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washingtonpost.com

An Eminence With No Shades of Gray
In a New Bestseller, Noam Chomsky Argues Against the War in Afghanistan

By Michael Powell
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, May 5, 2002; Page F01

CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--The talk is of terrorism and the terrible delusions of the
powerful, and of the real bottom line of Sept. 11.

Which the famous professor explains this way:

"The atrocities of Sept. 11 are quite new in world affairs, not in scale and character,
but in target. The United States exterminated its indigenous population, conquered
half of Mexico, and carried out depredations all over. Now, for the first time since 
the
British burned the White House in [the War of] 1812, the guns have been directed
the other way."

Our professor is being a touch provocative here, no?

He glances sideways at you, through silver-rimmed glasses, and smiles. If you listen
closely, he seems sure he can penetrate the fog.

"This is not complicated," he says in that softly insistent voice. "You can be a pure
hypocrite or you can look at events honestly."

Noam Chomsky believes in the redemptive power of logical thinking and coming to
Chomskyan conclusions about the world. He is a white-hot contrarian, a
distinguished linguist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who "tends to be
quite conservative" and is devoted to "simple moral truisms."

The United States, he says, is the world's leading purveyor of state terrorism while
Osama bin Laden is the foremost private practitioner. The Saudi's fundamentalist
politics are benighted, but he gives form to a deep discontent with the nature of
American power.

"Uncontroversially" -- the adverb is classic Chomsky; the suggestion is that to
disagree is to express an irremediable daftness -- "bin Laden draws support from a
reservoir of bitterness and anger over the U.S. polices in the region, which extended
those of earlier European masters," Chomsky says. "His call for the overthrow of
brutal regimes of gangsters and torturers resonates, as does his indignation at the
atrocities he attributes to the United States, hardly without reason."

The 73-year-old Chomsky doesn't just tack into the prevailing wind. He sails into
Category 5 hurricanes. And his course is not so unpopular as one might imagine
right now.

Chomsky's new book -- a pamphletlike collection of interviews with the professor -- is
titled "9-11." The book, which argues that the war in Afghanistan is morally and
legally appalling, not to mention an act of state terrorism, has sold 160,000 copies
and three weeks ago ranked ninth on the Washington Post bestseller list. It's been
translated into a dozen languages, from Korean to Japanese to two varieties of
Portuguese.

Chomsky's lectures are standing-room-only affairs. Afterward his fans dutifully
transcribe and circulate his words.

And he is ubiquitous on foreign airwaves, from CBC to BBC to Radio B92 in
downtown Belgrade. Chomsky travels to Turkey to lend comfort to defenseless
Kurds and to Brazil to rally those fighting the worst excesses of global capitalism.

The London Independent newspaper declares him among our greatest living
philosophers. The Arts and Humanities Citation Index reports Chomsky is the most
quoted living intellectual. As for the dead ones, he's passed Cicero and is gaining on
Freud. Certainly he's the only silver-haired MIT professor to appear on stage and on
disc with bands Chumbawamba and Rage Against the Machine.

Chomsky had non-singing roles.

It took two months to arrange a one-hour interview, which is timed to the minute by
Chomsky's assistant. "How do I relax?" Chomsky smiles, faintly, at the suggestion of
personal needs -- he sees lifelong friends twice a year, at most. "That's my wife's
worry when I get home each night."

And yet . . .

To pick up the most powerful newspapers and intellectual magazines in the United
States, to tune in the 463 television political babble-athons, is to conclude that
Chomsky is invisible. His book has garnered just a single review in a major
newspaper. It's as though the professor inhabits Dimension Left, the alternative
celebrity universe.

The publisher of the New Republic describes Chomsky's views, particularly on Israel,
where he champions an eventual confederation with Palestine, as outside the pale of
intellectual responsibility. Television commentator Jeff Greenfield suggests that
Chomsky's opinions "come from Neptune."

"He's been consigned to a kind of oblivion by the higher circles of America's
intellectual class," says Steve Wasserman, editor of the Los Angeles Times book
review. "He's ignored by the mafia that controls America's op-ed pages, and that's
unfortunate."

Chomsky professes no mystification. He's tracked American intellectuals since they
fell into serried rows of support for the Vietnam War 40 years ago. They are, he says,
a lap dog class, scampering forth to bark on command for their masters.

"It's a remarkably narrow culture. There are disagreements but they are at the level
of statistical error, literally," Chomsky says.

That said, Chomsky might be seen as complicit in his own marginalization. His
sentences are diamond-hard and brook no disagreement. "No one with even a shred
of honesty would disagree -- " is a characteristic bit of Chomskyan throat-clearing.

And the master linguist's analysis can skirt the arid reaches of moral certitude. His
pursuit of the logical can lead to moral cul-de-sacs, as when Chomsky and co-author
Edward Herman, in "After the Cataclysm," detailed and ridiculed inconsistencies in
journalistic exposés of Khmer Rouge atrocities in the late 1970s -- even as
Cambodia descended into a horror of communist purges, executions and famine that
left as many as 1 million dead.

Chomsky's fury at American depredations in Cambodia was such that he seemed
incapable of seeing the Khmer Rouge for the malevolent force it was. He dismissed
refugee accounts as untrustworthy and lashed at "Western moralists" who
condemned the Khmer's "peasant" regime.

"The positive side of [the Khmer Rouge] picture has been virtually edited out of the
picture," Chomsky and Herman wrote in "After the Cataclysm." "The negative side
has been presented to a mass audience in a barrage with few historical parallels,
apart from wartime propaganda."

Today Chomsky is fond of analogies between American and Nazi attempts to
rationalize state violence in pursuit of international aims.

"Of course the U.S. claims it has reasons," Chomsky says. "And the Nazis had
reasons for gassing the Jews. Everyone has reasons. The question is whether
they're justified."

Brian Morton, an novelist and essayist of the left, sees an important intellectual
whose arguments have suffered a sclerotic hardening.

"Chomsky sees the world in a very stark way and gets at certain truths in that way,"
Morton says. "But ultimately his view is so simplistic that it's not useful. He's 
become
a phase that people on the left should go through when they are young."

Linguistic Einstein

Chomsky grew up in working-class Philadelphia in the dark interregnum between the
start of the Great Depression and the onset of World War II. His father was a
renowned Hebrew scholar. By the age of 10, Noam was reading proofs of books on
13th-century medieval Hebrew and penning passionate editorials for the school
newspaper decrying the rise of fascism.

Noam wept when he heard that Barcelona had fallen to Franco's fascist legions on
Jan. 26, 1939.

On weekends, as a teenager, he took the train to New York to visit a favorite uncle
who owned a newsstand. The uncle was a Trotskyite, then an anti-Trotskyite, and
finally a Freudian. The last choice was a keeper, as the uncle became a successful
lay psychoanalyst with a penthouse apartment.

Chomsky enrolled in the University of Pennsylvania in 1945, where he studied
linguistics. (He married Carol Doris Schatz in 1949, and they had three children.) The
behavioralism of B.F. Skinner ruled the field, with his view that human responses are
learned through conditioning, and thus can be predicted and controlled.

Chomsky recoiled from this.

How can it be, he asked, that language is but a learned habit if man and his words
are so creative, nuanced and morally complex? From this question of philosophy no
less than science, Chomsky developed his theory of transformational grammar,
eventually published in his book "Syntactic Structures." He posited that the ability to
speak and think complexly is encoded in our species through evolution. All humans
have an innate capacity to understand grammar.

It was a breakthrough likened to unraveling the genetic code. Modern linguists regard
Chomsky as their Einstein, their Freud, their Picasso.

By the early 1960s, Chomsky had a new passion: Vietnam. American soldiers had
landed, American planes began dropping napalm, and the professor turned his every
faculty to opposing that war.

These were lonely years, filled with threats of arrest and possible loss of his job at
MIT. Chomsky recalls walking into church basements and finding his fellow loyal
oppositionists: a polite Presbyterian minister, a blue-haired organist and a couple of
guys who'd wandered in off the street, "usually including a drunk who wanted to
punch me out."

Every mainstream intellectual magazine and newspaper supported the war.
Chomsky wrote a book on Vietnam, "American Power and the New Mandarins," that
was a cannonade across this intellectual landscape. His book attempted no grand
theoretical architecture. Its strength was a searing critique of the technocrats and
intellectuals who provided the infrastructure of imperialism.

He judged them by the standards they applied to our Cold War enemies, and found
potential war criminals. It was an epochal moment for young Americans opposed to
the war. The professor, columnist Christopher Hitchens has written, became their
"great moral and political tutor in the years of the Indochina War."

Chomsky extended his critique in ensuing years to United States policy in East Timor
(where successive American governments supported brutal Indonesian repression of
the island) and to Central America, where the United States supported autocracies
and consistently ignored World Court rulings.

He developed a view of the West as a uniquely vicious and savage culture, where
the nature of global domination remains half-hidden from people by a corporate-
dominated press and mendacious leaders. To focus on the terror of others is beside
the point.

"The terrorism of them against us?" He shakes his head. "It exists, but it's the minor
part."

To Chomsky's critics, such statements suggest a willful naivete about the ways of
power and of human nature. State violence and the will to dominate are the province
of no single culture.

Thus the Tartars and Mongols rode their horses across continents in clouds of
ecstatic violence, the Aztecs tore the hearts out of their enemies, and the Puritans
created a new world even as they savaged the Indians.

Now America rules imperfectly over an imperfect world.

"The United States has supported many democracies. It has also supported
authoritarian autocracies when it judges that the alternative is a totalitarian
movement," says Edward N. Luttwak, a fellow at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, who debated U.S. policy on Israel with Chomsky this past
winter. "Sometimes we are wrong. That is not a heavy indictment."

To which Chomsky replies: Tell that to the hundreds of thousands of dead Timorese
and Kurds and Vietnamese. It is his fate to see the world from the perspective of the
ruled. Barcelona is forever falling.

And, he argues, he sees no particular virtue in nation-states of any ethnic variety. 
"To
talk of legitimacy is ridiculous," he says. "The word 'legitimacy' doesn't apply to any
nation's history."

He recalls the applause accorded to former defense secretary Robert McNamara
when he apologized for leading America into Vietnam. "McNamara had not a single
word of apology, not a single word, for the Vietnamese whom he practically
destroyed."

Chomsky's eyes narrow. He leans as though into a storm in his chair.

"Among intellectuals, this apology is considered a vindication. But this is like a Nazi
general after Stalingrad apologizing for how many German soldiers were lost.

"Any halfway serious critic should find this morally outrageous."

The Belligerati

How the war fevers raged in those days after Sept. 11. The nation's syndicated
belligerati were beside themselves. Columnist Michael Kelly flayed the
unconscionable pacifists as pro- terrorist and evil. Charles Krauthammer argued for
bombing an enemy city, anywhere.

And Christopher Hitchens, the Nation columnist, turned on his old moral tutor in a
splenetic display, averring that Chomsky's opposition to a war in Afghanistan did "not
rise above the level of half truth" and that the professor's "remorseless logic has
degraded into flat-out irrationality."

Chomsky barely paused to take the rhetorical bait, dismissing Hitchens's sustained
critique of his views as a "fanciful diatribe." Chomsky passed most of this time giving
the near nonstop speeches and interviews that Seven Stories Press collected in his
book "9-11."

He raised a number of provocative points during this period. He noted that the United
States had armed and trained many of the fundamentalists, and that theirs was less
a blind desire to smash globalization than a campaign to force the United States out
of Saudi Arabia and establish an Islamic state. And he predicted, correctly, that many
nations, including Israel, would use the rubric of Bush's war on terror to prosecute
their own battles.

If Bush was interested in leading a fight for civilization, Chomsky said, he might 
start
by laying out his evidence against al Qaeda and asking Congress for a declaration of
war, as outlined in the Constitution.

But Chomsky's crystal ball was as often cracked.

Last October, he stated as a matter of fact that American military strategists
"anticipated the slaughter and silent genocide" of 3 million to 4 million Afghans, as
the bombing would disrupt food relief efforts. He offered no evidence for his charge
and his prediction of such a terrible death toll has not come to pass.

He takes pride in noting that he's always described the attacks on the World Trade
Center as an atrocity, though he always adds that such attacks pale next to the
West's "deep- seated culture of terrorism."

"We should recognize that in much of the world the United States is regarded as a
leading terrorist state, with good reason," Chomsky says. "These were horrific acts
on September 11, but anyone who is honest will recognize . . ."

This might be called the attenuated sympathetic style.

It is also Chomsky's style to express surprise that his analogies are considered
provocative. His favorite, of late, is to compare the terror attacks to the American
bombing of a Sudanese chemical factory in 1998. President Clinton claimed,
erroneously, that this factory produced chemical weapons.

A security guard died in that attack. The factory was Sudan's chief source of
pharmaceuticals and pesticides. And Chomsky argues -- with the use of some elastic
math -- that tens of thousands of Sudanese perished as a result.

Still, you ask, isn't there a moral difference between an act of terror that directly
claims 3,000 lives and a mistake that directly claims one life?

The Sudan bombing, Chomsky replies, was worse.

"The Americans didn't even think about the outcome of the bombing," he says,
"because the Sudanese were so far below contempt as to be not worth thinking
about."

His mind leaps to ants. Suppose he walks down the sidewalk in Cambridge and
without, a second thought, steps on an ant.

"That would mean that I regard the ant as beneath contempt," he says. "And that's
morally worse than if I purposely killed that ant. So, if we're not moral hypocrites,
we'd agree that Sudan was the morally worse crime than the World Trade -- "

A knock on the door. It's 4:45 p.m. on a Friday. The professor's aide has been timing
the hour allotted for the interview. A young documentarian waits outside, video
camera in hand, ready for the professor's next hour.

Chomsky smiles pleasantly and extends his hand. The hope is that the fog has
cleared just a touch.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company
End<{{{

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