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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
From the days of Anybody but Bush
By John Levine
31 August 2005
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Hijacking Catastrophe: 9/11, Fear, & the Selling of
American Empire, written and directed by Jeremy Earp and Sut
Jhally
Hijacking Catastrophe: 9/11, Fear, & the Selling of
American Empire, written and directed by Jeremy Earp and Sut
Jhally, was produced in 2003-04, in order to combat what the filmmakers
perceived as public support for the war on terror
and the Iraq invasion in particular.
A number of socially critical documentaries appeared besides
this one, including The Corporation, The Control Room,
Outfoxed, Bushs Brain, Uncovered, and
of course, Michael Moores Fahrenheit 9/11. An unusual
and significant change in American cinema, this trend arises from
the attempts of filmmakers, along with much of the rest of the
population, to assimilate the traumatic political experiences
of recent years.
With interviews, pictures, excerpts from television news and
instructive charts, Earp and Jhally prove conclusively that the
Bush administration lied about the rationale for war and, in fact,
had a hidden agenda. In this regard, their film successfully makes
the case that the war was planned long in advance of September
11, 2001, and that the terrorist attacks were used as a pretext
to launch the war.
Hijacking Catastrophe, however, is guided by a political
outlook that damages its ability to conduct a full investigation.
Among liberal opponents of the war in 2004, there developed a
conception that an electoral defeat of Bush would end the militaristic
trend in American foreign policy. To the extent that the filmmakers
adopted this idea, they set limits on their own search for the
deeper roots of the war within American society.
The Media Education Foundation released the documentary in
2004, one week after the Republican Party national convention,
and in time to influence the 2004 elections. No one in the documentary
states this explicitly, but the underlying message is clear: Anybody
but Bush.
Hijacking Catastrophe begins with a series of clips
of Bush administration officials making claims that Iraq has weapons
of mass destruction. In one of these, Bush describes Saddam Hussein
as a homicidal dictator addicted to weapons of mass destruction.
Then, it cuts to a series of clips from the mainstream media months
into the war; the pundits and anchors all act surprised that none
of these weapons were found. We are then reminded of the well-known
comment by Hermann Goering, a Nazi official tried at Nuremburg:
The people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders.
That is easy ... All you have to do is tell them that they are
being attacked ... and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism
and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country.
The film, however, places the entire onus for the war on the
group of neoconservatives within the Bush administration,
namely Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney and Paul Wolfowitz. It outlines
Wolfowitzs Defense Planning Guidance, a 1992
Defense Department document that argued for global hegemony as
an aim for US foreign policy in the aftermath of the Cold War.
The film argues that the Wolfowitz doctrine was
essentially abandoned by all but a few people within the extreme
right of the Republican Party. These are dubbed neoconservatives.
Rather than approaching the problem from a class and historical
perspective and pointing to the widespread approval that the American
ruling elite as a whole, despite tactical differences,
has given these policies, the film inaccurately asserts that the
neoconservatives were the cause of the shift. According
to the filmmakers, this tiny group has essentially hijacked
US foreign policy. From this flows the argument that all Americans
must forget their differences and unite to get rid of these hijackers
and set US foreign policy back on the proper track.
This argument does not hold water. Consider only that Rumsfeld,
Cheney, Wolfowitz, and other neoconservatives have
held high level government positions for decades. Moreover, the
invasion and occupation of Iraq received the endorsement of virtually
the entire American ruling elite, and still does, despite the
unfolding disaster! Why did the majority of Democrats in Congress,
including their eventual presidential candidate John Kerry, support
the invasion? Why did no one in the mainstream media raise a protest
or even question the government line? That Hijacking Catastrophe
does not even pose these questions demonstrates that the filmmakers
objectivity and determination to expose has a certain limit. Their
support for the Democratic Party imposes that limit.
The film points quite correctly to the formation of the Project
for a New American Century (PNAC) in 1997, which based itself
explicitly on popularizing and implementing the Wolfowitz doctrine,
as a significant event. We hear chilling passages from its September
2000 Statement, Rebuilding Americas Defenses.
Arguing for a dramatic expansion of military spending in order
to deter any potential rival, the document seems to predict the
9/11 attacks a year before they occurred: The process of
transformation, even if it brings revolutionary change, is likely
to be a long one, absent some catastrophic and catalyzing eventlike
a new Pearl Harbor.
A few more important points are made in the film. One is the
former involvement of the United States with Saddam Hussein. Rumsfeld
is shown shaking hands with the Iraqi dictator in 1983 and 1984.
Viewers are reminded that when Saddam Hussein used poison gas
to kill Kurdish civilians in 1988, the United States considered
him an ally. It also exposes Washingtons role in helping
Saddam Hussein quell the 1991 Shiite rebellion, which then-president
George H.W. Bush publicly encouraged.
About half-way through, the movie finally addresses the war
in Afghanistan. In this regard it rightly points to the importance
of the proposed Trans-Afghanistan pipeline. We see a map of Afghanistan
with the proposed route of the pipeline along with a plot of American
bases. Clearly, the United States has planned its bases to be
in proximity to the pipeline. Little else, however, is said about
Afghanistan.
The Shock and Awe tactics of the invasion of Iraq
are traced to a 1996 book, Shock and Awe: Achieving Rapid Dominance,
by Harlan K. Ullman and James P. Wade of the National Defense
University. Disturbing quotations from this book are read, announcing
a brutal strategy to cause massive destruction to intimidate the
population of an entire country into submission. This is accompanied
by the pictures of Iraqi victims of this policy, suppressed by
the media in the United States. This is probably the most moving
sequence of the film, combining the cold calculating words of
military planners with the images of death and suffering they
produced.
The faults of the film
A good deal of what the film shows would come as a valuable
shock to those who rely solely on the mainstream media for their
information. The portrayal of the war as a conspiracy against
the American people is not inaccurate. As mentioned earlier, however,
much goes unexplained. And what is left out weighs heavily against
the movie.
In the process of describing the neoconservatives, not a single
mention is made of the policies or policy-makers of the Democratic
Party. Clinton administration policies in Iraq, its constant bombings
and its embargo denying Iraqis the basic necessities of life,
led to hundreds of thousands of deaths in Iraq. None of the people
interviewed make any mention of the 1999 war against Serbia.
In 1997, Zbigniew Brzezinski, the former national security
adviser of President Jimmy Carter, wrote in his book The Grand
Chessboard that it would be difficult to gain domestic support
for the military excursions he was recommending into Central Asia,
except in conditions of a sudden threat or challenge to
the publics sense of domestic well-being. Can we assume
that this important parallel to the statement of the PNAC, written
three years earlier, was excluded because Brzezinski is a Democrat?
Anyone watching this film would wait in vain for a single mention,
much less a thorough analysis, of the October 2002 vote in Congress,
in which a majority of Democrats, including serious contenders
for the 2004 Democratic presidential nomination, voted to give
Bush the authority to invade Iraq. Congress passed the Patriot
Act with hardly any debate and hardly any dissent. These facts
must also be presented to the American public, and this is a glaring
failure.
The filmmakers at least admit that there is more to these wars
than simply oil. However, when they attempt to uncover the deeper
roots of the new aggressive US policy, they fail. The various
intellectuals interviewed on the subject of the new American empire
are at times boring, repetitive and sometimes even odd. Zia Mian,
professor of Science and Global Security at Princeton University,
has this to say: Theres this strange notion that people
think that the whole world, because we all live in the same time,
its 2003 for everybody, it will be 2004 for everybody, but
that America has no territorial bounds but that actually time
belongs to America. The movie features only short clips
taken from various interviews, so it is not clear why this profound
passage could not be edited out.
Noam Chomsky and Tariq Ali speak rather superficially. They
tell us that the invasion of Iraq was primarily meant as a message.
Ali says, The major reason to take Iraq was a display of
imperial power ... To show ... who is master. Chomsky informs
us, The reasons for the extreme hostility and fear that
quickly rose all over the world were not just the invasion of
Iraq, but the fact that the invasion was understood to be an action
taken to demonstrate that this program of global domination by
force and the crushing of any potential challenge was meant extremely
seriously.
The war, while enormously destructive, has been anything but
a cake-walk, and has failed to achieve stability.
Watching the movie, however, one has no sense that an organized
and growing insurgency has made Iraq ungovernable for the United
States. Nothing of the corrupt no-bid contracts. Nothing of the
insoluble divisions within the puppet regime. Nothing of Ahmed
Chalabi or Iyad Allawi. In addition, no analysis is made of what
type of government the US seeks to put in place in Iraq.
Some quite reactionary positions are put forward, directly
in line with the 2004 Democratic Party campaign. For one, William
Hartung of the World Policy Institute makes the argument that
the war in Iraq has diverted US policy from the real threat
of terrorism. Osama bin Ladens connection to the CIA
throughout the 1980s, as well as evidence of the US governments
foreknowledge of the 9/11 attacks, do not fit into the film. It
is not clear, but from his comments it seems that Hartung may
have supported the US invasion of Afghanistan.
Also, a particularly ugly sequence of the film attempts to
portray Bush administration officials simply as chicken-hawks.
Medea Benjamin of Global Exchange tells us This guy never
fought a war. Mark Crispin Miller, author of The Bush
Dyslexicon, fulminates against Bush in a patriotic and chauvinist
way. Bush was a draft dodger. Not only that, he was AWOL,
in fact he was a deserter, because if its longer than 30
days, youre a deserter. The guy was actually a deserter
in wartime. If it had been Clinton, they would have just crucified
him on the White House lawn. This is reminiscent of the
attempt by Kerrys campaign to present its candidate as a
soldier reporting for duty. In fact, one who directly
participated in a previous American war is not on that account
any more fit to lead than one who did not.
At the same time, the film heaps praise on the Republican leadership
for its ability to create the public image of George W. Bush.
Michael Eric Dyson of the University of Pennsylvania says, Republicans
have ingeniously created the sense that this is about real men
... Its time for real men to step to the plate. Miller
is also quite impressed. Bushs propagandists have
been masterful at crafting a certain image for him, actually based
to some extent on his weaknesses ... Hes just a normal guy,
and when he messes up the language it proves hes just like
you and me. Its quite brilliant to make Bush into a Jacksonian
figure. Masterful, brilliant, ingenious. Thus is the incompetent
and crisis-ridden Bush administration characterized.
Its highly likely that everyone featured in this documentary
voted for the Democratic Party, or would have if they had a vote.
Although this does not get mentioned in the film, Chomsky and
Ali called for a vote for Kerry, who himself wholeheartedly supported
the war on terror, the Patriot Act, the invasion of
two countries, cuts in taxes for the rich and cuts in social programs
for the poor.
Ali still claims to be a socialist; in the 1960s and 1970s
he led the International Marxist Group in Britain. Yet we do not
hear a single mention, much less a clear analysis of class, capitalism
or imperialism. While a few reviewers have compared this film
favorably to Fahrenheit 9/11 because of its more
serious tone, its shunning of all class issues in favor
of a vague Politics of Citizenship causes it to leave
out many of the most powerful insights into American society that
could be seen in Michael Moores film.
The eruption of US militarism threatens the stability of democratic
rule within the United States itself. Vast changes have occurred
and will continue to occur, affecting the political consciousness
of millions of people. At such a time, what is required is honesty
and a presentation of all the relevant facts. In that sense,
despite the important information contained in this film, what
was left out of Hijacking Catastrophe makes a great deal
of difference.
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