Phantom Towers:
Feminist Reflections on the Battle between Global Capitalism and Fundamentalist
Terrorism
Rosalind P. Petchesky
Presentation at Hunter College Political Science Dept. Teach-In, Sept.
25, 2001
These are trying times, hard times to know where we are from one day
to the next. The attack on the World Trade Center has left many
kinds of damage in its wake, not the least of which is a gaping ethical
and political confusion in the minds of many Americans who identify in
some way as "progressive"-meaning, anti-racist, feminist, democratic
(small d), anti-war. While we have a responsibility to those who
died in the disaster and their loved ones, and to ourselves, to mourn,
it is urgent that we also begin the work of thinking through what kind
of world we are now living in and what it demands of us. And we
have to do this, even while we know our understanding at this time can
only be very tentative and may well be invalidated a year or even a month
or a week from now by events we can't foresee or information now hidden
from us.
So, at the risk of being completely wrong, I want to try to draw a picture
or a kind of mapping of the global power dynamics as I see them at this
moment, including their gendered and racialized dimensions. I want
to ask whether there is some alternative, more humane and peaceable way
out of the two unacceptable polarities now being presented to us: the
permanent war machine (or permanent security state) and the regime of
holy terror.
Let me make very clear that, when I pose the question whether we are
presently facing a confrontation between global capitalism and an Islamist-fundamentalist
brand of fascism, I do not mean to imply their equivalence. If,
in fact, the attacks of Sept. 11 were the work of Bin Laden's Al-Qaeda
network or something related and even larger-and for the moment I think
we can assume this as a real possibility-then most of us in this room
are structurally positioned in a way that gives us little choice about
our identities. (For the Muslim-Americans and Arab-Americans among
us, who are both opposed to terrorism and terrified to walk in our streets,
the moral dilemma must be, I imagine, much more agonizing.) As
an American, a woman, a feminist, and a Jew, I have to recognize that
the Bin Ladens of the world hate me and would like me dead; or, if they
had power over me, would make my life a living hell. I have to
wish them-these " perpetrators," "terrorists," whatever they are-apprehended,
annulled, so I can breathe in some kind of peace. This is quite
different from living at the very center of global capitalism-which is
more like living in a very dysfunctional family that fills you with shame
and anger for its arrogance, greed, and insensitivity but is, like it
or not, your home and gives you both immense privileges and immense responsibilities.
Nor, however, do I succumb to the temptation of casting our current
dilemma in the simplistic, Manichean terms of cosmic Good vs. Evil. Currently
this comes in two opposed but mirror-image versions: the narrative,
advanced not only by the terrorists and their sympathizers but also by
many on the left in the US and around the globe, that blames US cultural
imperialism and economic hegemony for the " chickens coming home to roost";
versus the patriotic, right-wing version that casts US democracy and
freedom as the innocent target of Islamist madness. Both these
stories erase all the complexities that we must try to factor into a
different, more inclusive ethical and political vision. The Manichean,
apocalyptic rhetorics that echoed back and forth between Bush and Bin
Laden in the aftermath of the attacks-the pseudo-Islamic and the pseudo-Christian,
the jihad and the crusade-both lie.
So, while I do not see terrorist networks and global capitalism as equivalents
or the same, I do see some striking and disturbing parallels between
them. I picture them as the phantom Twin Towers arising in the
smoke clouds of the old-fraternal twins, not identical, locked in a battle
over wealth, imperial aggrandizement and the meanings of masculinity. It
is a battle that could well end in a stalemate, an interminable cycle
of violence that neither can win because of their failure to see the
Other clearly. Feminist analysts and activists from many countries-whose
voices have been inaudible thus far in the present crisis-have a lot
of experience to draw from in making this double critique. Whether
in the UN or national settings, we have been challenging the gender-biased
and racialized dimensions of both neoliberal capitalism and various fundamentalisms
for years, trying to steer a path between their double menace. The
difference now is that they parade onto the world stage in their most
extreme and violent forms. I see six areas where their posturing
overlaps:
1. Wealth - Little needs to be said about the US as the world's wealthiest
country nor the ways in which wealth-accumulation is the holy grail,
not only of our political system (think of the difficulty we have even
in reforming campaign finance laws), but of our national ethos. We
are the headquarters of the corporate and financial mega-empires that
dominate global capitalism and influence the policies of the international
financial institutions (IMF, World Bank, WTO) that are its main governing
bodies. This reality resonates around the globe in the symbolic
pantheon of what the US stands for-from the MacDonald's and Kentucky
Fried Chicken ads sported by protestors in Genoa and Rawalpindi to the
WTC towers themselves. Acquisitiveness, whether individual or corporate,
also lurks very closely behind the values that Bush and Rumsfeld mean
when they say our "freedoms" and our "way of life" are being attacked
and must be defended fiercely. (Why, as I'm writing this, do unsolicited
messages about Wall Street investment opportunities or low fares to the
Bahamas come spewing out of my fax machine?)
Wealth is also a driving force behind the Al-Qaeda network, whose principals
are mainly the beneficiaries of upper-middle-class or elite financing
and education. Bin Laden himself derives much of his power and
influence from his family's vast fortune, and the cells of Arab-Afghan
fighters in the 1980s war against the Soviets were bankrolled not only
by the Pakistani secret police and the CIA--$3 billion writes Katha Pollitt
in The Nation, "more money and expertise than for any other cause in
CIA history"-but also by Saudi oil money. More important than this, though,
are the values behind the terrorist organizations, which include-as Bin
Laden made clear in his famous 1998 interview-defending the "honor" and "property" of
Muslims everywhere and "[fighting] the governments that are bent on attacking
our religion and on stealing our wealth. . . ." Paul Amar rightly
urges us not to confuse these wealthy networks-whose nepotism and ties
to oil interests eerily resemble those of the Bush family-with impoverished
and resistant social movements throughout the Middle East and Asia. There
is no evidence that economic justice or equality figure anywhere in the
terrorist program.
2. Imperialist nationalism - The Bush administration's initial
reaction to the attacks exhibited the behavior of a superpower that knows
no limits, that issues ultimatums under the cover of "seeking cooperation." "Every
nation in every region has a decision to make," pronounced Bush in his
speech to the nation that was really a speech to the world; "Either you
are with us or you are with the terrorists." "This is the world's
fight, this is civilization's fight"-the US, then, becoming the leader
and spokesman of " civilization," relegating not only the terrorists
but also those who refuse to join the fight to the ranks of the uncivilized. To
the Taliban and to every other regime that "harbors terrorists," he was
the sheriff stonewalling the cattle rustlers: "Hand over all the terrorists
or you will share in their fate." And a few days later we read "the
American announcement that it would use Saudi Arabia as a headquarters
for air operations against Afghanistan." As the war campaign progresses,
its aims seem more openly imperialist: " Washington wants to offer [the
small, also fundamentalist, drug-dealing mujahedeen mostly routed by
the Taliban] a role in governing Afghanistan after the conflict" (NY
Times, 9/24), as if this were "Washington's" official role. Further,
it and its allies are courting the octogenarian, long-forgotten Afghan
king (now exiled in Italy) to join in a military operation to oust the
Taliban and set up-what? a kind of puppet government? Nothing here
about internationally monitored elections, nothing about the UN, or any
concept of the millions of Afghan people-within the country or in exile-as
anything but voiceless, downtrodden victims and refugees.
Clearly, this offensive involves far more than rooting out and punishing
terrorists. Though I don't want to reduce the situation to a crude
Marxist scenario, one can't help wondering how it relates to the longstanding
determination of the US to keep a dominant foothold in the gulf region
and to maintain control over oil supplies. At least one faction
of the Bush "team," clamoring to go after Saddam Hussein as well, is
clearly in this mindset. And let's not forget Pakistan and its
concessions to US demands for cooperation in return for lifting of US
economic sanctions-and now, the assurance of a sizable IMF loan. In
the tradition of neo-imperial power, the US does not need to dominate
countries politically or militarily to get the concessions it wants;
its economic influence backed up by the capacity for military annihilation
is sufficient. And, spurred by popular rage over the WTC attacks,
all this is wrapped in the outpouring of nationalist patriotism and flag-waving
that now envelops the American landscape.
Though lacking the actual imperial power of the US, the Bin Laden forces
mimic its imperial aspirations. If we ask, what are the terrorists
seeking?, we need to recognize their worldview as an extreme and vicious
form of nationalism-a kind of fascism, I would argue, because of its
reliance on terror to achieve its ends. In this respect, their
goals, like those of the US, go beyond merely punishment. Amar
says the whole history of Arab and Islamic nationalism has been one that
transcended the colonially imposed boundaries of the nation-state, one
that was always transnational and pan-Arabic, or pan-Muslim, in form. Although
the terrorists have no social base or legitimacy in laying claim to this
tradition, they clearly seek to usurp it. This seems evident in
Bin Laden's language invoking "the Arab nation," "the Arab peninsula," and
a "brotherhood" reaching from Eastern Europe to Turkey and Albania, to
the entire Middle East, South Asia and Kashmir. Their mission is
to drive out " the infidels" and their Muslim supporters from something
that looks like a third of the globe. Provoking the US to bomb
Afghanistan and/or attempt ousting the Taliban would surely destabilize
Pakistan and possibly catapult it into the hands of Taliban-like extremists,
who would then control nuclear weapons-a big step toward their perverted
and hijacked version of the pan-Muslim dream. 3. Pseudo-Religion
- As many others have commented, the "clash of religions" or "clash of
cultures" interpretation of the current scenario is utterly specious. What
we have instead is an appropriation of religious symbolism and discourse
for predominantly political purposes, and to justify permanent war and
violence. So Bin Laden declares a jihad, or holy war, against the
US, its civilians as well as its soldiers; and Bush declares a crusade
against the terrorists and all who harbor or support them. Bin
Laden declares himself the "servant of Allah fighting for the sake of
the religion of Allah" and to protect Islam's holy mosques, while Bush
declares Washington the promoter of "infinite justice" and predicts certain
victory, because "God is not neutral." (The Pentagon changed the "Operation
Infinite Justice" label to "Operation Enduring Freedom" after Muslim-Americans
objected and three Christian clergymen warned that "infinite" presumed
divinity, the "sin of pride.") But we have to question the authenticity
of this religious discourse on both sides, however sincere its proponents. A
statement written by a distinguished list of Islamic scholars firmly
denounces terrorism-the wanton killing of innocent civilians-as contrary
to Sh'aria law. And Bush's adoption of this apocalyptic discourse
can only be seen as substituting a conservative, right-wing form of legitimation
for the neoliberal internationalist discourse that conservatives reject. In
either case, it is worth quoting the always wise Eduardo Galeano: "In
the struggle of Good against Evil, it's always the people who get killed."
4. Militarism - Both the Bush administration and the Bin Laden
forces adopt the methods of war and violence to achieve their ends, but
in very different ways. US militarism is of the ultra-high-tech
variety that seeks to terrorize by the sheer might, volume and technological
virtuosity of our armaments. Of course, as the history of Vietnam
and the survival of Saddam Hussein attest, this is an illusion of the
highest order. (Remember the "smart bombs" in the Gulf War that
headed for soda machines?) But our military technology is also
a vast and insatiable industry for which profit, not strategy, is the
driving rationale. As Jack Blum, a critic of US foreign policy, points
out, "the national defense game is a systems and money operation" that
has little if any relevance to terrorism. Missiles were designed to counter
hostile states with their own fixed territories and weapons arsenals,
not terrorists who sneak around the globe and whose "weapons of mass
destruction" are human bodies and hijacked planes; nor the famously impervious
terrain and piles of rubble that constitute Afghanistan. Even George
W., in one of his most sensible comments to date, remarked that we'd
know better than to aim "a $2 billion cruise missile at a $10 empty tent." And
yet four days after the attack the Democrats in Congress piled madness
atop madness and withdrew their opposition to Bush's costly and destructive "missile
shield," voting to restore $1.3 billion in spending authority for this
misconceived and dangerous project. And the armaments companies
quickly started lining up to receive their big orders for the impending
next war-the war, we are told, that will last a long time, maybe the
rest of our lives. US militarism is not about rationality-not even
about fighting terrorism-but about profits.
The war-mania and rallying around the flag exhibited by the American
people express desire, not for military profits, but for something else,
something harder for feminist and anti-war dissidents to understand. Maybe
it's just the need to vent anger and feel avenged, or the more deep-rooted
one to experience some sense of community and higher purpose in a society
where we are so atomized and isolated from one another and the world. Barbara
Kingsolver writes that she and her husband reluctantly sent their 5-year-old
daughter to school dressed in red, white and blue like the other kids
because they didn't want to let jingoists and censors "steal the flag
from us." Their little girl probably echoed the longings of many less
reflective grownups when she said, wearing the colors of the flag " means
we're a country; just people all together."
The militarism of the terrorists is of a very different nature-based
on the mythic figure of the Bedouin warrior, or the Ikhwan fighters of
the early 20th century who enabled Ibn Saud to consolidate his dynastic
state. Their hallmark is individual courage and ferocity in battle;
as one Arab witness wrote, foreshadowing reports of Soviet veterans from
the 1980s Afghan war: "utterly fearless of death, not caring how
many fall, advancing rank upon rank with only one desire-the defeat and
annihilation of the enemy." (M. Ruthven, Islam in the World, p. 27) Of
course, this image too, like every hyper-nationalist ideology, is rooted
in a mythic golden past and has little to do with how real terrorists
in the 21st century are recruited, trained and paid off. Moreover,
like high-tech militarism, terrorist low-tech militarism is also based
in an illusion-that millions of believers will rise up, obey the fatwa,
and defeat the infidel. It's an illusion because it grossly underestimates
the most powerful weapon in global capitalism's arsenal-not "infinite
justice" or even nukes but infinite Nikes and cd's. And it also
underestimates the local power of feminism, which the fundamentalists
mistakenly confuse with the West. Iran today, in all its internal
contradictions, shows the resilience and globalized/localized variety
of both youth cultures and women's movements. (Sciolino, NY Times, 9/23/01)
5. Masculinism - Militarism, nationalism, and colonialism
as terrains of power have always been in large part contests over the
meanings of manhood. Feminist political scientist Cynthia Enloe
remarks that "men's sense of their own masculinity, often tenuous, is
as much a factor in international politics as is the flow of oil, cables,
and military hardware." In the case of Bin Laden's Taliban patrons,
the form and excessiveness of the misogyny that goes hand in hand with
state terrorism and extreme fundamentalism have been graphically documented. Just
go to the website of the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan
(RAWA), at www.rawa.org, to view more photos of atrocities against women
(and men) for sexual offenses, dress code offenses, and other forms of
deviance than you'll be able to stomach. According to John Burns,
writing in the NY Times Magazine in 1990, the "rebel" leader in the Afghan
war who received "the lion's share of American money and weapons"-and
was not a Taliban-had been reputed to have "dispatched followers [during
his student movement days] to throw vials of acid into the faces of women
students who refused to wear veils."
In the case of transnational terrorists and Bin Laden himself, their
model of manliness is that of the Islamic "brotherhood," the band of
brothers bonded together in an agonistic commitment to fighting the enemy
to the death. The CIA-Pakistani-Saudi-backed camps and training
schools set up to support the "freedom fighters" (who later became "terrorists")
in the anti-Soviet war were breeding grounds not only of a worldwide
terrorist network but also of its masculinist, misogynist culture. Bin
Laden clearly sees himself as a patriarchal tribal chief whose duty is
to provide for and protect, not only his own retinue, wives and many
children, but also his whole network of lieutenants and recruits and
their families. He is the legendary Arabic counterpart of the Godfather,
the padrone.
In contrast to this, can we say that the US as standard-bearer of global
capitalism is "gender-neutral"? Don't we have a woman- indeed an
African-American woman-at the helm of our National Security Council,
the president's right hand in designing the permanent war machine? Despite
reported "gender gaps" in polls about war, we know that women are not
inherently more peace-loving than men. Remember all those suburban housewives
with their yellow ribbons in midwestern airports and shopping malls during
the Gulf War? Global capitalist masculinism is alive and well but
concealed in its Eurocentric, racist guise of "rescuing" downtrodden
Afghan women from the misogynist regime it helped bring to power. Feminists
around the world, who have tried for so long to call attention to the
plight of women and girls in Afghanistan, cannot feel consoled by the
prospect of US warplanes and US-backed guerrilla chiefs coming to "save
our Afghan sisters." Meanwhile, the US will send single mothers
who signed up for the National Guard when welfare ended to fight and
die in its holy war; US media remain silent about the activism and self-determination
of groups like RAWA, Refugee Women in Development and NEGAR; and the
US military establishment refuses accountability before an International
Criminal Court for the acts of rape and sexual assault committed by its
soldiers stationed across the globe. Masculinism and misogyny take many
forms, not always the most visible.
6. Racism - Of course, what I have named fascist fundamentalism,
or transnational terrorism, is also saturated in racism, but of a very
specific, focused kind-which is anti-semitism. The WTC towers symbolized
not only American capitalism, not only finance capitalism, but, for the
terrorists, Jewish finance capitalism. We can see this in the reported
misreporting of the Sept. 11 attacks in Arabic language newspapers in
the Middle East as probably the work of the Israelis; their erroneous
allegation that not a single person among the dead and missing was Jewish,
so Jews must have had advance warning, etc. In his 1998 interview,
Bin Laden constantly refers to " Jews," not Israelis, in his accusations
about plans to take over the whole Arab peninsula. He asserts that "the
Americans and the Jews. . . represent the spearhead with which the members
of our religion have been slaughtered. Any effort directed against
America and the Jews yields positive and direct results." And finally,
he rewrites history and collapses the diversity of Muslims in a warning
to "Western governments" to sever their ties to Jews: "the enmity
between us and the Jews goes far back in time and is deep rooted. There
is no question that war between the two of us is inevitable. For
this reason it is not in the interest of Western governments to expose
the interests of their people to all kinds of retaliation for almost
nothing." (I cringe to realize I am part of the "nothing.")
US racism is much more diffuse but just as insidious; the pervasive
racism and ethnocentrism that fester under the American skin always boil
to the surface at times of national crisis. As Sumitha Reddy put
it in a recent teach-in, the targeting of Sikhs and other Indians, Arabs,
and even tan Latinos and African-Americans in the wave of violent and
abusive acts throughout the country since the disaster signals an enlargement
of the "zone of distrust" in American racism beyond the usual black-white
focus. Women who wear headscarves or saris are particularly vulnerable
to harassment, but Arab and Indian men of all ages are the ones being
murdered. The state pretends to abhor such incidents and threatens
their full prosecution. But this is the same state that made the
so-called Anti-Terrorism Act, passed in 1995 after the Oklahoma City
bombing (an act committed by native white Christian terrorists), a pretext
for rounding up and deporting immigrants of all kinds; and that is now
once again waiving the civil liberties of immigrants in its zealous anti-terrorist
manhunt. Each day The New York Times publishes its rogues' gallery
of police photos of the suspects, so reminiscent of those eugenic photographs
of "criminal types" of an earlier era and imprinting upon readers' minds
a certain set of facial characteristics they should now fear and blame. Racial
profiling becomes a national pastime. * * *
If we look only at terrorist tactics and the world's revulsion against
them, then we might conclude rather optimistically that thuggery will
never win out in the end. But we ignore the context in which terrorism
operates at our peril, and that context includes not only racism and
Eurocentrism but many forms of social injustice. In thinking through
a moral position on this crisis, we have to distinguish between immediate
causes and necessary conditions. Neither the United States (as a state)
nor the corporate and financial power structure that the World Trade
Centers symbolized caused the horrors of Sept. 11. Without question,
the outrageous, heinous murder, maiming and orphaning of so many innocent
people-who were every race, ethnicity, color, class, age, gender, and
some 60-odd nationalities-deserve some kind of just redress. On
the other hand, the conditions in which transnational terrorism thrives,
gains recruits, and lays claim to moral legitimacy include many for which
the US and its corporate/financial interests are directly responsible
even if they don't for a minute excuse the attacks. It is often
asked lately, why does the Third World hate us so much? Put another
way, why do so many people including my own friends in Asia, Africa,
Latin America and the Middle East express so much ambivalence about what
happened, both lamenting an unforgivable criminal act and at the same
time taking some satisfaction that Americans are finally suffering too? We
make a fatal mistake if we attribute these mixed feelings only to envy
or resentment of our wealth and freedoms and ignore a historical context
of aggression, injustice and inequality. Consider these facts:
1. As Walden Bello in the Philippines reminds us, the United States
is still the only country in the world to have actually used the most
infamous weapons of mass destruction in the nuclear bombing of innocent
civilians-in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
2. The US persists to this day in bombing Iraq, destroying the lives
and food supplies of hundreds of thousands of civilian adults and children
there. We bombed Belgrade-a dense capital city-for 80 straight days during
the war in Kosovo and supported bombing that killed untold civilians
in El Salvador in the 1980s. In the name of fighting Communism,
our CIA and military training apparatus sponsored paramilitary massacres,
assassinations, tortures and disappearances in many Latin American and
Central American countries in Operation Condor and the like in the 1970s
and has supported corrupt, authoritarian regimes in the Middle East,
Southeast Asia, and elsewhere-the Shah of Iran, Suharto in Indonesia,
the Saudi dynasty, and let's not forget the Taliban regime itself. Sept.
11 is also the date of the coup against the democratically elected Allende
government in Chile and the beginning of the 25-year Pinochet dictatorship,
again thanks to US support. Yes, a long history of state terrorism.
3. In the Middle East, which is like the eye of the tornado or the microcosm
of the current conflagration, US military aid and the Bush administration's
disengagement are the sine qua non of continued Israeli government policies
of attacks on villages, demolition of homes, destruction of olive orchards,
restrictions on travel, assassination of political leaders, building
roads and enlarging settlements that bantustanize Palestinian territories
and deepen the occupation, and continual human rights abuses of Palestinians
and even Arab citizens-all of which exacerbate hostility and suicide
bombings. And so the US contributes to the endless cycle of violence
there.
4. The US is one of only two countries-along with Afghanistan!-that
has failed to ratify the Women's Convention, and the only country that
hasn't ratified the Children's Convention. It is the most vocal
opponent of the statute establishing an International Criminal Court
as well as the treaties banning land mines and germ warfare; a principal
subverter of a new multilateral treaty to combat illegal small arms trafficking;
and the sole country in the world to threaten an unprecedented space-based
defense system and imminent violation of the ABM treaty. So who
is the "outlaw, " the "rogue state"?
5. The US is the only major industrialized country to refuse signing
the final Kyoto Protocol on Global Climate Change, despite compromises
in that document designed to meet US objections. Meanwhile, a new global
scientific study shows that the countries whose productivity will benefit
most from climate change are Canada, Russia and the US, while the biggest
losers will be the countries that have contributed least to global climate
change-i.e., most of Africa.
6. As even the World Bank and the UNDP attest, two decades of globalization
have resulted in enlarging rather than shrinking the gaps between rich
and poor, both within countries and among countries. The benefits
of global market liberalization and integration have accrued disproportionately
to wealthy Americans and Europeans (as well as small elites in the Third
World). Despite the presumed democratizing effects of the Internet,
a middle-class American "needs to save a month's salary to buy a computer;
a Bangladeshi must save all his wages for eight years to do so." And
despite its constant trumpeting of "free-trade" rhetoric, the US remains
a persistent defender of protectionist policies for its farmers. Meanwhile
small producers throughout Asia, Africa and the Caribbean-a great many
of whom are women-are squeezed out by US imports and relegated to the
informal economy or sweatshop labor for multinationals.
7. The G-8 countries, of which the US is the senior partner, dominate
decision-making in the IMF and the World Bank, whose structural adjustments
and conditionalities for loans and debt relief help to keep many poor
countries and their citizens locked in poverty.
8. US-based corporations can cough up billions overnight to "aid" their
counterparts whose offices and personnel were destroyed in the WTC attacks,
and Congress can vote instantly to hand over $15 billion to the beleaguered
airline industry. Yet our foreign assistance appropriations (except
for military aid) have shrunk; we, the world's richest country, don't
even meet the UN standard of .7% of GNP. A recent WHO report tells
us the total cost of providing safe water and sanitation to everyone
in the world who needs it would be only $10 billion, only no one can
figure out where the money will come from; and the UN is still a long
way off from raising a similar amount for its proclaimed World HIV/AIDS
Fund. What kind of meanness is this? And what does it say about
forms of racism, or "global apartheid," that value some lives-those in
the US and Europe-far more than others in other parts of the globe?
And the list goes on, with MacDonald's, Coca-Cola, CNN and MTV and all
the uninvited commercial detritus that proliferates everywhere on the
face of the earth and offends the cultural and spiritual sensibilities
of so many-including transnational feminist travelers like me, when we
find pieces of our local shopping mall transplanted to downtown Kampala
or Kuala Lumpur, Cairo or Bangalore. But worse than the triviality and
bad taste of these cultural and commercial barrages is the arrogant presumption
that our "way of life" is the best on earth and ought to be welcome everywhere;
or that our power and supposed advancement entitle us to dictate policies
and strategies to the rest of the world. This is the face of imperialism
in the 21st century.
None of this reckoning can comfort those who lost loved ones on Sept.
11, or the thousands of attack victims who lost their jobs, homes and
livelihoods; nor can it excuse the hideous crimes. As the Palestinian
poet Mahmoud Darwish writes, "nothing, nothing justifies terrorism." Still,
in attempting to understand what has happened and think how to prevent
it happening again (which is probably a vain wish), we Americans have
to take all these painful facts into account. The United States
as the command center of global capitalism will remain ill equipped to "stop
terrorism" until it begins to recognize its own past and present responsibility
for many of the conditions I've listed and to address them in a responsible
way. But this would mean the United States becoming something different
from itself, transforming itself, including abandoning the presumption
that it should unilaterally police the world. This problem of transformation
is at the heart of the vexing question of finding solutions different
from all-out war. So let me turn to how we might think differently
about power. Here is what I propose, tentatively, for now:
1. The slogan "War Is Not the Answer" is a practical as well as an ontological
truth. Bombing or other military attacks on Afghanistan will not
root out networks of terrorists, who could be hiding deep in the mountains
or in Pakistan or Germany or Florida or New Jersey. It will only
succeed in destroying an already decimated country, killing untold numbers
of civilians as well as combatants and creating hundreds of thousands
more refugees. And it is likely to arouse so much anger among Islamist
sympathizers as to destabilize the entire region and perpetuate the cycle
of retaliation and terrorist attacks. All the horror of the 20th century
surely should teach us that war feeds on itself and that armed violence
reflects, not an extension of politics by other means, but the failure
of politics; not the defense of civilization, but the breakdown of civilization.
2. Tracking down and bringing the perpetrators of terrorism to justice,
in some kind of international police action, is a reasonable aim but
one fraught with dangers. Because the US is the world's only " superpower," its
declaration of war against terrorism and its supporters everywhere says
to other countries that we are once again taking over as global policeman,
or, as Fidel Castro put it, a "world military dictatorship under the
exclusive rule of force, irrespective of any international laws or institutions." Here
at home a "national emergency" or "state of war"-especially when defined
as different from any other war-means the curtailment of civil liberties,
harassment of immigrants, racial profiling, and withholding of information
(censorship) or feeding of disinformation to the media, all without any
time limits and under an ominous new Office of Homeland Security. We
should oppose both US unilateralism and the permanent security state. We
should urge our representatives in Congress to diligently defend the
civil liberties of all.
3. I agree with the Afro Asian Peoples Solidarity Organization (AAPSO)
in Cairo that "this punishment should be inflicted according to the law
and only upon those who were responsible for these events," and that
it should be organized within the framework of the United Nations and
international law, not unilaterally by the United States. This
is not the same as the US getting unanimous approval from the Security
Council to commandeer global security, which is a first step at best. Numerous
treaties against terrorism and money-laundering already exist in international
law. The pending International Criminal Court, whose establishment
the US government has so stubbornly opposed, would be the logical body
to try terrorist cases, with the cooperation of national police and surveillance
systems. We should demand that the US ratify the ICC statute. In
the meantime, a special tribunal under international auspices, like the
ones for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, could be set up as well as
an international agency to coordinate national police and intelligence
efforts, with the US as one participating member. This is the power
of international engagement and cooperation.
4. No amount of police action, however cooperative, can stop terrorism
without addressing the conditions of misery and injustice that nourish
and aggravate terrorism. The US has to undertake a serious reexamination
of its values and its policies with regard not only to the Middle East
but also to the larger world. It has to take responsibility for
being in the world, including ways of sharing its wealth, resources and
technology; democratizing decisions about global trade, finance, and
security; and assuring that access to " global public goods" like health
care, housing, food, education, sanitation, water, and freedom from racial
and gender discrimination is given priority in international relations. What
we even mean by " security" has to encompass all these aspects of wellbeing,
of "human security," and has to be universal in its reach.
Let me again quote from the poet Mahmoud Darwish's statement, which
was published in the Palestinian daily Al Ayyam on Sept. 17 and signed
by many Palestinian writers and intellectuals.
"We know that the American wound is deep and we know that this tragic
moment is a time for solidarity and the sharing of pain. But we
also know that the horizons of the intellect can traverse landscapes
of devastation. Terrorism has no location or boundaries, it does
not reside in a geography of its own; its homeland is disillusionment
and despair. " The best weapon to eradicate terrorism from the soul lies
in the solidarity of the international world, in respecting the rights
of all peoples of this globe to live in harmony and by reducing the ever
increasing gap between north and south. And the most effective
way to defend freedom is through fully realizing the meaning of justice."
What gives me hope is that this statement's sentiments are being voiced
by growing numbers of groups here in the US, including the National Council
of Churches, the Green Party, a coalition of 100 entertainers and civil
rights leaders, huge coalitions of peace groups and student organizations,
New Yorkers Say No to War, black and white women celebrities featured
on Oprah Winfrey's show, and parents and spouses of attack victims. Maybe
out of the ashes we will recover a new kind of solidarity; maybe the
terrorists will force us, not to mirror them, but to see the world and
humanity as a whole. |