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Noam Chomsky: WikiLeaks Cables Reveal "Profound Hatred for Democracy on the Part of Our Political Leadership"
In a national broadcast exclusive interview, we speak with world-renowned political dissident and linguist Noam Chomsky about the release of more than 250,000 secret U.S. State Department cables by WikiLeaks. In 1971, Chomsky helped government whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg release the Pentagon Papers, a top-secret internal U.S. account of the Vietnam War. Commenting on the revelations that several Arab leaders are urging the United States to attack Iran, Chomsky says, "latest polls show] Arab opinion holds that the major threat in the region is Israel, that's 80 percent; the second threat is the United States, that's 77 percent. Iran is listed as a threat by 10 percent," Chomsky says. "This may not be reported in the newspapers, but it's certainly familiar to the Israeli and U.S. governments and the ambassadors. What this reveals is the profound hatred for democracy on the part of our political leadership." [Rush transcript below]
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AMY GOODMAN: We have lost David Leigh, investigations editor from The Guardian. He was speaking to us from the busy newsroom there. The Guardian is doing an ongoing series of pieces and exposes on these documents. They are being released slowly by the various news organizations, from The Guardian in London, to Der Spiegel in Germany, to El Pais in Spain, to the New York Times here in the United States.. For reaction to the WikiLeaks documents, we’re joined by world renowned political dissident and linguist Noam Chomsky, Professor Emeritus at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, author of over a hundred books including his latest Hopes and Prospects. Forty years ago, Noam and Howard Zinn helped government whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg edit and release the Pentagon Papers that top-secret internal U.S. history of the Vietnam War.
Noam Chomsky joins us from Boston. It is good to have you back again, Noam. Why don’t we start there. Before we talk about WikiLeaks, what was your involvement in the Pentagon Papers? I don’t think most people know about this.
NOAM CHOMSKY: Dan and I were friends. Tony Russo, who also who prepared them and helped leak them. I got advanced copies from Dan and Tony and there were several people who were releasing them to the press. I was one of them. Then I- along with Howard Zinn as you mentioned- edited a volume of essays and indexed the papers.
AMY GOODMAN: So explain how, though, how it worked. I always think this is important- to tell this story- especially for young people. Dan Ellsberg- Pentagon official, top-secret clearance- gets this U.S. involvement in Vietnam history out of his safe, he Xerox’s it and then how did you get your hands on it? He just directly gave it to you?
NOAM CHOMSKY: From Dan Ellsberg and Tony Russo, who had done the Xeroxing and the preparation of the material.
AMY GOODMAN: How much did you edit?
NOAM CHOMSKY: Well, we did not modify anything. The papers were not edited. They were in their original form. What Howard Zinn and I did was- they came out in four volumes- we prepared a fifth volume, which was critical essays by many scholars on the papers, what they mean, the significance and so on. And an index, which is almost indispensable for using them seriously. That’s the fifth volume in the Beacon Press series.
AMY GOODMAN: So you were then one of the first people to see the Pentagon Papers?
NOAM CHOMSKY: Outside of Dan Ellsberg and Tony Russo, yes. I mean, there were some journalists who may have seen them, I am not sure.
AMY GOODMAN: What are your thoughts today? For example, we just played this clip of New York republican congress member Peter King who says WikiLeaks should be declared a foreign terrorist organization.
NOAM CHOMSKY: I think that is outlandish. We should understand- and the Pentagon Papers is another case in point- that one of the major reasons for government secrecy is to protect the government from its own population. In the Pentagon Papers, for example, there was one volume- the negotiations volume- which might have had a bearing on ongoing activities and Daniel Ellsberg withheld that. That came out a little bit later. If you look at the papers themselves, there are things Americans should have known that others did not want them to know. And as far as I can tell, from what I’ve seen here, pretty much the same is true. In fact, the current leaks are- what I’ve seen, at least- primarily interesting because of what they tell us about how the diplomatic service works.
AMY GOODMAN: The documents’ revelations about Iran come just as the Iranian government has agreed to a new round of nuclear talks beginning next month. On Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the cables vindicate the Israeli position that Iran poses a nuclear threat. Netanyahu said, "Our region has been hostage to a narrative that is the result of sixty years of propaganda, which paints Israel as the greatest threat. In reality, leaders understand that that view is bankrupt. For the first time in history, there is agreement that Iran is the threat. If leaders start saying openly what they have long been saying behind closed doors, with can make a real breakthrough on the road to peace," Netanyahu said. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also discussed Iran at her news conference in Washington. This is what she said:
HILARY CLINTON: I think that it should not be a surprise to anyone that Iran is a source of great concern, not only in the United States. What comes through in every meeting that I have- anywhere in the world- is a concern about Iranian actions and intentions. So, if anything, any of the comments that are being reported on allegedly from the cables confirm the fact that Iran poses a very serious threat in the eyes of many of her neighbors and a serious concern far beyond her region. That is why the international community came together to pass the strongest possible sanctions against Iran. It did not happen because the United States said, "Please, do this for us!" It happened because countries- once they evaluated the evidence concerning Iran’s actions and intentions- reached the same conclusion that the United States reached: that we must do whatever we can to muster the international community to take action to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear weapons state. So if anyone reading the stories about these, uh, alleged cables thinks carefully what they will conclude is that the concern about Iran is well founded, widely shared, and will continue to be at the source of the policy that we pursue with like-minded nations to try to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
AMY GOODMAN: That was Secretary to Hillary Clinton yesterday at a news conference. I wanted to get your comment on Clinton, Netanyahu’s comment, and the fact that Abdullah of Saudi Arabia- the King who is now getting back surgery in the New York- called for the U.S. to attack Iran. Noam Chomsky?
NOAM CHOMSKY: That essentially reinforces what I said before, that the main significance of the cables that are being released so far is what they tell us about Western leadership. So Hillary Clinton and Benjamin Netanyahu surely know of the careful polls of Arab public opinion. The Brookings Institute just a few months ago released extensive polls of what Arabs think about Iran. The results are rather striking. They show the Arab opinion holds that the major threat in the region is Israel- that’s 80. The second major threat is the United States- that’s 77. Iran is listed as a threat by 10%.
With regard to nuclear weapons, rather remarkably, a majority- in fact, 57–say that the region would have a positive effect in the region if Iran had nuclear weapons. Now, these are not small numbers. 80, 77, say the U.S. and Israel are the major threat. 10 say Iran is the major threat. This may not be reported in the newspapers here- it is in England- but it’s certainly familiar to the Israeli and U.S. governments, and to the ambassadors. But there is not a word about it anywhere. What that reveals is the profound hatred for democracy on the part of our political leadership and the Israeli political leadership. These things aren’t even to be mentioned. This seeps its way all through the diplomatic service. The cables to not have any indication of that.
When they talk about Arabs, they mean the Arab dictators, not the population, which is overwhelmingly opposed to the conclusions that the analysts here- Clinton and the media- have drawn. There’s also a minor problem; that’s the major problem. The minor problem is that we don’t know from the cables what the Arab leaders think and say. We know what was selected from the range of what they say. So there is a filtering process. We don’t know how much it distorts the information. But there is no question that what is a radical distortion is- or, not even a distortion, a reflection–of the concern that the dictators are what matter. The population does not matter, even if it’s overwhelmingly opposed to U.S. policy.
There are similar things elsewhere, such as keeping to this region. One of the most interesting cables was a cable from the U.S. ambassador in Israel to Hillary Clinton, which described the attack on Gaza- which we should call the U.S./Israeli attack on Gaza- December 2008. It states correctly there had been a truce. It does not add that during the truce- which was really not observed by Israel- but during the truce, Hamas scrupulously observed it according to the Israeli government, not a single rocket was fired. That’s an omission. But then comes a straight line: it says that in December 2008, Hamas renewed rocket firing and therefore Israel had to attack in self-defense. Now, the ambassador surely is aware that there must be somebody in the American Embassy who reads the Israeli press- the mainstream Israeli press- in which case the embassy is surely aware that it is exactly the opposite: Hamas was calling for a renewal of the cease-fire. Israel considered the offer and rejected it, preferring to bomb rather than have security. Also omitted is that while Israel never observed the cease-fire- it maintained the siege in violation of the truce agreement- on November 4, the U.S. election 2008, the Israeli army invaded Gaza, killed half a dozen Hamas militants, which did lead to an exchange of fire in which all the casualties, as usual, were Palestinian. Then in December, Hamas- when the truce officially ended- Hamas called for renewing it. Israel refused, and the U.S. and Israel chose to launch the war. What the embassy reported is a gross falsification and a very significant one since- since it has to do the justification for the murderous attack- which means either the embassy hasn’t a clue to what is going on or else they’re lying outright.
AMY GOODMAN: And the latest report that just came out- from Oxfam, from Amnesty International, and other groups- about the effects of the siege on Gaza? What’s happening right now?
NOAM CHOMSKY: A siege is an act of war. If anyone insists on that, it is Israel. Israel launched two wars- '56 and ’67- in part on grounds its access to the outside world was very partially restricted. That very partial siege they considered an act of war and justification for- well, one of several justifications- for what they called "preventive"- or if you like, preemptive- war. So they understand that perfectly well and the point is correct. The siege is a criminal act, in the first place. The Security Council has called on Israel to lift it, and others have. It's designed to- as Israeli officials have have stated- to keep the people of Gaza to minimal level of existence. They do not want to kill them all off because that would not look good in international opinion. As they put it, "to keep them on a diet." This justification, this began very shortly after the official Israeli withdrawal. There was an election in January 2006 after the only free election in the Arab world- carefully monitored, recognized to be free- but it had a flaw. The wrong people won. Namely Hamas, which the U.S. did not want it and Israel did not want. Instantly, within days, the U.S. and Israel instituted harsh measures to punish the people of Gaza for voting the wrong way in a free election.
The next step was that they- the U.S. and Israel- sought to, along with the Palestinian Authority, try to carry out a military coup in Gaza to overthrow the elected government. This failed- Hamas beat back the coup attempt. That was July 2007. At that point, the siege got much harsher. In between come in many acts of violence, shellings, invasions and so on and so forth. But basically, Israel claims that when the truce was established in the summer 2008, Israel’s reason for not observing it and withdrawing the siege was that there was an Israeli soldier- Gilad Shalit- who was captured at the border. International commentary regards this as a terrible crime. Well, whatever you think about it, capturing a soldier of an attacking army- and the army was attacking Gaza- capturing a soldier of an attacking army isn’t anywhere near the level of the crime of kidnapping civilians. Just one day before the capture of Gilad Shalit at the border, Israeli troops had entered Gaza, kidnapped two civilians- the Muammar Brothers- and spirited them across the border. They’ve disappeared somewhere in Israel’s prison system, which is where hundreds, maybe a thousand or so people are sometimes there for years without charges. There are also secret prisons. We don’t know what happens there.
This alone is a far worse crime than the kidnapping of Shalit. In fact, you could argue there was a reason why was barely covered: Israel has been doing this for years, in fact, decades. Kidnapping, capturing people, hijacking ships, killing people, bringing them to Israel sometimes as hostages for many years. So this is regular practice; Israel can do what it likes. But the reaction here and the rest of the world of regarding the Shalit kidnapping- well, not kidnapping, you don’t kidnap soldiers- the capture of a soldier as an unspeakable crime, justification for maintaining and murders siege... that’s disgraceful.
AMY GOODMAN: Noam, so you have Amnesty International, Oxfam, Save the Children, and eighteen other aide groups calling on Israel to unconditionally lift the blockade of Gaza. And you have in the WikiLeaks release a U.S. diplomatic cable- provided to The Guardian by WikiLeaks- laying out, "National human intelligence collection directive: Asking U.S. personnel to obtain details of travel plans such as routes and vehicles used by Palestinian Authority leaders and Hamas members." The cable demands, "Biographical, financial, by metric information on key PA and Hamas leaders and representatives to include the Young Guard inside Gaza, the West Bank, and outside," it says.
NOAM CHOMSKY: That should not come as much of a surprise. Contrary to the image that is portrayed here, the United States is not an honest broker. It is a participant, a direct and crucial participant, in Israeli crimes, both in the West Bank and in Gaza. The attack in Gaza was a clear case in point: they used American weapons, the U.S. blocked cease-fire efforts, they gave diplomatic support. The same is true of the daily ongoing crimes in the West Bank, and we should not forget that. Actually, in Area C- the area of the West Bank that Israel controls- conditions for Palestinians have been reported by Save The Children to be worse than in Gaza. Again, this all takes place on the basis of crucial, decisive, U.S., military, diplomatic, economic support; and also ideological support- meaning, distorting the situation, as is done again dramatically in the cables.
The siege itself is simply criminal. It is not only blocking desperately needed aid from coming in, it also drives Palestinians away from the border. Gaza is a small place, heavily and densely overcrowded. And Israeli fire and attacks drive Palestinians away from the Arab land on the border, and also drive fisherman in from Gaza into territorial waters. They compelled by Israeli gunboats- all illegal, of course- to fish right near the shore where fishing is almost impossible because Israel has destroyed the power systems and sewage systems and the contamination is terrible. This is just a stranglehold to punish people for being there and for insisting on voting the wrong way. Israel decided, "We don’t want this anymore. Let’s just get rid of them."
We should also remember, the U.S./Israeli policy- since Oslo, since the early 1990’s- has been to separate Gaza from the West Bank. That is in straight violation of the Oslo agreements, but it has been carried out systematically, and it has a big effect. It means almost half the Palestinian population would be cut off from any possible political arrangement that would be made. It also means Palestine loses its access to the outside world- Gaza should have and can have airports and seaports. Right now, Israel has taken over about 40% of the West Bank. Obama’s latest offers have granted even more, and they’re certainly planning to take more. What is left is just canonized. It’s what the planner, Ariel Sharon called Bantustans. And they’re in prison, too, as Israel takes over the Jordan Valley and drives Palestinians out. So these are all crimes of a piece.
The Gaza siege is particularly grotesque because of the conditions under which people are forced to live. I mean, if a young person in Gaza- student in Gaza, let’s say- wants to study in a West Bank university, they can’t do it. If it a person in Gaza needs advanced medical training or treatment from an East Jerusalem hospital where the training is available, they can’t go! Medicines are held back. It is a scandalous crime, all around.
AMY GOODMAN: What do you think the United States should do in this case?
NOAM CHOMSKY: What the United States should do is very simple: it should join the world. I mean, there are negotiations going on, supposedly. As they are presented here, the standard picture is that the U.S. is an honest broker trying to bring together two recalcitrant opponents- Israel and Palestinian Authority. That’s just a charade.
If there were serious negotiations, they would be organized by some neutral party and the U.S. and Israel would be on one side and the world would be on the other side. And that is not an exaggeration. It should not be a secret that there has long been an overwhelming international consensus on a diplomatic, political solution. Everyone knows the basic outlines; some of the details you can argue about. It includes everyone except the United States and Israel. The U.S. has been blocking it for 35 years with occasional departures- brief ones. It includes the Arab League. It includes the Organization of Islamic States. which happens to include Iran. It includes every relevant actor except the United States and Israel, the two rejectionist states. So if there were to be negotiations that were serious, that’s the way they would be organized. The actual negotiations barely reach the level of comedy. The issue that’s being debated is a footnote, a minor footnote: expansion of settlements. Of course it’s illegal. In fact, everything Israel is doing in the West Bank and Gaza is illegal. That hasn’t even been controversial since 1967.
AMY GOODMAN: We’re going to come back to this in a minute. Noam Chomsky, author and institute professor emeritus at MIT, as we talk about WikiLeaks and the state of the world today.
[music break]
AMY GOODMAN: Our guest is Noam Chomsky, world-renowned dissident, author of more than 100 books, speaking to us from Boston. Noam, you wrote a piece after the midterm elections called Outrage Misguided. I want to read for you now what Sarah Palin tweeted – the former Alaskan governor, of course, and Republication vice presidential nominee. This is what she tweeted about WikiLeaks. Rather, she put it on Facebook. She said, “First and foremost, what steps were taken to stop WikiLeaks’ director Julian Assange from distributing this highly-sensitive classified material, especially after he had already published material not once but twice in the previous months? Assange is not a journalist any more than the editor of the Al Qaeda’s new English-language magazine “Inspire,” is a journalist. He is an anti-American operative with blood on his hands. His past posting of classified documents revealed the identity of more than 100 Afghan sources to the Taliban. Why was he not pursued with the same urgency we pursue Al Qaeda and Taliban leaders?” Noam Chomsky, your response?
NOAM CHOMSKY: That’s pretty much what I would expect Sarah Palin to say. I don’t know how much she understands, but I think we should pay attention to what we learn from the leaks. What we learned, for example, is kinds of things I’ve said. Perhaps the most dramatic revelation, or mention, is the bitter hatred of democracy that is revealed both by the U.S. Government – Hillary Clinton, others – and also by the diplomatic service.
To tell the world– well, they’re talking to each other- to pretend to each other that the Arab world regards Iran as the major threat and wants the U.S. to bomb Iran, is extremely revealing, when they know that approximately 80% of Arab opinion regards the U.S. and Israel as the major threat, 10% regard Iran as the major threat, and a majority, 57%, think the region would be better off with Iranian nuclear weapons as a kind of deterrent. That is does not even enter. All that enters is what they claim has been said by Arab dictators – brutal Arab dictators. That is what counts.
How representative this is of what they say, we don’t know, because we do not know what the filtering is. But that’s a minor point. But the major point is that the population is irrelevant. All that matters is the opinions of the dictators that we support. If they were to back us, that is the Arab world. That is a very revealing picture of the mentality of U.S. political leadership and, presumably, the lead opinion, judging by the commentary that’s appeared here, that’s the way it has been presented in the press as well. It does not matter with the Arabs believe.
AMY GOODMAN: Your piece, Outrage Misguided. Back to the midterm elections and what we’re going to see now. Can you talk about the tea party movement?
NOAM CHOMSKY: The Tea Party movement itself is, maybe 15% or 20% of the electorate. It’s relatively affluent, white, nativist, you know, it has rather traditional nativist streaks to it. But what is much more important, I think, is the outrage. Over half the population says they more or less supported it, or support its message. What people are thinking is extremely interesting. I mean, overwhelmingly polls reveal that people are extremely bitter, angry, hostile, opposed to everything.
The primary cause undoubtedly is the economic disaster. It’s not just the financial catastrophe, it’s an economic disaster. I mean, in the manufacturing industry, for example, unemployment levels are at the level of the Great Depression. And unlike the Great Depression, those jobs are not coming back. U.S. owners and managers have long ago made the decision that they can make more profit with complicated financial deals than by production. So finance – this goes back to the 1970s, mainly Reagan escalated it, and onward- Clinton, too. The economy has been financialized.
Financial institutions have grown enormously in their share of corporate profits. It may be something like a third, or something like that today. At the same time, correspondingly, production has been exported. So you buy some electronic device from China. China is an assembly plant for a Northeast Asian production center. The parts and components come from the more advanced countries – and from the United States, and the technology . So yes, that’s a cheap place to assemble things and sell them back here. Rather similar in Mexico, now Vietnam, and so on. That is the way to make profits.
It destroys the society here, but that’s not the concern of the ownership class and the managerial class. Their concern is profit. That is what drives the economy. The rest of it is a fallout. People are extremely bitter about it, but don’t seem to understand it. So the same people who are a majority, who say that Wall Street is to blame for the current crisis, are voting Republican. Both parties are deep in the pockets of Wall Street, but the Republicans much more so than the Democrats.
The same is true on issue after issue. The antagonism to everyone is extremely high – actually antagonism – the population doesn’t like Democrats, but they hate Republicans even more. They’re against big business. They’re against government. They’re against Congress. They’re against science –
AMY GOODMAN: Noam, we only have thirty seconds. I wanted ask if you were President Obama’s top adviser, what would you tell him to do right now?
NOAM CHOMSKY: I would tell him to do what FDR did when big business was opposed to him. Help organize, stimulate public opposition and put through a serious populist program, which can be done. Stimulate the economy. Don’t give away everything to financiers. Push through real health reform. The health reform that was pushed through may be a slight improvement but it leaves some major problems untouched. If you’re worried about the deficit, pay attention to the fact that it is almost all attributable to military spending and this totally dysfunctional health program.
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61 Comments so far
Show All“The principal deficiency of Wikileaks is its lack of transparency about its operators and funds, characteristics of spies and secret societies up to no good and whose main purpose is to hide from public accountability and conceal corruption and criminality.
Such organizations always use a noble purpose and claim secrecy is needed to protect supporters. In practice the secrecy protects the principal beneficiaries, the operators and sources of funds, and supporters are sacrificed to protect the continuation of the enterprise.
Wikileaks has followed the lucrative model of the cult of national security, the largest world’s secret enterprise, composed of selected elements of governments, military, intelligence, NGOs, contractors, lobbyists and supporters, identified by their clearance for access to classified information.
Royalty and religion have long demonstrated the power of secrecy in misrepresenting what they are up to, pronouncing a great public benefit while reaping privileged rewards behind this cloak — a lavish cloak of property, ceremony, titles and prizes, architecture, clothing, language and literature, music, fine arts, and not least, a complex apparatus of punishment for apostates and infidels, often by military means but equally often by covert attacks.
Cults of royalty, religion, military are the main practitioners of secrecy and they are role models for ambitious persons who believe they have a mission to be superior to the public and must violate public trust to battle those who have similar ambitions. They invent enemies to warrant this betrayal.
They also combine with their competitors to advance their causes. Thus the appeal of global initiatives to violate national borders in transgression of local law hidden by secrecy. John Young, the founder of Cryptome
I frankly am puzzled by this mounting criticism, from certain quarters, of Wikileaks and its role in publicizing the secrecy behind which the USA conducts diplomacy. Just the fact that this post refuses to comment upon the merit of the information released, the impact of said material upon world opinion of America's influence world wide and instead engages in attacks upon the credibility of the organization , not the materials, makes unspecified and unverifiable assertions about the profits , if any, being made here makes me very,very suspicious of this sort of character assassination.
Obviously discrediting Wikileaks benefits only the USA and not the ending of secrecy and unscrupulous dealings.
Because wikileaks keeps leaking, and who benefits? Who takes the fall?
It's looking more and more like wikileaks may be a psyops campaign to get our war on with Iran. Is it that opaque?
Purely hypothetical, clearly. For now, I withhold my judgment, and remain vigilant.
What you do is deny the tone and tenor of the new information regarding both those who push for war with Iran and their real capability vis-avis nuclear weapons.
To even have to ask who benefits from the publishing of secrets, of slanted intel, of the facts of withholding information from our own people seems to be rather superficial. The world benefits from the truth, always and ever.
And we know that all the published information is all 100% legit?
What we do know is that *much* has been redacted from each of these 'revelations'. Is this truth?
What will the leaks eventually be used for?
Will they revive the possibility of investigations into the actions of powerful public officials? Highly unlikely.
Seem just like great opportunities to keep bringing up those devilish Iranians to me.
That's my main concern.
You posit that these leaks promote war with Iran when everything I have read concerning the leaks shows plainly that it is the rulers of Iran's neighbors that want this war, not the people of that region. The Sunni rulers fear an armed Shia nation next door.
But the general put down of those who are exposing the unending secrecy behind which our ridiculous foreign and domestic policies thrive is a real puzzlement. What would you see in its place, a continuation of stupidity, poor policies , arrogance and bad foreign relations? Shining a light on the dark corners is never, ever a bad thing.
Some very simple words to live by...
None of what you hear and half of what you see.
And these days we maybe down to a quarter in the "what you see" department.
You're obviously coming from some whacked out rightwing direction, and thus you make absolutely NO sense. What the hell all your idiocy about "royalty and religion" has to do with Wikileaks only one on the wrong side of drugs could possibly guess. Get back under your nutbag rock.
touchy ? I guess. this should send you over the top.
"That's an internet theory and it's hopelessly implausible. Hopelessly implausible. So hopelessly implausible I don't see any point in talking about it."
—Noam Chomsky, at a FAIR event at New York's Town Hall, 22 January 2002, in response to a question from the audience about US government foreknowledge of 9/11. At that time, 9/11 investigators had already presented substantial documented evidence for: prior warnings, Air Force stand-down, anomalous insider trading connected to CIA, cover-up of the domestic anthrax attacks, inconsistencies in identities & timelines of "hijackers", US connections to al Qaeda in Balkans, a Pak ISI-al Qaeda funding connection, etc etc etc.
As much as I truly consider Chomsky authoritative, this answer is certainly puzzling. I've never read such an emphatic denial. I am compelled to ask what many like me probably already wanted to ask Chomsky regarding the above statement:
'And so you consider the official version eminently plausible?'
Is this just a deep understanding on his part that it would have been dynamite to his career, had he tacked differently?
His career is all about appealing to crazy leftists. It'd just help it. Maybe he has a shred of common sense and sanity?
Did you mean to come off so absolutely silly?
Only to crazy leftists.
Why would you blog with crazy leftists?
To show them the errors of their ways so they can reform and become sane progressives. Then we'll have a group who can fight the right-wingers.
Chomsky is right...WikiLeaks is good for democracy but bad for authority and authoritarianism.
The way most establishment media figures and prominent politicians have responded to WikiLeaks latests leak is disgusting and reveals a democracy-threatening authoritarian mindset that would make any dictator thrilled.
Who needs a state-run media when there is CNN, FOX, much of MSNBC, and numerous newspapers who are OUTRAGED! we peasants get to see behind our own government's false veil of secrecy.
Peter "The Totalitarian" King R-NY is probably the most irresponsible figure in calling for Jullian Asange to be declared an "enemy combatant", a terrorist, and jailed without charge...King is an embarrassment to all of New York.
I endorse. The King has no clothes. This whole generation of narcissistic, corrupt world politicians is morally and intellectually bankrupt. Their cloak-and-dagger way of operating is quite simply no longer adequate (let alone their return to the medieval torture chamber, for which they must be judged). There are too many crucial problems on humanity's plate. We need a new world-political mind-set, new global ways of organising and operating - a real democratic New World Order - and we need it fast. Expect systemic bifurcation, or if not, meltdown (this is only the start). The vital elements are already quitting the leaking ship.
oldcrow,
Why publish this fact-challenged ad homimen attack?
It took a bit of searching but I did locate this page at Cryptome which appears to be the original source of the quote above:
http://cryptome.org/0002/aljazeera-snitch.htm
My comment would be that reading the rest of the page at Cryptome left me with the unpleasant thought that Mr. Young is neither emotionally stable, nor immune to petty jealousies. There seems to be very little of substance to Young's attack on his much more successful successor and competitor (i.e. Wikileaks) in the whistleblower category. "Sour grapes" seems to be the shorthand on Young's criticisms.
Wikileaks might be self-protective because TPTB are after them and Assange is in great danger.
Your piece has nothing to do with this situation - why did you inflict it on this site? Who sent you here? Your little stratagem is not going to work.
Assange is in great danger. never mind. that is funny though
You had me going there, and I agree that there is always a cult of personality. That's the ego that this culture worships.
However, you outted your intentions with what you wrote above. I'll pay you no more mind.
Indeed, Chomsky's analysis rings of self-evident truth, always essential, clear, and compelling.
This was a particularly succinct and fairly comprehensive interview.
----
Iran is listed as a threat by 10%. With regard to nuclear weapons, rather remarkably, a majority—in fact, 57%–say that the region would have a positive effect in the region if Iran *had* nuclear weapons.
----
Yes, this was true almost 5 years ago also and in fact the percentage of people who don't have a problem with Iran—or vice versa—has only increased:
pewglobal.org/2006/06/13/americas-image-slips-but-allies-share-us-concerns-over-iran-hamas
It's only the husband of dozens of women, the king of Saudi Arabia and the hysterical leaders of Israel who want the US to start bombing Iran.
Questioning the role of the 'free press', I assume this means 'journalists' not confined to the guidelines the mainstream media works by, is expressly reactionary fear of being exposed to the light of truth for their crimes so the american people can see just how the people we elect turn to criminal ways in secret to carry out their agendas at our expense.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/201
0-11-30-insidewiki30_ST_N.htm
Definitely, more people who have things they want to hide and not to be exposed the light of day. Secrecy is their favorite luxury for allowing them to further their agendas.
That bitch clinton is so off the mark. Where is the proof that IRAN has a nuclear weapons program. Surely Saudi Arabia is scared of Iran since S.A. doesn't have the nukes to destroy their enemy, Iran.
Excellent interview/discussion. Too bad it is contrained by the 'time factor'.
I agree wholeheartedly with doubledee! It has become the rule to discuss the process and not what the process reveals, spiced with lines like "endangering lives" as if the US has not been 'endangering lives' or better yet, taking lives by the thousands, millions ... How can we change this? Unfortunately there are not many Noam Chomsky's around. Most others are afraid to speak to the truth.
I fail to see where Wikileaks is 'raking in the profits?' Get real people. Listen to Noam and Amy and pass it on.
Did these dictators curse Iran because they knew that's what the US wanted to hear? They surely must know there has to be some justification for US arms sales to Arab dictators while Israel's agents rule our Congress.
Noam Chomsky does the best job yet of explaining Wikileaks and I especially like his line: " One of the major reasons for government secrecy is to protect the government from its own people". Our government has been getting away with murder and assassinations under the canard of "National Security" for far too long ( like maybe at least 100 years or more). The truth is, it is their security and their nefarious and extraordinary evil they are worried about and are hiding under the guise of their flag waving freedom and democracy BS and that they are keeping us safe from terrorism. Yes, if the truth were to be known, our political leaders have a profound hatred of freedom and democracy. Thanks to Amy and Noam.
I'll second that.
The Current Government of the USA:
A mesmerizing magical act that makes all their crimes,
and all your wealth
.
.
.
-disappear-
Professor Chomsky is right about our putative leaders' contempt for democracy.
But I have yet to encounter more than a handful of ordinary people who favor it, either, and one of those died of liver cancer ten years ago.
Since it is widely assumed that Iran would like to be a counter to Israel, why would these Arab leaders not support Iran instead of supposedly urging the U.S. to attack them? After all, a weakened Iran helps Israel. Since when do any Arab leaders want to do that.
Point being - why do we not assume the Iranian threat is real? Not that I'm advocating attacking Iran but the threat is likely real. There is just different options of what to do about it.
And though I usually quite like Chomsky, obsessing about what the Arab population says in some meaningless poll question is hardly the sole criteria for determining policy. I mean, in the U.S., the majority were in favor of the Iraq war back in 2003. I would have been happy if our leaders ignored "democracy" and did the right thing instead (ie. did not go to war). The majority of Americans often have stupid beliefs, are misinformed and/or are in favor of things I don't support.
More to the point - the leaks express the opinions of various Arab leaders. Isn't that just factual? This is what they say/think. There's no memo saying "the Arab leaders think this so this is what the United States will do."
Puppet monarchies such as the House of Saud, the king of Jordan and the Princes of Abu Dabi, Dubai, etc. are generally not representative of Arab opinion nor ceratinly the will of their people any more than the Obama admin is of its dissed voter base. These petro-palaces protected by US weapons hate democracy as much or more than Washington and Langley do, and they fear Iran as much as they fear their own people.
Chomsky: "One of the major reasons for government secrecy is to protect the government from its own people".
Read the numbers on Arab opinion above, and it's very clear that, with very good reason, Arabs oppose and distrust Israel and America 7 or 8 to 1 over Iran, and a majority believe that Iranian nukes would be a stabilizing factor in the region.
It's no secret that most Arab countries, who are primarily Sunni, have been concerned with the rise of the Shia governments in Iran and Iraq. Particularly Saudi Arabia. This isn't far-fetched nonsense, but well-known common knowledge.
I am thinking along these same lines, but that lead me to the conclusion that the Wikileaks were staged this time.
I am surprised that Arab leaders would view Iran as a big threat and want the US to wage war.
From : The Shia Opposition in Saudi Arabia
http://www.focusire.com/archives/300.html
In Saudi Arabia, the Shia Muslim is the religious minority. They lived primarily in the Eastern Province, being concentrated in the oases of Qatif and Al Ahsa. Saudi Shia belong to the sect of the Twelvers, the same sect to which the Shia of Iran and Bahrain belong. The Twelvers believe that the leadership of the Muslim community rightfully belongs to the descendants of Ali, the son-in-law of the Prophet, through Ali’s son Husayn. There were twelve such rightful rulers, known as Imams, the last of whom, according to the Twelvers, did not die but went into hiding in the ninth century, to return in the fullness of time as the messiah (mahdi) to create the just and perfect Muslim society……
In the economic realm, the Shia are much worse off than the rest of Saudi Arabia’s Sunni population. They are socially excluded from better jobs and receive less government funding.
The Shia plays an important role in oil production, but the most of the profits do not belong to them. The discovery of oil brought them employment, if not much of a share in the contracting and subcontracting wealth that the petroleum industry generated. The Shia have formed the bulk of the skilled and semiskilled workers employed by Saudi Aramco. Members of the older generation of Shia were sufficiently content with their lot as Aramco employees not to participate in the labor disturbances of the 1950s and 1960s.
The Shia live in the eastern of the country where oil is quite rich. However, the government restricts employment of Shia in the oil and petrochemical industries. The Saudi Arabia’s Shia have been excluded in the oil industry since the 1980s.[10] In Sunni eyes, the Shia not only dominate the oil-rich areas of the eastern region of Saudi Arabia, but are attempting to usurp the role of “protector” of the central dream of all Arabs, the Palestinian cause.
"I mean, in the U.S., the majority were in favor of the Iraq war back in 2003. I would have been happy if our leaders ignored "democracy" and did the right thing instead (ie. did not go to war). The majority of Americans often have stupid beliefs, are misinformed and/or are in favor of things I don't support."
The majority were in favor of the Iraq invasion and occupation (one can hardly call it a war) only after a sustained propoganda campaign that portrayed Saddam Hussein as a major "security" threat. You know - weapons of mass destruction, 9/11 involvement, "gassing his own people" (a crime commited when he was an ally and trading partner, a fact unmentioned by the news media), etc. While the US populace is definitely ignorant, woefully so, that ignorance is fed by the major media such as the NY Times, WaPo, Time, Newsweek, NBC, ABC, CBS, CNN, and Fox. From the summer/fall of '02 on all the people were allowed to hear were pro-war voices. In that environment it would have been remarkable in the extreme for Americans to have developed any other opinion. The same dynamic is in play regarding the Iranian "threat". Iran is a threat only to the nefarious plans of the U.S. and Israel. Does it not seem strange to you that the only part of the latest Wikileaks documents to have been given any detailed analysis is that of the opinions of Arab dictators?
I'm glad you pointed that out, newbie. There seems to be a fundamental lack of understanding of US foreign policy with regards to the Middle East. These are not democracies (with the exception of Israel), but theocracies and dictatorships. Although our own democracy can (and should) be questioned, comparing "public opinion" with the way leaders "act" is important. Chomsky points out that most Arabs don't see Iran as a bigger threat than Israel and the US, yet their leaders are aligned with "us".
Power and profit are the motivating forces. The Arab leaders see their power as being "safe" as long as they side with the US empire. It allows them to act with impunity against the wishes of their own people.
And there's no propoganda in the Arab world? Whatever they believe is taken at face value but what Americans believe is the fault of that dreaded mass media feeding them nothing but propoganda.
Think of what I'm saying this way: If a French version of Noam Chomsky said in 2003, "It's clear France has no respect for democracy because polls show the majority of Americans in favor of invading Iraq, yet the leadership of France doesn't care. They're not going to support democracy." Wouldn't this be ridiculous?
But to my larger point - these cables simply report what Arab leaders think and have said to U.S. officials. How does it show that the U.S. "doesn't respect democracy" by simply recording the viewpoints - right or wrong - of certain leaders? I'm not debating that the drumbeat for some kind of military confrontation with Iran isn't pounding heavy from some quarters but these cables aren't some kind of smoking gun in terms of U.S. policy.
And furthermore, one nation can view another as a threat and it be perfectly valid, even if other nations don't view it the same way. Does anyone seriously debate that a nuclear armed Iran wouldn't be a threat to Israel? So while some other Arab country or its citizens may say "we don't view Iran as a threat", why would it be "a profound hatred of democracy" for Israel to disagree, from their perspective?
I'm not advocating one policy over another here - just pointing out the hole in Chomsky's argument.
You might not be aware of this, but America is pretending to be doing everything for spreading democracy, that's the current official reason for waging war in Iraq and Afghanistan. This is something Chomsky says all the time when people pretend elite opinion is representative or the same as public opinion, and this is what big money media does too. There's no hole, no matter how you wish for one.
And instead of speculating about what he might have said about France, just take look at the Spanish terror incident and subsequent elections and what Chomsky said about it - it's completely consistent with this.
But yeah, a nuclear armed Iran would clearly be a threat to Israel, because it would provide some kind of counterforce and balance to the largest (only) nuclear power of the region. It may even be better for the region or the world, but it'd certainly be a threat to Israel.
And seriously, you have to be pretty stupid not to see the overwhelming and yep, very profound hatred of democracy on top of concentrated power structures like the US. Of course people who love power hate to share it, it's just absolutely trivial, a "truism" as Chomsky says :-) It's like saying water is wet. You don't say.
Noam is spot on --- as always:
NOAM CHOMSKY: "I think that is outlandish. We should understand- and the Pentagon Papers is another case in point- that one of the major reasons for government secrecy is to protect the government from its own population."
snip
"But the major point is that the population is irrelevant. All that matters is the opinions of the dictators that we support. If they were to back us, that is the Arab world. That is a very revealing picture of the mentality of U.S. political leadership and, presumably, the lead opinion, judging by the commentary that’s appeared here, that’s the way it has been presented in the press as well."
What Chomsky clearly recognizes is that the Wikileak of US (and other nations) ruling-elite correspondence in these secret cables could just as clearly show average Americans (since they are the last in the world to understand this) that an integrated ruling-elite here and abroad is conspiring to operate an integrated, but disguised, global corporate/financial/militarist EMPIRE.
That these cables are the fingerprints of Global EMPIRE that has absolute contempt (or as Chomsky terms it "a profound hatred") for democracy -- but poses as being a normal multipolar nation-state facade of democracy, and uses secrecy and propaganda to carry-out this charade.
Which is why I have been posting the following critical analysis all over since the 'leaks' came out:
The issue is not one of \“State Secrets\” being disclosed to foreign governments, but the far bigger problem of \“EMPIRE secrets\” being clearly seen by Americans at home.
It seems to me that all the tremendous angst, consternation, and difficulty of the US in messaging, dealing and explaining what is coming out from Wikileaks really does not have anything to do concerns about the normal \“roughness’, candor, or embarrassment of explaining the supposed foreign ‘damage’ of how normal diplomacy works, but rather the shock of American citizens at home seeing how an EMPIRE conducts global policy.
If the leaked information contains what I strongly think that it will clearly reveal, the real danger that ‘our’ (sic) government is fearing is that of how average American citizens will react to seeing that their own supposed government is acting like an EMPIRE with the rest of the world——and that the American people will realize that they have been being lied to for decades, and that their government, far from acting like a normal democracy (or democratic republic) has been acting like an Empire and IS an Empire.
That’s the real threat that has all of the politicians from both ‘Vichy’ parties, and their professional bureaucratic and technocratic underlings, and more importantly the ruling-elite of this previously well hidden global corporate/financial/militarist EMPIRE posing as the nation called America nervous as bankers in church——that the people will now see them as phonies, shills, pimps, and treasonous slugs for an Empire whose disguise is now coming off.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Ditto that. I watched Lawrence Wilkerson, Colin Powell's Chief of Staff, last night on Countdown. He stated that many of these diplomatic cables are purposely filled with lies and misinformation, and that it has always been this way -- that this is nothing "new" in the diplomatic world.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036677/ns
/msnbc_tv-countdown_with_keith_olbermann/#40424963
Peter Pike,
He should know!
Churchill once described Russia as a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma.
I guess we can conclude the same thing about diplomatic cables and diplomacy in general. They all lie in service of their master: Power.
This pithy quote from a recent post a few days ago on another thread is apropos to what you're saying about empire as opposed to nations:
"the American people are just another foreign country to these banking and corporate elites"
Noam Chomsky is right on this one - as is usually the case. The call by Sarah Palin to arrest Wikileaks founder Julian Assange is particularly telling, indicating much of the political establishment of the US (ab)uses the threat of terrorism as a scapegoat for cracking down on exposes of the abuse of US power.
Goodman's last question and Chomsky's answer tell it all. What kind of person would pose giving the war-criminal Obama 'advice', as if he were just misguided? Obama knows all that these exalted 'progressives' know, and much more. To suggest that a little reform of capitalism will solve everything is treason to the workers of the world. Reformism is a ruse! Build the party of proletarian socialist revolution!
Life Wish,
You hit the nail on the head--the interview was going well up until the end.
Also, Noam's statement about Republicans being much more in the pockets of corporations than Dems is pure BS--the duopoly are equal opportunity scumbags.
I nearly fell off my chair when he stated the health care deform bill is "an improvement."
I think these two are Democrats.
"Push through real health reform. The health reform that was pushed through may be a slight improvement but it leaves some major problems untouched."
What, do you only read the words that push your buttons?
Lifewish, would you say the people in W. Europe who have affordable universal health care feel they are the victims of 'treason'?
To propose local reforms without linking them to the big picture, and without pointing to the need to end economic exploitation through proletarian socialist revolution is indeed class treason.
We must always fight for justice and humanitarian reforms, but without a linkage to global socialism, incremental reforms are just a sop. Perhaps you did not know that the socialization in Europe was largely put in place to stall the communist movement? Perhaps you don't know that they are under severe attack right now, precisely because of the latest capitalist crisis and the nearly infinite money wasted on 'defense'?