June 22, 2006
A SUPERB DEMOLITION - PART 2
The Observer’s Foreign Affairs Editor Peter Beaumont Reviews Noam
Chomsky's Failed States
Beaumont continues of Chomsky:
“In attempting to create a consistent argument for America as murderous
bully, going back to the Seminole Wars, he edits out anything that could
be put on the other side of the balance sheet. I could find no mention
of the Marshall Plan...”
Beaumont might have tried turning to pp.49-50 of Chomsky’s previous
book, Hegemony Or Survival. Alternatively, the Observer’s senior editor
on foreign affairs might have deployed his investigative skills to search
the words ‘Marshall Plan’ on the www.chomsky.info
website, as we did. This instantly appears from 2004:
“The favored illustration of ‘generosity and goodwill’
is the Marshall Plan. That merits examination, on the ‘strongest
case’ principle. The inquiry again quickly yields facts ‘that
“it wouldn't do” to mention.’ For example, the fact
that ‘as the Marshall Plan went into full gear the amount of American
dollars being pumped into France and the Netherlands was approximately
equaled by the funds being siphoned from their treasuries to finance their
expeditionary forces in Southeast Asia,’ to carry out terrible crimes.
"And that the tied aid provisions help explain why the U.S. share
in world trade in grains increased from less than 10% before the war to
more than half by 1950, while Argentine exports reduced by two-thirds.
And that under U.S. influence Europe was reconstructed in a particular
mode, not quite that sought by the anti-fascist resistance, though fascist
and Nazi collaborators were generally satisfied. And that the generosity
was overwhelmingly bestowed by American taxpayers upon the corporate sector,
which was duly appreciative, recognizing years later that the Marshall
Plan ‘set the stage for large amounts of private U.S. direct investment
in Europe,’ establishing the basis for the modern Transnational
Corporations, which ‘prospered and expanded on overseas orders...
fueled initially by the dollars of the Marshall Plan’ and protected
from ‘negative developments’ by ‘the umbrella of American
power.’"
(Chomsky, ‘The United States and the "Challenge of Relativity"’;
http://www.chomsky.info/articles/199811--.htm)
Chomsky, we are told, also ducks “the genuine fear of the Soviet
Union, one of the most brutally efficient human-rights-abusing states in
history”. In a February 1996 interview, Ira Shorr asked Chomsky:
“Current plans call for increasing US military spending by $7 billion
more than the Pentagon requested. Why do you think that in the absence
of an enemy that was supposedly as formidable as the former Soviet Union
was that military spending is going up?”
Chomsky replied:
“Well, what that shows us is what we should have known all along
and, indeed, was obvious all along, that military spending had very little
to do with the Soviet Union. In fact, this gives us a good measure as
to the actual assessment of the Soviet threat. Military spending is now
- before the increases - is now at a higher level in real terms than it
was under Nixon. It's at about 85 percent of the Cold War average and
it's now going up. And that gives a rational person a measure of how seriously
the Soviet threat was taken. Answer: Not seriously at all, or very marginally.”
Shorr: “Well, we were fighting communism, is what we were told.”
Chomsky: ‘Well, what we called communism, but communism could be
priests organizing peasants in El Salvador. We were fighting somebody
who was trying to construct a system of - a socio-economic system that
was not in the interest of American investors. And then if you can get
them to rely on the Russians, so much the better. And because of that,
it sort of took a Cold War aspect to it, you know, on the margins, but
no serious planner could have believed it.
"And, in fact, if you look at the record, it's clear and now we
know, because the Soviet Union is gone and everything remains the same.
Yes, because the policies had very little to do with the Soviet Union,
except in so far as it's a big force and - like if you attack Nicaragua
and you block arms from France, they'll turn to the Russians. Yes, in
that respect, the Russians were there.” (‘On US Military Budgets
- Noam Chomsky interviewed by Ira Shorr,’ America's Defense Monitor
and the Center for Defense Information, February 11, 1996; http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/19960211.htm)
The British historian Mark Curtis has confirmed this view:
“The State Department noted in 1950 that Communist parties were
‘non-existent in Yemen and Saudi Arabia; outlawed in Iraq, Egypt,
Syria and Lebanon and apparently unorganised in Jordan.’ Rather,
‘throughout the Arab states, at the present time, extreme rightist
or ultra-nationalist elements may exercise greater influence and form
a greater threat to the maintenance of a pro-Western orientation than
the communists.’” (Curtis, The Ambiguities of Power, Zed Books,
1995, pp.31-2)
Curtis commented ironically:
“So, if there was little or no communist or Soviet threat to the
Middle East, ‘Black’ Africa, North Africa, the Far East, South
Asia and Southeastern Asia, there were not many areas left where communism
or the Soviet Union could be supposed to be on the march.” (Ibid,
p.32)
Beaumont adds of Chomsky:
“At other times, he elides rumour with quotes taken out of context,
for example where he refers to: 'A Jordanian journalist [who] was informed
by officials in charge of the Jordanian-Iraqi border after US and UK forces
took over that radioactive materials were detected in one of every eight
trucks crossing into Jordan destination unknown. "Stuff happens,"
in Rumsfeld's words.'
“That's all pretty puzzling - as four pages earlier, Chomsky gives
the impression that the weapons of mass destruction thing was all a deception.”
Does Beaumont really believe Chomsky is all but alone on the planet in
believing Iraq had nuclear WMD capacity in 2002-2003? A notion dismissed
out of hand by UN weapons inspectors who confirm that Iraq’s nuclear
programme had been 100% eliminated by 1998. Even Bush, Blair, Powell and
Straw shied away from making such a preposterous claim.
On the other hand, there +were+ many media reports in 2003 of yellow cake
- a radioactive compound derived from uranium ore - being emptied on the
ground from containers that were then taken for domestic use, and of radioactive
sources being stolen and removed from their shielding. In response, Mohamed
El Baradei, the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency,
said:
"I am deeply concerned by the almost daily reports of looting and
destruction at nuclear sites, and about the potential radiological safety
and security implications of nuclear and radiological materials that may
no longer be under control. We have a moral responsibility to establish
the facts without delay and take urgent remedial action." (UN News
Service, 'IAEA urges return of experts to Iraq to address possible radiological
emergency,' May 19, 2003)
No one, least of all Chomsky, has claimed that these “radiological
materials” constituted weapons of mass destruction.
Beaumont then notes:
“Between pages 60 and 62, for instance, he cannot decide whether
an alleged bribe paid to UN official is $150,000 or $160,000. Maybe it's
a typo. Maybe not.”
Again, a little research might have clarified the issue. Chomsky begins
by mentioning “fevered tales” surrounding an alleged £160,000
bribe - the figure cited in the interim report of the Volcker commission
and widely reported in US press coverage when the story broke in February
2005. Chomsky then cites press coverage of the $147,000 figure taken from
the +final+ report of the Volcker commission in August 2005. This final
figure was often rounded up to $150,000 in press reporting. Thus:
“Investigators in the $35 million Independent Inquiry Committee
into the U.N. Oil-for-Food Program used a time- and trial-tested method
of garnering obviously circumstantial evidence to accuse the former director
of the program, Benon Sevan, of collecting more than $150,000 in kickbacks...
bank records showed that Sevan deposited $147,184 in cash, usually in
$100 bills, the committee said.” (William M. Reilly, ‘Sleuths
followed U.N. money,’ UPI, August 9, 2005)
Chomsky draws attention to the widely used figure that initially received
major attention - he then supplies the lower figure from the Volcker commission’s
final report.
Beaumont continues:
“But what I find most noxious about Chomsky's argument is his desire
to create a moral - or rather immoral - equivalence between the US and
the greatest criminals in history.
Beaumont must have missed the BBC’s rare, May 2004 Newsnight interview
with Chomsky. Jeremy Paxman asked:
“You seem to be suggesting or implying, perhaps I'm being unfair
to you, but you seem to be implying there is some moral equivalence between
democratically elected heads of state like George Bush or Prime Ministers
like Tony Blair and regimes in places like Iraq.”
Chomsky replied:
“The term moral equivalence is an interesting one, it was invented
I think by Jeane Kirkpatrick as a method of trying to prevent criticism
of foreign policy and state decisions. It is a meaningless notion, there
is no moral equivalence whatsoever.” (‘On American Imperialism
and British Me Too-ism - Noam Chomsky interviewed by Jeremy Paxman,’
BBC News, May 19, 2004; http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/20040519.htm)
Beaumont again:
“Thus on page 129, comparing a somewhat belated US conversion to
the case for democracy in Iraq after the failure to find WMD, Chomsky
claims: 'Professions of benign intent by leaders should be dismissed by
any rational observer. They are near universal and predictable, and hence
carry virtually no information. The worst monsters - Hitler, Stalin, Japanese
fascists, Suharto, Saddam Hussein and many others - have produced moving
flights of rhetoric about their nobility of purpose.'“
“Which leads to a question: is that really what you see, Mr Chomsky,
from the window of your library at MIT? Is it the stench of the gulag
wafting over the Charles River? Do you walk in fear of persecution and
murder for expressing your dissident views? Or do you make a damn good
living out of it?”
As discussed above (Part 1),
Chomsky has endlessly affirmed the relative freedom of the United States:
“The United States is, in fact, the freest society in the world.
The level of freedom and protection of freedom of speech has no parallel
anywhere. This was not a gift; it's not because it was written in the
Constitution. Up to the 1920s, the United States was very repressive,
probably more so than England. The great breakthrough was in 1964 when
the law of seditious libel was eliminated. This, in effect, made it a
crime to condemn authority. It was finally declared unconstitutional in
the course of the civil rights struggle. Only popular struggle protects
freedom."
Chomsky has also explained the point he is making about the “moving
flights of rhetoric”:
“You have to pretend that we don't do things for self-interest.
We do them altruistically. So the standard line in British, American,
French and other propaganda is that everything we do is altruistic...
Maybe a few cynics will say it but almost everyone will give you the conventional
- ‘we're altruistic, we're working for the good of others, they
don't appreciate it, we don't understand why they hate us, we've done
so much for them’ and so on and so forth. Very few people are going
to say ‘they hate us because we rob them‘...
“And it's not just Britain, the US, France and others. It's every
system of domination. Just try someday reading Hitler's propaganda or
the propaganda of the Japanese fascists. I mean it's just overcome with
love for the people of the world, what kind of wonderful things we were
going to do for them. Japan was going to create an earthly paradise in
Asia where everyone would work together in peace and Japan has the technology
so it would serve them and help them.
"The only problem was trying to protect the population from the
Chinese bandits, the Chinese who they were conquering. It's just full
of, you know, tears come to your eyes it's just so beautiful. And that's
the standard line of every imperial power plus the line that says look
how much good we did for you. I mean we built railroads so we could export
products - that part's not mentioned. But to say we did that out of self-interest
is very rare.” (‘American Empire - Noam Chomsky interviewed
by Matthew Kennard,’ November 21, 2004; http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/20041121.htm)
Beaumont concludes:
“The faults of the Bush administration will not be changed by books
such as Failed States. They will be swept away by ordinary, decent Americans
in the world's greatest - if flawed and selfish - democracy going to the
polls.”
Chomsky would surely agree that it will take more than books to make a
difference. But are the faults of the Bush administration the primary concern?
And is going to the polls to choose between big business Tweedledum and
corporate Tweedledee the answer?
Of course not. In truth, like most of his media peers, Beaumont is intellectually
and ethically drowning in superficiality. It is the job of the ‘liberal’
press to ensure that readers who might otherwise be informed and empowered
activists for progressive change do the same.
In Part 3, we will examine
Peter Beaumont’s June 18 online article, ‘Microscope on Medialens’
(http://observer.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1800328,00.html).
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Email: peter.beaumont@observer.co.uk
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