The core issue of my article is really very simple: Can a society be democratic with counterterrorism as a core political and cultural value widely practiced and institutionalized? Considering that by definition counterterrorism necessarily leads to militarist policies practices at home and abroad, its apologists view it as a necessary evil in the name of national security. Historical studies show that terrorism has been rising not declining, while the political and economic costs to society have been immense.
Is America a model democracy, the epitome of an pluralistic and open society, the example for the rest of the world to emulate, or is it a paranoid society in search of enemies that the US government must create in order to preserve the anachronistic political, social and economic status quo against the tide of history? If you lived in the US during the first fifteen years of the 21st century, you probably noticed that government at all levels, the mass media, businesses and churches are all concerned about terrorism to the degree that this has become an obsession and national hysteria deeply embedded in the culture. In fact, the culture of counterterrorism is so deeply embedded in America that one finds it throughout the educational system in courses taught from elementary school to graduate school; in Christian churches and Jewish synagogues that see Islam as the source of terrorism, as though there is a “terrorism gene” in the DNA of those espousing Islam as their faith.
A
pluralistic society like the US has many layers of history and culture that
reflect the diversity of the various ethnic groups living here from the Native
Americans and African-Americans to the Europeans, Asian and Latin Americans.
One layer of contemporary American culture, a predominantly political one on
top to the consumerism layer, is counterterrorism that feeds off the mass
psychology of fear. Counterterrorism has become an industry in itself and a
lucrative one at that because the government has been throwing billions to
everyone from surveillance specialists to the common media propagandist and
consultant for hire.
That counterterrorism is an integral part of the dominant
culture ought to concern all citizens, even the financial and political elites
that enjoy most of society’s privileges under such culture.
Does
the majority of the American people really feel and living in a democracy when
the counterterrorism has converted society into a police state? George W. Bush
used to say that “they”, namely militant Muslims, hate our freedom. In other
words, they are just jealous and all of the actions across the Islamic world
are driven by jealousy for the American way of life; a way of life that is an
anathema of course for the vast majority of Muslims. Bush’s comment assumes
that at least the majority of Americans are really convinced they are free and
that the rest of the world is not, at least Muslims are not enjoying the same
precious freedoms as American Christians and Jews.
While
most Americans feel that they are free to shop as a way of life, if they have
money of course, do they believe that their voice makes any difference in political,
social or economic affairs? No doubt, many Muslims would probably empathize
with Americans on this issue. Do American citizens believe that the social
contract is for them as the Founding Fathers intended, at least as Thomas
Jefferson did, or has the social contract become a business one for the
socioeconomic elites that exert dominant influence in the political arena at
all levels and have a paternalistic attitude toward the middle class and
workers? In this domain many Muslims would also empathize with Americans who
feel that their government represents the elites.
Americans have as part of their ideology the “Exceptionalism” doctrine that goes back
to the 19th century. The institutionalization of counterterrorism
plays right into the ideology of “American Exceptionalism” as well as the Cold
War anti-Communist campaign that Truman unleashed in 1947 – Truman Doctrine. I
suppose if everyone is a citizen of a quasi-police state operating in the name
of safety and security then no one is a prisoner of an illiberal regime because
of the collective nature of the police state methods that the state imposes on
society. In other words, Americans
living under a counterterrorism regime, which necessarily requires police state
measures, believe that they are “free”.
Perhaps Americans are not as free as
Norwegians under a totally different model of democracy. For the most part,
Americans are convinced of what their government and media tell them, namely,
that their “freedom” must be restricted for their own good. Under rigid security measures extending from
illegal surveillance to drone warfare carried out in Africa and parts of the
Middle East, the US is always fighting to preserve the freedom for all at home
and all freedom-loving people across the world! Rhetoric aside, in the final
analysis, freedom to an American in the early 21st century means
living within the very rigid confines of counterterrorism institutions. He
trick is to keep the public convinced that counterterrorism is not a fad, but a
way of life for a very long time. The way to achieve the goal is to make
counterterrorism an integral part of the mainstream culture.
It
is simply impossible to turn on the radio, TV, read a newspaper or news magazine,
go to a mainstream online news outlet and not have to encounter the chronic
crisis America is facing with Islamic terrorism. It is as though government and
media are expecting a repeat of 9/11 on a daily basis; at least this is what
they want the masses to believe when they turn on the radio or TV, or read any
of the newspapers. Never mind all of the real problems in the lives of the
average American, such as declining living standards because the government has
clipped the social safety net in order to provide more assets to the corporate
welfare system, everything from bailouts to tax relief, to tax loopholes that
permit corporations and individuals to stash their money abroad and avoid
paying taxes. As long as we promote
counterterrorism, who cares about the poverty rate, lack of proper funding for
education, expensive health care costs, etc.
Economic
and social issues affecting the working class and middle are not an issue
worthy of discussion for mass media or the two political parties that represent
the financial elites, whereas terrorism and an imminent Muslim threat, lately
combined with a revived Russian one, are significant. After all, terrorism and
the Russians assisting the Russian-speaking minority in Ukraine poses a threat
to US national security, thus to the life of the car transmission worker in
Indiana, to the retired grandmother in Omaha, to the college student who cannot
afford tuition or housing in New York city. Social and economic problems are
not at issue, but the Islamic terrorists, many of which the US and its allies
helped create in the last thirty years, those are real threats. What about
economic and social news affecting the ordinary citizen? The media deals with
corporate business news and with the lives of celebrities, and that ought to be
sufficient. Believe it or not, this works because people internalize external
problems, blaming themselves because they are not billionaires or movie stars.
Never
mind that the reality of upward socioeconomic mobility looks increasingly bleak
because the top one percent of Americans own half of the wealth and the only
support for government spending is in the parasitic defense sector and tax
breaks to the rich and corporations that contribute to the rising public debt
and result in massive transfer of wealth from the lower classes to the
financial elites. This is not an issue worthy of discussion because there are
terrorists running loose in Iraq and Syria, terrorists that the US and its
regional allies were assisting just two years ago.
The
police must rule out terrorism, as though it is the first suspect in any
routine fire in a train station in New York, Washington or any major city. The
same assumption holds true for the typical psychologically disturbed gun
enthusiast who opens fire on a crowd of people. There is something very curious
about a society where authorities find it necessary to rule out the “terrorism
theory” first even on the most obvious and routine cases of homicide, arson,
and other crimes that never required such an ideological filter 20 years ago. Unique in American society, the
counterterrorism theme finds expression in books, magazines, video games,
movies, TV shows, and even toys. This theme is so pervasive in the political
mainstream and socio-cultural milieu that the unsuspecting citizens assumes terrorists
are waiting just around the corner to deliver harm to innocent Americans
because they are evil and hate America. Is it safe to take the subway in
Washington DC or New York without assuming a terrorist may have placed a bomb
under your seat?
The
institutionalization of counterterrorism is not simply in the domain of foreign
intelligence gathering and domestic security, but in every sector of society
from media and education, to social organizations and culture. Practically all
government agencies are part of the counterterrorism prism. Not just Homeland
Security, the FBI, NSA, and the CIA, but every single federal and local law
enforcement agency has counterterrorism as a theme around which its activities
revolve. Everything from Airport Security
to the Social Security, from the Department of Energy to banking regulatory
agencies is focused on anti-terrorism. Counterterrorism people are also in all
media outlets to “advise” on how to present domestic and international news
stories. For example, the Russian-speaking minority in eastern Ukraine is made
up of “terrorists”, as are the Palestinians, as are the tribes fighting against
the US-EU imposed regime in Libya, as are the rebels in Colombia, etc.
The
mainstream media has no other focus than terrorism as the core of its message.
Not just FOX and CNN, but all mainstream news outlets focus on this theme as
though there is nothing else taking place in the US or the world. The American
people are bombarded by counterterrorism “news and analysis” 24 hours a day
seven days a week, and if that is not enough, there are the motion pictures and
TV shows. I am amazed that living under such a culture of mass-media-manufactured
fear and hysteria about terrorism that people can still trust anyone including
their loved ones. There is something seriously wrong with a society’s sense of balance
when the mass media presents even the weather report from a “crisis”
perspective as though people can actually do something about nature that is
presented as “enemy force”. What is a person to think when even national
holidays become “crisis management” affairs, when the symbol of American
democracy, the White House today in comparison with the 1970s resembles a
military/police fort?
When
I walk into Pentagon City Mall and see all of those people shopping, I wonder
how many of them are making a living as a result of the terrorism industry that
the US has created. I wonder how many of them are thinking that they are safe
and secure because the US government together with the media and business has
created a culture of counterterrorism and institutionalized it as a way of life.
If they really believe it, then government and media have succeeded in mass
indoctrination. Do they even think about terrorism as an issue as they window-shop
from one store to the other? I wonder if the counterterrorism regime and
culture never existed, would the Pentagon City Mall shoppers think differently
about the social contract and about their role as citizens toward the state.
Is
a “Muslim terrorist” more likely to be a threat to Pentagon City Mall shoppers,
or a psychologically unbalanced ordinary American indoctrinated in the
counterterrorism ideology, believing that guns are the simple solution to
complex problems that befall the individual and society collectively?
Ironically, the counterterrorism culture feeds the aggression proclivities in
individuals while suppressing the rational and creative tendencies that cannot
survive the weight of an institutional structure demanding conformity and not
questioning. We are now at a point where glorification of counterterrorism
pays, while criticizing it is tantamount to treason.
The American Sniper motion picture that glorifies a soldier shooting Iraqis, including children, is a reflection of American values today molded by the counterterrorism culture. The real American sniper claimed to have killed 255 people. He bragged that he loved it because killing was fun, just another recreational activity no different than hunting deer. US Navy Seal Chris Kyle wrote “I hate the damn savages. I couldn’t give a flying fuck about the Iraqis.” When Obama recently tried to lessen the anti-Islam bias by noting Christians killed Muslims in the name of God during the Crusades, the conservatives and many media outlets insisted there is no moral equivalence, and the president has no right to insult Christians in such manner. The US media simply assumes that the Western Judeo-Christian culture is free of war crimes, when in fact during the last five centuries Christians have killed the overwhelming majority of people on this planet, beginning with the trans-Atlantic slave trade to the Jewish Holocaust.
The missionary aspect and ideological inspiration of
America’s “war on terror” is itself a continuation of a long-standing US
foreign policy tradition that dates to the Wilson administration. Announcements
from the Bush White House that the enemies of the US are “evil” and if grouped
together they constitute “the Axis of Evil” makes one wonder not just about the
moral standards US policymakers, the media and all propagating such notions,
but about the level of political maturity and sense of realism. Is the issue of
combating non-conventional warfare a religious and moral one, Armageddon about
to descend upon humanity, or is this a matter of policy and strategy that
government must analyze and arrive at the best possible solution for the
benefit of all of its citizens and not just the defense industry?
If only the rest of the nations behaved exactly as the
US wishes in everything from their domestic economic and social policies to
their foreign and defense policies, then they would not be “evil” and targeted
for regime change by Washington. This is not to absolve other nations and
organized guerrilla groups of responsibility for their actions. Nor is this a
defense of random acts of violence or even organized ones en masse that lack a
grassroots support and have as a goal publicity rather than social change.
Having said this about the futility of what the US calls “terrorism” as a
military means to a political end that is almost never achieved, if “the terrorist
enemy” kills x number of people and US military retaliation is 100 times x,
then what does this reveal about the US and its resolve to find a constructive
solution to a political problem? Of course in the absence of retaliation
against “the enemy”, the culture of anti-terrorism could not be justified,
hence the need to continue the vicious circle that government and the media
project as necessary.
It is true that the mass media in most of the world is
very biased, slanted to favor the political and social status quo, lacking in
serious news and analysis, focused instead on business and entertainment.
Mainstream media is simply an instrument of the status quo rather than one that
critiques the status quo or promotes social justice. It is just as true that
the message the US culture of anti-terrorism sends to the rest of the world is
military solutions work against any enemy of the state baptized “terrorist”,
while human rights and social justice need not be considered. In other words,
the US anti-terrorism culture has global consequences, especially when the US
encourages military solutions only to the complex problem of militant conduct
among young Muslims who see right through the hypocrisy of US foreign policy.
At the urging of the US, the UN adopted 16 conventions
against terrorism, but the poor countries, especially African countries, have
resisted pouring precious assets in this area because health needs – infectious
diseases especially – as well as primary food needs take precedence. Besides
the poor nations that are forced to spend resources on what the US defines as
“terrorism” and to divert resources from human needs, all countries have become
more militarized as a result of the US global counterterrorism campaign. Just
as disturbing, many countries have been using the “war on terror” to violate
their citizens rights; after all, the US does not observe human rights,
according to the Senate Intelligence report on CIA torture of political
prisoners.
It is up to the American people to change the
destructive culture of counterterrorism that is a pretext for preserving the
political, economic and social status quo and makes society more dangerous
rather than safer. The first step to change is to become aware of what the
anti-terrorism culture is all about, rather than accepting the incessant
indoctrination of media, government, business, and social-cultural
organizations. Social justice cannot possibly be realized under counterterrorism
regime. Under the current legal system and political-cultural climate, it is
very difficult for anyone who does not wish to be isolated from the mainstream
to speak out against the culture of counterterrorism.
Of course, there are academic works on the subject,
and of course there are blogs that express opposition to the status quo under
the counterterrorism culture that has resulted in quasi-police state practices,
everything from denying human rights to cops shooting down unarmed black youths
as though they are the terrorists. A society that does not permit dissident
voices to be heard not in the periphery but within the mainstream as part of
the debate about the social contract, a society that treats dissidents as
unpatriotic, pro-terrorist elements that the FBI must place under watch, such a
society is authoritarian and has no political or moral authority to preach
democracy to anyone in the world unless it first begins to practice it for
itself.
The state mobilizes public support for itself and institutions it protects, while the majority of the population falls in line with the state that presents itself as 'protector' of public interest. It would be naive to deny that the state has every right to protect its people and its national sovereignty combating any threats from hostile forces. However, there is a huge difference between the state's right to self defense within its own borders, and unleashing a global "war on terror" that violates the national sovereignty and rights of innocent people, while at the same time promoting a culture of counterterrorism. Without engaging in lengthy analysis of 'the ethics of counterterrorism', analysis that can be approached from different ideological and political perspectives, the bottom line is that counterterrorism measures used as a pretext for police state methods benefits the political, economic, and social status quo. At the same time, counterterrorism precludes democratic preactices, societal progress to the benefit of all people, and social justice, while it maintains a "military-solution based foreign policy" that invariably results in disaster for all parties concerned.
5 comments:
Correct that bit about the axis of evil. The phrase was actually coined by President Reagan. You have also not defined what a counter-terrorism culture is. I do not think that there is such a culture. It is however, correct to state that there is a missionary zeal in American foreign policy. It has been that way since the founding of the United States. It once accounted for notions about Manifest destiny, which influenced American foreign policy for a long time.
The term AXIS OF EVIL is one that President George W. Bush used in January 2002 during his State of the Union Address. Reagan, however, did use the term "Evil Empire" to refer to the USSR. The goal by both presidents was a populist appeal to demonize an adversary, rather than to present their policies that were at odds with US policy.
In response to a comment by a reader who believes that the US is not an ideal society, but a "pragmatic democracy", I have decided to add the following comment.
It is true of course that there are no utopian societies, except in philosophy books and novels. Does "Pragmatic Democracy" describe the US? Maybe, if the terms means that domestic and foreign policies deviate from the Constitution because of practical considerations. Fro example the NSA and other agencies spy on American citizens in violation of the Constitution, as a former CIA chief has readily admitted, because it is necessary for "national security", as the government defines it, meaning no limits. If the American people are fine with this, then that is what they choose as their political system. If they have no problem with their government violating human rights, for practical considerations that national security necessitates, that too is fine, I suppose because that is what they choose. But what if they have no clue because there is no public disclosure? Is failure to inform the citizenry "pragmatic democracy" as well? Does "pragmatic democracy" have any Constitutional or legal limits at all?
Dr. Kofas,
I was very interested to run across your article/blog above.
As someone who has written: 1) two published articles on "CounterTerror Culture" in primarily US and UK "cultural products" in both contemporary science fiction and "espionage/intelligence" fiction; 2) another published article on US biowarfare preparedness exercises; 3) and finally a dissertation - and hopefully soon to be submitted for publication - comparing the development of the US and Czarist/Soviet/Post-Soviet internal security apparatus from 1900 to the present (2015), I can definitively say that the US currently is under near hegemonic control of what President Eisenhower in 1961 called the "military-industrial-complex."
Anyone who insists that the US is a "pragmatic democracy" has simply failed to fully comprehend the increasing power of the US National Security Apparatus, and the US Deep State of interlinked security services and their corporate allies/controllers.
Post-Snowden and WikiLeaks/Manning(let alone Post-Watergate/IranContra/Church and Pike Committee 1970s), anyone who tries to understand US "democracy" without taking into account the nearly unchecked power of the US Deep State, is "whistling past the graveyard" of American democracy.
You are definitely onto an important vein of inquiry. And you can probably understand why I wrote this response directly on your blog, rather than the more "self-censoring" prone LinkedIn.
And the National Security State/Deep State, must have profound and inviolable Constitutional limits, with severe consequences for violating them. Otherwise, there is no democracy, no Republic, and America would degenerate into a fascist police state operating under the guise of "national security," ... and armed with thermonuclear weapons and a planetary surveillance grid.
- Dr. Erickson
The following is my response to a Human Rights Expert from the UK who argues that privacy rights rank low on the scale of human rights.
The "natural and legal rights" is 18th century (Enlightenment) based bourgeois concept. Natural rights includes human rights, considering that during the 18th century thinkers began to raise the issue of slavery and human rights. The US Constitution is really based on the ideas of the Enlgihtenment as is the right to pirvacy that evolved as a legal right in the American legal system. There were debates between Jeffersonians influenced by Rousseau who subordinated individual rights to the "General Will", and the more classical Liberal followers of John Locke who placed individual rights above all else. This is the debate Brandeis picked up and reflected the Progressive movement of his times that found expression in both political parties. If there is a Consitutional basis for human rights and privacy rights, the government violating such rights can only resort to the old argument of "national security". Brandeis issued a dissenting opinion on the privacy matter, stating that: "Government was identified as a potential privacy invader....the makers of our Constitution conferred against the government, the right to be let alone—the most comprehensive of rights and the right most valued by civilized men." The Brandeis dissenting opinion was a warning about a government violating the human rights of citizens when it violated their privacy rights. The issue was then was government spying on its own citizens as it does today under a SURVEILANCE REGIME. The Supreme Court today would not side with Brandeis on this issue, because the Justice Department will argue that the "war on terror" takes precedence over the natural, human and civil rights of citizens.
Post a Comment