>
>  ----Original Message Follows----
>  Date: Mon, 4 Jan 1999 10:56:18 -0600 (CST)
>  From: MiD-EasT RealitieS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  Subject: CHOMSKY on bombing Iraq
>  To: undisclosed-recipients:;
>
>          _______   ____   ______
>         /  |/  /  /___/  / /_ //    M I D - E A S T   R E A L I T I E S
>        / /|_/ /  /_/_   / /\\         Making Sense of the Middle East
>       /_/  /_/  /___/  /_/  \\           http://www.MiddleEast.Org
>
>                           C H O M S K Y   O N   B O M B I N G   I R A Q
>  _________________________________________________________________
>       TO RECEIVE MER REGULARLY EMAIL TO:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  -------------------------------------------------------------------
>                    M I D - E A S T   R E A L I T I E S
>      News, Information, & Analysis That Governments, Interest Groups,
>      and the Corporate Media Don't Want You To Know from Independent
>                   Middle East Experts Around the World.
>  ____________________________________________________________________
>
>              THE U.S. AND WAR CRIMES IN THE MIDDLE EAST
>
>  MER - Washington - 1/2/99:  Former Attorney General of the United
>  States, Ramsey Clark; Catholic Bishop Brian Gumbleton from Detroit;
>  former Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations, Denis
>  Halliday -- these are all Western persons who have served at the
>  highest levels of authority and they have all of their own personal
>  volition reached the conclusion that U.S. policies toward Iraq are
>  immoral, unjust, and at least bordering on war crimes.
>     The following comments about the bombing and sanctions of Iraq
>  come from Professor Noam Chomsky:
>
>                   U.S. IS COMMITTING LAWLESS WAR CRIMES
>
>  The US and its increasingly pathetic British lieutenant want the world
>  to understand -- and in particular want the people of the Middle East
>  region to understand -- that "What We Say Goes," as Bush defined his New
>  World Order while the missiles were raining on Baghdad in February 1991.
>  The message, clear and simple, is that we are violent and lawless
>  states, and if you don't like it, get out of our way. It's a message of
>  no small significance.  Simply have a look at the projections of
>  geologists concerning the expanding role of Middle East oil in global
>  energy production in the coming decades.
>
>  I suspect that the message is understood in the places to which it is
>  addressed.
>
>  A very conservative assessment is that the US/UK attacks are
>  "aggression," to borrow the apt term of the Vatican and others. They
>  are as clear an example of a war crime as one could construct. In the
>  past, acts of aggression, international terrorism, and violence have
>  sometimes been cloaked in at least a pretense of legalism --
>  increasingly ludicrous over the years, to be sure.  In this case there
>  was not even a pretense.  Rather, the US and its client simply
>  informed the world that they are criminal states, and that the
>  structure of binding international law and conventions that has been
>  laboriously constructed over many years is now terminated.  It is
>  still available, of course, as a weapon against designated enemies,
>  but apart from that it is without significance or value. True, that
>  has been always been operative reality, but it has rarely been
>  declared with such clarity and dramatic force.
>
>  As for the moral level, if the word can even be used, it is hard to
>  improve on the pronouncements of Secretary of State Madeleine
>  Albright. Two years ago, when asked on national TV about her reaction
>  to reports that the sanctions she administers have killed half a
>  million Iraqi children in 5 years, she responded that it is "a very
>  hard choice," but "we think the price is worth it."  We know well
>  enough on what page of history those sentiments belong. Today,
>  suggesting a reversal of Washington's policy since 1991 of seeking a
>  military dictatorship to replace Saddam Hussein's in name at least,
>  she explains that "we have come to the determination that the Iraqi
>  people would benefit if they had a government that really represented
>  them." We need not tarry on the plausibility of this sudden
>  conversion. The fact that the words can be articulated tells us more
>  than enough.
>
>  It costs the US/UK nothing to keep a stranglehold on Iraq and to
>  torture its people -- while strengthening Saddam's rule, as all
>  concede There is a temporary oil glut, and from the point of view of
>  the oil majors (mainly US/UK and clients), it's just as well to keep
>  Iraqi oil off the market for the moment; the low price is harmful to
>  profits. That aside, competitors (France and Russia) are likely to
>  have the inside track when Iraq, which has the world's second largest
>  known energy reserves, is brought back into the international system,
>  as it will be when its resources are needed. So it might not be a bad
>  idea to bomb the refineries too, while dismantling further what
>  remains of Iraqi society.
>
>  The region is highly volatile and turbulent. Alliances can quickly
>  shift. Though the fact is carefully suppressed, we would do well to
>  bear in mind that the US/UK were highly protective of their admired
>  friend and trading partner Saddam Hussein right through the period of
>  his worst crimes (gassing of Kurds, etc.), and returned to support for
>  him right after the Gulf War, in March 1991, as he turned to crushing a
>  Shi'ite rebellion in the South that might have overthrown his regime.
>  Alliances are likely to shift again. But fundamental interests remain
>  stable, and the two warrior states are making it as clear as they can
>  that they are dangerous, and others should beware. It might also be
>  recalled that a recent high-level planning study, released early this
>  year but scarcely reported, resurrected Nixon's "madman theory,"
>  advising that the US should present itself as "irrational and
>  vindictive," flourishing its nuclear arsenal and portraying itself as
>  "out of control."  That should frighten the world properly, and ensure
>  submissiveness, it is hoped.
>
>  The most ominous aspect of all of this is, perhaps, that the openly
>  declared contempt for the law of nations and professed norms of
>  civilized behavior proceeds without eliciting even a twitter of
>  principled comment among the educated classes. Their position, with
>  impressive uniformity, is that the criminal stance of the US and its
>  client are so obviously valid as to be beyond discussion, even beyond
>  thought.  If such matters as international law or the opinions and
>  wishes of the population of the region intrude at all, which is very
>  rare, they are dismissed as a "technicality," with no bearing on the
>  decisions of the global ruler. Not only are the warrior states
>  officially declaring (not for the first time, to be sure) that the
>  foundations of international order are an absurd irrelevance, but they
>  are doing so with the virtually unanimous endorsement of the educated
>  classes. The world should take notice, and it surely does, outside of
>  narrow sectors of privilege and power.
>
>  The manner and timing of the attack were also surely intended to be a
>  gesture of supreme contempt for the United Nations, and a declaration
>  of the irrelevance of international law or other obligations; that too
>  has been understood. The bombing was initiated as the Security Council
>  met in emergency session to deal with the crisis in Iraq, and even its
>  permanent members were not notified.  The timing is interesting in other
>  ways. The bombing began at 5PM Eastern Standard Time, when the three
>  major TV channels open their news programs. The script is familiar. The
>  first war crime orchestrated for prime time TV was the bombing of Libya
>  in 1986, scheduled precisely for 7PM EST -- which is when the major TV
>  news programs aired then.
>
>  Personally, I doubt that all of this has much to do with the
>  impeachment farce.  From Clinton's point of view, the coincidence
>  mainly serves to undermine his credibility further, though Democrats
>  are plainly hoping to construct an issue for later campaigns,
>  establishing the basis for much passionate rhetoric about how these
>  evil Republicans attacked our Commander-in-Chief while our brave sons
>  and daughters were putting their lives on the line fighting for their
>  country, and so on. The posture is familiar not only here, but also in
>  the long and ugly record of warrior states generally.
>
>                      Noam Chomsky
>
>  _________________________________________________________________
>
>          M  I  D  -  E  A  S  T      R  E  A  L  I  T  I  E  S
>                         (c) Copyright 1998
>      [EMAIL PROTECTED] / Fax: 202 362-6965 / Phone: 202 362-5266
>
>  Phone Messages can now be sent to MER 24-hours daily using our new 800
>  number. Just call 1800 724-6644.  When asked put in our regular phone
>  number, 202 362-5266, followed by #.  Your message can be up to one
>  minute and will be instantly forwarded to MER at all times.





----Original Message Follows----
Date: Mon, 4 Jan 1999 10:56:18 -0600 (CST)
From: MiD-EasT RealitieS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: CHOMSKY on bombing Iraq
To: undisclosed-recipients:;

        _______   ____   ______
       /  |/  /  /___/  / /_ //    M I D - E A S T   R E A L I T I E S
      / /|_/ /  /_/_   / /\\         Making Sense of the Middle East
     /_/  /_/  /___/  /_/  \\           http://www.MiddleEast.Org

                         C H O M S K Y   O N   B O M B I N G   I R A Q
_________________________________________________________________
     TO RECEIVE MER REGULARLY EMAIL TO:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-------------------------------------------------------------------
                  M I D - E A S T   R E A L I T I E S
    News, Information, & Analysis That Governments, Interest Groups,
    and the Corporate Media Don't Want You To Know from Independent
                 Middle East Experts Around the World.
____________________________________________________________________

            THE U.S. AND WAR CRIMES IN THE MIDDLE EAST

MER - Washington - 1/2/99:  Former Attorney General of the United
States, Ramsey Clark; Catholic Bishop Brian Gumbleton from Detroit;
former Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations, Denis
Halliday -- these are all Western persons who have served at the
highest levels of authority and they have all of their own personal
volition reached the conclusion that U.S. policies toward Iraq are
immoral, unjust, and at least bordering on war crimes.
   The following comments about the bombing and sanctions of Iraq
come from Professor Noam Chomsky:

                 U.S. IS COMMITTING LAWLESS WAR CRIMES

The US and its increasingly pathetic British lieutenant want the world
to understand -- and in particular want the people of the Middle East
region to understand -- that "What We Say Goes," as Bush defined his New
World Order while the missiles were raining on Baghdad in February 1991.
The message, clear and simple, is that we are violent and lawless
states, and if you don't like it, get out of our way. It's a message of
no small significance.  Simply have a look at the projections of
geologists concerning the expanding role of Middle East oil in global
energy production in the coming decades.

I suspect that the message is understood in the places to which it is
addressed.

A very conservative assessment is that the US/UK attacks are
"aggression," to borrow the apt term of the Vatican and others. They
are as clear an example of a war crime as one could construct. In the
past, acts of aggression, international terrorism, and violence have
sometimes been cloaked in at least a pretense of legalism --
increasingly ludicrous over the years, to be sure.  In this case there
was not even a pretense.  Rather, the US and its client simply
informed the world that they are criminal states, and that the
structure of binding international law and conventions that has been
laboriously constructed over many years is now terminated.  It is
still available, of course, as a weapon against designated enemies,
but apart from that it is without significance or value. True, that
has been always been operative reality, but it has rarely been
declared with such clarity and dramatic force.

As for the moral level, if the word can even be used, it is hard to
improve on the pronouncements of Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright. Two years ago, when asked on national TV about her reaction
to reports that the sanctions she administers have killed half a
million Iraqi children in 5 years, she responded that it is "a very
hard choice," but "we think the price is worth it."  We know well
enough on what page of history those sentiments belong. Today,
suggesting a reversal of Washington's policy since 1991 of seeking a
military dictatorship to replace Saddam Hussein's in name at least,
she explains that "we have come to the determination that the Iraqi
people would benefit if they had a government that really represented
them." We need not tarry on the plausibility of this sudden
conversion. The fact that the words can be articulated tells us more
than enough.

It costs the US/UK nothing to keep a stranglehold on Iraq and to
torture its people -- while strengthening Saddam's rule, as all
concede There is a temporary oil glut, and from the point of view of
the oil majors (mainly US/UK and clients), it's just as well to keep
Iraqi oil off the market for the moment; the low price is harmful to
profits. That aside, competitors (France and Russia) are likely to
have the inside track when Iraq, which has the world's second largest
known energy reserves, is brought back into the international system,
as it will be when its resources are needed. So it might not be a bad
idea to bomb the refineries too, while dismantling further what
remains of Iraqi society.

The region is highly volatile and turbulent. Alliances can quickly
shift. Though the fact is carefully suppressed, we would do well to
bear in mind that the US/UK were highly protective of their admired
friend and trading partner Saddam Hussein right through the period of
his worst crimes (gassing of Kurds, etc.), and returned to support for
him right after the Gulf War, in March 1991, as he turned to crushing a
Shi'ite rebellion in the South that might have overthrown his regime.
Alliances are likely to shift again. But fundamental interests remain
stable, and the two warrior states are making it as clear as they can
that they are dangerous, and others should beware. It might also be
recalled that a recent high-level planning study, released early this
year but scarcely reported, resurrected Nixon's "madman theory,"
advising that the US should present itself as "irrational and
vindictive," flourishing its nuclear arsenal and portraying itself as
"out of control."  That should frighten the world properly, and ensure
submissiveness, it is hoped.

The most ominous aspect of all of this is, perhaps, that the openly
declared contempt for the law of nations and professed norms of
civilized behavior proceeds without eliciting even a twitter of
principled comment among the educated classes. Their position, with
impressive uniformity, is that the criminal stance of the US and its
client are so obviously valid as to be beyond discussion, even beyond
thought.  If such matters as international law or the opinions and
wishes of the population of the region intrude at all, which is very
rare, they are dismissed as a "technicality," with no bearing on the
decisions of the global ruler. Not only are the warrior states
officially declaring (not for the first time, to be sure) that the
foundations of international order are an absurd irrelevance, but they
are doing so with the virtually unanimous endorsement of the educated
classes. The world should take notice, and it surely does, outside of
narrow sectors of privilege and power.

The manner and timing of the attack were also surely intended to be a
gesture of supreme contempt for the United Nations, and a declaration
of the irrelevance of international law or other obligations; that too
has been understood. The bombing was initiated as the Security Council
met in emergency session to deal with the crisis in Iraq, and even its
permanent members were not notified.  The timing is interesting in other
ways. The bombing began at 5PM Eastern Standard Time, when the three
major TV channels open their news programs. The script is familiar. The
first war crime orchestrated for prime time TV was the bombing of Libya
in 1986, scheduled precisely for 7PM EST -- which is when the major TV
news programs aired then.

Personally, I doubt that all of this has much to do with the
impeachment farce.  From Clinton's point of view, the coincidence
mainly serves to undermine his credibility further, though Democrats
are plainly hoping to construct an issue for later campaigns,
establishing the basis for much passionate rhetoric about how these
evil Republicans attacked our Commander-in-Chief while our brave sons
and daughters were putting their lives on the line fighting for their
country, and so on. The posture is familiar not only here, but also in
the long and ugly record of warrior states generally.

                    Noam Chomsky

_________________________________________________________________

        M  I  D  -  E  A  S  T      R  E  A  L  I  T  I  E  S
                       (c) Copyright 1998
    [EMAIL PROTECTED] / Fax: 202 362-6965 / Phone: 202 362-5266

Phone Messages can now be sent to MER 24-hours daily using our new 800
number. Just call 1800 724-6644.  When asked put in our regular phone
number, 202 362-5266, followed by #.  Your message can be up to one
minute and will be instantly forwarded to MER at all times.




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