and civilised. He has been sculpted from the spare rib of a world laid to
waste by America’s foreign policy: its gunboat diplomacy, its nuclear
arsenal, its vulgarly stated policy of “full-spectrum dominance”,
its chilling disregard for non-American lives, its barbarous military interventions,
its support for despotic and dictatorial regimes, its merciless economic
agenda that has munched through the economies of poor countries like a cloud
of locusts. Its marauding multinationals who are taking over the air we
breathe, the ground we stand on, the water we drink, the thoughts we think.
Now that the family secret has been spilled, the twins are blurring into
one another and gradually becoming interchangeable. Their guns, bombs, money
and drugs have been going around in the loop for a while. (The Stinger missiles
that will greet US helicopters were supplied by the CIA. The heroin used
by America’s drug addicts comes from Afghanistan. The Bush administration
recently gave Afghanistan a $43m subsidy for a “war on drugs”....)
Now Bush and Bin Laden have even begun to borrow each other’s
rhetoric. Each refers to the other as “the head of the snake”.
Both invoke God and use the loose millenarian currency of good and evil
as their terms of reference. Both are engaged in unequivocal political crimes.
Both are dangerously armed - one with the nuclear arsenal of the obscenely
powerful, the other with the incandescent, destructive power of the utterly
hopeless. The fireball and the ice pick. The bludgeon and the axe.
The important thing to keep in mind is that neither is an acceptable alternative
to the other. President Bush’s ultimatum to the people of the world
- “If you’re not with us, you’re against us” - is
a piece of presumptuous arrogance. It’s not a choice that people want
to, need to, or should have to make.
© Arundhati Roy 2001
http://www.guardian.co.uk/saturday_review/story/0,3605,559756,00.html