-Caveat Lector-

The New York Times and the case of John Walker
By David Walsh
22 December 2001

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2001/dec2001/walk-d22.shtml

The New York Times’ editors have brought the full breadth of their
cynicism and inhumanity to bear on the case of John Walker Lindh, the
20-year-old American citizen captured fighting with the Taliban forces in
Afghanistan.

In a December 21 editorial (“The American Prisoner”), the Times
solidarizes itself with the reported decision by the Justice Department to
charge Walker with “aiding a terrorist organization,” a crime punishable
by life imprisonment, rather than treason. That “sounds about right,”
declares the voice of American liberalism. (It should be noted, however,
that George Bush, at a Friday press conference referred to Walker as an
“Al Qaeda fighter” and refused to rule out treason charges.)

One ought to consider, in the first place, the matter of the timing of the
Times’ editorial. Walker was arrested in Mazar-i-Sharif in early December.
He was thereupon interrogated by CIA agents, an episode captured on
videotape, during which he was taunted and threatened with death. Walker
survived the subsequent massacre carried out by Northern Alliance and US
forces at Jala-i-Qanghi prison, at one point standing in freezing water in
a cellar for perhaps 20 hours. The video of his interview with CNN shows a
young man filthy, wounded and seemingly half-dead.

Walker was then spirited away by US military forces to a troop ship, the
USS Pelilieu, in the Arabian Sea off the coast of Pakistan, where he has
been held incommunicado for more than two weeks. US officials have refused
a lawyer hired by Walker’s parents, James Brosnahan of San Francisco,
access to the young man. Brosnahan issued a brief statement this week
protesting the American government decision not to allow Walker’s parents
permission to meet with their son and suggesting that Walker had an
immediate right to counsel. “He has now been held in custody and
reportedly subject to ongoing interrogations by various government agents
for 16 days without any access to an attorney and without the ability to
communicate with his family,” Brosnahan said.

Far from raising the question of Walker’s democratic rights, the Times
essentially intervenes to further poison public opinion against Walker
under conditions in which virtually nothing is known about his case,
nothing has been proven against him and the full force of the state, armed
to the teeth and in unrestrained military mode, is bearing down upon him—a
20-year-old who has seen things that no 20-year-old should have to see. In
this the “liberals” at the Times demonstrate a horrifying callousness.

The Bush administration is in a genuine crisis as to what charges to
pursue against Walker. This is extremely murky territory. What legal
grounds are there for indicting him for treason? Walker wasn’t involved in
the September 11 attack, nor was he any kind of decision-maker in the
Taliban regime. He traveled to Afghanistan last May, when the US was not
at war with the Taliban. Indeed no declaration of war has ever been voted
upon by Congress. Walker didn’t “take up arms” against the US, the US took
up arms, bombed and invaded Afghanistan.

As far as “aiding a terrorist organization” goes, the Times would do
better to look closer to home. Let us recall once again, the Taliban
regime and Islamic fundamentalism more generally are the products, in the
final analysis, of America’s tragic two-decade-long encounter with
Afghanistan. Under the Carter, Reagan and Bush regimes, the US, as a
matter of policy, cultivated and incited Islamic fundamentalism as an
instrument of the Cold War against the former USSR. This has had the most
dire consequences for the Afghan and Pakistani peoples, in particular, as
well as for the several thousand innocents who died at the World Trade
Center September 11. The entire cast of characters currently vilified in
the American media, Osama bin Laden, Mullah Mohammed Omar and the rest,
rose to prominence as the result of US government policy.

In March 1985 President Ronald Reagan declared, referring to the Soviet
Union: “Throughout the world ... its agents, client states and satellites
are on the defensive—on the moral defensive, the intellectual defensive,
and the political and economic defensive. Freedom movements arise and
assert themselves. They’re doing so on almost every continent populated by
man—in the hills of Afghanistan, in Angola, in Kampuchea, in Central
America ... [They are] freedom fighters.” Yesterday’s “freedom fighter” is
today’s “evildoer,” such is the cynicism of Washington’s realpolitik.

In addition, there are the long-standing relations between the US
government and corporate elite, particularly in big oil, and the Saudi
establishment. This semi-feudal theocratic despotism, which produced bin
Laden among others, has been propped up by the US for more than half a
century at the expense of its own population and that of the region. The
specific relations between the Bush family (as well as other members of
the Bush senior inner circle, such as James Baker and Frank
Carlucci)—through the Carlyle Group—and the Saudis and bin Laden family,
are equally well documented. It is also a matter of public record that the
FBI helped a number of the bin Ladens leave the US following the September
11 attack on a chartered 727.

Furthermore, the American role in helping consolidate the Taliban’s grip
on power would be the worthy subject of a full-scale public inquiry,
although not one which would receive the warm support of the Times or any
other segment of the US media and political establishment. It is a fact of
history that an official of the US oil company, Unocal, informed news
agencies in September 1996 that an oil pipeline project would be easier to
implement now that the Taliban had captured Kabul. It is also a fact that
within hours of the Taliban’s conquest of Kabul, the US State Department
announced it would establish diplomatic relations with the new regime (an
announcement it later retracted).

The Times, in its December 21 editorial, pontificates about the “serious
mistakes” Walker has committed, for which he “will have to face the legal
consequences.” Who else will have to face such consequences? When it comes
to “aiding a terrorist organization,” the Times might look to official
Washington and find a host of possible suspects: Carter, Brzezinski,
Kissinger, Bush Sr., etc. There are people in and around the present Bush
administration who have far more experience with the Taliban, who are more
familiar with its inner workings and crimes and who, one might also hazard
a guess, know a good deal more about September 11 than John Walker.

The Times’ contribution to an understanding of Walker’s personal evolution
is to heap insults on the imprisoned youth. It refers to “the appalling
weight of what this 20-year-old doesn’t know” and asserts that his quest
for enlightenment “has been coupled with unspeakable ignorance from the
beginning.” Such language might be more appropriately applied to the
current resident of the White House.

Based on the little one knows, the Walker case resounds with tragedy that
has a sociological and historical significance. Walker’s fate speaks to
the more generalized American experience, and specifically to the
experience of his generation.

Everything we know about him suggests that Walker was an exceptional young
person and an idealist. “He wanted something pure, and he was definitely
questing at an early age,” his father, Frank Lindh, told the San Francisco
Chronicle. “We encouraged him to look.”

>From the start, however, his search seems to have been disoriented and
confused, veering off into religious obscurantism. His quest apparently
began with a reading of The Autobiography of Malcolm X and led him to
investigate Islam. During visits as a teenager to Internet chat rooms and
mosques in the San Francisco Bay area he encountered followers of the
“‘tablikhi jamaat,’ a movement roughly translated as ‘preaching society’
that encourages Muslims to contact those whose faith is drifting and steer
them back into the orbit of a mosque” (Associated Press).

“After graduating from an independent studies high school at 16, Lindh
departed for Yemen in 1998 to study Arabic with his parents’ blessing. He
returned home in 1999, after 10 months in Yemen. He stayed in Marin County
for about eight months, but apparently felt lonely and unsettled. In
February 2000, he returned to Yemen and eventually moved to Pakistan,
where he studied at an Islamic school near the Afghan border. It was there
he fell in with the Taliban, Lindh told the CNN crew as he was being
treated for wounds suffered during the deadly prisoner revolt in
Mazar-e-Sharif.”

Revulsion at the materialism of the West and a yearning for the apparently
more spiritualistic East are not so odd or rare as they may first appear.
Such sentiments reoccur throughout Western cultural and political history,
from Sir Richard Burton to Lawrence of Arabia. In Walker’s case this took
a reactionary and tragic form.

The Walker case raises many troubling questions that the Times editors, in
the sanctimonious tones known only to the wealthy elite, do not dare
address. Why should an idealistic youth take such a path? What were the
alternatives to which he was exposed?

The editorial asserts that to be in Walker’s position “is to have fallen
down a rabbit hole of one’s own making.” Earlier this year, in regard to
another case with tragic dimensions, that of the right-wing terrorist,
Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh, the Times referred to “a mind warped
by self-induced militancy.” The refrain is similar. The fates of Walker
and McVeigh are entirely self-produced, they have nothing to do with the
general condition of American society or of its younger generation.

The anger and confusion of the Times’ editorial reflect concerns that are
not simply of an overtly political character. Somehow the Walker case
strikes too close to home. The editors react furiously to any sign of
youth rejecting their values, rejecting the society that has made them
rich and complacent. It is incomprehensible to such people why anyone
would be dissatisfied with the results of the stock market and profit boom
of the 1990s, with the inequality blighting the US, with the corruption
and arrogance of its ruling elite.

Walker and McVeigh listened to false prophets and took terribly false
paths, but, again, who is primarily to blame for that? What were the
options offered them? Such youth saw no possibility within the existing
institutions for the creation of a just and equal society. There was
nothing in the official culture and media, with its deadening worship of
wealth and the market, to inspire their idealism and instinct for
self-sacrifice. They are not alone. That a large number of American youth
see no possibility of a meaningful life helps explain the atrocity at
Columbine and other school shootings.

The Walker case is fascinating, and one that for all its extraordinary
characteristics is hardly as alien to the American experience as Bush and
the media would have us believe. The Bush administration has already
apparently backed down from its intention to try Walker on treason
charges. It would no doubt like to settle this business behind the scenes.
If ever there were a need for a lawyer who would not cringe, who would
challenge public opinion and force it to look at the circumstances, social
and personal, underlying a case, this is it. There is something profound
about the Walker case.

There is already a segment of the American population that senses that
there is more involved in Walker’s situation than the media will
acknowledge, a segment of the population that has not made up its mind.
There is no reason to believe that an American jury, presented with all
the facts, would rush to convict John Walker.

A society reveals a great deal about itself by the way it treats its
youth, even those who make mistakes. John Walker found himself, more or
less accidentally, in a tragic position. The official response is
out-and-out brutality. George Bush, the former president, told ABC TV,
“Make him leave his hair the way it is and his face as dirty as it is and
let him go wandering around this country and see what kind of sympathy he
would get. I mean, he’s just despicable.” This from a man who never knew a
day of poverty or deprivation in his life, whose own son, incidentally,
had a checkered life well into his forties. The principal difference
between Walker and Bush junior is that the latter was never motivated for
an instant by altruistic, generous or humane interests.

The Los Angeles Times specifically editorialized against any consideration
of Walker’s age: “Does it really matter whether John Walker Lindh, the
20-year-old American who came to world attention after a bloody prison
uprising among Taliban soldiers last month, is a purposeful and
coldhearted Taliban warrior or just took a noir detour in his youthful
odyssey of spiritual self-discovery? American courts increasingly have
lost patience with such nuance in dealing with young criminals.”

Is there no one to be found who will speak up for this youth?

The question—what brought Walker to Afghanistan?—is bound up with the
still more complex one: what brought the US to Afghanistan? Walker is one
element of the catastrophe that America has produced in that country. The
present war originates, not in Central Asia, but in the US. The horrifying
violence that the Bush administration and the US military have unleashed
on Afghanistan cannot be understood without reference to the deep social
contradictions within America itself, contradictions of which the Times’
“liberal” inhumanity and John Walker’s peculiar evolution are further
expressions.


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