-Caveat Lector- From http://www.guardian.co.uk/afghanistan/story/0,1284,582606,00.html
}}}>Begin Politicians do it. Terrorists do it. Let's all exaggerate Since September 11 everyone has banged their own drum ever louder Peter Preston Monday October 29, 2001 The Guardian Small but naggingly necessary questions. Why can't the Ernst Stavro Blofelds of the 21st century spell? Why does the mad anthrax chemist who shivers our timbers think, in his note to Senator Daschle, that "penicillin" is spelt "penacilin"? And could he write "exaggeration" without reaching for a dictionary? Or consider Osama bin Laden. He is bent on "biological, chemical and even nuclear" attacks. (The prime minister tells us so, invoking moral duties to stiffen sinews.) He runs a hi-tech network of terror 30,000 strong and flush with funds. We have to go to "war" to stop him. And yet, over 10 years, the headline results are low- tech and disproportionately puny. Two East Africa bombs in 1998 which killed 224; the attack on the USS Cole with 17 victims; and September 11. To call that record "puny" is, of course, to be easily misunderstood. There is nothing puny about the trail of death and destruction he leaves behind him. But nothing, either, that would make old Eta or IRA hands fall mut e with admiration. Suicide-bombings are his hoary stock in trade. Vans packed with explosive which blow up in embassy compounds. Men with penknives who take over passenger jets and - after a little Florida training - ram them into skyscrapers. The effect is shattering -because it is designed to kill the maximum number of people (and perpetrators). But it is in no sense rocket science. Nor, by the terrorist standards we got used to in the eighties, does it have momentum. The strikes against Americans are occasional and random. They start and they stop. The rotten House of Saud is shaken but not stirred. Thirty thousand men and unlimited boodle have not, so far, changed even the little bit of the globe that Bin Laden wants to make his own. So to that word again: exaggeration. And to the basic text provided for Guardian readers last August by the Swedish environmentalist Bjorn Lomborg. Why, Lomborg asked, is the end of the world not quite as nigh as we somet imes fear? Because, in part, "of the self-interest of environmental lobby groups". These "selfless folk nevertheless share many of the characteristics of other lobby groups. They need to be noticed by the mass media. They also need to keep the money that sustains them rolling in. The temptation to exaggerate is surely there." I thought (laterally) of the Lomborg thesis a few days ago when two Afghan aid charity chiefs - accused of excessive emotionalism by Clare Short - gave evidence to a Commons select committee. Any contingency planning for refugee handling or food provision, one of them explained, had to include a worst-case estimate. And there was nothing wrong in citing that estimate alone to galvanise governments or fundraisers, because worst cases somet imes materialise. A prudent, even laudable position. The more millions thought to face starvation through Afghanistan's coming winter, the more cash and resolve there'll be to feed them. But virtuous exaggeration is still exaggeration - an d it combines too rancidly with another familiar trait in modern society: the grotesque perversion of risk management. Do you remember December 31 1999 and the way London's hospitals, all leave cancelled, stood at full alert? Do you remember how the Queen Mum's gymnasium in Victoria was cleared as an emergency mass mortuary? Millions migh t come out to celebrate the new millennium and hundreds, nay thousands, might be crushed to death. But it rained; and nothing happened. See the same NHS syndrome today as anthrax alerts spread through hospital boards. Watch Washington order 100m doses of the Bayer antibiotic it could, just conceivably, require. Keep calm? How is that supposed to happen wh en the authorities who guide us go frenziedly about their worst casework. So BSE (on the latest research) will not kill hundreds of thousands? So cows' brains and sheep brains got muddled up in the lab? So what? No one ev er gets fired for overstating a risk. It's not spotting the risk which lands you in the soup. (How often, since the autumn of 1987, has the Met Office failed to turn brisk breezes into pending gales?) No certainties, of course. Horrible things happen. The destruction of the twin towers was uniquely horrible - and other attacks, other disasters, will flow in train. But let's look at this current stew and think what Bjor n Lomborg would say if he were an "expert on terrorism" rabbiting away to some cable channel. Perhaps he'd bring Mandy Rice-Davies along to the studio and she'd intone her famous phrase: "They would, wouldn't they?" Three weeks into military action and little goes swimmingly. Donald Rumsfeld wonders whether we'll ever catch Bin Laden, the new chief of the defence staff witters about the most difficult campaign "since Korea" and Tony Blair (who four weeks ago was denouncing such scaremongering) suddenly discovers the nuclear threat which must stiffen all resolve. Well, he would, wouldn't he? The west's intelligence services, breaking cover, begin delivering details on Bin Laden's resources and supposed brilliance. He's now such a formidable genius that their progress is slow going on non-existent - even when the CIA mail room is pronounced spore-free. Well, they would, wouldn't they? Newspapers and TV companies, lacking pictures or much eye-witness material, must toil with the "experts" and covert briefers who foretell appalling revolutions gripping the Middle East or plagues that could threaten manki nd. WTW, WT? Aid agencies, selfless and stretched, talk of 2m more refugees flooding into Pakistan and then wonder why 15,000 miserable lost souls doesn't (yet) seem heartrending enough. Is it millions more - or 400,000 in the mountai ns beyond Herat - who will starve? Why, always, the worst-case scenarios? WTW,WT? "September 11: how has your life really changed?" asks the front page of the Times. There is one answer to that. It has changed because everyone for every possible reason - good as well as bad - now swallows exaggeration from the shortest spoon. Politicians with no end in sight do it. Defence chiefs with a shopping list do it. Intelligence bosses with backs to cover do it. Northern Alliance generals wanting air support do it. Taliban prop agandists do it. Bin Laden in his cave does it. Journalists inevitably do it. Pressure groups with a handy axe to grind do it. Even aid agencies wanting the attention they must have do it. Let's do it, let's exaggerate? Too many worst cases; too much rhetoric feeding on itself; too little proper threat analysis. Is this the most difficult war since Korea? In reality, it's not yet a recognisable war, just poundings from the sky and scurryings on the ground. And "war" - in its instantly, dismally conflated way - is the most fatal exaggeration of the lot. 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