-Caveat Lector-

-----Original Message-----
From: Lew Rockwell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Friends and Colleagues <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Saturday, April 24, 1999 2:39 PM
Subject: Chomsky Replies to the Pro-War Left


http://www.zmag.org/ZMag/chomreplieskos.htm


Chomsky was asked first about support among progressives for the position
that "military intervention is needed to stop Milosevic from committing
genocide, regardless of whether NATO's motivations are pure," with
comparisons about "WWII being necessary to stop Hitler, even if the U.S. did
not have truly humanitarian objectives." As well as, "Is the Yugoslavian
government genocidal" and "Will the NATO intervention have the effect of
stopping Milosevic and/or saving the people of Kosovo from extermination?"

I don't want to say anything about the people you are referring to,
because I don't know, but it seems to me reasonably clear that if we think
the matter through, the arguments you report are untenable, so untenable as
to raise some rather serious questions.

First, let's consider Milosovec's "genocide" in the period preceding the
NATO
bombings. According to NATO, 2000 people had been killed, mostly by Serb
military, which by summer 1998 began to react (with retaliation against
civilians)
to guerrilla (KLA) attacks on police stations and civilians, based from and
funded from abroad. And several hundred thousands of refugees were
generated. (We might ask, incidentally, how the US would respond to attacks
on police stations and
civilians in New York by armed guerrillas supported from and based in
Libya). That's a humanitarian crisis, but one of a scale that is matched or
exceeded
substantially all over the world right now, quite commonly with decisive
support from Clinton.

The numbers happen to be almost exactly what the State Department has just
reported
for Colombia in the same year, with roughly the same distribution of
atrocities (and
a far greater refugee population, since the 300,000 resulting from last
year's
atrocities are added to over a million from before). And it's a fraction of
the atrocities that Clinton dedicated substantial efforts to escalating in
Turkey in the same years, in the ethnic cleansing of Kurds. And on, and on.
So if Milosovic is "genocidal," so are a lot of others-pretty close to home.
That doesn't say he's a nice guy: he's a monstrous thug.

But the term "genocidal" is being waved as a propaganda device to mobilize
the public for Clinton's wars.

Second, the US ("NATO") intervention, as predicted, radically escalated
the atrocities, maybe even approaching the level of Turkey, or of Palestine
in 1948, to take another example. I wouldn't use the term "genocide" for
such operations-
that's a kind of ultra-right "revisionism," an insult to the memory of the
victims of the Holocaust, in my opinion. But it's very bad, and it suffices
to undermine the claim that "military intervention is needed to stop
Milosevic from committing genocide," on elementary logical grounds.

About "WWII being necessary to stop Hitler," that's not what happened at
all. The US/UK were rather sympathetic to Hitler (and absolutely adored
Mussolini). That went on to the late '30s, with varying defections in the
latter stages (much the same was true of Japanese fascism). When Hitler
invaded Poland, Britain and France went to war-called "a phony war," because
they didn't do much. When Hitler attacked them, it became a real war. When
Germany declared war on the US, after Japan had attacked mainly US military
facilities in US colonies that had been conquered (in one case, with
extraordinary violence) half a century before, the US went to war. No one
went to war "to stop Hitler."

There's always more to say: history is too complex to summarize in a few
lines. But the basic assumptions you describe are so far off the mark that
discussion is hardly even possible.

Chomsky was also asked: "To what extent could US resort to military force in
the Balkans be related to Caspian Sea oil and concerns over declining
reserves, uncertainty about Russia and its former empire, the threat to
Western interests of increasing conflict in the Balkans, the desire to
increase the Pentagon budget, or maybe other factors, since the professed
humanitarian concerns seem 'dubious.'"

On the last, "dubious" is too kind. If a Mafia don who runs the local
branch of Murder Inc. shows some kindness to children, the humanitarian
concerns don't rise to the level of "dubious"-and that's even more so if he
shows his humanitarian concerns by kicking the kid in the face. We can put
that aside, as sheer hypocrisy.

More plausible, in my view, is just what Clinton, Blair, etc., have been
saying from the start. It's necessary to ensure the "credibility of NATO."
But that
phrase has to be translated from Newspeak.

The US is not concerned with the "credibility" of Italy or Holland: rather,
with the US (and its British attack dog). And what does "credibility" mean?
Here we can return to the Mafia don. If someone doesn't pay protection
money, the don has to establish "credibility," to make sure others don't get
funny ideas about
disobeying orders. So what Clinton, et al., are saying is that it's
necessary to ensure that everyone has proper fear of the global enforcer. I
think it is also useful to bear in mind the Clinton strategic document
called "Essentials of Post-Cold War Deterrence" that's quoted in an article
of mine in Z a year ago on "Rogue States," the same one Steve Shalom
reviewed in more detail in a recent post. It advocates that the US portray
itself as "irrational and vindictive if its vital interests are attacked,"
"part of the national persona we project to all adversaries": "It hurts to
portray ourselves as too fully rational and cool-headed," and surely not
subordinate to treaty obligations or conditions of
world order. "The fact that some elements" of the US government "may appear
to be
potentially 'out of control' can be beneficial to creating and reinforcing
fears and doubts within the minds of an adversary's decision makers."

That makes sense for a rogue superpower, with a near monopoly on means of
violence. The "humanitarian cover" has been used by violent states
throughout history: we'd probably find it was true of Genghis Khan, if we
had records. It
was surely true of the Crusaders who left a hideous trail of death and
destruction. In fact, about the only clear exceptions I know are in the
Biblical tales, which call for outright genocide-the Carthaginian
solution-with no credible motive.
In the background is the dedicated US assault against any institution of
international order: the UN, the World Court, even the WTO when it gets out
of hand.
That's been going on for almost 40 years, for reasons that are explained
very
clearly and would be taught in every school in the country and headlined in
every newspaper and journal, under conditions of authentic freedom: they
don't follow our orders, so they can get lost. That's why the US, in this
case, compelled its more reluctant NATO allies to reject even
"authorization" from the UN.

A very important observation leaked through the NY Times on April 8, in one
of the
last paragraphs of a story on an inside page by Steven Erlanger, their
Belgrade
correspondent, who has a record of reliability. Possibly the most important
bit of
information about what has been happening. He writes that "just before the
bombing,
when [the Serbian Parliament] rejected NATO troops in Kosovo, it also
supported the
idea of a United Nations force to monitor a political settlement there."
If Erlanger's report is true, then it provides very dramatic evidence of US
intentions: like the bombing of Iraq in December, it is another brazen
attack against the institutions of world order, since the Serbian Parliament
would be right, and Washington wrong, on the alternatives of a UN vs. a NATO
force. If the report is true, then the last shreds of legitimacy for the
US/NATO operation disappear. I hadn't seen this reported before; maybe
others have. It surely merited a front-page headline, the day before the
bombings began, not a hidden phrase two weeks later-though that's better
than nothing. I'd be intrigued to know if others have come across similar
reports. The other factors you mention could be real, but I think they are
secondary. The US (NATO) operation is likely to exacerbate most of the
problems. And expanding the Pentagon budget is not a value in itself. The
kind of expansion that will follow this episode is largely a waste, from the
point of view of the Pentagon and the large sectors of the "private" economy
that rely on it for R&D.




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