Attacks in Boston and London -- and the failure of the West in the war on terror
By Peter Baofu Pravda.ru
The recent incidents like the killing of a British soldier in London on
May 22, 2013 and the Boston Marathon bombings on April 15, 2013 reveal
an inconvenient truth that the West has failed in the war on terror, and
this is something that neither the Western mainstream media nor many
Western leaders would like to admit or tell their own people, with
tragic consequences to the world that we all live in.
Instead,
the mainstream (popular) analysis of the incidents in the Western world
(as in CNN and BBC) portrays the U.S. and the U.K. as "innocent" victims
of "barbaric" or "savage" terrorism by "sickening" individuals who
"hate our freedom," but "we have always beaten them back," so they "will
never win."
For instance, the British Prime Minister David
Cameron said on May 22, 2013: "[T]here is absolutely no justification
for these acts and the fault for them lies solely and purely with the
sickening individuals who carried out this appalling attack," and "the
terrorists will never win because they can never beat the values we hold
dear, the belief in freedom, in democracy, in free speech, in our
British values, western values. They are never going to defeat those."
And
Cameron then proposed that "Britain works with our international
partners to make the world safe from terrorism." And the U.S. President
Barack Obama supported the U.K. by condemning the killing "in the
strongest terms" and added on May 23, 2013 that "we have now been at war
[against terrorism] for well over a decade....In sum, we are safer
because of our efforts," in spite of these incidents.
If one puts
aside these euphemistic rhetorical speeches by Cameron and Obama, the
reality on the ground shows an entirely different story, which can be
shown on two fronts: (a) at home and (b) abroad.
(a) AT HOME
At
home, in Western societies, the official discourse on "freedom" and
"equality" is applied, in practice, mostly for those who are "whites"
and/or mostly for those who follow the dominant mindset in regard to the
"Others" (e.g., different racial, ethnic, religious, political, and
other marginalized minorities). The term "unspoken rules" can be used
here to reveal what is hidden behind the "official" discourse in a
culture and thus reflect the dark side of that society which perpetuates
discrimination and oppression against the "Others," and this is true in
all societies, both Western and non-Western. More specifically in the
Western context, the dominant groups look down on, and discriminate
against, the "Others" on a daily basis, while the official discourse is
all about "freedom" and "equality" for all.
In America, there is
no lack of derogatory terms to humiliate or degrade the "Others," like
"nigger" or "monkey" or "fried chicken" (for blacks), "gook" or "banana"
(for Asians), "raghead" or "Haji" (for Arabs and Muslims), "Bohunk"
(for Eastern-Central Europeans), "Beaner" or "Beaney" (for Mexicans),
"ABCD" (for South Asians)," "commie" or "Red" (for Communists),
"skinhead" (for far right extremists), and "Nazi" (for National
Socialists) - while in other Western societies, there are different
terms to degrade them, like "wog" (for dark-skinned natives of the
Middle East, Africa, or Southeast Asia) in the U.K., "chink" (for
Asians), "black cunt" (for blacks), and "sand monkey" (for Arabs). In
Israel, an Arab is put down as "Arabush," and the Palestinian militants
are regarded as "subhuman," as the current Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu bluntly put it on April 15, 2013.
In America,
racism and ethnocentrism against the "Others" have long plagued its
existence in the last few centuries, and the recent book titled "Racism
in Contemporary America" by Meyer Weinberg, for example, had listed
"almost 15,000 entries to books, articles, dissertations, and other
materials...organized under 87 subject-headings" to document the
everlasting problem.
This problem is a relevant context to
understand the Boston bombing suspects from Russia, especially in regard
to their new life in America; for example, when Tamerlan Tzarnaev, one
of the two Boston bombing suspects, wrote in a photo essay online before
the attacks that "I don't have a single American friend, I don't
understand them," the American mainstream media dismissed this as a
loser who failed to "assimilate," even though he married a local girl,
but her best friends refused to attend her wedding. Many individuals
from the U.S.S.R. or now Russia are not well accepted in American
society, just as many Russian and Eastern European girls are regarded as
"whores" in major American urban cities, partly because of the
historical legacy of the Cold War between the Western bloc and the
Eastern bloc, partly because of the political fault line of modern
Russian history outside the Western world, and of course partly because
of the lucrative (exploitative) sex (slave) trade for American men.
In
the U.K., racism and ethnocentrism have also long "inflicted...various
groups at various times in its history"; even nowadays, "police
forces...have been accused of institutionalised racism since the late
20th century. A stand which many believe is the catalyst for the 2011
summer riot. During the riot, a Metropolitan Police officer, PC Alex
MacFarlane, arrested and attempted strangling an African origin male and
used racial words like 'nigger' and 'black cunt' on him," as well
described in a Wikipedia article titled "Racism in the United Kingdom."
Around
the same time of the killing of a British soldier on May 22, 2013,
there have been riots for more than a week (starting on May 17, 2013) in
Stockholm, Sweden by some minorities who were angry by the shooting of
one of their own kind by the Swedish police, and the shooting sparked
outrage, because these minorities were fed up with "police brutality and
racism" against them, and "one of the rioters in Husby told Swedish
Radio that racism was rampant where he lived, and that violence was his
only way of being noticed" - contrary to the official discourse on
Sweden as "an oasis of peace and harmony" in the Western world, as
reported by Pia Ohlin for AFP on May 24, 2013.
Surely, not every
(especially white) Westerner is discriminative against the "Others," as
some of them even campaign for their rights and well-being -- just as in
statistics, every "average" or "central tendency" has "standard
deviations" to allow exceptional cases or those observations which stand
outside a generalization, but they do not invalidate the norm or the
"central tendency" in question, because they are "exceptions to the
rules."
This pattern of "unspoken rules" against the "Others" in
mainstream Western societies constitutes a fertile breeding ground for
"alienation" and "anger," which, when combined with the second front of
the war on terror (abroad), produces tragic consequences so as to
perpetuate the vicious cycle of violence between the Western dominant
groups and the "Others."
The "lone wolves" (or the "enemies from
within") are thus inextricably linked with this troubling pattern of
"unspoken rules" against the "Others" in mainstream Western societies.
David Cameron is ignorant enough to say that these "sickening"
individuals "hate our freedom." No, not at all, they "love" our freedom,
but they do not have enough freedom and equality in Western societies,
because they are not accepted as "equal" and "free" as the privileged
(mostly white) dominant groups.
This vicious cycle of violence at
home strikes at the very heart of contemporary Western culture and
society, that is, the very conflict between the "official" discourse (in
mainstream media) and the "unspoken rules" (in everyday life). The
Western world has failed to eliminate the "lone wolves," because the
"unspoken rules" against the "Others" remain pervasive in everyday
life.
(b) ABROAD
Abroad, there is the "second" front of
the Western war on terror against the "militants," "insurgents," etc.,
-- just as there is the "first" front of the Western war on terror at
home against the "lone wolves." But the two fronts are artificially
(mistakenly) separated, because they are in fact inextricably linked.
In
the killing of a British soldier in London on May 22, 2013, the black
man with "hands covered in blood, brandishing a bloodied meat cleaver
and a knife" bluntly said in front of a camera: "We swear by almighty
Allah we will never stop fighting you. The only reason we have done this
is because Muslims are dying every day" abroad due to Western military
strikes, and "this British soldier is an eye for an eye, a tooth for a
tooth....I apologize that women had to witness that, but in our lands
our women have to see the same thing. You people will never be safe.
Remove your government. They don't care about you," as reported by Maria
Golovnina and Guy Faulconbridge for Reuters on May 22, 2013.
One
is tempted to blame the 43rd U.S. President George W. Bush for his
initiation of the war on terror abroad more than a decade ago. However,
in a most recent "Pew Research Center survey," although Bush is still
"unpopular...in the Muslim world" -- to the surprise of many, "the US
generated higher approval ratings (19 percent)" under Bush "than it does
now (12 percent), under Obama," as reported by Husna Haq for the
Christian Science Monitor on May 22, 2013.
But how is this
possible? How is Obama even more unpopular now than Bush in the Muslim
world? After all, it was Obama who promised the Muslim world a new
beginning based on "mutual interest and mutual respect," as he thus said
on January 27, 2009 in his interview by Al-Arabiya host Hisham Melhem.
The reason is that the Western war on terror abroad has gone astray in
the last few years (on Obama's watch), for 3 major reasons.
The
first reason is that, although Osama bin Laden and many of his major Al
Qaeda leaders had been killed in the past years, the global terrorist
network becomes "decentralized," with many new "local" cells operating
on their own terms, while sharing the violent crusade against the U.S.
and its allies. The recent two incidents in Boston and London fit in
these new "local" cells, with little or no guidance at all from the top
hierarchy of the global terrorist network. These new "local" cells are
more dangerous, because they spread everywhere, hard to detect, and
often act alone.
The second reason is that the "drone strikes" by
the U.S. in the past decades have killed many innocent civilians around
the world and therefore have made many new enemies in the process,
especially under the leadership of Obama, who now becomes "known as the
'drone president,'" because "his drone campaign started three days into
the first term of his presidency. His national security policy has been
defined, at least in part, by a penchant for targeted killings. And he
has already authorized more than six times the number of strikes in
Pakistan that President George W. Bush did in his entire presidency," as
reported by Husna Haq for the Christian Science Monitor on May 22,
2013. And it is therefore "no surprise" that "Obama's drone program has
alienated allies abroad, largely because of the number of civilian
casualties incurred as a result of the strikes. Nowhere is that more
true than in Pakistan, where anti-American sentiments are already high
due to US actions such as the SEAL team operation to kill Osama bin
Laden [which blatantly violated the territorial sovereignty of
Pakistan]....'Globally these operations are hated,' Micah Zenko, a
scholar at the Council on Foreign Relations, told The New York Times.
'It's the face of American foreign policy, and it's an ugly face.'"
This
is expectable, if one remembers how the "Others" are treated in Western
societies (as explained earlier). By the same logical extension,
Western powers show no moral scruples in killing countless innocent
civilians around the world in all these military strikes against the
"Others" over the years, whose lives are not deemed as worthy enough as
those of "whites" (or "Europeans"). Each time, these deaths are simply
dismissed as "collateral damages." When one single British life (a
"white") was lost in the attack on May 22, 2013, Obama immediately
showed outrage and sent his "thoughts and prayers" to "the family of the
victim...." But when all these countless innocent civilians
(non-whites) were killed by drone strikes (on Obama's watch), he never
bothered to send his "thoughts and prayers" to the families of the
victims. In reality, the West does not care about the human lives of the
"Others" abroad, who are often looked down upon as "uncivilized,"
"backward," "subhuman," "trashy," or "inferior" - but the official
Western rhetoric is always about "freedom," "equality," "human rights,"
etc. for all, as part of its psychological warfare for the imperial
project (as there is no year without a war initiated by the West, with
all the subsequent killings and the tragic flows of war refugees around
the world, as "collateral damages").
And the third reason is
that these ruthless killings of countless innocent civilians and the
endless flows of war refugees around the world by the "drone strikes"
(and other military actions) have become a highly successful tool of
"recruitment propaganda" for enemies abroad, because "wildly unpopular
in the Muslim world, the strikes are leveraged by Al Qaeda to make a
case that the US is at war with Islam and to drum up sympathy for its
cause. The drone program has also been mentioned by convicted terrorists
as motivation for their crimes, as the Times points out, including
'underwear bomber' Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab who tried to bomb a
Detroit-bound airliner on Christmas Day 2009, as well as Faisal Shahzad,
whose attempted Times Square car bombing was foiled in 2010. In other
words, drone strikes may be creating as many would-be terrorists as it
seeks to eliminate," as reported by Husna Haq for the Christian Science
Monitor on May 22, 2013.
In fact, the Boston bombing suspects on
April 15, 2013 and the attackers of a British soldier on May 22, 2013
had both stressed that their attacks were a response to the Western war
on terror abroad, which had killed and maltreated too many Muslims.
It
is no secret that the majorities of those in American and British
societies are Christians, not Muslims; and the relationships between
Christians and Muslims in these societies have been quite rocky for
years. But the Obama administration, like his Bush predecessor, does not
make things better by treating the Muslims badly in the notorious
prison at Guantánamo Bay, and this is even more shocking when one
remembers that Obama, again, promised more than 4 years ago to close it
but still has not.
Even the mainstream British magazine The
Economist recently (on May 4, 2013) called "the [Guantánamo] prison...a
deeply un-American disgrace," because many of the prisoners there "have
been there as long as 11 years, without ever even having been charged,"
and about "100 of the 166 detainees still in Guantánamo are now on
hunger strike, and extra doctors were brought in this week to help with
what the administration refuses to call force-feeding. No matter what
they have done, this is wrong. This newspaper has condemned Guantánamo
as unjust, unwise and un-American for a decade. The spectre of prisoners
denied either a fair trial or the possibility of release is Orwellian.
Nothing has done more to sully America's image in the modern world. They
should be tried or set free, just as terrorist suspects are in every
other civilised country."
And the horror of "force-feeding" is
graphic enough, because "prisoners [there] have a choice. They can eat
or, if they refuse to, they will have a greased tube stuffed up their
noses, down their throats and into their stomachs, through which they
will be fed. This can cause gagging and bleeding in a compliant patient,
and is a lot nastier when done against his will. It takes up to two
hours, during which time an unco-operative prisoner must be restrained
to stop him pulling out the tube. Lawyers for the 23 or so men who are
being subjected to this treatment report that it is deliberately being
done roughly, with unsterilised tubes that are too large: those claims
are denied. But even if they are false, the business clearly violates an
individual's rights; according to the president of the American Medical
Association, it also breaches the 'core ethical values of the medical
profession,'" as The Economist rightly pointed out.
When Western
powers kill and treat Muslims like this abroad, they lose so many hearts
and minds of the "Others" around the world - just as when the "Others"
suffer from the "unspoken rules" in Western societies at home, this has
contributed to more "alienation" and "anger."
So, when the "two"
fronts of the war on terror are combined together, they reinforce each
other to perpetuate the vicious cycle of violence in the world. The West
cannot win on one side of the war on terror by being unable to get rid
of the "Others" -- and the "Others" cannot lose on the other side of the
war on terror by continuing its attacks, for reasons as explained
above.
The more we deny this, the more all of us shall continue
to suffer together in this world in the years to come - regardless of
the euphemistic speech by Cameron (that "we have always beaten them") or
by Obama (that "we are safer" now).
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