>From the Indian Journal Frontline
Aijaz Ahmad, author of *In Theory: Classes, Nations, and Literature*,
Verso Press.

"A Task That Never Ends"
Bush Proposes Perpetual War

*

The date of 11 September has a powerful resonance in the annals of modern
history. Twenty-eight years ago on this date, the CIA-sponsored coup of
General Pinochet overthrew the democratically elected socialist government
of President Allende and established a regime of terror which killed an
estimated thirty-five thousand people in the first few weeks and continued
to brutalise Chilean society for some two decades. 11 September was also
the date of the Camp David Accords which signalled Egypt's final surrender
to American imperialism and Israeli zionism, leaving the Palestinians at
the mercy of the latter. And, 11 September was the day when George Bush,
father of the current President of the United States, made his fateful
speech to the U.S. Congress announcing the war against Iraq-that supreme
act of terror which killed an estimated 200,000 people in the course of
that brief assault and which has led to the death of at least half a
million Iraqi children over the next decade, thanks to the U.S.-dictated
sanctions against their country.

Betrayal of the Palestinians, the destruction of Iraq! One can reasonably
assume that these two great devastations of the Arabo-Muslim world were
vivid in the memory of those 19 hijackers on this year's 11 September, when
they cammandeered four civilian aircraft owned by two major U.S. airlines,
and smashed three of them into the World Trade Centre (WTC) and the
Pentagon- famous nerve centres of U.S. financial and military power- while
committing a collective suicide in the process. The White House-the seat of
America's political power-was probably to be struck by the fourth aircraft
but something in the hijackers' plan went awry. Over 6,000 innocent
civilians from 60 couuntries-some five hundred of them from South Asia
alone, including the son of a close friend of the present writer- died
within a couple of hours in an act of calculated, hideous act of terrorism
carried out with stunning technical precision.

Hiroshima and Nagasaki, with their 220,000 dead, are of course the most
famous of the numerous cities that the United States has destroyed around
the world in the course of this century with the deliberate, terroristic
intent of targetting innnocent civilians, just as civilians were targetted
in their towns and hamlets alike throughout Indochina during the Vietnam
War. The spectacular terror which destroyed the World Trade Centre and
killed so many so callously pales by comparison; as one journalist has
calculated, the death of 6,000 civilain means that this same level of
violence would have to be carried out every day for a whole year for the
resulting death toll to match the death toll in Iraq over the past decade.

Even so, this was the first time that Americans came to experience what it
means for cities to be at the receiving end of such destructive force.

This hijacking operation carried out by less than two dozen individuals was
the largest attack on mainland United States in its history, larger than
Pearl Harbour, while American armies, assassins and covert operators of all
kinds have been active around the globe for well over a century.

And, because being at the receiving end of violence on their own soil was
such a novel experience for the U.S. centres of power, this attack on a
couple of buildings at the heart of the imperial centre produced effects
that no amount of terror and destruction in the outposts-or even the
secondary and tertiary centres- of the empire could have produced. An
economy that was already slowing down went into a full-fledged downturn,
and the week following the hijackers' attack proved to be the worst in the
history of U.S. finance since July 1933, with Dow Jones and Nasdeq posting
2-digit losses virtually every day and liquid assets losing $1.4 trillion
of their value over the week. The 30-year Treasury bonds continued to
decline day by day, amid speculation that further issues of long-term
federal debt shall be required to fund the war-without-end that is now
envisaged, not to speak of the reconstruction costs and coping with the
expected recession.

Not just fresh investment but also consumer spending dried up and the
working people paid the price. 116,000 jobs were lost in the airline
industry alone during that week, and the twin fears of war and economic
recession led to plummeting of sales across North America. An emergency $15
billion assistance package was quickly put together for the airlines while
Boeing, the lynchpin of American aerospace industry, threatened to fire
31,000 of its employees unless federal aid and subsidy came in.

Insurance companies were in similar turmoil, with insurance claims arising
from the World Trade Centre tragedy alone expected to exceed $73 billion.

The companies hit back by notifying airports across North America and
Western Europe that wartime coverage would be withdrawn as of 24 September,
calculating that governments would be forced to step in with subsidies to
renew that coverage while airports would be forced to beef up their
security systems, requiring more outlays and more subsidies.

What happened was unspeakably hideous, cruel, senseless. The loss of
thousands of precious lives, many of them cut down in the flower of their
youth, has neither a moral nor a political justification. For once, the
speechwriter of President Bush was right: those who carry out such acts in
the name of Allah blaspheme the name of Allah; they hijack Islam in the
name of Islam; in the larger, largely humane world of Islam they are a
dangerous, fringe element. And a danger to their own people, I would add.

In their fit of fundamentalist psychosis they might have believed that they
were serving the Palestininan cause. Their actual act was a gift to the
zionists, however, and it was just as well that Yasser Arafat was quick to
denounce the act even though Saddam Hussein, true to form, did not have the
decency to do so. (Interestingly enough, the Taliban denounced it too, and
begged the United States to act sensibly and not use the tragedy as
justification for further destruction of Afghanistan.) Taking advantage of
the anger and human anguish arising from the tragedy, and exploiting the
fears and frustrations arising from the prospect of massive economic
recession, the U.S. Administration moved quickly to plan a new, globalised,
permanent war; to expound what amounts to a new doctrine of America's right
to use its might as it pleases; to expand the war-making powers of the
Presidency; to put in place a new regime of infininte surveillace; and to
demolish whatever restraints had been introduced after the Vietnam War on
America's right to undertake assasinations and covert actions across the
globe. All this was accompanied with hair-raising rhetoric which tended at
times to portray the coming war as a clash between Judeo-Christian and
Muslim civilizations.

Bush called his so-called `war on terrorism' a "crusade" early on, with no
sense of the historical meaning of that word. Only expressions of outrage
from a wide spectrum of opinion in the Muslim world made him retract that
stance and start saying that the war was not against Islam as such but only
against certain Muslims. Not to be outdone, Pentagon named its planned
operation "Infinite justice", a phrase not even from the Bible but from the
lexicon of Christian fundamentalism. Not only Muslims but even liberal
Christians were outraged, and Protestant pastors themselves pointed out
that "infinite justice" referred to God's own divine justice, an attribute
that no human power ought to claim for itself, America's vision of its own
omnipotence notwithstanding. Pentagon sheepishly promised to reonsider the
code name. The U.S. Congress swiftly passed a resolution authorizing Bush
to use wide powers in pursuit of this war on terrorism, asserting that "all
necessary and appropriate force" could be used against nations,
organizations and individuals. No nations were named, nor were any
organizations, let alone individuals; the President could determine which
one was to be attacked as he went along. Nor was there a time limit; he was
authorized to act against present danger as well as in anticipation of
"future attacks." The powers were in some ways wider than a mere
declaration of war could have bestowed, since such a declaration would name
the country against whom the war was to be waged.

Meanwhile, the Justice Department started putting together a package of
proposed legislation giving the U.S. intelligence agencies much wider
powers to wiretap telephones, enter into people's internet accounts, deport
suspected immigrants, seize evidence form suspects, including DNA samples,
and obtain information from educational institutions, taxation records and
a whole range of public and private agencies without prior court order or
subsequent court review of the evidence. Attorney General John Ashcroft is
said to be actively considering permanent video surveillance in public
places and issuing "smart cards" to all Americans which the surveillance
devices can read electronically so as to distinguish citizen from
non-citizen, keep a record of the movements of citizens themselves in
public places and to have quick access to personal data linked to each of
the "smart cards." It is also being contemplated that certain immigrants,
chosen by intelligence at will, be required to report their activities
regularly, like ordinary criminals on bail, and that airport security
personnel be authorised to interrogate particular passengers at will and do
on-the-spot check of their private baggage without having to explain why
and what they are being suspected of.

Bush was blunt. The war is against a network of hundreds of thousands of
people spread across some sixty countries, he said, and this war was, in
his considered phrase, "a task that never ends;" Echoing John Foster
Dulless, the rabid Foreign Secretary of the Eisenhower years who said that
non-alignment was "immoral," Bush too has put the whole world on notice: if
you do not explicitly join us in this global crusade, we shall treat you as
a hostile country! Enemies are lurking in thousands of little corners, in
dozens of countries across the globe, and America will choose its tragets
as well as its methods and timing for dealing with them as it goes along,
according to its own convenience; every country must join up each time, or
else it too becomes an enemy and perhaps the next target. This war-"unlike
any we have ever seen," he said-- shall be perpetual but largely secret.

Some of it shall be seen on television, he said, but much shall go
unreaveled-even in success, he emphasized. Congressional leaders in
Washington are now talking of putting the CIA "on a war footing" and cite
with admiration the Israeli example of an open policy of assasinations
without regard to legal niceties.

It is quite astonishing, though predictable, how quickly one government
after another has fallen in line. India of course joined the crusade and
offered its airspace and naval facilities with shameless alacrity, putting
the lives of Indians at risk of retaliation from those against whom India
has offered its facilities. Musharraf then cited India's pre-emptive oath
of allegience as his reason for offering the same to the U.S.; India would
otherwise have a strategic edge, he reasoned. Competitive servilities, one
might say. Tony Blair, a veritable lapdog of Washington who doubles as the
British Prime Minster, flew across the Atlantic to register his presence at
the moment of birth of this new era of perpetual war. The European
Commission has been scurrying around formulating new policies of
cooperation over the question of terrorism, urging individual members of
the EU to allocate more funds and build new systems of surveillance. The
Russian parliament has passed a bill to create an international body to
fight terrorism and, aping the U.S. President, calls for elimination of
terrorists as well as the governments which are said to finance them.

China has been somewhat more shrewd, somewhat more independent; it urges a
policy that involves presentation of concrete evidence, does not involve
sacrifice of innocent civilians and is within the bounds of international
law, but it also promises cooperation if the U.S. were more receptive to
its interests in Tibet, Taiwan and Xinjiang-and on the issue of NMD; the
U.S. has in turn moved quickly to put in place a new deal facilitating
China's entry into the WTO.

The less powerful, many of whom also happens to be directly involved-even
in some cases directly tragetted-are of course treated differently. On 14
September, William F. Burns, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern
Affairs, called in ambassadors of fifteen Arab countries, including Syria
which is otherwise one of the `target' states as well as the PLO, and
imperiously read out to them a list of actions they were to undertake,
including arrest and prosecution of those on their soil whom the United
States desgnates as `terrorists'. Everyone seems to have fallen in line,
including Yasser Arafat who has extended "full cooperation" (with the
implicit promise that the U.S. would press Israel for an immediate and
durable ceasefire). Even President Khatami of Iran has made sympathetic
noises and wishes to use the ocassion for drawing closer to the United
States which he has been wanting to do for some time. Iran has sealed its
borders with Afghanistan, as has Pakistan and Tajikistan. China has gone s
o far as to seal its own borders with Pakistan itself, blocking the
Korrakuram highway in the process.

Specially heavy burden has fallen on Pakistan, which was given the blunt
choice of either getting treated in the same category as the Taliban or
meet U.S. demands: air space, naval facilities, stationing facilities for
troops and covert operatives, full revelation of what the Pakistan
intelligence services know about Afghanistan, Osama bin Laden and allied
elements. Pakistanies tried to plead that such far-reaching cooperation
with U.S. war designs in the region would rip apart the fabric of Pakistani
society itself, but to no avail. Since then, a Gallup poll has revealed
that 62 per cent of Pakistanis oppose any kind of cooperation with the U.S.
against another Muslim country; whether this opinion can be mobilised for
effective political opposition is yet to be determined. In the midst of
great fear of Taliban retaliation on the one hand, uncontrollable civic
unrest on the other, foreign companies have pulled out of Pakistan and the
U.S. embassy itself is functioning with a skeletal staff. In these
conditions, it remains unclear how all those foreign funds would pour in to
solve Pakistan's economic problem, as the Pakistan Finance Minister Shaukat
Aziz is promising.

Better sense might prevail later. As of now, however, the only concession
the U.S. has made to Pakistan-aside from offering some economic benefits,
most notably the lifting of sanctions-is that it will not call upon
Pakistan to lend its own troops for operations in Afghnaistan. Musharraf of
course yielded, but it is far from clear just where substantial elements
among the corps commanders stand on this issue and where the violent
protests that have erupted already might lead. It will probably all depend
upon the nature, intensity and longevity of the projected U.S. military
operations in the region. Nor is it yet clear just what Musharraf's offer
of "full cooperation" would imply for such U.S. demands as that it
immediately cut-off fuel supplies to Afghanistan, but we do know that the
Afghan clerics' invitation to bin Laden to leave voluntarily was obtained
on Pakistan's insistence.

Soon after the hijacked civilian planes smashed into the World Trade
Centre, the dominant electronic media set out to identify all sorts of
people as the culprits. PLO and the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine were the early favourites. By noon, the focus shifted to Osama
bin Laden. By the afternoon the channels were abuzz with the idea that bin
Laden could not have done it without the diabolical expertise of Saddam
Hussein. The focus on Iraq soon became so alarming that Secretary of State
Colin Powell as well as Vice President Dick Cheney and others were
eventually forced to say on record that Iraq had nothing to do with it.

Indeed, Powel has been the cool head in Washington, arguing that the U.S.
ought not go around shooting all over the Middle East and should
judiciously concentrate on one major target at a time, and that Afghanistan
should be the first. He is also the one arguing that too much of an
escalation against Iraq at this time, when the U.S. wants Arab governments
to join it in a coalition against the Taliban, would be counterproductive.

Niaz Naik, the senior Pakistani stateman, has revealed on BBC a personal
conversation with Colin Powell well before the recent events in which Powel
had spelled out the set of U.S. demands which have now been presented to
the spellbound tv-watching world as non-negotiable and a retaliation
against the "attack on America": hand over the Taliban and, in Bush's
words, "deliver to the United States authorties all the leaders of al Qaeda
. . . Give to the United States full access to terrorist training camps"
and so on-demands which the Taliban would find it impossible to accede to,
even if they so wanted. The emphasis is significant: it is the United
States, not some international tribunal or UN forces, which shall take
custody of these people and places. The tactic too is obvious: present
non-negotiable and impossible demands, issue a short notice, and invade.

That there shall be an invasion is clear, but there is still a far-reaching
debate within the US government as to what kind of invasion it would be.

A decade of the most brutal military and economic warfare without
committing ground troops or trying to occupy large chunks of Iraq has not
succeeded in toppling Saddam Hussein. Chances of success of that sort of
warfare in Afghanistan are even fewer; as one of the Taliban put it, "we
don't even have a factory which could be a reasonable military target."
Direct landing in Kabul or Kanadhar would only turn the Taliban into
phantoms scurrying around in the hinterlands, bleeding the U.S. militarily
and financially, and winning new allies in the face of a foreign occupation
force. Bin Laden's numerous camps are perfectly well known to the Americans
since he initially built them with their money and assistance. But he is a
moving target, with a widespread following, and with numerous camps many of
which are dug deep under the mountains.

One of the likely scenarios is a round of massive bombings and well
orchestrated commando operations to disorganise and soften up the targets,
killing great many and hoping that many of those killed would be the
Taliban and members of Al Qaida. This could then be followed by actual
landing and taking over ghost cities from which the surviving civilians
would have fled, as a prelude to establishing aU.N-sponsored Afghan
administration drawn from among the enemies of the Taliban, and settling
down to a long-term scorched earth policy, from some bases inside
Afghanistan but mainly from the outside. Hence two emphases in American
pronouncements thus far. Bush emphasised to the U.S. public time and again
that there shall be casualties this time and that the campaign shall be
prolonged. And, there is an enormous pressure on Pakistan, Azerbaijan and
Tajikistan to provide basing facilities, and upon Russia to use its
influence in this regard. The information obtained from Pakistan's
Inter-Services Intelligence Agency (ISI) would be crucial for even moderate
success of the American design. Pakistan's historic involvement in
Afghanistan on the side of the Americans and its enduring geo-political
location may yet come to haunt Jaswant Singh's dream of turning India into
America's "most allied ally," as Pakistan was once called.

What does all this portend for Afghanistan? It is a country devastated by
some two decades of the most brutal warfare and, since the fall of the PDPA
government, equally brutal forms of rule. For a population of roughly 26
million, there are six million land mines dug into its earth which kill or
maim 100 people per week. There are 3.6 million Afghan refugees in Pakistan
and Iran, and another one million or so internal refugees, hungry and
homeless, who roam around the country hoping to survive another day. It has
suffered three consecutive years of drought, and the combined effects of
war, misrule and the drought has meant that until only a few days ago the
UN World Food Program was feeding three million Afghans in the countryside
and some 300,000 in Kabul itself. Virtually the whole of that institutional
infrastructure has now collapsed under the threat of U.S. invasion, and
those who are now deprived even of that meagre ration are facing imminent
death without the U.S. firing even a shot-just like the Iraqi children who
die not of bullets but for lack of the food and medicine which the
U.S.-imposed embargo denies them. Afghanistan is in this state in
consequence of the anti-communist, Islamised crusade that the U.S.

cynically waged there before abandoning it to its own miseries. This is the
country that the mightiest empire in human history has now set out to
subjugate with all its technological and financial might, but with little
chance of success.

America cannot win but it shall not suffer either. The Afghans shall not be
subjugated but they shall suffer and perhaps even a majority of them might
perish or become homeless and get consiged to a subhuman existence. That is
the asymmetry of power in our time: those who rule the universe shall not
be victorious against the poorest and the most wretched of this earth;
those who refuse subjugation shall be made to suffer miseries that no
previous period in human history inflicted on the powerless. War shall be
permanent because the war cannot end without justice and justice is what
the U.S. has set out to deny, permanently. The war shall be globalised
because in this period of globalisation there is a singular power whose
task it is to guarantee regimes of injustice throughout the world. And much
of this war shall be secret, like much of the movements of finance capital,
because finance capital is what this war serves and therefore imitates.
Bush is right: this is truly "a task that has no end"-until someone rises
to end it.

Will there be organised opposition to these imperial designs? That's still
hard to tell. Haaretz, the Israeli newspaper, mentions a poll taken in 30
countries in which only the U.S. and Israel are shown to be the two
countries where majorities are in favour of war; 77 percent in Israel, an
overwhelmingly war-mongering society in any case, but only a bare majority
in the U.S., with 54 per cent. Will even this majority hold once the
immediate shock and grief have been absorbed and put in some perspective?
Will the majority shrink or expand if Americans begin to die in faraway
places? It is too soon to tell. What is already heartening is that there is
great opposition to the type of military operations which involve large
numbers of civilian deaths, and a student movement of anti-war activists is
beginning to emerge on many campuses. According to the same poll, 80
percent in Europe and 90 per cent in Latin America want the action
restricted to application of law and judicial process. The grand coalition
of the governments does not hold among the masses of people.

A brief word about this particular form of fighting which is called
"terrorism." Bush was careful enough to say that America's enemy was that
particular "terrorism" which "has global reach." In other words, he is not
particular concerned with the great many varieties of terrorism which
include the IRA in Ireland, the LTTE in Sri Lanka, the RSS fraternity in
India. Nor is "fundamentalism" the issue: Taliban fundamentalism is bad but
Saudi fundamentalism is good, and Bush himself of course speaks the
language of that Christian fundamentalism which defines the far right in
contemporary United States. "Terrorism with global reach," the designated
enemy, is the one that challenges American power.

This is a complex and important subject and we shall return to this in
another essay. Briefly put, the "terrorism" that torments the U.S. is what
comes when the communist left and secular anti-colonial nationalism have
both been defeated while the issue of imperialism remains unresolved and
more important than ever. Hatred takes the place of revolutionary ideology.

Privatised, retail violence takes the place of revolutionary warfare and
national liberation struggles. Millenarian and free-lance seekers of
religious martyrdom replace the defeated phalanx of disciplined
revolutionaries. Un-Reason arises where Reason is appropriated by
imperialism and is eliminated in its revolutionary form. There were no
Islamic terrorists in Afghanistan before Americans created them as a
counterweight against the secular left. Islamism arose to fill that space
in Iran which had been left vacant with the elimination of secular
anti-imperialist nationalionalism and the revolutionary left by the
CIA-sponsored regime of the Shah. Islamic secret societies arose in Egypt
after imperialism and zionism combined to defeat Nasser's secular
nationalist project. Hamas arose in Palestine because the cosmopolitan
Palestinian nationalism was denied its dream of a secular state in the
historic land of Palestine where Jew and Arab could live as co-equals.

What gets called "terrorism with global reach" today is a mirror of our own
defeat but also the monster that imperialism's faustian success made
possible and which now haunts its own creator. The loss of over 6,000 lives
in the blaze and collapse of the World Trade Centre is the price the
victims and their families paid for our defeat and imperialism's victory.

America can never defeat "terrorism with a global reach" because for all
its barbarity and irrationality, that religiously motivated "terrorism" is
also a "sigh of the opressed," and if some Palestinians cheered it that too
was owed to the fact that even an "opiate of the people" is sometimes
mistaken for the medicine itself. The only way to end this "terrorism" is
to re-build that revolutionary movement of the left whose place it occupies
and with whose mantle it masquerades.


*

The author wishes to register that he has written this essay with the
memory of Taimur in his heart, a lovely boy who was last seen on the 94th
floor of the World Trade Centre.


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