[lbo-talk] Why do they hate Moore?

Luke Weiger lweiger at umich.edu
Sat Jul 3 17:09:54 PDT 2004


"Eight months after the bombing, FBI director Robert Mueller could only inform a Senate Committee that US intelligence now 'believes' the plot was hatched in Afghanistan, though planned and implemented elsewhere. [Walter Pincus, 'The 9-11 Masterminds may have been in Afghanistan,' Washington Post Weekly, June 10-16.]" Chomsky at <www.zmag.org/chomsky4-30-03.htm."

Is not equivalent to

"Robert Mueller informed a Senate Committee that US intelligence wasn't sure if bin Laden was responsible for 9/11."

-- Luke

----- Original Message ----- From: "C. G. Estabrook" <galliher at alexia.lis.uiuc.edu> To: <lbo-talk at lbo-talk.org> Sent: Saturday, July 03, 2004 7:54 PM Subject: Re: [lbo-talk] Why do they hate Moore?


> You were right to be "initially worried about possible mass starvation in
> Afghanistan," because the Bush administration was perfectly willing to see
> it happen; there is no reason to think that would have shown any more
> compunction about causing hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths in
> Afghanistan than the Clinton administration did about hundreds of
> thousands of civilian deaths in Iraq. The fact was obvious and generally
> recognized (for citations, see the notes to Chomsky's talk at
> <http://www.zmag.org/lakdawalalec.htm>.)
>
> "Eight months after the bombing, FBI director Robert Mueller could only
> inform a Senate Committee that US intelligence now 'believes' the plot was
> hatched in Afghanistan, though planned and implemented elsewhere. [Walter
> Pincus, 'The 9-11 Masterminds may have been in Afghanistan,' Washington
> Post Weekly, June 10-16.]" Chomsky at <www.zmag.org/chomsky4-30-03.htm>.
>
> Some rightist hacks said Chomsky predicted a "silent genocide" in
> Afghanistan that didn't take place. Here's his answer:
>
> QUESTION: Professor Chomsky, do you think you overestimated the
> humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan? Pakistan News Service has you saying
> on a November trip to Pakistan, only ten days before the bombing, the U.N.
> Food and Agricultural Organization had warned that over seven million
> people would face starvation in Afghanistan if military action was
> initiated.
>
> CHOMSKY: I wasn't overestimating it. I was quoting the Food and
> Agricultural Organization.
>
> QUESTION: But you give the impression that the bombing alone would
> endanger the lives of seven million people.
>
> CHOMSKY: I didn't give that impression at all. What I said is that, before
> the bombing, there were, according to UN estimates, about five million
> people facing starvation. According to the New York Times, the effect of
> the threat of bombing, let alone the bombing, would be to place an
> additional two and a half million people at risk. They were quoting UN
> sources. And I quoted them. If it's an overestimate, it's not mine. It's
> the overestimate of the New York Times, the Food and Agricultural
> Organization, the World Food Program, and others. There's a separate
> question: did it happen? Totally separate. Interesting and important
> question but it's not the basis on which we carry out--
>
> QUESTION: So you were still right to issue the warning--?
>
> CHOMSKY: I was right to quote the warnings of every international
> authority on the basis of which the actions were undertaken and commentary
> was made. And, furthermore, I was right to point out the elementary truism
> that we evaluate the actions, and the commentary on them, on the basis of
> the expectations on which the actions were taken. Now, there's a separate
> question -- important separate question: what are the effects? Well, what
> I said at the same point is: we'll never know.
>
> QUESTION: Well, the effects, according to Oxfam, are that for some the
> dangers have receded -- for others, they've got worse.
>
> CHOMSKY: Exactly.
>
> QUESTION: It's a mixed and complex picture.
>
> CHOMSKY: Let's first establish the fact, which is elementary, that
> whatever the consequences are -- and they're important -- they're
> completely irrelevant to this issue. Okay, having established that, let's
> look at the consequences. The consequences, first of all, are mixed and,
> secondly, the point that I made in the book, back in October, is, I
> believe, correct. They will never be investigated. I hope I'm wrong about
> that. As I said there, I hope that we will break the historical pattern, a
> very overwhelming historical pattern, and actually look at the
> consequences of our own actions. That almost never happens...
>
>
> On Sat, 3 Jul 2004, Luke Weiger wrote:
>
> > C.G. Estabrook wrote:
> >
> > > We get to kill people if we suspect their government is not sincere?
> > > Robert Mueller, head of the FBI, testifying the summer after 9/11,
> > could > not say that he "_knew_ Al Qaeda was responsible."
> >
> > Where's the quotation?
> >
> > > The administration was certainly willing to starve many people in >
> > Afghanistan to death, as the UN recognized.
> >
> > What's your evidence, apart from the warnings of some aid workers?
> >
> > > Part of the reason it didn't happen was the world-wide outcry
> > against the vicious plans of the US.
> >
> > Again, where's your evidence? I'll admit that I was initially worried
> > about possible mass starvation in Afghanistan--but folks like Jon
> > Chait, who predicted that the invasion would actually help matters,
> > proved to be correct.
> >
>
>
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