Newsflash

Hailing the Killer 

A new documentary celebrating the assassin of Sadat reopens a bitter and unresolved chapter in Egypt-Iran relations, writes Rasha Saad

 

 

Last comments

MRN Meeting with Chief: Civil ...
will posner rebuke chief rabbi's boycott of fellow-jews inst...
19/07/08 19:37 More...
By chothia

MRN Meeting with Chief: Civil ...
MR
Manipulated the pic??
19/07/08 06:54 More...
By BLACKLISTED DICTATOR

MRN Meeting with Chief: Civil ...
u think mrn manipulated the pic? Lets chk with NIA.
16/07/08 20:40 More...
By chothia

MRN Meeting with Chief: Civil ...
chothia
posner in despair? OR Tambo is not israeli occupied territor...
16/07/08 20:31 More...
By chothia

MRN Meeting with Chief: Civil ...
chothia
posner in despair? OR Tambo is not israeli occupied territor...
16/07/08 20:31 More...
By chothia

Most favoured

Home arrow War On Terror arrow Trouble With the US Definition of Terror
Trouble With the US Definition of Terror PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 06 May 2008
By Gwynne Dyer


“Terrorism,” like “fascism,” is one of those words that people routinely apply to almost any behavior they disapprove of. We had a particularly impressive spread of meanings on display last week.

At one extreme, the US State Department released its annual “Country Reports on Terrorism,” a congressionally mandated survey of all the incidents that the United States officially regards as terrorism. There were, it said, 14,499 such attacks last year. (That’s 71 down from the previous year, so there is hope.)

At the other extreme, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama’s former pastor and current nemesis, when asked to justify his earlier remark that the 9/11 attacks on the United States were “America’s chickens coming home to roost,” helpfully explained that the US had dropped atomic bombs on Japan and “supported state terrorism against the Palestinians and black South Africans,” so what did Americans expect?

“You cannot do terrorism on other people and expect it never to come back on you,” Wright elucidated. “These are Biblical principles, not Jeremiah Wright bombastic divisive principles.” So it was presumably God who selected a bunch of Arabs to punish the United States for its misdeeds against Japanese, Palestinians and South Africans.

So much for Jeremiah Wright’s attempt to define the American use of nuclear weapons against Japan as terrorism. It was terrible and terrifying, and it was intended to terrorize the Japanese people into surrender, but it was not terrorism. Neither are Israeli actions against the Palestinians, even when ten or twenty Palestinians are dying for every Israel victim of Palestinian terrorism, and a high proportion of the dead Palestinians are innocent civilians. Israel is a state, so by definition what it does cannot be terrorism.

Now that that’s clear, let’s move on to what the US State Department does define as terrorism.

The first thing that strikes you, reading the “Country Reports on Terrorism,” is that 6,212 of “the terrorist attacks,” over two-fifths of all the 14,499 that it records for last year, were in Iraq.

Might that be connected in some way with the fact that Iraq was invaded by the United States five years ago and for all practical purposes remains under US military occupation?

Algerian rebels used similar tactics against French imperial rule, including numerous brutal attacks on innocent civilians. So did the Mau Mau guerrillas against their British colonial masters in Kenya, and the Viet Cong against the American presence in South Vietnam, and other people fighting against foreign occupation or domestic oppression in dozens of other countries.

Their tactics were regularly condemned by their targets, but nobody tried to pretend that the world was facing a wave of irrational and inexplicable violence called “terrorism.”

Yet that is precisely the assumption that underlies the State Department’s annual reports on “terrorism,” and indeed the Bush administration’s entire “war on terror.” Or rather, it is the perspective through which the report’s authors want the rest of the world to see the troubles in Iraq, Afghanistan and so on, for they cannot be so naive that they truly believe the link between the presence of US occupation troops and a high level of terrorist attacks is purely coincidental.

You can see the same perspective at work in the distinction that is made between Israeli attacks on Palestinians (the legitimate actions of a sovereign state) and Palestinian attacks on Israelis (terrorism). Thus US support for Israel is also legitimate, while Iranian support for Palestinian militants makes Iran the “most active state sponsor of terrorism.”

Others play this game too — notably the Russians in Chechnya — but it is really an American innovation. Leading neoconservative Richard Perle, former chairman of the Defense Policy Board, famously declared in 2002 that “terrorism must be decontextualised,” but the process was already well underway in practice.

And so, deprived of context, terrorism sits there as a uniquely wicked and inexplicable phenomenon, while legitimate states and armies can get on with the business of killing people in legitimate wars.

Jeremiah Wright is a narcissistic and embittered man who says many stupid and untrue things (like accusing the US government of spreading HIV/AIDS among the African-American population), but you can see why he got a little confused on the terrorism issue.
 
Source : Arabnews

 
< Prev

News Feed


Press TV
PRESS TV RSS News
'Iran to be equipped with S-300 by 09'
Iran will receive the advanced Russian-made S-300 anti-aircraft missile defense system by year-end, senior Israeli military officials say.
Sudan agrees AL plan for Darfur crisis
Sudan agrees to set up special courts to deal with Darfur crisis after President Omar al-Bashir was charged with war crimes in the region.
Obama: Nuclear Iran would change world
Barack Obama says 'a nuclear Iran' would create a 'game-changing situation' not only for Israel but also for the rest of the world.
US soldiers charged with conspiracy
The Unites States Army has brought charges against four soldiers in connection to the deaths of several detainees in Iraq in early 2007.
'Karadzic arrest made history in Bosnia'
Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman Hassan Qashqavi says the arrest of war criminal Radovan Karadzic has come as a comfort to Bosnians.
BBC News Feed
BBC News | Middle East | World Edition
Iran vows no nuclear concessions
Iran will not "retreat one iota" in its nuclear activities, its president says, defying fresh international pressure.
Talabani denounces election law
Iraq's president says he will not approve a draft provincial election law adopted by MPs despite a Kurdish walkout.
Swapped human remains reach Syria
Syria received the bodies of 114 Arab fighters handed over by Israel as part of last week's prisoner exchange.
Obama urges political fix in Iraq
US Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama says security in Iraq is better but political solutions are needed.
Iraq MPs approve new election law
The Iraqi parliament approves a bill paving the way for provincial elections which the government wants to see held in October.

Who's Online

© 2008 Media Review | Website Designed and Optimised by Go Fish Client Catchers