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A Rumsfeld-Era Reminder About What Causes Terrorism
The primary rationale for remaining -- and escalating -- in Afghanistan is the same all-purpose justification offered for virtually everything the U.S. has done since 2001: Terrorism. Apparently, the way to solve the Terrorist threat is by sending 60,000 more American troops into a Muslim country and committing to at least five more years of war there. That, so the pro-escalation reasoning goes, will make us safer.
In 2004, Donald Rumsfeld directed the Defense Science Board Task Force to review the impact which the administration's policies -- specifically the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan -- were having on Terrorism and Islamic radicalism. They issued a report in September, 2004 (.pdf) and it vigorously condemned the Bush/Cheney approach as entirely counter-productive, i.e., as worsening the Terrorist threat those policies purportedly sought to reduce. It's well worth reviewing their analysis, as it has as much resonance now as it did then (h/t sysprog).
The Task Force began by noting what are the "underlying sources of threats to America's national security": namely, the "negative attitudes" towards the U.S. in the Muslim world and "the conditions that create them" (click images to enlarge):
And what most exacerbates anti-American sentiment, and therefore the threat of Terrorism? "American direct intervention in the Muslim world" -- through our "one sided support in favor of Israel"; support for Islamic tyrannies in places like Egypt and Saudi Arabia; and, most of all, "the American occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan":
Let's just repeat that: "Muslims do not 'hate our freedom,' but rather, they hate our policies." And nothing fuels -- meaning: helps -- the Islamic radicals' case against the U.S. more than ongoing American occupation of Muslim countries:
For that reason, "a year and a half after going to war in Iraq, Arab/Muslim anger [had] intensified" and the war had thus "weakened support for the war on terrorism and undermined U.S. credibility worldwide" (see. 14-15). Similarly, as of six months into his presidency, Obama had vastly improved perceptions of the U.S. among Western Europeans but -- as Der Spiegel put it -- he "has actually made little progress in the regions where the US faces its biggest foreign policy problems," particularly the Muslim world (other than Indonesia, where Obama spent part of his childhood, and Egypt, where Obama spoke).
We can't combat Terrorism by sending our military into Muslim countries. Doing that only exacerbates the problem, since it inevitably intensifies the anti-American sentiment that enables and fuels the terrorist threat in the first place. All of that is so basic. It's been empirically proven over and over during the last decade. It's not Noam Chomsky or Al Jazeera pointing out these basic truths, but instead, a 2004 Task Force handpicked by Donald Rumsfeld's Pentagon to review and assess the Bush administration's anti-terrorism efforts, principally the wars they were waging in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Undoubtedly, there is some small faction of "Islamic radicals" principally motivated by religious fervor which will likely hate the West regardless of what it does, but -- as the 2004 Pentagon-commissioned Report found -- their most potent weapons are American policies that inflame anti-American hatred in the Muslim world, beginning with ongoing wars waged by the U.S. military in Muslim countries. That's so self-evident it shouldn't require a report to document it, but since it seems to, here's a very credible report that does exactly that.
UPDATE: The latest rationale of the pro-war liberal think tanks -- as epitomized by Peter Bergen's New Republic piece yesterday -- is that Al Qaeda and Taliban are inseparable and therefore "we cannot defeat Al Qaeda without securing Afghanistan." Steve Hynd has an interview with Afghan-based journalist Anand Gopal, who debunks that claim in several ways, as does Leah Farrall at the All Things Counterterroism blog. Even if Bergen's claim were true, as Matt Yglesias points out, it merely "beg[s] the question -- [Bergen] says we’re fighting the Taliban because the Taliban is working so closely with al-Qaeda, but arguably the Taliban is working closely with al-Qaeda largely because we’re fighting them."
If -- as the conventional wisdom has it (correctly) -- Osama bin Laden was eager for us to invade Iraq and get caught up in an endless occupation there, wouldn't Al Qaeda and other Islamic radicals benefit for the same reasons from our doing the same thing in Afghanistan?
UPDATE II: There's also this:
The U.S. is an empire in decline, according to Niall Ferguson, Harvard professor and author of The Ascent of Money.
"People have predicted the end of America in the past and been wrong," Ferguson concedes. "But let's face it: If you're trying to borrow $9 trillion to save your financial system...and already half your public debt held by foreigners, it's not really the conduct of rising empires, is it?"
Given its massive deficits and overseas military adventures, America today is similar to the Spanish Empire in the 17th century and Britain's in the 20th, he says. "Excessive debt is usually a predictor of subsequent trouble."
There's substantial dispute over Ferguson's general economic analysis but does anyone really dispute this? From today's New York Times article on Robert Gates' trip to Japan:
Japan’s future contributions to the Afghanistan mission were to be on the agenda, but Mr. Gates said he would be making no specific request for either money or troops. Since the invasion of Afghanistan following the terrorist attacks in the United States of Sept. 11, 2001, Japan has pledged $2 billion for civilian reconstruction and security training, one of the largest contributors. About $1.8 billion has been distributed.
By comparison, however, the United States has budgeted $68 billion for its military and civilian effort in Afghanistan in the current fiscal year.
That number would obviously be much higher if we escalate. One would think this factor would play a larger role in discussing whether we want to occupy and wage war in various countries for the next decade or so, but it seems that we believe if we just blissfully ignore that, it will cease to exist. Nero fiddles along.
UPDATE III: Just as was true for the first two installments of David Rohde's account of being held hostage by the Taliban for seven months (which I wrote about here and here), his third installment, now available, bolsters all of these conclusions:
Some nights, commanders and their fighters visited the houses where we were being held. Conversations were dominated by their unwavering belief that the United States was waging a war against Islam.
It was a universe filled with contradictions. My captors assailed the West for killing civilians, but they celebrated suicide attacks orchestrated by the Taliban that killed scores of Muslim bystanders. They bitterly denounced missionaries, but they pressed me to convert to their faith. They complained about innocent Muslims being imprisoned by the United States, even as they continued to hold us captive. . . .
One morning, [Aby Tayyeb, chief of the captors] wept at news that a NATO airstrike had killed women and children in southern Afghanistan. A guard explained to me that Abu Tayyeb reviled the United States because of the civilian deaths. . . .
My captors saw me — and seemingly all Westerners — as morally corrupt and fixated on pursuing the pleasures of this world. Americans invaded Afghanistan to enrich themselves, they argued, not to help Afghans.
As is to be expected, Rohde's account contains widely divergent depictions of his captors -- some are violence-obsessed religious fanatics while others "showed glimpses of humanity" to him. As is clear by now, the Tablian are not monolithic. But in all of Rohde's accounts, there is one common strand: fury towards the U.S. for invading and occupying their country, killing civilians, imprisoning people with no charges, and generally attempting to control the Muslim world. There's simply no way to continue doing that while decreasing the threat of Terrorism. The only thing that can result is the opposite.





34 Comments so far
Show AllWhy must the foreign policy of the U.S. always begin with a delusion as the first premise?
Because as long as our foreign policy is based on the paradigm of industrial greed, where profit is more important than killing innocent people; hegemony,hubris,deceit,and lies our foreign policy... will always be in delusion. Oderint dum mutant!
Would we have gone to war with Iraq if it had not nationalized the oil industry? Wasn't that their big crime? So why have we not gone to war with Iran and Venezuela? Is the reason perhaps that they have financially compensated the oil companies and Iraq did not? I do not know. I did read something about Chavez having paid compensation though. I don't know about Iran and Iraq.
Iraq nationalized its oil industry mostly in 1961 and totally by 1966. The US Empire is waging war against Iran--Economic War, while threatening Terroristic Acts in violation of International Law. The US Empire also is waging a political war and backed a coup--warfare/terrorism by proxy--against Venezuela's Chavez.
The US Empire is ALL about controlling fundamental energy and raw material resources, and said as much in a 1947 State Department memorandum that anyone can read in The Foreign Relations of the United States series of publications available online and at any worthy university library. The second goal of the US Empire is to enrich the top 1% at the expanse of everyone else through the National Security State's Military Indiustrial Complex which is controlled by Banksters. If you've read "Shock Doctrine," you ought to see how this works. Chomsky's "Year 501" is also a good primer on how the Empire functions. Michael Klare's tieing the coming energy crisis to US Imperial policy is also very good.
For a decade, there was a unipolar condition in the global international balance of power structure that enabled US Imperial actions. That is now over and will likely never happen again. Empires are evil in all their guises--political, economic, religious, etc. because they exploit people to enrich themselves, often in very horrible manners--slavery, for example. If you want peace, you don't want Empires on any sort.
Good post. Chalmers Johnson, Chris Hedges, Tariq Ali, Pepe Escobar, John Pilger and Robert Fisk could also be added to the list.
Lenin, although he got the timing and some other points wrong, still has some valid points in "Imperialism, the Hightest Stage of Capitalism"
Terrorism is a tactic, and tactics are employed because they are perceived to work. Nothing succeeds like success, and a successful strategy will be repeated. Conceding to terorist demands only feeds into this cycle.
The best way to fight terror is to *not* address their grievances in leiu of their violence. Even if the chowderhead who carries it out thinks its for revenge, the brain who put it together knows its part of a political strategy. Watch the movie Paradise Now as it illustrates this point.
Sure, if you pay the mob 'protection money' your store won't get bricks through the windows, bombed or tommy gunned as much as if you don't.
However if you want to end criminal syndicates extorting from you you have to take a different course.
And just like no longer reacting to the bully who harrasses you on the playground, it'll get worse before it gets better because he's trying harder to break you before he gives up.
The bully here would be the US Empire. And it's being stood up to. It's long used terror as a tactic, just as the bully. And like the bully, it must be broken and driven from the field.
If world peace is desired, then the US Empire must cease to exist as it's the primary provoker of war due to its rapacious domestic and foreign policies meant to enrich Banksters and their allies at the expense of everyone else--GLOBALLY.
What a mess.
As far as I can tell though, the only definition of "terrorism" that we seem able to consistently employ is the following:
Whenever a state, individual, or group uses violence against our own forces to effect political change whether or not that violence is against military targets.
There is no reciprocity of view. We seem to be allowed to use violence against civilian or military targets. We expressly do it for political change. We have had a long policy of this starting with the Soviets.
If our 'way of life' or our 'system' is so damm superior, then why can we not seem to employ the same standard to ourselves that we hold to other people? I completely feel, deep down, that it IS WRONG to attack civilians, set bombs, run airplanes full of people into buildings.....but unlike so many of my fellow countrymen I believe that these things are wrong EVEN WHEN THE USA DOES IT.
And it is well documented that we do these things now and have done them in the past. over and over again. Only Americans seem blind to these facts. It's not really a question of "backing down" I think it is a question of, for once, stopping our arrogant hypocrisy.
This is called "hating America" by the Glenn Beck followers of the world by the way.
The only government to be CONVICTED of acts of terrorism is the USA, in 1988 by the World Court for actions during Reagan's illegal war agaisnt Nicaragua. Probably never heard about it, yeah?
The Beck followers still see the USA as the world's "beacon of hope". At times the USA was a good global citizen as it inspired and helped the world in various ways, by promoting the rule of law and democracy, by funding lots of scientific advances that serve real human needs, and through generous aid to the right people for the right reasons. There has always been elements in the society promoting those things for the right reasons and elements exploiting them for zero-sum gain. But today the exploiters prevail, "big time", and Beck, et al, are working feverishly to fuel their followers' delusions while the petro-pushers keep their 3.5 to 4 ton SUVs and trucks rolling.
In his interview with atimes.com, http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/KJ15Df03.html
Mohammad Ilyas Kashmiri, "an al-Qaeda leader who, according to American intelligence is al-Qaeda's head of military operations," confirms Rumsfeld's auditors:
".... I decided to join the Afghan resistance as an individual and I had quite a reason for that. Everybody knows that only a decade ago I was fighting a war of liberation for my homeland Kashmir.
"However, I realized that decades of armed and political struggles could not help to inch forward a resolution of this issue. Nevertheless, East Timor's issue was resolved without losing much time. Why? Because the entire game was in the hands of the great Satan, the USA. Organs like the UN and countries like India and Israel were simply the extension of its resources and that's why there was a failure to resolve the Palestinian issue, the Kashmir issue and the plight of Afghanistan.
"So I and many people all across the world realized that analyzing the situation in any narrow regional political perspective was an incorrect approach. This is a different ball game altogether for which a unified strategy is compulsory. The defeat of American global hegemony is a must if I want the liberation of my homeland Kashmir, and therefore it provided the reasoning for my presence in this war theater....
"When I came here I found my step justified; how the world regional powers operate under the umbrella of the great Satan and how they are supportive of its great plans. This can be seen here in Afghanistan."
And much more info is in the interview. But there you have it from al-Qaeda's #1 military man: It's goal is to weaken and if possible destroy the US Empire's hegemony and thus raise the many similar sieges (often unknown in the USA) affecting muslims globally. Their goal is no different from Luke Skywalker's Rebels, and the circumstances that caused young Luke to join the Rebellion was no different from many muslims--just focus on the burnt crisps of his aunt and uncle and your identification with his motives and you too can understand just who is right and wrong in this whole affair.
Want to defeat al-Qaeda? Drain the swamp of its enemy and watch it vanish as there will be no more US Empire left to destroy.
"The New York Times is publishing articles filled with quotes from anonymous war advocates."
This DESPITE NYT's express abolition of articles founded on anonymous sources.
These days, it is hard to find a NYT article that have published sources.
Yep, it's Iraq all over again.
In the NYT, "government sources say . . . ".
What experts? Are these "experts" fluent in Dari and Pashto? Have they spent time in Afghanistan or Pakistan's Federal Administered Tribal Areas?
Would anyone in the US consider an outsider--say, an Arab, Mongolian, or Ghanian, etc.-- an expert on the US if that person did not speak English and had not spent substanital time in the US?
These so-called experts, for the great part, are nothing but courtiers and spin-meisters.
Some great comments here already.
"Terrorists"? People who resist being invaded, bombed and slaughtered by foreign powers are patriotic freedom fighters not terrorists. (eg. mujahadeen)
Terrorism is simply the new bogeyman to replace the Soviet Union in the New Politics of Fear. It is in the interests of the ruling classes to keep the people ignorant and afraid.
Even using the dubious assumptions, even if we include deaths in the so-called 9-11 attacks, the threat of 'terrorism' is quite small, as far as probability goes.
One is more likely to be struck by lightning on the same day twice than experience a "terrorist" incident.
Over 15,000 people are murdered by other Americans every year in the USA. Over 40,000 people are killed on the road every year. And who knows how many thousands die every year from lack of health care.
The whole premise of the discussion makes false assumptions.
In excess of 40000 people per year die in the US due to lack of funds to buy healthcare or to be able to pay for insurance and, co-pays, deuctibles, medications, and misc out-of-pocket expenses.
Over 100,000 people die in the US each year at the hands of licensed physicians, who have performed common accepted procedures in accredited facilities, or who have prescribed approved drugs for on-label indications.
First time, shame on them! Second time, shame on us (if this goes forward)!
Just one question. Will any American be surprised when a fellow American straps on a bomb suit and attacks an insurance company or hospital that has some level of culpability in the death of thier loved one?
I will be surprised. But if it ever does happen I will see it as a spiritually important event as well as perhaps a harbinger of an increasing seriousness in American politics. However it will most likely lack a political context and be more an act of private clinicalinsanity, an isolated incident.
Has anyone ever entertained the reason this happens so readily in Arab and Islamic cultures is that they come from a more morally advanced and spiritual civilization that paradoxically values human life more than decadent Western cultures?
The very reason the West goes apoplectic about suicide bombers and insists on seeing them as barbaric is that they secretly cannot admit that just the opposite is true.
What is exposed is not the savagery or inhumanity of the bomber, but the enervated moral vacuity of the Western 'man' who is unable to believe in anything strongly enough to risk his life over.
It is the difference between what Nietzsche called 'passive' and active 'nihilism. '(Žižek).
– (Jill Bains)
Amfortas:
You have an excellent point. I have noticed that Americans (men almost always) often kill themselves AFTER killing a bunch of other people, sometimes family members, sometimes not, but always without any positive principle and always intensely personal. It's quite different from the suicide bombers of the Arab/Muslim world where the incidents are a protest against foreign oppression. That is more akin to the resistance movements of occupied Europe in WW2 than some personal grudge and desire to be personally famous (a major motive in American suicide-murders, almost unknown in the rest of the world).
These 'pro-war' profiteers - and we all know the single reason certain nuts are calling for more death is because without Afghanistan, they got no more profit centers to mine - are the same lunatics who freak the f@#k out the second THEIR OWN government even seems to be meddling in their business.
Yet they pretend not to understand how Muslims might be a little f@#king murderously pissed off after 8 years of constant American death and destruction and torture and corruption and etc etc etc - AKA, 'meddling'...
Look - those profiteering off of the original AUFM (in spite of the fact that all goals of said AUFM have been fulfilled) will not walk away from trillions in profit. Period. If we want out of Afghanistan, we are going to have to compensate our military contractors for their losses - let's call it a pre-emptive stimulus/bailout/rescue whatever.
Boeing, Lockheed, GE, et al - they do not care where the money comes from, as long as it comes. Right now, let's say we're dropping $100B/month on PMCs. Fine. We'll keep dropping it, you keep producing your products (which we'll put in storage,) and, in the meantime, all US combat military home ASAP.
We libs and progs have to get w/the f@#king program - and that means 'we' either pay the death-makers to stop, or enjoy the death-making...
8 years? 8 years? I don't think they'd be pissed if it were only 8 years!
"with a Democratic President, there seems to be more Democratic and progressive support for this war"
There is no such thing as progressive support for war. While it's possible for one to carry a flower in one hand and a knife in the other, I'd say that one's a butcher, not a flower child. If you want to be progressive, you have to practice the Hippocratic Oath.
The real problem is that the unknown unknowns will up and bite you in the axx.
To understand what is going on we need to turn things around. When Glenn Greenwald cites this report from the Defence Science Board Task Force he makes a very understandable mistake in his interpretation. He assumes that our government (under Bush or Obama) would use a report like this to learn how to reduce the level of hostility.
I believe otherwise.
I believe that Washington and Wall Street prefer exacerbation. As long as they can ensure there will be more "terrorists" to fight in the future, then they know they are pleasing their fellow board members and the thugs that they employ.
Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine" applies to the Pentagon as much as anywhere else.
Look at what sectors of our economy are flourishing.
The only metropolitan area in this nation which is not in decline economically is Washington D.C.
In fact, they can't keep track of all the money flooding in.
Please read "Cashing In the War Dividend" by Jo Comerford. I read it after I wrote the above.
"Glenn Greenwald ... makes a very understandable mistake in his interpretation. He assumes that our government (under Bush or Obama) would use a report like this to learn how to reduce the level of hostility.I believe otherwise. I believe that Washington and Wall Street prefer exacerbation." –(Birdbrain Alley).
–You are correct. For all the heavy lifting that Glenn Greenwald does all his thinking is self referenced from within the vantage point of the system he criticizes. He sometimes fails to be cynical enough, because he is a reformist at heart and does not want to believe the worst.
Underpinning all his thought is an optimistic good faith belief that the system can be corrected by its own devices and it can be made to work for the public good.This is a very minor caveat I have with his indefatigable work. I may even be wrong in this assessment. Maybe he scrupulously does not want to indulge any pessimism as a political choice. –(Jill Bains)
I have been corresponding with the son of Dutch friends who has served in the notorious Helmand province of Afghanistan and has visited Kabul on several occasions. He has opened my eyes to the remarkable complexity of Afghan society. That society may be technologically somewhat backwards to ours but is in all other respects just as developed. He has confirmed my view that the Taliban is primarily an extremist offshoot of Islam which he compares to the “assassins” of yore. The Talibs do not hate all foreigners. They hate the godless, the corrupt rich and the powerful; perhaps rightly so in Afghanistan. It is this hatred which connects them to Al Qaeda although the Talibs will not fight for AQ causes. According to my correspondent many Afghans, perhaps even a great majority despise and fear the Taliban. One fundamental problem is that this majority is not as willing to risk its live in fighting the Taliban as the Talibs are to fight, say, us and Karzai. Moreover there are numerous family ties between Talibs and anti-Talibs. In the end our involvement will trigger one of the periodic and devastating civil wars in that country from which the notorious warlords will only profit. His bottom line: if the anti-Talibs will not rise up en masse, enlist in reliable security forces, and risk their lives to make Afghanistan a reasonably livable country we Westerners are wasting our children for naught there. This is sad, sad, sad.
Geez, I sounds like the Taliban hates the same things we so called Americans do: the banksters! Maybe we should let them lose on Wall Street and see if they can take care of our mutual problem.
The Muslim kids who were 8 to 12 year olds when we started killing Afghans and Iraqis 8 years ago are now 16 to 20 year olds and surely they fear and hate America.
Presto ---Endless War....
The Pentagon is never going to be honest and admit America cannot 'win' in Afghanistan.That would be considered treasonous. They didn*t get to the top of the U.S. military by having doubts about America's ability to win wars. So of course all you keep hearing is more troops , more time,a new strategy,save the women,another election, and so on.
It reminds how when the Three Stooges were hired as exterminators,they infested their clients with all kinds of Rats and Bugs.They ,like our military,created the very problems they are sworn to eradicate.
I don't have to read the article to know what causes terrorism: terrorism! The kind that's state-sponsored, the kind that perpetrated by an empire and its 'allies.' The kind that's waged with nuclear weapons not TNT belts. Imperialist expansionism, warmongering, injustice, greed, inhumanity, imperial bullying. That's what causes terrorism!