Philip K. Dick Meet George W. Bush
by
Tom Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
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Blowing
Them Away Means Never Having to Say You're Sorry: Globalization
Bush-style
Imagine, for
a moment, that you live in a small town somewhere near the Southern
California coast. You're going about your daily life, trying to
scrape by in hard times, when the missile hits. It might have come
from the Iranian unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) its pilot
at a base on the outskirts of Tehran that has had the village
in its sights for the last six hours or from the Russian sub stationed
just off the coast. In either case, it's devastating.
In Moscow
and Tehran, officials announce that, in a joint action, they have
launched the missile as part of a carefully coordinated "surgical"
operation to take out a "known terrorist," a long-term danger to
their national security. A Kremlin spokesman offers the following
statement:
"As
we have repeatedly said, we will continue to pursue terrorist activities
and their operations wherever we may find them. We share common
goals with respect to fighting terrorism. We will continue to seek
out, identify, capture and, if necessary, kill terrorists where
they plan their activities, carry out their operations or seek safe
harbor."
A family in
a ramshackle house just down the street from you he's a carpenter;
she works at the local Dairy Queen are killed along with
their pets. Their son is seriously wounded, their home blown to
smithereens. Neighbors passing by as the missile hits are also wounded.
As it happens,
there are no terrorists in the vicinity. Outraged, you organize
your neighbors and march angrily in protest
through the town, shouting anti-Russian, anti-Iranian slogans. But,
of course, there is nothing you can really do. Iran and Russia are
far away, their weaponry powerful, your arms nonexistent. The state
of California is incapable of protecting you. This is, in fact,
at least the fourth time in recent months that a "terrorist" has
been declared "taken out" from the air or by a ship-based cruise
missile, when only innocent Californians have died.
As news of
the "collateral damage" from the botched operation dribbles out,
the Russian and Iranian media pay next to no attention. There are
no outraged editorials. Official spokesmen see no need to comment
further. No one is held responsible and no promises are made in
either Tehran or Moscow that similar assassination strikes won't
be launched in the near future, based on "actionable intelligence,"
possibly even on the same town. In fact, the next day, seeing UAVs
once
again soaring overhead, you load your pick-up and prepare to
flee.
Swatting
Flies in Somalia
Philip
K. Dick meet George W. Bush. When it comes to such a thing happening
in the United States, we are, of course, at the wildest frontiers
of science fiction. The U.S. is a sovereign nation. We guard our
air space and coastal waters jealously. Any country violating them
for purposes of aggressive action, no less by launching a missile
against an American town, would be committing an act of war and
would certainly be treated accordingly.
If, somehow,
such an event did occur, it would be denounced in Washington and
on editorial pages across the country as a shocking contravention
of international legal conventions and a crime of war… unless, of
course, we did it in a country where sovereignty has been
declared meaningless.
In fact, an
almost exact replica of the above fictional incident at least
the fourth
of its kind in recent months did indeed take place at
the beginning of March in the embattled failed state of Somalia.
(For that country's most recent abysmal collapse, the Bush administration,
via an invasion by Ethiopian proxy forces, can take significant
credit.) One or two houses in Dobley, a Somali town, were hit, possibly
by two submarine-launched Tomahawk Cruise missiles in what a U.S.
official termed "a deliberate strike against a suspected bed-down
of known terrorists."
The missiles
were evidently meant for Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan, an al-Qaedan suspect
in the bloody bombings of American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania
in 1998. He was, however, not in Dobley, despite the "actionable
intelligence" on hand. Accounts of the dead and wounded in the town
vary. One report claimed only wounded Somalis (and two dead cows);
most spoke of anywhere from four to ten dead civilians. Local district
Commissioner Ali Nur Ali Dherre told
CNN that three women and three children had been killed and
another 20 people wounded. While a "U.S. military official said
the United States is still collecting post-strike information and
is not yet able to confirm any casualties. He described [the] strike
as 'very deliberate' and said forces tried to use caution to avoid
hitting civilians."
For the dead
Somalis, not surprisingly, we have no names. In stories like this,
the dead are regularly nobodies and, though the townspeople of Dobley
did indeed march angrily in protest yelling anti-American slogans,
just about no one noticed.
In our world,
only the normal smattering of small news reports dealt with this
modest sidebar in the President's Global War on Terror (GWOT). On
the GWOT scorecard if you remember, for a long time George
Bush kept "his
own personal scorecard" of top terror suspects in a desk drawer
in the Oval Office, crossing off al-Qaedan figures as U.S. forces
took them down this operation hardly registered. One terrorist
missed, and not for the first time, possibly a few dead peasants
in some god-forsaken land. Please, move on…
In a recent
Pentagon
briefing for reporters featuring Secretary of Defense Robert
Gates and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Admiral Michael Mullen, who
had just returned from a trip to Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan,
4,500 words of back-and-forth were interrupted by this question
from a reporter:
"Secretary
Gates, the strike on Somalia two days ago did the missiles
that were fired did they strike their target? And was the
target Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan? Do you have a report back from the
field? And Admiral Mullen, what message did you give to President
Musharraf, and why did you meet with him?"
Gates responded
to the Somali part of the question in eight words: "You know we
don't talk about military operations." He might have added: ...unless
they're successful.
That was evidently
all that the incident and its minor "collateral damage" deserved
in such a global war. So Gates and Mullen moved on immediately.
So many matters more important than a single "decapitation" strike
that didn't succeed to consider.
The Decapitation
Strike as Global Policy
Minor as that
Somali mis-strike might seem, this is not, in fact, a small matter.
Think of that strike and the many like it around the world over
these last years as reflections of George Bush's post-9/11 update
of globalization. After all, the most basic principle of his Global
War on Terror has been the erasure of global boundaries and whatever
international agreements about war-making might go with them.
Across the
Islamic world, in particular, boundaries simply no longer matter.
In fact, in such regions no aspect of sovereignty can now constrain
a U.S. president from acting as he pleases in pursuit of whatever
he may personally define as American interests.
"Assassinations
by air" are, writes David Case in Mother
Jones magazine, "a relatively new tactic in warfare." By
the beginning of 2006, however, U.S. Predator drones "bearing Hellfire
missiles the preferred weapon in decapitation [strikes]
had already hit 'terrorist suspects overseas' at least 19 times
since 9/11." Such strikes and other similar operations by air, land,
and sea have been a crucial follow-on to the Bush administration's
proclamations,
immediately after 9/11, that there would be no "safe havens" for
terrorists on the planet, nor safety for those countries which housed
them, inadvertently or otherwise. Within days of the destruction
of the World Trade Center towers, Bush administration officials
were already
identifying up to 60 countries-cum-targets.
This aspect
of the Bush Doctrine, of what the President likes to call staying
"on the offensive," when mixed with a couple of decades of "advances"
in air warfare, including the development of sophisticated, missile-armed
drones, "smart bombs," "precision-guided munitions," and the like,
has resulted in a lethal globalizing brew of assassination and destruction.
It recognizes neither boundaries, nor sovereignty across much of
the planet. With all its "actionable" possibilities, it will surely
be with us long after George W. Bush has left office.
Of course,
those few nameless dead or wounded Somali civilians swatted
like so many flies and forgotten as quickly as flies would be
don't faintly match up against the "dozens" of Iraqi civilian deaths
that, according to Human
Rights Watch, were caused by 50 decapitation strikes launched
against the top officials of Saddam Hussein's regime back in March
2003. (Not a single official was harmed.) Nor do they quite make
it into the company of the "Afghan elders" being taken to President
Hamid Karzai's inauguration back in 2001, who were mistaken "for
a Taliban group" and bombed, with 20 killed; nor the 30 or more
guests at an Afghan wedding party back in 2002 blown away by 2,000-pound
bombs after celebratory gunfire was evidently mistaken for an attack
(no
apologies offered); nor that wedding party in the Western desert
of Iraq near the Syrian border wiped
out in 2004 with 42 deaths, including 27 in one extended family,
14 children in all. They were, of course, taken for terrorists.
(As U.S. Major General James Mathis put
the matter in offering an explanation: "How many people go to
the middle of the desert... to hold a wedding 80 miles from the
nearest civilization?") And these are just a few prominent cases,
not including the civilians killed in periodic Predator and other
strikes in Pakistani border areas, in Afghanistan,
and elsewhere whom no fuss is ever made about not here, anyway.
After all,
there's always going to be "collateral damage" when you keep your
eye and your 2,000-pound bomb or Hellfire missile
focused on the prize.
The "Right"
to Kill Civilians
Remember back
in the 1990s, when the glories of an economically borderless world
were being limned? Just after September 11, 2001, the Bush administration
proudly declared us to be in a far darker world without borders
(except, of course, when it came to our own). In this new world,
whether we knew it or not, whether we cared or not, we granted our
highest officials specifically our military and intelligence
services the full powers of prosecutor, defense counsel,
judge, jury, and executioner, as well as the right to report on
such events only to the extent, and as, they wished. This was the
sort of power that monotheistic religions normally granted to an
all-powerful god, that kingdoms generally left to absolute rulers,
and that dictators have always tried to take for themselves (though
just, of course, in the domains under their control).
Our domain,
it seems, is now much of the globe, when it comes to the bloody
work of assassinating individuals via bombs or missiles that, however
precise, surgical, and smart, are weapons meant to kill en masse
and largely without discrimination.
There are
still limits of sorts on such actions. These put bluntly
though no one is likely to say this are the limits imposed,
in part, by racism, by gradations, however unspoken, in the global
value
given to a human life.
The Bush administration
has, so far, only been willing to carry out "decapitation" strikes
in countries where human life is, by implication, of less or little
value. It has yet to carry one out in London or Hamburg or Tokyo
or Moscow or the Chinese countryside, even though "terrorist suspects"
abound everywhere, even (as with the Anthrax attacks of 2001) in
our own country. On the other hand, given the impetus of this kind
of globalization, who knows when such a strike might come. After
all, the CIA has already carried out clearly illegal, sovereignty-violating
"extraordinary rendition" operations (kidnappings of terror suspects)
on
the streets of European cities.
In this country,
we still theoretically venerate the sovereign self ("the individual")
and that self's right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."
Despite George Bush's "Freedom Agenda," however, the sovereignty,
not to say the life, liberty, and happiness of other peoples, individually
or collectively, have not really been much on our minds these last
years. Our freedom of action, our safety, has been the only freedom,
the only "security," to which we have attached much global value.
And don't for a second think that, when the "actionable intelligence"
comes in to John McCain's, Hillary Clinton's, or Barack Obama's
Oval Office, those Predators won't be soaring or those cruise missiles
leaving subs lurking off some coast and that innocent civilians
elsewhere won't continue to die.
In places
like Somalia, we deliver death, and every now and then an American
bomb or missile actually obliterates a terrorist suspect. Then we
celebrate. The rest of time, it's hardly even news. When the deeper
principle behind such global strikes is mentioned in our papers,
in some passing paragraph, it's done as in a recent Washington
Post article about a Predator strike, piloted from Nevada,
that killed a suspected "senior al-Qaeda commander" in Pakistan
in this polite way: "Independent actions by U.S. military
forces on another country's sovereign territory are always controversial…"
(Imagine the language that the Washington Post would use,
if that had been a Pakistani drone strike in Utah.)
This version
of globalization is already so much the norm of our world that few
here even blink an eye when it's reported, or consider it even slightly
strange. It's already an American right. In the meantime, other
people, who obviously don't rise to the level of our humanity, regularly
die.
And here's
the thing: In our world, there is a chasm that can never be breached
between, say, a Sunni extremist clothed in a suicide vest who walks
into a market in Baghdad with the barbaric intent of killing as
many Shiite civilians as possible, and an air or missile attack,
done in the name of American "security" and aimed at a "known terrorist,"
that just happens to repeatedly kill innocent civilians.
And yet, what if you know before you launch your attack, as American
planners certainly must, that the odds are innocents (and probably
no one else) will die?
Not so long
ago in the United States, presidentially sanctioned assassinations
abroad were illegal. But that was then, this is so now. Nonetheless,
it's a fact that the "right" to missile, bomb, shell, "decapitate,"
or assassinate those we declare to be our enemies, without regard
to borders or sovereignty, is based on nothing more than the power
to do it. This is simply the "right" of force (and of technology).
If the tables were turned, any American would recognize such acts
for the barbarism they represent.
And yet, late
last week, like clockwork, the Associated Press brought us the latest
notice: "In Afghanistan, a spokesman for the American-led coalition
said troops had used 'precision-guided munitions' to strike a compound
about a mile inside Pakistan..." This operation was, as they all
are, said to be based on "reliable intelligence"; in this case,
"senior" Taliban commanders were said to be in residence.
As it happened,
according to the Pakistani military and the AP reporter who made
it to Tangrai, a village of about forty houses, the residence hit
was that of "Noor Khan, a greengrocer who said the house was his
family home." The AP reporter added that "only one of its four walls
was standing amid a tangle of mud bricks, bedding and cooking pots."
And Noor Khan, who was quoted saying, "We are innocent, we have
nothing to do with such things," claimed that six of his relatives,
four women and two boys, had been killed. (The Pakistani military,
on investigating, reported that two women and two children had died.)
This
was but the latest minor decapitation strike, and we can
be sure of this not the last. Philip K. Dick move over. We're
already in your future.
Note:
Let me strongly recommend David Case's article, "The
U.S. Military's Assassination Problem," in the March/April issue
of Mother Jones magazine, quoted in the above piece. A well
researched, thoughtful, and rare discussion of what we know about
the Bush administration's global assassination campaign from the
air, it is an accomplishment. I have relied on it in writing this
essay.
March
17, 2008
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com,
is the co-founder of the American
Empire Project. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His blog is The
Notion.
Copyright
© 2008 Tom Engelhardt
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