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The political roots of the terror attack on New York and Washington
By the Editorial Board
12 September 2001
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The World Socialist Web Site unequivocally condemns
the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
Those responsible for the hijacking of four commercial passenger
aircraft and their conversion into flying bombs are guilty of
mass murder. Nothing of a socially progressive character will
be achieved on the basis of such an indiscriminate and callous
destruction of human life.
These acts of homicidal terrorism manifest a toxic combination
of demoralized pessimism, religious and ultra-nationalist obscurantism,
and, it must be added, political opportunism of the vilest character.
Terrorist organizationsnotwithstanding their anti-American
rhetoricbase their tactics on the illusion that random acts
of horrific violence will compel the US ruling class to shift
its policies. Thus, in the final analysis, they hope to make a
deal with Washington.
However it seeks to justify itself, the terrorist method is
fundamentally reactionary. Far from dealing a powerful blow against
imperialist militarism, terrorism plays into the hands of those
elements within the US establishment who seize on such events
to justify and legitimize the resort to war in pursuit of the
geopolitical and economic interests of the ruling elite. The murder
of innocent civilians enrages, disorients and confuses the public.
It undermines the struggle for the international unity of the
working class, and counteracts all efforts to educate the American
people on the history and politics that form the background to
contemporary events in the Middle East.
Nevertheless, our condemnation of Tuesdays terrorist
outrages does not in the slightest imply any lessening of our
principled and irreconcilable opposition to the policies of the
US government. Anyone who wishes to understand the why and wherefore
of yesterdays events must study the historical and political
record of the US in the Middle East, especially over the last
30 years. The unrelenting efforts of American imperialism to secure
its domination over the oil resources of the region, which has
entailed, among other things, unstinting support for the Israeli
states oppression of the Palestinian people, has placed
the United States in violent opposition to the legitimate and
irrepressible democratic, national and social aspirations of the
Arab masses.
In the immediate aftermath of Tuesdays events, politicians,
editorialists and media pundits have declared over and over that
Americans must recognize that the destruction of the World Trade
Center means the United States is at war and must act accordingly.
But the fact of the matter is that the US government has been
engaged in direct warfare in the Middle East, in one form or another,
for the better part of two decades.
Putting aside the massive material aid that it provides for
Israeli military operations, the United States has been bombing
one or another Middle Eastern country almost continuously since
1983. US bombers and/or battleships have attacked Lebanon, Libya,
Iraq, Iran, the Sudan and Afghanistan. Without actually declaring
war, the United States has conducted military operations against
Iraq for nearly 11 years. The ongoing daily bombings of Iraq are
barely mentioned in the American media, which has made no attempt
to ascertain the total number of Iraqis killed by US bombs since
1991.
Given this bloody record, why should anyone be surprised that
those who have been targeted by the United States have sought
to strike back?
The same media that is now screaming for blood has routinely
applauded the use of violence against whatever country or people
are deemed to be obstacles to US interests. Let us recall the
words of New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, who
had this to say to the Serbian people during the US bombing campaign
in 1999: It should be lights out in Belgrade: every power
grid, water pipe, road and war-related factory has to be hit....
[W]e will set your country back by pulverizing you. You want 1950?
We can do 1950. You want 1389? We can do 1389.
The foreign policy of the US is a mixture of cynicism, brutality
and irresponsibility. Washington has pursued a course that has
inflamed the hatred of large sections of the worlds population,
creating an environment in which recruits can be found for bloody
terrorist operations. In rare moments of candor, foreign policy
specialists have acknowledged that the actions of the United States
provoke hatred and the desire for retribution. During the Balkan
War, former Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger stated: Weve
presented to the rest of the world a vision of the bully on the
block who pushes a button, people out there die, we dont
pay anything except the cost of a missile ... thats going
to haunt us in terms of trying to deal with the rest of the world
in the years ahead.
This insight has not prevented the same Eagleburger from declaring
Tuesday night that the United States should respond to the destruction
of the World Trade Center by dropping bombs immediately on any
country that might have been involved.
George W. Bushs address to the nation Tuesday evening
epitomized the arrogance and blindness of the American ruling
class. Far from America being the brightest beacon for freedom
and opportunity in the world, the US is seen by tens of
millions as the main enemy of their human and democratic rights,
and the main source of their oppression. The American ruling elite,
in its insolence and cynicism, acts as if it can carry out its
violent enterprises around the world without creating the political
conditions for violent acts of retribution.
In the immediate aftermath of Tuesdays attacks, US authorities
and the media are once again declaring that Osama bin Laden is
responsible. This is possible, although, as always, they present
no evidence to back up their claim.
But the charge that bin Laden is the culprit raises a host
of troubling questions. Given the fact that the US has declared
this individual to be the worlds most deadly terrorist,
whose every move is tracked with the aid of the most technologically
sophisticated and massive intelligence apparatus, how could bin
Laden organize such an elaborate attack without being detected?
An attack, moreover, against the same New York skyscraper that
was hit in 1993?
The devastating success of his assault would indicate that,
from the standpoint of the American government, the crusade against
terrorism has been far more a campaign of propaganda to justify
US military violence around the world than a conscientious effort
to protect the American people.
Moreover, both bin Laden and the Taliban mullahs, whom the
US accuses of harboring him, were financed and armed by the Reagan-Bush
administration to fight pro-Soviet regimes in Afghanistan in the
1980s. If they are involved in Tuesdays operations, then
the American CIA and political establishment are guilty of having
nurtured the very forces that carried out the bloodiest attack
on American civilians in US history.
The escalation of US militarism abroad will inevitably be accompanied
by intensified attacks on democratic rights at home. The first
victims of the war fever being whipped up are Arab-Americans,
who are already being subjected to death threats and other forms
of harassment as a result of the media hysteria.
The calls from both Republican and Democratic politicians for
a declaration of war foreshadow a more general crackdown on opponents
of American foreign policy. General Norman Schwarzkopf, who commanded
American troops in the 1991 invasion of Iraq, spoke for much of
the political and military elite when he declared on television
that the war on alleged terrorist supporters should be conducted
inside as well as outside the borders of the US.
It is the policies pursued by the United States, driven by
the strategic and financial interests of the ruling elite, which
laid the foundations for the nightmare that unfolded on Tuesday.
The actions now being contemplated by the Bush administrationindicated
by the presidents threat to make no distinction between
the terrorists who committed these acts and those who harbor themwill
only set the stage for further catastrophes.
This article is available as a PDF-formatted
leaflet
See Also:
Why the Bush administration wants war
[15 September 2001]
Arab-Americans and Muslims attacked in
the US
[15 September 2001]
The political significance of Israels
assassination policy
[7 September 2001]
After the Slaughter:
Political Lessons of the Balkan War
[14 June 1999]
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