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""  The culture of fear comes from the top down. It comes from society's
leaders, and their inability to lead.  Over the past decade, the Western
political elite has experienced a profound disorientation. The old
framework of left and right, which shaped both the domestic political
situation and the international world order, has long gone. ""

""  Risk consciousness represents acquiescence to an imperfect world.  ""

Article26  March 2003
How did we get from 9/11 to here?
by Jennie Bristow


When it comes to the current US/UK war against Iraq, the daily
bombardment of news and analysis leaves us none the wiser about what is
going on now, why it is happening, and what the outcome might be. As the
world watches, uncertain and perplexed, as events unfold, one key
question is not being asked.

How did we get from 11 September to here?

How did we get from a major terrorist attack on New York and Washington
to a war against Iraq? How did we get from a reactive 'war on terror'
against the shady, stateless forces of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network
to a proactive military campaign against the Iraqi nation state? How did we
go from a world ordered around the multilateral institutions of NATO, the
European Union and the United Nations to one where the USA and Britain
end up going it alone?

One favourite theory doing the rounds is that of the 'hawks conspiracy'.
Ever since 11 September, the theory goes, certain members of the Bush
administration have had their sights trained on Iraq, just waiting for the
chance to push the button. But what we are witnessing now is anything
but a concerted, conscious strategy by America to control the world. On
the contrary: as each event has unfolded, things have spun further out of
everybody's control.

To understand how we got to here, it is necessary to look back to the
time before 11 September. Because while these terrorist attacks certainly
shook the world, 11 September was a catalyst for political developments
that were already taking place. In that sense, it is kind of fitting that the
USA should end up back where it was a decade ago: in the war- without-
end in Iraq.

Culture of fear

The catastrophic attacks on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon, by
terrorists armed with passenger-laden jumbo jets, sent shockwaves
through the world. But from the start, the significance of this event was
not about the attack itself, but the reaction to it within the West.

The audacious attacks did not start a new wave of terrorism in the USA. It
is worth reminding ourselves that, since 11 September, only one
apparently similar attack has happened. And the bombing of a nightclub in
Bali on 12 October 2002, killing around 200 people, was similar only in its
apparent senselessness - the target being, not one of political or military
significance, but young Western tourists on a night out. The consequence
of 11 September has not been more terrorism, but a heightened sense of
fear.

It is hard to speculate as to how America might have reacted to the events
of 9/11, had these events taken place in a different time and context. But
the way that it did react helps to make sense of the trends that we are
witnessing now.

Anger was quickly replaced by upset, as a nation mourning its dead sought
solace in tears and the comfort of friends. Confidence, about the ability of
mighty America to deal with the nihilistic actions of a few individuals, gave
way to a heightened sense of fear, as Americans feared a new attack
around every corner.

Patriotism, in the sense of a nation coming together under the flag to
unite against their foe, became a kind of shared national vulnerability, as
the nation huddled together under its flag. And trust, in the ability of the
political elite to lead a wounded America out of the rubble of Ground
Zero, became panic, as Americans started to feel themselves even more
estranged from their leaders and isolated in the world. The heroes of 9/11
were not the politicians, but the firefighters - not leaders, but those
charged with sorting out the mess.

Within days, the reaction to 9/11 was shaped by the culture of fear: not
only in America, but throughout the Western world. When certain
commentators in the UK and Europe, and even within America, started
asking 'Did America deserve it?', it was clear where the analysis was
heading.

The terrorist attacks of 11 September were not viewed as an affront to all
that the developed world has achieved and the values that we hold dear,
but as the grimly inevitable outcome of a world gone wrong. The moral of
this story was that the West has shaped the world in its image, and now
the people of the West will pay for it with fear. Why was society so
receptive to this view?

The politics of risk

The culture of fear is not a spontaneous reaction by the public to a truly
dangerous world.  The worldwide anthrax panic sparked by a handful of
anthrax-related deaths in America shortly after 9/11 was not caused by a
genuine and widespread mortal danger facing US and European citizens.
Our propensity to panic about everything from child abductions to mobile
phones does not come from the fact that modern life contains more risks
than ever before - on the level of everyday reality, the opposite is the
case.

The culture of fear comes from the top down. It comes from society's
leaders, and their inability to lead.  Over the past decade, the Western
political elite has experienced a profound disorientation. The old
framework of left and right, which shaped both the domestic political
situation and the international world order, has long gone. In its place is
an elite charged with running modern capitalist society, with all its
problems and contradictions, and yet without its own vision of the future
or an alternative to pitch itself against. Today's political elite is painfully
aware of the problems of society, with no vision about how these might be
resolved. Enter the philosophy of risk consciousness.

Risk consciousness represents acquiescence to an imperfect world. It
implies that society has problems that cannot be resolved, only managed.
Today's leaders, lacking a vision of the future, have come to view their role
as the management of risk in the here and now. The strategy is not to
solve the problems of society, but to contain them - often by an ever-
closer regulation of individual behaviour.

Risk consciousness might be the logical outlook of an imperfect world with
no alternative. As a political strategy for the ruling elite, however, it is
fraught with problems. It is an entirely passive, negative philosophy, which,
rather than attempting to unite people around an ideology or a cause,
aims to scare them into submission by drawing attention to their individual
vulnerability. And by setting up political leadership as the ability to contain
risk, it exposes the inability of society's leaders to deliver an entirely safe
world. This was one sharp lesson of the 'war on terror'.

The political reaction to 9/11 was an attempt to cohere both the citizens
of America, and the Western world, around an appropriate response to
the terrorist attacks. Bereft of any positive sentiment to appeal to, the US
and other Western elites latched on to society's receptiveness to fear.

>From new security measures to official advice about dealing with terrorist
attacks, from anti-terrorism legislation to grand statements about
protecting the Western world from an ever- expanding 'axis of evil' abroad,
there was a concerted attempt to use 9/11 to bring people together, and
to use the need for protection as a way of boosting the legitimacy of their
leaders

It didn't work. Far from bringing people together, the emphasis on terror
post-9/11 fuelled suspicion of others, and pulled people further apart. And
far from providing Western leaders with a new role as protector in a risk-
averse world, the strategy encouraged pre-existing cynicism and deepened
doubts about the legitimacy of the elite.

Legitimacy crisis

One striking feature of our times has been the ever-widening gulf between
society's citizens and their political leaders. With no social alternative on
offer, and no vision of the future readily available, the past decade has
brought a growing disengagement between electorates in the West and
the established political parties.

In the USA, the presidential election of 2000, with its dodgy 'chads' and
media manipulation, brought the corruption of the US political system into
the spotlight. Even now, George W Bush's presidency is still viewed in some
circles as illegitimate; an historical accident that never would have
happened with better technology. Yet with nobody and nothing of
interest in the Democrat camp, Bush dissenters have little political outlet
for their opposition.

In the UK in 2001, Tony Blair's New Labour party followed its 1997 landslide
victory with another, based on the lowest electoral turnout for decades.
The big shift in British politics has been the implosion of the Tory party,
with the slippery insipidness of the Liberal Democrats taking place on the
side. In 2001, Blair was it because he was there - but never had the British
public been so unexcited about an election. Meanwhile, around Europe,
speculation of far right parties taking advantage of political disengagement
has accompanied collapsing regimes and corruption-ridden politicians. This
is the bread-and-butter of traditional politics.

Across the Western world, the legitimacy of political leaders hangs in the
balance. They have no vision, no programme, no reason to be there
except for the will of the electorate. And the will of the electorate, such
as it exists, involves casting a grudging vote for the one personality on
offer. Is Iain Duncan Smith any alternative at all to New Labour? Where is Al
Gore now? Vote for Chirac because we don't want Le Pen. That's as far,
today, as engagement with mainstream politics goes.

The political elite knows this, and is terrified of its consequences. It
cannot lead societies whose response to its leadership is, 'Not in my name'.
But its attempts to foster greater coherence tend to make things worse,
by exposing its weakness and fuelling greater cynicism. The message of the
domestic war on terror - in summary, 'protect yourself' - only adds to the
notion that politicians can do nothing when it comes to keeping us safe
from harm.

This level of mistrust is one reason why the culture of fear can hold
today's society so readily in thrall. Trusting nobody at the top, individuals'
isolation makes them very exposed to every new scare or panic - whether
it is issued by the authorities, campaign groups, or anybody else. And the
cynicism of politicians means that there is little antidote for these panics.
A scared society may continually seek official reassurance, but
increasingly, it does not trust this advice.

So hot on the heels of the anthrax panic came complaints that politicians
were protecting themselves, without caring about postal workers or the
American public to whom letters were delivered every day. When the
British Army surrounded Heathrow airport in an apparent anti- terrorism
measure, it was quickly dismissed as a propaganda stunt.

Fear does not make political leaders legitimate - it only makes the public
more suspicious and scared. In this context, it is little wonder that US and
European politicians, in reacting to 11 September, soon set their sights on
Abroad.

National interest

Within the space of one month, the US reaction to 11 September took the
form of dropping bombs on Afghanistan. The reasoning was spurious - from
what was known of the 9/11 hijackers, they were Western-educated
Muslims without obvious links to Afghanistan; and no organisation took
responsibility for the terrorist attacks. But the inability to respond to 9/11
at home pushed the US elite outwards, to the bogeyman Osama bin Laden
and his al-Qaeda network, which were presumably based in Afghanistan.

The Afghan campaign was a curious affair. Over the past decade, the
strategy of compensating for waning legitimacy at home through the
assertion of moral right and might abroad has been employed, with some
success, by the Western elite. Think of Kosovo - Blair's war of Good v Evil,
widely perceived as 'our' mission to save 'them'. Think back to the first Gulf
War, and the Allied mission to save the Kurds (and the Marsh Arabs) from
the evils of Saddam Hussein.

These military adventures were not driven by something so crude as the
desire for votes, but nor were they driven by any obvious material or
strategic interest. They were about the Western powers using the world
as a stage to affirm their legitimacy at home, the world order
internationally, and their relationships with each other.

The Afghan campaign, however, was not so straightforward. President Bush
had the world behind him in his war on terror, and nowhere for that to
go. Afghanistan - a likely suspect, and an easy target - could be seen as a
useful focus for the reaction to 9/11, and a useful test of the world's
resolve. But from the start, the bombastic language contrasted sharply
with the cautious, unsure approach to the war itself.

Within days of 11 September, many commentators voiced their fears about
the danger of America lashing out against the world; and there was some
surprise when that simply failed to happen. Bush carefully built an
international base of support for military action in Afghanistan; and the
campaign itself was marked, not by gung-ho destruction but by politically
correct apologism. Remember the food parcels raining down in time with
the bombs; the humanitarian concerns; the continual assurances that this
was not a war against Islam?

While many were uncomfortable with the military campaign itself, PR-wise
it seemed an appropriate reaction to 11 September - supposedly, a
specific targeting of dangerous terrorists, acting as a warning to others
that they ought to behave.

But the Afghan campaign was a mess. What started as a war for bin Laden's
head foundered when bin Laden was nowhere to be seen; what started as
a war against stateless terrorists foundered when Afghanistan's ruling
Taliban regime refused to accept the war. So it became a war against the
Taliban, more like the West-against-a-third-world-state conflicts of the
past; and then it became a war of humanitarian liberation by default, in a
way that made the humanitarian claims look like a PR add-on.

Ranged against a pitiful enemy of peasants in rags, the military still
managed to get bogged down and commit unfortunate errors, like bombing
Afghan wedding parties. Eighteen months on, and there is still no sign of
bin Laden, no end to the fighting, and the original war aims have been
revised so many times that they have been forgotten. Both in symbolic and
practical terms, the Afghan campaign became a problem.

Which might possibly have been manageable - if it weren't for Iraq.

Back to Iraq

Now the West's most unpopular war has started, many are fond of arguing
that the USA always had its sights on war with Iraq, whatever the UN
inspectors managed to achieve. Clearly there are a few hawks in the Bush
administration suffering from a case of Hussein-on- the-brain, and
comments like Bush's 'we're talking about the guy who tried to kill my dad'
do not help much.

But let's be clear about one thing. Whatever the USA's plans in relation to
Iraq, the US administration never intended to embroil itself in a war that
would split the UN Security Council, give the green light to third world
countries to raise two fingers in opposition, estrange the voting public
from the political elite, and lose the lives of US soldiers.

The crisis over Iraq is a product of the broader tensions of the modern
world coming together around an issue that just so happens to be Iraq. It
has nothing to do with Bush's psychology, terrorist threats, the finer
feelings of the French for the fate of the Iraqi people, or the principles of
a new anti-war movement. It is about a homegrown crisis within the West
being played out on the world stage.

For the past 12 years, Iraq has played a useful role as rogue state sans
pareil. In 1991, after the demise of the Soviet Union's 'Evil Empire', blasting
Iraq was a focus for Western unity in a new, and more uncertain, world.
This kind of unity, embodied in Western-led multilateral institutions like
the UN and NATO, helped to contain tensions within the Western alliance
and bring some sense of order and structure to international affairs.

All those now asking, bemusedly, why NATO did not finish off Saddam
Hussein in the first place should know that, if Saddam Hussein did not
exist, they would have had to invent him. The campaign against Saddam,
with 12 years' worth of multilateral bombing, inspecting and bullying Iraq,
has helped to reaffirm the West's coherence as a world police force. Over
all this time, allied tensions have been contained through the recognised
need for international control - and to have this control, you need a few
rogues.

The dissidents on the UN Security Council had no problem with this. It has
been in no Western nation's interest to defend Iraq, to annoy America, or
to cause any kind of rift in the Western alliance. We should note that the
cry of the so-called anti-war lobby, from the French president to the
protesters on the streets, is restricted to allowing more time for coercion-
by- diplomacy.

The acceptance, in the West, of its need to control evil Iraq has not
changed. What has changed is the extent to which various other tensions
have come to prominence, allowing for a situation in which the broader
stability represented by the Western alliance to appear threatened.

Take France. What's in it for Chirac, in picking fights with America over a
couple more months' worth of weapons inspections? In the long-term
world, very little. But in the short-term in France, Chirac's barely
legitimate presidency has undergone a major boost. No longer is he the
man awaiting corruption trials who at least is better than Le Pen - he
appears as a principled hero, standing up for plucky little France against
the big bad USA.

If the pattern of the past 10 years was for Western regimes to deal with
their legitimacy crisis at home by dropping bombs abroad, Chirac is doing
the same thing by arguing against the bombs being dropped just yet.

And why can France get away with it? Because of the USA's own sense of
illegitimacy about heading up this unipolar world. For years, it has relied
on the sanction of the UN to cover for its military adventures - for years, it
has experienced a palpable discomfort about the consequences of directly
exercising its power in the world. Hence the ascendancy of non- state
actors and institutions, set up to take a diffuse and unaccountable
responsibility for what happens in the world.

That is why Bush pleaded, procrastinated and backtracked all the way into
the war against Iraq - having set it in motion with the assumption of
Western support, there was little appetite for going it alone. When it came
to it, the reason for pushing the button was a negative one. Having gone
so far, there was no way back.

The USA's sense of its own failure to deal decisively and successfully with
the events of 11 September, and the experience of a messy and
unconvincing war in Afghanistan, led both to the focus on Iraq and the
reaction against the war on Iraq. The USA was propelled outwards and
backwards, to attacking its safe-bet rogue state. In doing so, it revealed its
weakness, prompting other nations to pick, parasitically, at America's
weakness for their own short-term gains.

These antics have been played out to the public, whose disenchantment
with politics and immersion in the culture of fear makes them cynical and
scared about any attempt by political leaders to exercise anything that
looks like power. And the media, rumour-heavy and analysis-lite, has
faithfully reflected the depth of confusion that characterises the current
times.
That's how we got from 11 September, to here.
Read on:
spiked-conference: Panic attack
spiked-issue: War on Iraq
spiked-issue: War on terror
spiked-issue: After 11 September





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