The Loneliness of Noam Chomsky
excerpted from the book
War Talk
by Arundhati Roy
South End Press, 2003, paper
[Written as an introduction
for the new edition of Noam Chomsky's 'For Reasons of State',
New Press, 2003]
p77
Sitting in my home in New Delhi, watching
an American TV news channel promote itself ( 'We report. You decide"
), I imagine Noam Chomsky's amused, chipped-tooth smile.
Sitting in my home in New Delhi, watching
an American TV news channel promote itself ("We report. You
Decide."), I imagine Noam Chomsky's amused chipped-toothed
smile.
Everybody knows that authoritarian regimes,
regardless of their ideology, use the mass media for propaganda.
But what about democratically elected regimes in the "free
world"?
Today, thanks to Noam Chomsky and his
fellow media analysts, it is almost axiomatic for thousands, possibly
millions, of us that public opinion in "free market"
democracies is manufactured just like any other mass market product-soap,
switches, or sliced bread. We know that while, legally and constitutionally,
speech may be free, the space in which that freedom can be exercised
has been snatched from us and auctioned to the highest bidders.
Neoliberal capitalism isn't just about the accumulation of capital
(for some). It's also about the accumulation of power (for some),
the accumulation of freedom (for some). Conversely, for the rest
of the world, the people who are excluded from neoliberalism's
governing body, it's about the erosion of capital, the erosion
of power, the erosion of freedom. In the "free" market,
free speech has become a commodity like everything else-justice,
human rights, drinking water, clean air. It's available only to
those who can afford it. And naturally, those who can afford it
use free speech to manufacture the kind of product, confect the
kind of public opinion, that best suits their purpose. (News they
can use.) Exactly how they do this has been the subject of much
of Noam Chomsky's political writing.
[Italian] Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.
for instance. has a controlling interest in major Italian newspapers,
magazines, television channels, and publishing houses. "[T}he
prime minister in effect controls about 90 percent of Italian
TV viewership," reports the Financial Times. What price free
speech? Free speech for whom? Admittedly, Berlusconi is an extreme
example. In other democracies-the United States in particular-media
barons, powerful corporate lobbies, and government officials are
implicated in a more elaborate but less obvious manner. (George
Bush Jr.'s connections to the oil lobby, to the arms industry,
and to Enron, and Enron's infiltration of U.S. government institutions
and the mass media-all this is public knowledge now.)
After the September 11, 2001, terrorist
strikes in New York and Washington, the mainstream media's blatant
performance as the U.S. government's mouthpiece, its display of
vengeful patriotism, its willingness to publish Pentagon press
handouts as news, and its explicit censorship of dissenting opinion
became the butt of some pretty black humor in the rest of the
world.
Then the New York Stock Exchange crashed,
bankrupt airline companies appealed to the government for financial
bailouts, and there was talk of circumventing patent laws in order
to manufacture generic drugs to fight the anthrax scare ( much
more important and urgent of course than the production of generics
to fight AIDS in Africa). Suddenly, it began to seem as though
the twin myths of Free Speech and the Free Market might come crashing
down alongside the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center.
But of course that never happened. The
myths live on.
There is however, a brighter side to the
amount of energy and money that the establishment pours into the
business of "managing" public opinion. It suggests a
very real fear of public opinion. It suggests a persistent and
valid worry that if people were to discover (and fully comprehend)
the real nature of the things that are done in their name, they
might act upon that knowledge. Powerful people know that ordinary
people are not always reflexively ruthless and selfish. (When
ordinary people weigh costs and benefits, something like an uneasy
conscience could easily tip the scales.) For this reason, they
must be guarded against reality, reared in a controlled climate,
in an altered reality, like broiler chickens or pigs in a pen.
Those of us who have managed to escape
this fate and are scratching about in the backyard, no longer
believe everything we read in the papers and watch on TV. We put
our ears to the ground and look for other ways of making sense
of the world. We search for the untold story, the mentioned-in-passing
military coup, the unreported genocide, the civil war in an African
country written up in a one-column-inch story next to a full-page
advertisement for lace underwear.
We don't always remember, and many don't
even know, that this way of thinking, this easy acuity, this instinctive
mistrust of the mass media, would at best be a political hunch
and at worst a loose accusation, if it were not for the relentless
and unswerving media analysis of one of the world's greatest minds.
And this is only one of the ways in which Noam Chomsky has radically
altered our understanding of the society in which we live. Or
should I say, our understanding of the elaborate rules of the
lunatic asylum in which we are all voluntary inmates?
Speaking about the September 11 attacks
in New York and Washington, President George W. Bush called the
enemies of the United States "enemies of freedom." "Americans
are asking why do they hate us?" he said. "They hate
our freedoms, our freedom of religion, our freedom of speech,
our freedom to vote and assemble and disagree with each other."
If people in the United States want a
real answer to that question (as opposed to the ones in the Idiot's
Guide to Anti-Americanism, that is: "Because they're jealous
of us," "Because they hate freedom," "Because
they're losers," "Because we're good and they're evil"),
I'd say, read Chomsky. Read Chomsky on U.S. military interventions
in Indochina, Latin America, Iraq, Bosnia, the former Yugoslavia,
Afghanistan, and the Middle East. If ordinary people in the United
States read Chomsky, perhaps their questions would be framed a
little differently. Perhaps it would be: "Why don't they
hate us more than they do?" or "Isn't it surprising
that September 11 didn't happen earlier?"
Unfortunately, in these nationalistic
times, words like "us" and "them" are used
loosely. The line between citizens and the state is being deliberately
and successfully blurred, not just by governments, but also by
terrorists. The underlying logic of terrorist attacks, as well
as "retaliatory" wars against governments that "support
terrorism," is the same: both punish citizens for the actions
of their governments.
(A brief digression: I realize that for
Noam Chomsky, a U.S. citizen, to criticize his own government
is better manners than for someone like myself, an Indian citizen,
to criticize the U.S. government. I'm no patriot, and am fully
aware that venality, brutality, and hypocrisy are imprinted on
the leaden soul of every state. But when a country ceases to be
merely a country and becomes an empire, then the scale of operations
changes dramatically. So may I clarify that I speak as a subject
of the U.S. empire? I speak as a slave who presumes to criticize
her king.)
If I were asked to choose one of Noam
Chomsky's major contributions to the world, it would be the fact
that he has unmasked the ugly, manipulative, ruthless universe
that exists behind that beautiful, sunny word "freedom."
He has done this rationally and empirically. The mass of evidence
he has marshaled to construct his case is formidable. Terrifying,
actually. The starting premise of Chomsky's method is not ideological,
but it is intensely political. He embarks on his course of inquiry
with an anarchist's instinctive mistrust of power. He takes us
on a tour through the bog of the U.S. establishment, and leads
us through the dizzying maze of corridors that connects the government,
big business, and the business of managing public opinion.
Chomsky shows us how phrases like "free
speech," the "free market," and the "free
world" have little, if anything, to do with freedom. He shows
us that, among the myriad freedoms claimed by the U.S. government
are the freedom to murder, annihilate, and dominate other people.
The freedom to finance and sponsor despots and dictators across
the world. The freedom to train, arm, and shelter terrorists.
The freedom to topple democratically elected governments. The
freedom to amass and use weapons of mass destruction-chemical,
biological, and nuclear. The freedom to go to war against any
country whose government it disagrees with. And, most terrible
of all, the freedom to commit these crimes against humanity in
the name of "justice," in the name of "righteousness,"
in the name of "freedom."
Attorney General John Ashcroft has declared
that U.S. freedoms are "not the grant of any government or
document, but. . .our endowment from God. SO, basically, we're
confronted with a country armed with a mandate from heaven. Perhaps
this explains why the U.S. government refuses to judge itself
by the same moral standards by which it judges others. (Any attempt
to do this is shouted down as "moral equivalence.")
Its technique is to position itself as the well-intentioned giant
whose good deeds are confounded in strange countries by their
scheming natives, whose markets it's trying to free, whose societies
it's trying to modernize, whose women it's trying to liberate,
whose souls it's trying to save.
Perhaps this belief in its own divinity
also explains why the U.S. government has conferred upon itself
the right and freedom to murder and exterminate people "for
their own good."
When he announced the U.S. air strikes
against Afghanistan, President Bush Jr. said, "We're a peaceful
nation. He went on to say, "This is the calling of the United
States of America, the most free nation in the world, a nation
built on fundamental values, that rejects hate, rejects violence,
rejects murderers, rejects evil. And we will not tire."
The U.S. empire rests on a grisly foundation:
the massacre of millions of indigenous people, the stealing of
their lands, and following this, the kidnapping and enslavement
of millions of black people from Africa to work that land. Thousands
died on the seas while they were being shipped like caged cattle
between continents. "Stolen from Africa, brought to America"-Bob
Marley's "Buffalo Soldier" contains a whole universe
of unspeakable sadness. It tells of the loss of dignity, the loss
of wilderness, the loss of freedom, the shattered pride of a people.
Genocide and slavery provide the social and economic underpinning
of the nation whose fundamental values reject hate, murderers,
and evil.
Here is Chomsky, writing in the essay
"The Manufacture of Consent," on the founding of the
United States of America:
During the Thanksgiving holiday a few
weeks ago, I took a walk with some friends and family in a national
park. We came across a gravestone, which had on it the following
inscription: "Here lies an Indian woman, a Wampanoag, whose
family and tribe gave of themselves and their land that this great
nation might be born and grow."
Of course, it is not quite accurate to
say that the indigenous population gave of themselves and their
land for that noble purpose. Rather, they were slaughtered, decimated,
and dispersed in the course of one of the greatest exercises in
genocide in human history...which we celebrate each October when
we honor Columbus-a notable mass murderer himself on Columbus
Day.
Hundreds of American citizens, well-meaning
and decent people, troop by that gravestone regularly and read
it, apparently without reaction; except, perhaps, a feeling of
satisfaction that at last we are giving some due recognition to
the sacrifices of the native peoples.... They might react differently
if they were to visit Auschwitz or Dachau and find a gravestone
reading: "Here lies a woman, a Jew, whose family and people
gave of themselves and their possessions that this great nation
might grow and prosper."
How has the United States survived its
terrible past and emerged smelling so sweet? Not by owning up
to it, not by making reparations, not by apologizing to black
Americans or native Americans, and certainly not by changing its
ways (it exports its cruelties now). Like most other countries,
the United States has rewritten its history. But what sets the
United States apart from other countries, and puts it way ahead
in the race, is that it has enlisted the services of the most
powerful, most successful publicity firm in the world: Hollywood.
In the best-selling version of popular myth as history, U.S. "goodness"
peaked during World War II (akaAmerica's War Against Fascism).
Lost in the din of trumpet sound and angel song is the fact that
when fascism was in full stride in Europe, the U.S. government
actually looked away. When Hitler was carrying out his genocidal
pogrom against Jews, U.S. officials refused entry to Jewish refugees
fleeing Germany. The United States entered the war only after
the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Drowned out by the noisy hosannas
is its most barbaric act, in fact the single most savage act the
world has ever witnessed: the dropping of the atomic bomb on civilian
populations in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The war was nearly over.
The hundreds of thousands of Japanese people who were killed,
the countless others who were crippled by cancers for generations
to come, were not a threat to world peace. They were civilians.
Just as the victims of the World Trade Center and Pentagon bombings
were civilians. Just as the hundreds of thousands of people who
died in Iraq because of the U.S.-led sanctions were civilians.
The bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was a cold, calculated experiment
carried out to demonstrate America's power. At the time, President
Truman described it as "the greatest thing in history.
The Second World War, we're told, was
a "war for peace." The atomic bomb was a "weapon
of peace." We're invited to believe that nuclear deterrence
prevented World War III. (That was before President George Bush
Jr. came up with the "pre-emptive strike doctrine.")
Was there an outbreak of peace after the Second World War? Certainly
there was (relative) peace in Europe and America-but does that
count as world peace? Not unless savage, proxy wars fought in
lands where the colored races live (chinks, niggers, dinks, wogs,
gooks) don't count as wars at all.
Since the Second World War, the United
States has been at war with or has attacked, among other countries,
Korea, Guatemala, Cuba, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia, Grenada, Libya,
El Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama, Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Yugoslavia,
and Afghanistan. This list should also include the U.S. government's
covert operations in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, the coups
it has engineered, and the dictators it has armed and supported.
It should include Israel's U.S.-backed war on Lebanon, in which
thousands were killed. It should include the key role America
has played in the conflict in the Middle East, in which thousands
have died fighting Israel's illegal occupation of Palestinian
territory. It should include America's role in the civil war in
Afghanistan in the 1980s, in which more than one million people
were killed. It should include the embargos and sanctions that
have led directly and indirectly to the death of hundreds of thousands
of people, most visibly in Iraq. Put it all together, and it sounds
very much as though there has been a World War III, and that the
U.S. government was (or is) one of its chief protagonists.
Most of the essays in Chomsky's For Reasons
of State are about U.S. aggression in South Vietnam, North Vietnam,
Laos, and Cambodia. It was a war that lasted more than twelve
years. Fifty-eight thousand Americans and approximately two million
Vietnamese, Cambodians, and Laotians lost their lives. The U.S.
deployed half a million ground troops, dropped more than six million
tons of bombs. And yet, though you wouldn't believe it if you
watched most Hollywood movies, America lost the war.
The war began in South Vietnam and then
spread to North Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. After putting in
place a client regime in Saigon, the U.S. government invited itself
in to fight a communist insurgency-Vietcong guerrillas who had
infiltrated rural regions of South Vietnam where villagers were
sheltering them. This was exactly the model that Russia replicated
when, in 1979, it invited itself
into Afghanistan. Nobody in the "free
world" is in any doubt about the fact that Russia invaded
Afghanistan. After glasnost, even a Soviet foreign minister called
the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan "illegal and immoral."
But there has been no such introspection in the United States.
In 1984, in a stunning revelation, Chomsky wrote:
For the past twenty-two years, I have
been searching to find some reference in mainstream journalism
or scholarship to an American invasion of South Vietnam in 1962
(or ever), or an American attack against South Vietnam, or American
aggression in Indochina-without success. There is no such event
in history. Rather, there is an American defense of South Vietnam
against terrorists supported from the outside (namely from Vietnam).
There is no such event in history!
In 1962, the U.S. Air Force began to bomb
rural South Vietnam, where eighty percent of the population lived.
The bombing lasted for more than a decade. Thousands of people
were killed. The idea was to bomb on a scale colossal enough to
induce panic migration from villages into cities, where people
could be held in refugee camps. Samuel Huntington referred to
this as a process of "urbanization." (I learned about
urbanization when I was in architecture school in India. Somehow
I don't remember aerial bombing being part of the syllabus.) Huntington-famous
today for his essay "The Clash of Civilizations?"-was
at the time Chairman of the Council on Vietnamese Studies of the
Southeast Asia Development Advisory Group. Chomsky quotes him
describing the Vietcong as "a powerful force which cannot
be dislodged from its constituency so long as the constituency
continues to exist." Huntington went on to advise "direct
application of mechanical and conventional power"-in other
words, to crush a people's war, eliminate the people. (Or, perhaps,
to update the thesis-in order to prevent a clash of civilizations,
annihilate a civilization.)
Here's one observer from the time on the
limitations of America's mechanical power: "The problem is
that American machines are not equal to the task of killing communist
soldiers except as part of a scorched-earth policy that destroys
everything else as well." That problem has been solved now.
Not with less destructive bombs, but with more imaginative language.
There's a more elegant way of saying "that destroys everything
else as well." The phrase is "collateral damage."
And here's a firsthand account of what
America's "machines" (Huntington called them "modernizing
instruments" and staff officers in the Pentagon called them
"bomb-o-grams') can do. This is T.D. Allman flying over the
Plain of Jars in Laos.
Even if the war in Laos ended tomorrow,
the restoration of its ecological balance might take several years.
The reconstruction of the Plain's totally destroyed towns and
villages might take just as long. Even if this was done, the Plain
might long prove perilous to human habitation because of the hundreds
of thousands of unexploded bombs, mines and booby traps.
bombing can do to a rural area, even after
its civilian population has been evacuated. In large areas, the
primary tropical colour-bright green-has been replaced by an abstract
pattern of black, and bright metallic colours. Much of the remaining
foliage is stunted, dulled by defoliants.
Today, black is the dominant colour of
the northern and eastern reaches of the Plain. Napalm is dropped
regularly to burn off the grass and undergrowth that covers the
Plains and fills its many narrow ravines. The fires seem to burn
constantly, creating rectangles of black. During the flight, plumes
of smoke could be seen rising from freshly bombed areas.
The main routes, coming into the Plain
from communist-held territory, are bombed mercilessly, apparently
on a non-stop basis. There, and along the rim of the Plain, the
dominant colour is yellow. All vegetation has been destroyed.
The craters are countless.... [T]he area has been bombed so repeatedly
that the land resembles the pocked, churned desert in storm-hit
areas of the North African desert.
Further to the southeast, Xieng Khouangville-once
the most populous town in communist Laos-lies empty, destroyed.
To the north of the Plain, the little resort of Khang Khay also
has been destroyed.
Around the landing field at the base of
King Kong, the main colours are yellow (from upturned soil) and
black (from napalm), relieved by patches of bright red and blue:
parachutes used to drop supplies.
[T]he last local inhabitants were being carted into air transports.
Abandoned vegetable gardens that would never be harvested grew
near abandoned houses with plates still on the tables and calendars
on the walls.
(Never counted in the "costs"
of war are the dead birds, the charred animals, the murdered fish,
incinerated insects, poisoned water sources, destroyed vegetation.
Rarely mentioned is the arrogance of the human race toward other
living things with which it shares this planet. All these are
forgotten in the fight for markets and ideologies. This arrogance
will probably be the ultimate undoing of the human species.)
The centerpiece of For Reasons of State
is an essay called "The Mentality of the Backroom Boys,"
in which Chomsky offers an extraordinarily supple, exhaustive
analysis of the Pentagon Papers, which he says "provide documentary
evidence of a conspiracy to use force in international affairs
in violation of law." Here, too, Chomsky makes note of the
fact that while the bombing of North Vietnam is discussed at some
length in the Pentagon Papers, the invasion of South Vietnam barely
merits a mention.
The Pentagon Papers are mesmerizing, not
as documentation of the history of the U.S. war in Indochina,
but as insight into the minds of the men who planned and executed
it. It's fascinating to be privy to the ideas that were being
tossed around, the suggestions that were made, the proposals that
were put forward. In a section called "The Asian Mind-the
American Mind," Chomsky examines the discussion of the mentality
of the enemy that "stoically accept[s] the destruction of
wealth and the loss of lives," whereas "We want life,
happiness, wealth, power," and, for us, "death and suffering
are irrational choices when alternatives exist." So, we learn
that the Asian poor, presumably because they cannot comprehend
the meaning of happiness, wealth, and power, invite America to
carry this "strategic logic to its conclusion, which is genocide."
But, then "we" balk because "genocide is a terrible
burden to bear." (Eventually, of course, "we" went
ahead and committed genocide any way, and then pretended that
it never really happened.)
Of course, the Pentagon Papers contain
some moderate proposals, as well.
Strikes at population targets (per se)
are likely not only to create a counterproductive wave of revulsion
abroad and at home, but greatly to increase the risk of enlarging
the war with China and the Soviet Union. Destruction of locks
and dams, however-if handled right-might. . . offer promise. It
should be studied. Such destruction does not kill or drown people.
By shallow-flooding the rice, it leads after time to widespread
starvation (more than a million?) unless food is provided-which
we could offer to do "at the conference table."
Layer by layer, Chomsky strips down the
process of decision-making by U.S. government officials, to reveal
at its core the pitiless heart of the American war machine, completely
insulated from the realities of war, blinded by ideology, and
willing to annihilate millions of human beings, civilians, soldiers,
women, children, villages, whole cities, whole ecosystems-with
scientifically honed methods of brutality.
Here's an American pilot talking about
the joys of napalm:
We sure are pleased with those backroom
boys at Dow. The original product wasn't so hot-if the gooks were
quick they could scrape it off. So the boys started adding polystyrene-now
it sticks | like shit to a blanket. But then if the gooks jumped
under water it stopped burning, so they started adding Willie
Peter [white phosphorous] so's to make it burn better. It'll even
burn under water now. And just one drop is enough, it'll keep
on burning right down to the bone so they die anyway from phosphorous
poisoning.
So the lucky gooks were annihilated for
their own good. Better Dead than Red.
Thanks to the seductive charms of Hollywood
and the irresistible appeal of America's mass media, all these
years later, the world views the war as an American story. Indochina
provided the lush, tropical backdrop against which the United
States played out its fantasies of violence, tested its latest
technology, furthered its ideology, examined its conscience, agonized
over its moral dilemmas, and dealt with its guilt (or pretended
to). The Vietnamese, the Cambodians, and Laotians were only script
props. Nameless, faceless, slit-eyed humanoids. They were just
the people who died. Gooks.
The only real lesson the U.S. government
learned from its invasion of Indochina is how to go to war without
committing American troops and risking American lives. So now
we have wars waged with long-range cruise missiles, Black Hawks,
"bunker busters." Wars in which the "Allies"
lose more journalists than soldiers.
As a child growing up in the state of
Kerala, in South India-where the first democratically elected
Communist government in the world came to power in 1959, the year
I was born-I worried terribly about being a gook. Kerala was only
a few thousand miles west of Vietnam. We had jungles and rivers
and rice-fields, and communists, too. I kept imagining my mother,
my brother, and myself being blown out of the bushes by a grenade,
or mowed down, like the gooks in the movies, by an American marine
with muscled arms and chewing gum and a loud background score.
In my dreams, I was the burning girl in the famous photograph
taken on the road from Trang Bang.
As someone who grew up on the cusp of
both American and Soviet propaganda (which more or less neutralized
each other), when I first read Noam Chomsky, it occurred to me
that his marshaling of evidence, the volume of it, the relentlessness
of it, was a little-how shall I put it?-insane. Even a quarter
of the evidence he had compiled would have been enough to convince
me. I used to wonder why he needed to do so much work. But now
I understand that the magnitude and intensity of Chomsky's work
is a barometer of the magnitude, scope, and relentlessness of
the propaganda machine that he's up against. He's like the wood-borer
who lives inside the third rack of my bookshelf. Day and night,
I hear his jaws crunching through the wood, grinding it to a fine
dust It's as though he disagrees with the literature and wants
to destroy the very structure on which it rests. I call him Chomsky.
Being an American working in America,
writing to convince Americans of his point of view must really
be like having to tunnel through hard wood. Chomsky is one of
a small band of individuals fighting a whole industry. And that
makes him not only brilliant, but heroic.
Some years ago, in a poignant interview
with James Peck, Chomsky spoke about his memory of the day Hiroshima
was bombed. He was sixteen years old:
I remember that I literally couldn't talk
to anybody. There was nobody. I just walked off by myself. I was
at a summer camp at the time, and I walked off into the woods
and stayed alone for a couple of hours when I heard about it.
I could never talk to anyone about it and never understood anyone's
reaction. I felt completely isolated.
That isolation produced one of the greatest,
most radical public thinkers of our time.
When the sun sets on the American empire,
as it will, as it must, Noam Chomsky's work will survive. It will
point a cool, incriminating finger at a merciless, Machiavellian
empire as cruel, self-righteous, and hypocritical as the ones
it has replaced. (The only difference is that it is armed with
technology that can visit the kind of devastation on the world
that history has never known and the human race cannot begin to
imagine.)
As a could've been gook, and who knows,
perhaps a potential gook, hardly a day goes by when I don't find
myself thinking-for one reason or another-"Chomsky Zindabad."
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