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</font><font face="Verdana" color="#0000FF"><u>October Web
Features</u></font><font face="Verdana" color="#000000"><br>
<br>
Thus Spake Noam<br>
<br>
10.16.01<br>
<br>
<i>by</i></font><font face="Verdana" color="#0000FF"><u><i> Jeffrey C.
Isaac</i></u></font><font face="Verdana" color="#000000"><br>
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The huge slaughter. . . in East Timor is (at least) comparable to the
terrible atrocities that can plausibly be attributed to Milosevic in
the earlier wars in Yugoslavia, and responsibility is far easier to
assign, with no complicating factors. If proponents of the
"repetition of Bosnia" thesis intend it seriously, they
should certainly have been calling for the bombing of Jakarta --
indeed Washington and London -- in early 1999 so as not to allow in
East Timor a repetition of the crimes that Indonesia, the U.S., and
the UK, had perpetrated there for a quarter-century. And when the new
generation of leaders [an allusion to Clinton and Blair-J.I.] refused
to pursue this honorable course, they should have been leading honest
citizens to do so themselves, perhaps joining the Bin Laden network.
These conclusions follow straightforwardly, if we assume that the
thesis is intended as something more than apologetics for state
violence.<br>
<br>
These words appear on page 39 of Noam Chomsky's recent<i> A New
Generation Draws the Line: Kosovo, East Timor and the Standards of the
West</i>. In light of the terroristic mass murder of September 11, and
of the attention Chomsky's comments on that horror have received, it
is worth reflecting on these chillingly prescient words.<br>
<br>
First, in the name of an intellectual honesty that is remote from
Chomsky's own literary tactics, it must be noted that Chomsky does not
really support the conclusions drawn in the paragraph above -- that
Jakarta ought to be bombed along with Washington and London, and that
if the relevant governments forswear this task, then citizens ought to
be encouraged to do the bombing themselves, "perhaps by joining
the Bin Laden network." What he says is that these conclusions
follow straightforwardly if we assume that the rationale for
intervention in Kosovo was "something more than apologetics for
state violence." The burden of Chomsky's book -- like<i> The New
Military Humanism and other essays</i> -- is that the Kosovo rationale
is nothing more than apologetics for state violence. So Chomsky, ever
the logician, saves himself from the provocative conclusions he
offers, which are, in his text, only frightening possibilities.<br>
<br>
But as we know now, the conclusions are no longer logical
possibilities. The conclusions have been drawn, and acted upon. And
the results of the syllogism are plain to see for anyone who has seen
photographs of the rubble to which Lower Manhattan and the Pentagon
have been reduced.<br>
<br>
The moral and criminal responsibility for this bit of practical
reasoning can be laid only at the feet of the perpetrators and the
network that supported and promoted their terror. But questions must
also be raised about the intellectual responsibility of the author of
a well-known essay on "The Responsibility of the Intellectuals"
-- Chomsky himself. These questions do not regard the actual influence
of his words on the atrocities that have taken place, but rather the
view of intellectual responsibility that could even entertain words
like those quoted above.<br>
<br>
Two things are notable about these words. The first is the symmetry
that Chomsky draws between the U.S.-led, NATO intervention in the
former Yugoslavia, and the possible bombing of Jakarta, Washington, or
London by states or by "honest citizens" acting as
terrorists. Chomsky makes no policy-relevant distinctions between the
circumstances surrounding the Indonesian government's brutal
repression of East Timor and those attending Milosevic's brutal policy
of "ethnic cleansing." More to the point, he sees no
difference between the brutal policies of these regimes, and the
policies of the United States and Great Britain. All are terroristic
policies pure and simple, and all deserve, in a manner of speaking, a
terroristic response. Those who live by the sword will die by the
sword. Simple.</font></blockquote>
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The second is the equanimity with which Chomsky draws his provocative
quasi-conclusion that Washington and London deserve the terrorism of
Bin Laden, and indeed, deserve for their very own citizens to partake
of this terrorism. Again Chomsky does not endorse such terrorism. But,
ever the analyst, he indicates that, from his ever-so-acute analytical
vantage point, there is a certain justice to it. For the Clinton
administration, in his view, is no different than Bin Laden, and if
its violence against Milosevic is justified, then so, too, is the
violence of Bin Laden's minions. If citizens of the United States and
Great Britain don't like these conclusions, then that, Chomsky seems
to be saying, is their problem, not his.</font></blockquote>
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One wonders if Chomsky ever considered the possibility that someone
lacking in his own logical rigor might read his book and carelessly
draw the conclusion that the bombing of Washington is required. Or
that someone possessed of the requisite logic might believe the
rationale for the Kosovo intervention was something more than
"apologetics for state atrocities" -- perhaps even an effort
on the part of "Western" democracies to promote human rights
and to limit the power of despots to ravage their subjects in the name
of blood, soil, or Holy War -- and wished to kill not in the name of
Chomsky's effete logic, but in the name of something more powerful --
ideological, anti-Western fanaticism? One wonders.<br>
<br>
What we do know is that in the wake of the September 11 terror Chomsky
has continued to insist on the equivalence of this terror and U.S.
policy, and to insist that the only thing new and remarkable about
this terror is that for the first time it was enacted in Washington
and New York. Here too, Chomsky is careful not to condone or endorse
the terror. And here, too, there is no reason to doubt his sincerity.
What he sincerely desires is an end to American "imperialism."
Ever the moralist, Chomsky fails here, as elsewhere, to say anything
about how this result might be brought about in a reasonable way. This
is not his conception of intellectual responsibility. His conception
of the responsibility of the intellectual is to "speak truth to
power," i.e., to relentlessly denounce American imperialism and
allow others to draw their own conclusions.<br>
<br>
For years Chomsky has endlessly recycled the same litany of charges
against American foreign policy, refusing in the name of consistency
to admit any distinctions beyond the distinction between the evil that
is the United States and that which in his mind stands as the
antithesis of this evil. Ever the critic, Chomsky rarely if ever has
said what, in his mind, the antithesis to this American imperialism
is, leaving his critics to charge him with moral tone deafness and
with sheer political emptiness. Those who have charged Chomsky with
offering apologetics for Pol Pot or Khomeini or Hussein or Hamas or
Milosevic were only partly right. By implication he did offer such
apologies, through his questioning of all criticism of these
murderers, and through his likening of their murderous regimes to the
policies of the U.S. But this was always indirect. Chomsky has never
really said what he actually, really supports. About this he has
allowed his readers to wonder.<br>
<br>
Reading the comments above in the light of September 11 suggests that
perhaps we need no longer wonder. For these comments present an
answer. And that is, that there is no answer. The true dialectic, for
Chomsky, is not between the evils of American imperialism and some
good that might (in his mind) stand against it. The true dialectic is
between "American imperialism" and the terrorists and
tyrants who hate it. Chomsky does not need to descend from the clouds
and take sides in this struggle. He can simply observe that "the
chickens have come home to roost," and say "I told you so"
while the body count rises. It is for the rest of us, or at least
those who care, to worry about the plight of the Kosovars, or the
realistic policies that might actually bring peace to the Middle East,
or how to respond to a terrorism that rightly shocks, angers, and
frightens us, and rightly calls forth a decisive
response.</font></blockquote>
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There is a word for Chomsky's stance, and it is not courageous dissent
or intellectual responsibility. It is cynicism.<br>
</font><font face="Verdana" color="#000000"><br>
<br>
</font><font face="Verdana" color="#0000FF"><u><i>Jeffrey C.
Isaac</i></u></font><font face="Verdana" color="#000000"><br>
<br>
</font><font face="Verdana" color="#BBBBBB">Copyright © 2001 by<i>
The American Prospect, Inc.</i> Preferred Citation: Jeffrey C. Isaac,
"Thus Spake Noam ,"<i> The American Prospect Online,</i><u>
October 16, 2001. This article may not be resold, reprinted, or
redistributed for compensation of any kind without prior written
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