http://www.zmag.org/content/print_article.cfm?itemID=4889&sectionID=40

A view from the left

Excerpts....

"During the height of the cold war, a group of Soviet journalists were taken on an 
official tour of the United States. They watched TV; they read the newspapers; they 
listened to debates in Congress. To their astonishment, everything they heard was more 
or less the same. The news was the same. The opinions were the same, more or less. 
"How do you do it?" they asked their hosts. "In our country, to achieve this, we throw 
people in prison; we tear out their fingernails. Here, there’s none of that? What’s 
your secret?"
.
.
.
""Liberal realism" - in America, Britain, Australia - meant taking the humanity out of 
the study of nations and viewing the world in terms of its usefulness to western 
power. This was presented in a self-serving jargon: a masonic-like language in thrall 
to the dominant power. Typical of the jargon were labels."
.
.
.
"The difference is that in totalitarian societies, people take for granted that their 
governments lie to them: that their journalists are mere functionaries, that their 
academics are quiet and complicit. So people in these countries adjust accordingly. 
They learn to read between the lines. They rely on a flourishing underground. Their 
writers and playwrights write coded works, as in Poland and Czechoslovakia during the 
cold war.

A Czech friend, a novelist, told me; "You in the West are disadvantaged. You have your 
myths about freedom of information, but you have yet to acquire the skill of 
deciphering: of reading between the lines. One day, you will need it."
.
.
.
"In the days before September 11, 2001, when America routinely attacked and terrorised 
weak states, and the victims were black and brown-skinned people in faraway places 
like Zaire and Guatemala, there were no headlines saying terrorism. But when the weak 
attacked the powerful, spectacularly on September 11, suddenly, there was terrorism.

This is not to say that the threat from al-Qaida is not real - It is very real now, 
thanks to American and British actions in Iraq, and the almost infantile support given 
by the Howard government. But the most pervasive, clear and present danger is that of 
which we are told nothing.

It is the danger posed by "our" governments - a danger suppressed by propaganda that 
casts "the West" as always benign: capable of misjudgment and blunder, yes, but never 
of high crime. The judgement at Nuremberg takes another view. This is what the 
judgement says; and remember, these words are the basis for almost 60 years of 
international law: "To initiate a war of aggression, it is not only an international 
crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in 
that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole."

In other words, there is no difference, in the principle of the law, between the 
action of the German regime in the late 1930s and the Americans in 2003. Fuelled by 
religious fanaticism, a corrupt Americanism and corporate greed, the Bush cabal is 
pursuing what the military historian Anatol Lieven calls "the classic modern strategy 
of an endangered right-wing oligarchy, which is to divert discontent into 
nationalism". Bush’s America, he warns, "has become a menace to itself and to mankind."

Reply via email to