Chomsky
to RT: All superpowers feel exceptional, inflate security myth for
‘frightened population’
10
October, 2013
The
United States is not the first superpower to act as if it’s
exceptional and will likely not be the last, although US leaders
could be squandering a fruitful opportunity for improved
international relations, Noam Chomsky said in an interview with RT.
RT: I’d
like to begin with Iran. The new president, Rouhani, has appeared to
be much softer than his predecessor. On his recent trip to the US it
was hailed as progress and the first time two presidents spoke in
over 30 years. Do you see US policy towards Iran changing?
Noam
Chomsky: The real issue is what will happen in the United
States. The way the issue is presented in the United States, and most
of the West, the problem is Iran’s intransigence and its rejection
of the demands of the international community. There is plenty to
criticize in Iran but the real issue is quite different. It’s the
refusal of the West, primarily of the United States, to enter into
serious diplomacy with Iran. And as far as Iran violating the will of
the international community, that depends on a very special
definition of international community which is standard in the West
where the term means the United States and anybody who goes along
with it. So if the international community includes the world then
the story is quite different. For example the non-aligned countries,
which is most of the world’s population, have vigorously supported
Iran’s right to enrich uranium – still do.
The
nearby region, in the Arab world, Arab’s don’t like Iran it’s
quite unpopular there are hostilities that go back very far. But they
do not regard Iran as a threat, a very small percentage regard Iran
as a threat. The threats they perceive are the United States and
Israel, so they are not part of the world as far as “international
community” is concerned but it’s a western obsession. Are there
ways to deal with it, whatever one takes a threat to be? Sure, there
are ways.
So
for example in 2010 there was a very positive advance that could have
mitigated whatever the threat is supposed to be. Turkey and Brazil
reached a deal with Iran in which Iran would ship out its
low-enriched uranium in exchange for storage in Turkey, and in return
the west would provide isotopes for Iran’s medical reactors. As
soon as that was announced Brazil and Turkey were bitterly condemned
by Washington and by the media, which more or less reflexively follow
what Washington says. The Brazilian government was pretty upset by
this, so much so that the Brazilian Foreign Minister released a
letter from President Obama to the president of Brazil in which Obama
had proposed this assuming that Iran would turn it down. When Iran
accepted, of course he had to denounce it and Obama went right to the
Security Council to try to get harsher sanctions. Well that’s one
case.
U.S. President Barack Obama (Reuters /
Kevin Lamarque)
'Exceptional in its right to use force and violence'
It’s
also worth remembering that every day the United States and Israel
are violating international law on this issue. The UN charter, if
anybody cares, bans the threat or use of force in international
affairs. Every time an official says “All options are open,” that
is a criminal act. Here nobody cares. We are supposed to be able to
carry out criminal acts and in fact that was a dramatic illustration
of that yesterday.
Reuters / Larry Downing
'Every great power that I know of has claimed to be exceptional'
The
United States has always adopted the principle of American
exceptionalism, this goes back to the early colonists, but it’s not
a uniquely American position.
Every
great power, at least every one I know of, has taken the same
position. So France was unique in its civilizing mission, which was
announced proudly as the Minister of War was calling for the
extermination of the people of Algeria. Russia under Stalin was
uniquely exceptional and magnificent while it was carrying out all
kinds of crimes. Hitler pronounced German exceptionalism when he took
over Czechoslovakia, it was done to end ethnic cleansing and put
people under the broader German high culture and German technology.
In fact I can’t think of an exception.
Every
great power that I know of has claimed to be exceptional, the United
States among them: exceptional in its right to use force and
violence.
RT: Doesn’t
the US take it a step further with exceptionalism?
NC: Only
because the US is more powerful. If you go back a hundred years
British and French exceptionalism was far more powerful. The US had
the same doctrine but what really mattered for the world was the
major imperial powers. And in Russia’s domains it was Russia that
was exceptional. Try to find an exception. So the exceptionalism is
kind of interesting in that it seems to be without exception.
Everybody accepts it, and of course it’s ludicrous in each case.
RT: I’d
like to ask you about Syria. They’ve just begun to dismantle their
chemical arsenal. The US now seemingly agrees with Russia that
perhaps military intervention is not the best way, although it seems
to be dragging its feet on Syria policy. Do you expect provocations
from the armed rebels in terms of trying to hamper this step to
disarm?
A U.N. convoy arrives at a hotel where
experts from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons (OPCW) are staying, in Damascus October 9, 2013 (Reuters /
Khaled al-Hariri)
Actually
it’s fine to get rid of Syrian chemical weapons, that’s great,
but it’s not what the policy ought to be. When President Obama and
the press and so on talk about the chemical weapons convention they
crucially misstate it, purposefully. What’s stated is that the
chemical weapons convention bans the use of chemical weapons, it’s
only part of the story. The convention bans the production, storage,
or use of chemical weapons. Now production and storage can’t be
mentioned because if you mention them you’ve got to dismantle
Israel’s chemical weapons therefore that can’t be mentioned. But
this is a perfect opportunity to move to eliminate chemical weapons
from the region, not just from Syria but remove them from the region.
'Syrian chemical weapons are not there just for fun, they were there as a counter to Israeli nuclear weapons'
Israel
is the only country with a massive nuclear capacity in the region. So
there’s a broader issue which goes back to the question of a
weapons of mass destruction free zone in the Middle East, which the
US has been blocking for the same reason. So this is a partial
solution, it’s good in itself but very partial. The broader
opportunities are not being pursued and not even being discussed
outside of really marginal areas.
RT: Recent
information released by whistleblower Edward Snowden stirred up a
whole lot of scandal across the globe. Some see him as a villain,
others as a hero. The US wants to try him while other people are
calling for him to receive the highest human rights prizes. What do
you think of him?
Reuters / Ueslei Marcelino
'Genuine security is a very low concern'
There
are two problems with that defense. One is that when a government or
others related to its claim security, it literally carries no
information. The reason is it’s predictable. No matter what any
state does, no matter how awful it’s going to say it’s necessary
for security. A message that is completely predictable is completely
uninformative. So first it’s uninformative. We can however look and
see what the claim of security amounts to and here it’s pretty easy
in a society like the United States, precisely because it is a very
free and open society, maybe the most in the world.
So
we have a huge record of declassified documents going way back that
were classified for security reasons but are now available, a huge
array of them, we can study them and ask to what extent was security
relevant. I’ve done a lot of work on this and others can do it to
and there’s a conclusion security is almost always relevant but its
security of the government from its own population. That’s the
security concern.
The
genuine security, like the security of the population from attack, is
a very low concern. You can see this in state policy as well, there’s
no time to go through it, but if you run through the record of state
policy from the very beginning up until the present the security of
the population is not a very high priority. The United States is not
alone in this, that’s pretty common.
RT: Why
do we not see more Americans scrutinizing NSA spying, Obama’s drone
campaign, clear violations and certainly things that you have people
abroad criticizing the US for. Why is it so quiet back home?
AFP Photo
The
invasion of Iraq was undertaken with warnings from the intelligence
services in the United States and Britain, both the attacking
countries, intelligence services warned that this was going to
increase terrorism. It did by a huge factor. According to government
statistics by about a factor of seven in the first year. Does that
help security? Well they had other reasons to invade Iraq, not
security and this goes way back.
Let’s
go back to 1950. The US was overwhelmingly powerful, it had about
half the world’s wealth, incomparable security and so on. But there
was a potentially serious danger: ICBMs with hydrogen bomb warheads.
They didn’t exist but they were going to exist. Well, if the
government had any interest in security it would have moved to see if
Russia would have accepted a treaty to ban the production of these
weapons and it’s very possible that they would have. Not because
they’re nice people but because they knew they were way behind. So
it might have worked.
There’s
kind of a standard history of nuclear weapons policy by George Bundy
who was national security advisor for Kennedy and Johnson. He had
access to the highest level of internal documents. And in this book
there are a couple of lines, which are most in important in the book,
which observed he could not find any internal paper that even raised
this possibility.
The
concern over destruction of the country was so limited that they
never even discussed the possibility of developing a treaty
arrangement with their only adversary which could have eliminated
this threat. It’s just not a concern. That’s the way states
operate. Where we know anything about state policy – it’s very
typical like this – they have their own power systems and they have
their own lists of concerns but security of the population is not
high on the list. But the population accepts it and they are afraid.
And other countries too, they’re afraid. They think we need big
brother to protect us from enemies so there’s very little protest
and very little discussion. So check to see where you can find the
drone campaign described as a terrorist campaign because it’s
generating terrorists. You can find it on the fringes but most
people, they’ve never heard anything like this.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.