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us terrorist attacks: terrorism and witch hunts
by Heather Wokusch ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) - September
17, 2001

Editor's Note: Heather Wokusch is a freelance writer.

I was sightseeing in the Scottish Highlands when news
of the World Trade Center broke. I'd visited the spot
where Janet Horne, the last 'witch' in Scotland was
burned to death, and had just returned from Dunrobin
Castle and its extraordinary eagle named Fig; years
before, Fig had been found abused and near death, the
feathers on one of his wings shattered and ripped
apart. It was only through attaching the feathers of
other birds to Fig's shafts that he was now able to
majestically soar with the rest, stronger and wiser
than before. As a North American, I am wondering if
our process of dealing with this horrific terrorist
attack will follow Fig's example, or far worse, Janet
Horne's.

Public/media reaction stateside has differed markedly
from that abroad, significant given the cold
realization that we are collectively staring down the
barrel of a global war. Discrepancies between the
official US version and that of other countries can be
summed up by two opinion pieces in The Herald
(September 13, 2001), a major British newspaper. The
first, "Inevitable Ring to the Unimaginable" by
Australian journalist John Pilger, argues that "the US
and its sidekicks, principally Britain, have
exercised, flaunted, and abused their wealth and
power" for so long they shouldn't be surprised if
those they have victimized fight back." Among many
examples, he cites the 200,000 Iraqis killed during
the Gulf War, and the million others who have since
died in Iraq as a result of US/UK sanctions, and
concludes that "Western terror is part of the recent
history of imperialism."

This perspective is directly contradicted by former US
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's "Response Must
Destroy the Network that Shelters Terrorism."
Kissinger writes that countries harboring terrorists
"must pay an exorbitant price" (ironic given that the
US trained and funded Bin Laden and at least a few of
the hijackers) and calls the World Trade Center
attacks "a threat to our social way of life and to our
existence as a free society." Perhaps to the dismay of
allies who evoked Article Five of the NATO charter
-which stipulates that an attack on any member of the
alliance is an attack on all, and which insists on
consultation of members before unilateral action is
taken - Kissinger says "since our own security was
threatened (the response) cannot be made dependent on
consensus."

While headlines here in the UK reflect those in the
States, ("The Day Our World Wept" etc.) and pictures
of the teary-eyed queen at a memorial service make
front page, beneath the sympathy is adamant insistence
that even though a significant percentage of the World
Trade Center victims were British, response must be
preceded by an honest assessment of the attack's root
causes. "They Can't See Why They Are Hated" (The
Guardian, September 13) notes that it is the "record
of unabashed national egotism and arrogance that
drives Anti-Americanism among swaths of the world's
population," and this connection must be made "if such
tragedies are not to be repeated." In the same
edition, "Shoulder to Shoulder" questions Prime
Minister Tony Blair's support for George Bush, noting
that while Blair referred to the attacks as an assault
"on the very notion of democracy," the terrorists "did
not in fact target democracy; they targeted American
power. There is a very important difference between
the two."

Large demonstrations have taken place across London,
focused on urging Tony Blair to pursue a peaceful
solution to the crisis. Some protestors are worried
about being dragged into an intractable war, and
express concern that the USAF F15 "Strike Eagles" have
suddenly returned to the Suffolk airbase, home of over
30 nuclear warheads. Others demand the UK use any
international clout it has to supercede an assault on
dubious targets in Afghanistan or Iraq, before even
more innocent lives are lost.

Which brings us back to Janet Horne, the last "witch"
put to the stake in Scotland. It seems that back in
1722, the tiny Scottish town of Dornoch was looking
for a scapegoat. Times were hard, people were restless
and the Catholic church was eager to assert its
authority. Janet Horne's two children had been born
with minor birth defects, and even though both were
then healthy and productive adults, she was an easy
target. Upon hearing about the charges against their
mother, Horne's children fled town never to return,
but were unable to notify her on time: Janet Horne was
charged with having turned her daughter into a pony
and burned at the stake.

The violence and carnage of the terrorist attacks in
the States are sickening and indefensible. Which means
we shouldn't turn around and do the same thing to
someone else. While it's much easier to pick a quick
scapegoat than to examine the painful roots of a
problem, now is the time for the United States to
reengage with the rest of the world - especially with
those in countries its policies have harmed. It is
time to reestablish support of international treaties
regarding biological weapons, space wars and
greenhouse gases, and time to pay UN dues. In the same
way that Fig the blue eagle could only take flight
with the support of other birds, justice for all will
best be served by engaging diverse opinions, rather
than the slaughter of more innocent victims.



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