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The War on (Euphemism)
WASHINGTON - From the people who brought you the "war on terror" and the "axis of evil" comes a new verbal tonic for combating that amorphous emotion.
Out with pejoratives like "Islamo-fascists", "jihadis" and "mujahadeen", and in with "words that work", that is according to a George W. Bush administration memo that was leaked last month to the Associated Press.
The non-binding 14-point guide on counterterrorism communication, prepared by the U.S. National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), urges U.S. officials to drop language and terminology that may offend Arab and Muslim communities, to use terms such as "violent extremist" or "terrorist" instead of "jihadi", and to shift the discussion away from the dualistic "Clash of Civilizations" or battle between "Islam and the West", a paradigm that casts Islam as inherently violent.
"A mujahed, a holy warrior, is a positive characterization in the context of a just war. In Arabic, jihad means 'striving in the path of God' and is used in many contexts beyond warfare. Calling our enemies jihadis and their movement a global jihad unintentionally legitimises their actions," according to the report. "We need to emphasise that terrorists misuse religion as a political tool to harm innocent civilians across the globe."
Others points suggest using the word "totalitarian to describe our enemy" because, according to the report, the term is widely understood in the Muslim world. Keep the focus on the terrorist, not us, it says, and don't ascribe "al Qaeda and its affiliates motives or goals they have not articulated. Our audiences have more familiarity with the terrorist messages than we do and will immediately spot U.S. government embellishment."
Lastly, "Try to limit the number of non-English terms you use if you are speaking in English," because "it's not what you say, but what they hear." In other words, mispronunciation could make a statement incomprehensible, such as in the example of "Qutbism", which refers to author Sayyid Qutb, a Muslim Brotherhood member during the mid-1950s who penned the controversial book, "Milestones", and whose ideas would inspire al Qaeda.
The word Qutb in English is often mispronounced to mean "books".
Talking tough on terror has been the main currency of the Republican Party, and the main project of neo-conservative pundits in Washington. But in the aftermath of the Bush administration's failed Middle East policy, many officials, including the bullhorn-in-chief himself, have pushed to reform the public diplomacy machinery, and to correct the rhetorical missteps that unintentionally serve to legitimize groups who share al Qaeda's ideology.
The inspiration may have come from Bush confidante and hand-holder Karen Hughes, who acted as an advisor to the administration until she was appointed undersecretary for public diplomacy and public affairs, a position she left in November 2007.
Hughes had never been to the Middle East and had no expertise in the Muslim communities that were the main targets of the White House's public diplomacy goals. But her year-long effort to change the U.S. image abroad did yield the National Strategy for Public Diplomacy and Strategic Communication, a 34-page document that calls for the U.S. to mind its language.
"Avoid characterizing people of any faith as 'moderate' -- this is a political word which, when extended to the world of faith, can imply these are less devout and faithful. The terms 'mainstream' or 'majority' are preferable," according to Hughes' report.
In the face of increased calls from analysts and officials within the intelligence community to focus on the very serious public diplomacy problem on its hands, the Bush administration appears to have taken Hughes' advice to heart.
The president has used the phrase "Islamic terrorist" only once since the beginning of 2007 and has buried the "Islamo-fascist" neologism embraced by right-leaning U.S. officials and terrorism analysts. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has also refrained from using the word "jihadi" in her public speeches since last September.
This January, the Pentagon decided to cut the contract of its "foremost" specialist on Islamic law and Islamic extremism, citing budgetary cuts, but Stephen Coughlin's supporters said the jihad maven was unjustly fired because his message was too politically hot.
The recent developments appear to have caused a split among Republicans on how to define terrorism, and the recent disclosure has ruffled the feathers of members on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. Earlier this month, every Republican voted for an amendment to an intelligence bill that would ban the use of federal cash to produce documents that used the same terminology as the NCTC report. The amendment, authored by the panel's ranking Republican, Rep. Peter Hoekstra of Michigan, was defeated.
In response to the new NCTC recommendations, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich warned last Friday that the U.S. was crippled by "political correctness" as it tried to meet "the threats around the world".
"If we cannot have an honest discussion about the nature of the threats against us, we cannot develop strategies to meet those threats," he said. "It is simply suicidal to treat the al Qaeda network as simply 'an illegitimate political organisation', both terrorist and 'criminal' while ignoring the radical religious foundation underpinning this and other groups that constitute an Irreconcilable Wing of Islam."
With the presidential election just beyond the horizon, it appears that Republican nominee John McCain will strive to create stark differences between himself and presumptive Democratic nominee Sen. Barack Obama. McCain pledges to continue waging war against "radical Islamic terrorism" and campaign aides say he won't back down from using the language, even though a recent Homeland Security report, which shares many of the same views as the NCTC, calls for just the opposite.
For U.S.-based Muslim advocacy groups, de-linking religious identity from the slippery slope of terror talk is a welcome change.
"It is a good step that they at least take these terms into consideration," Ibrahim Hooper, a spokesman for the Council on Islamic American Relations, told IPS. "What terms are used and what not are a matter of debate. At least, we should all be thinking about this."
© 2008 Inter Press Service
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16 Comments so far
Show Allmemo to newt gingrich:
to be fair and balanced, we should have a term to identify the nominally christian extremists who seem to be shaping both our foreign and domestic policy.
i suggest "armageddon fetishists."
I still say that we shower them all with "bomblets" until we can't see the whites of their eyes.
The manner in which 'other' is named says more about who is speaking than the entity referred to. You don't need a weatherman to tell which way the hot air blows. Then there is 'talking the talk and walking the walk'. At some point the necessity for attending to things of life rather than death will bring about an 'aha' experience.
I wonder if we would be in this mess if Bismarck or Hitler and Tojo had won. Never give a cheerleading cowchild a sword.
'Extinct Republicans'
'Fossil Fools'
Quoting from the article: ""We need to emphasise that terrorists misuse religion as a political tool to harm innocent civilians across the globe.""
"Man" am I tired of hearing and reading the Bush-Cheney-... cabal speak of themselves while, and instead of being fully honest, pretending that they're really speaking of others. They know what they're talking about, for all of these damn lies when applied to the others are wholly, or very nearly so, true about themselves. Damn frustrating!
"Others points suggest using the word "totalitarian to describe our enemy" because, according to the report, the term is widely understood in the Muslim world."
AGAIN; same thing. However, yes, the Muslim world sure knows about totalitarianism, because it's what's being applied against them by the West. The latter is the only part of the above quote that is indeed and wholly true. Damn motherf*ckers! And they're f*cking with innocent human moms, and with "Mother" Nature with their damn hellbent wars of destruction and madness for the sake of greed's push for conquest and domination.
I'm a poet and you don't know it; sort of poet, maybe (?).
"Keep the focus on the terrorist, not us, it says, ...."
Ha ha ha ha ... darkness in invading the world of Earth. Oh, shit. Head for the hills.
"and don't ascribe "al Qaeda and its affiliates motives or goals they have not articulated. Our audiences have more familiarity with the terrorist messages than we do and will immediately spot U.S. government embellishment.""
No shit. A reporter asked the FBI or one of its officers why they don't have an arrest warrant against Usama Bin Ladin (Al Jazeera's spelling, a few years ago anyway), and because the U.S. has no concrete proof that he was involved in the attacks of Sep. 11, 2001. Ha.
Oh, and Al Qa'ida's very much invention of the U.S.A.'s CIA, to boot. Ya know, similar to the KLA the West, i.e., imperialist West, has empowered in Kosovo and who are gangsters, international drug traffickers (heroin anyway), murderers, and so on. After all, innocent and honest people are never instrumentally useful to the West, which always works, quite feverishly, at overthrowing good govts, or else assassinating their leaders.
CD doesn't report these types of things, but plenty of other good providers do, and www.globalresearch.ca has plenty of articles on the above topics; many articles there indicating other websites that also provide this very Western censored and underreported information or analysis.
"Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has also refrained from using the word "jihadi" in her public speeches since last September."
Okay, that was said a few times or more from the beginning of the article to the point of referring to Rice, and I'm stunned, for I've mostly read of Bush et al speaking of 'terrorists', people who hate Americans' so-called 'freedom', and so on; rarely, if ever, having read of them using the term 'jihadi'. So I'm wondering if they really have made frequent use of that term, instead of 'terrorist', or not.
"The recent developments appear to have caused a split among Republicans on how to define terrorism, ...."
But, but, but ... they're experts at terrorism, state terrorism anyway. So, what's this; they don't understand much lesser scales of terrorism, while understanding state terrorism very well?
"In response to the new NCTC recommendations, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich warned last Friday that the U.S. was crippled by "political correctness" as it tried to meet "the threats around the world".
"If we cannot have an honest discussion about the nature of the threats against us, we cannot develop strategies to meet those threats," he said. ..."
Solution is trivially simple, stupid. LOOK IN YOUR MIRRORS; and if they lack any, then, and again very simple, borrow some!
How dumb animal will these people "evolve" to become?! They've already surpassed being dumber than all other living creatures, so when's this "evolution" going to stop and start to reverse itself?!
""It is simply suicidal to treat the al Qaeda network as simply 'an illegitimate political organisation', both terrorist and 'criminal' while ignoring the radical religious foundation underpinning this and other groups that constitute an Irreconcilable Wing of Islam.""
Just talking about themselves again, while pretending to be doing otherwise.
"With the presidential election just beyond the horizon, it appears that Republican nominee John McCain will strive to create stark differences between himself and presumptive Democratic nominee Sen. Barack Obama. McCain pledges to continue waging war against "radical Islamic terrorism" ...."
IOW, Obama is not pledging "to continue waging war against ...", which is good to see repeated. He was quoted in an Al Jazeera article during Bush's trip to Israel; an article in which Obama, Bush, McCain, and Billary are quoted, and I believe dated sometime last week. The only one who spoke correctly and as is needed is Obama, who said that he pledges to employ diplomatic approaches; no more pre-emptive warring.
To close this post off, I will refer to two articles, and I haven't read either of these yet, but they strike me as surely and critically important.
"Testimony of Iraq War Veteran to the US Congress
"May God Bless America & the Peoples of Iraq, & may we be forgiven for having participated in such a devastating conflict."
by Former Army Sergeant Kristofer Shawn Goldsmith
Global Research, May 17, 2008
US Congress
...
The following is testimony presented to Congress by Kristofer Shawn Goldsmith on May 15, 2008. While there were several powerful testimonies by several Iraq veterans, all worth watching, this one in particular provides a taste of what is actually happening in Iraq, and what soldiers of conscience face upon their return home. [Dahr Jamail]"
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=9012
Now that is serious testimony. Sergeant Goldsmith provided an extensive account.
Warning: With respect to the next article, there are very graphic pictures and I would not personally recommend that people who truly care, but who have heart health problems view these. They show extremely injured Iraqis and due to 'radiated heat'; limbs, or arms anyway, having been incinerated, and the torso of Ali Abbas being a horrifying sight.
"Tony Blair accused of War Crimes
Anthony Charles Lynton Blair on Trial in The Hague
by David Halpin
Global Research, May 19, 2008
uruknet.info - 2008-05-16"
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=9021
"Bon appetit".
Great. New words are on the horizon.
I also have a word, it´s not new, but it does work, and it pretty well describes what OUR side has been doing: invading sovereign states, torturing, the killing of many civilians, the designating of natural resources and land for our own advancement whereas the locals may eat the crumbs that fall off the table...
It´s the word no one wants to hear: Nazi´s.
" old goat May 20th, 2008 2:46 pm
The manner in which 'other' is named says more about who is speaking than the entity referred to. You don't need a weatherman to tell which way the hot air blows. ..."
Good "eyesight" and sense of humour, you have, old goat.
Evidently, all of the others who posted above, without speaking of my above post, also agree with what old goat says; as well as with the essence, if not whole, of what I posted, above.
And damn nauseating all of this shit is.
"elcid May 20th, 2008 7:22 pm
...
It´s the word no one wants to hear: Nazi´s."
True, but I'm not sure about it being true in the literal sense. In terms of analogy, though, I don't know what's more fitting.
Hey, old goat, wanta meet for a beer sometime? I too love your humor and style!
Why don't they just call themselves
"________."
Why don't they just end the war and bring the troops home and make sure we have health care and address the real problems of the world, like global warming and poverty and hunger and . . .
Yeah, I know - I'm naive.
We have an interest in civil society which is unshared by religious extremists' world view, which is basically that all of us who are inadequately endowed with a particular unorthodoxy are just going to fry anyway, so we can be excluded from consideration altogether. That interest is to be as essentially inclusive as possible. Our question is more like "can we live with that", rather than based on a cascade of symbolic rationale and involoving some ritual dance. It emphasizes tolerance, long-suffering, patience, persuasion; qualities not necessary for ideologues. How democracy without inclusiveness?
I understand that the name al Qaeda was invented here in the US. The neo-cons have been quite creative in their sell to the American people. But since they have known little about the Arab and Islamic world of 1.3 billion people, more or less, they had no idea how the words would play outside the US. What plays the worst is arrogance and continuing injuries done by our military, our mercenaries and our corporations. It's difficult to know who you are attacking with bombs until the Iraq communities start digging out the women and children. Collateral damage when referring to innocent civilians taken out by mistake is a term that needs retiring as well. They should say what they mean. But then they don't count. How many dead insurgents were really just in the wrong place at the wrong time by accident?
Dear Goat, here's some "other" name calling:
President -- psychotic bitch
V. President -- psychotic bitch slapper
Rumsfeld -- silly bitch
Each and every one a SOB.
Then there's:
collateral damage = dead children
PATRIOT ACT = plan for slavery
Rendition = kidnapping
Torture = bigger frogs
Terrorist = Washington politician
Smart Bomb = Blame the technicians
Cluster bombs = see No.1
Avarice = what they learned at Poppy's knee
Those who disagree = soon to be incarcerated
Truth = Crime against the current regime
Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. The world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children… This is not a way of life at all, in any true sense. Under the cloud of threatening war, it is humanity hanging from a cross of iron.
— Former U.S. President, Dwight D. Eisenhower, in a speech on April 16, 1953