|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: The
Balkan Crisis
Atrocity claims and the politics of propaganda
A second reply to a supporter of the Balkan war
By David North
25 June 1999
Use
this version to print
The following letter by David North, the chairman of the
WSWS Editorial Board, replies to a message sent by P. Harris,
a supporter of the Balkan war. Mr. Harris's letter can be read
in full by clicking here (http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/jun1999/harr-j25.shtml)
This correspondence follows an earlier exchange, in April
of this year, between North and Harris (see Behind the war
in the Balkans: A reply to a supporter of the US-NATO bombing
of Serbia, http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/apr1999/dn-a08.shtml).
Dear Mr. Harris:
Thank you for your letter of June 19. Given the fact that the
World Socialist Web Site published in its edition of April
8 a detailed response to your criticism of our opposition to the
US/NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, one could reasonably expect that
you would answer the points that I made in that reply. Unfortunately,
it seems that you have not used the last 10 weeks to prepare a
principled answer. Ignoring my reply to your first letter, you
simply launch another round of denunciations of the WSWS.
The cause of your anger is that the World Socialist Web
Site still refuses to join in the imperialist press campaign
over Serb atrocities that is being used to justify NATO's war
against Yugoslavia. You are outraged that we do not accept uncritically,
without factual substantiation, all the reports of massacres and
rapes presented by government spokesmen and the media. You object
to our use of the word allegedwhich, by the
way, is the standard qualifier used in legal proceedings until
a case has been provenin referring to crimes attributed
to the Yugoslav government.
As anyone who has followed our analysis of the war knows very
well, the World Socialist Web Site has never denied that
Serb forces were guilty of atrocities against Kosovan Albanians.
However, in opposing the US/NATO propaganda campaign, we have
repeatedly made the following critical points:
(1) Prior to the initiation of the bombing campaign on March
24, 1999, the total number of people killed in Kosovo, Albanian
and Serb, was in the area of 2,000. These deaths occurred in the
context of a civil war between the Yugoslav government and separatist
guerrillas. However deplorable the tactics employed by the Yugoslav
authorities, they were no more brutal than those developed and
used by the United States, Britain, and France in their own counterinsurgency
operations.
(2) The large-scale atrocities began after the US/NATO forces
started bombing Yugoslavia. The causal link between the bombing
and the subsequent atrocities is indisputable. The mayhem and
killing that followed the launching of the bombing campaign was
entirely foreseeable. Having chosen war as its preferred policy
option, the United States bears immense responsibility for the
tragedy that ensued.
(3) The reports of the American and West European media during
the war grossly and irresponsibly exaggerated the actual scale
of the killings inside Kosovo by Serb forces. The comparisons
between Serbia and Nazi Germany, between the Kosovan civil war
and the Holocaust, were based on a distortion of history and cover-up
of the political context of the violence in Kosovo.
The WSWS does not, as you claim, blindly
reject reports of Serb atrocities. We certainly do question the
veracity of the reports that are generated by a media that has
been caught in lies again and again. Only yesterday, the deaths
of British soldiers in Kosovo were immediately attributed to Serbian
mines. Later, it emerged that the cause of their deaths was an
unexploded British-made cluster bomb.
The initial false report was in keeping with a policy followed
throughout the war by US/NATO propagandists: Whenever remotely
possible, place the blame for loss of human life on the Serbs.
Given the modus operandi of Mr. Jamie Shea, we needn't apologize
for our skepticism toward US/NATO allegations. However, even if
one accepts without reservation the pro-war media's reports of
mass graves, it is clear that the number of Albanians murdered
by Serb military or para-military forces is only a fraction of
what was previously claimed by the media. While the media and
high-ranking government officialsincluding President Clinton
and Defense Secretary Coheninflamed public opinion by suggesting
that the number of Albanians murdered was in the area of 100,000,
if not higher, it would appear (based on the current media reports)
that the number killed was closer to 10,000.
It is not difficult to anticipate your rejoinder: You
are simply quibbling over numbers. Ten thousand dead is a terrible
human toll. Indeed it is, but it was not sufficientin
the opinion of Clinton, Blair and other NATO leadersto sustain
broad public support for the massive aerial bombardment of Yugoslavia.
For the public to accept the destruction wrought by US/NATO bombs,
it had to be convinced that the war was undertaken to prevent
another Holocaust. The fabrication of the death toll was an essential
component of a propaganda campaign which sought to disorient public
opinion, distort the background of the war, and conceal the real
political aims and material interests underlying the decision
to go to war against Yugoslavia.
Toward the conclusion of your letter, you attribute our opposition
to the US/NATO war to a totally schematic and inflexible
analysis of current events, rooted in a version of
class-based political-economic analysis, never leavened by any
of Marx's humanism and common sense. To the extent that
one can make sense of this criticism, it is that we, unlike you,
base our attitude to the war on an analysis of the class interests
represented by the states that launched it. We would not challenge
your right to reject this conscious class approach, but please
do not make Marx an accomplice in your theoretical charlatanry.
The author of the Communist Manifesto insisted, if we remember
correctly (though you evidently do not), that The history
of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles.
To remove from Marx's humanism this essential insight
into the basic driving force of history is to portray the greatest
revolutionary thinker in world history as a vulgar liberalthat
is, as someone very much like yourself.
Your own position on the war exposes the practical consequences
of the sort of non-class humanism that you espouse.
While accusing the WSWS of doing a great disservice
to socialists by opposing the war, you entrust the realization
of socialismwhich you define as fundamental justice,
equality, and freedom for all people, including Albanianto
NATO. Predictably, this reactionary blending of humanism
and imperialism finds its apotheosis in the bombing of Yugoslavia.
To be blunt, these positions are politically bankrupt. They
express the outlook of a deeply cynical political and social milieu,
of which you are a part, that has abandoned whatever socialist
principles it once believed in.
What separates us politically, Mr. Harris, goes far beyond
our different assessments of the scale of atrocities in Kosovo
or even of the origins of the war. We proceed on the basis of
entirely different historical perspectives. Unlike yourself, we
assign to imperialism absolutely no progressive social and historical
mission. We do not look to the Pentagon to provide answers to
the problems of the Balkans or any other part of the world. Rather,
the World Socialist Web Site adheres to the essential socialist
precept that the fate of mankind depends upon the development
of the political self-consciousness of the international working
class and its capacity for independent political action. Or as
Marx put it so succinctly, "The emancipation of the working
classes must be conquered by the working classes themselves."
He saw no need to add, "And where that task cannot be immediately
achieved, socialists are advised to turn for support to the military
machine of the bourgeois state."
Yours sincerely,
David North
See Also:
A reply to a liberal supporter
of the US-NATO attack on Yugoslavia
Cause and effect in the Balkan War
[17 April 1999]
Behind the war in the Balkans:
A reply to a supporter of the US-NATO bombing of Serbia
[8 April 1999]
Kosovan 'mass graves' agitation: US media
seeks to justify NATO war
[18 June 1999]
The Balkan
War
Full list of WSWS articles
WSWS
Readers Forum on the Balkan war
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |