The
Pentagon’s Fake Jihadists
by
Tom Engelhardt
Recently
by Tom Engelhardt: The
Militarized Surrealism of Barack Obama
Could the
Pentagon Be Responsible for Your Death?
The Militarys Marching Orders to the Jihadist World
Put what follows
in the category of paragraphs no one noticed that should have made
the nations hair stand on end. This particular paragraph should
also have sent chills through the body politic, launched warning
flares, and left the peoples representatives in Congress shouting
about something other than the debt crisis.
Last weekend,
two reliable New York Times reporters, Eric Schmitt and Thom
Shanker, had a piece in that papers Sunday Review entitled
After
9/11, an Era of Tinker, Tailor, Jihadist, Spy. Its focus
was the latest counterterrorism thinking at the Pentagon: deterrence
theory. (Evidently an amalgam of the old Cold War ideas of containment
and nuclear deterrence wackily reimagined by the boys in the five-sided
building for the age of the jihadi.) Schmitt and Shankers
article was, a note informed the reader, based on research for their
forthcoming book, Counterstrike:
The Untold Story of Americas Secret Campaign Against Al Qaeda.
And heres
the paragraph, buried in the middle of their piece, that should
have stopped readers in their tracks:
Or
consider what American computer specialists are doing on the Internet,
perhaps terrorist leaders greatest safe haven, where they
recruit, raise money, and plot future attacks on a global scale.
American specialists have become especially proficient at forging
the onscreen cyber-trademarks used by Al Qaeda to certify its
Web statements, and are posting confusing and contradictory
orders, some so virulent that young Muslims dabbling in jihadist
philosophy, but on the fence about it, might be driven away.
The italics
are mine, and as the authors urge us to do, lets consider
for a moment this tiny, remarkably bizarre window into military
reality. As a start, just where those military computer specialists
are remains unknown. Perhaps they are in the Pentagon, perhaps somewhere
in the National
Counterterrorism Center, but whoever and wherever they are,
heres the question of the week, possibly of the month or the
year: Just what kind of orders can they be posting so
virulent that young Muslims dabbling in jihadist philosophy, but
on the fence about it, might be driven away?
And
even if our computer experts really were capable of turning wavering
young Muslims back from the shores of jihadism and personally
I wouldnt put my money on the Pentagons skills in that
realm what about young Muslims (or older ones for that matter)
who werent on that fence and took those orders
seriously? What exactly are they being ordered to do?
Talk
about a potential Frankenstein situation and all we can do
is ask questions. Just what monsters, for example, might the militarys
computer specialists be helping to forge? And who exactly is supervising
those specialists and their vituperative messages? (Especially
since they are unlikely to be in English, and we already know that
Arabic, Pashto, Dari, and Farsi speakers at the higher levels, or
even lower levels, of the Pentagon are, at best, few and far between.)
Keep
in mind that we already have an example of a similarly wacky program
lacking meaningful oversight that went awry, hit the headlines,
and resulted in the perfectly real deaths of at least one U.S. Border
Patrol agent and undoubtedly many more Mexicans. The Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives launched its now infamous gun-tracking
program in Arizona in late 2009, under the moniker Operation
Fast and Furious (a reference to a series of movies about
street car racers). It was meant to track cross-border gun sales
to Mexicos drug cartels by actually letting perfectly real
weapons cross the border more than 2,000 of them, as it turned
out. ATF agents, according
to a Washington Post report, would be instructed
not to move in and question the [gun runners] but to let the guns
go and see where they eventually ended up. And so
they did for more than a year and, not exactly surprisingly,
those weapons ended up on the street and in the ugliest
of hands.
The Daily
Shows Jon Stewart asked an
apt question about the program: The ATF plan to prevent
American guns from being used in Mexican gun violence is to provide
Mexican gangs with American guns. If this is the plan that they
went with, what plan did we reject?
Assumedly,
the same question could be asked of the militarys online anti-jihadist
program, involving as it evidently does messages believed to be
too extreme for wavering young Muslims with an interest in the jihadi
philosophy. Shouldnt someone start asking whether
those Pentagons orders to jihadis might
not turn out to be the online equivalent of so many loose guns?
After all,
what are those specialists ordering them to do? And if actual jihadis
actually tried to follow those confusing and contradictory
orders, possibly being confused and contradictory kinds of
guys, if they took them seriously and interpreted them in ways not
predicted by their putative Pentagon handlers, is there a possibility
that anyone could die as a result? And if such messages turn off
some prospective jihadis, isnt it possible that they
might turn on others? And could they, for instance, have been ordered
to commit confused and contradictory acts that might end up involving
Americans?
Really, someone
should blow Schmitt and Shankers paragraph up to giant size,
tack it up somewhere in the Capitol, and call for a congressional
investigation. If the ATF could do it, why not the Pentagon? And
honestly, is this how Americans want to see their tax dollars spent?
Read the Schmitt
and Shanker piece and youll get a sense of what Shakespeare
might have called the oerweening pride rife in the Pentagon
when it comes to their skills and their ability to put one (or two,
or three) over on the jihadist community. So pleased with themselves
were they, that they evidently couldnt help bragging to the
two reporters about their skills. The old phrase too smart
for your own good comes to mind. Its enough to make
you worry, even based on so little information (which the new book
from the two reporters may significantly amplify).
And by the
way, if you want another unsettling analogy, when it comes to off-the-wall
ideas for deterring jihadist networks, check out the
major record companies and their efforts to deter communities and
individuals from illegally downloading music. The Recording Industry
Association of America, representing the four major record labels,
decided to make a cautionary example of Jammie Thomas-Rasset, a
Minnesota mom, by suing her for illegally downloading
and sharing 24 songs on the peer-to-peer file-sharing network Kazaa
in 2006. So far, the organization has dragged her through
three trials, getting terrible publicity. Even if they win and leave
her in hock for the rest of her life, do you think for one second
that they will have made a dent in the world of illegal downloads
or deterred anyone? Just ask your kid.
Don't
think deterrence here, think blowback.
Honestly, if
Schmitt and Shankers claim is accurate, you should be shaking
in your boots. And someone on Capitol Hill should be starting to
ask some relevant questions, including this one: Could computer
specialists in the employ of the Pentagon be responsible for
your death in a future terrorist attack?
August
24, 2011
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
co-founder
of the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com, is the co-founder of
the American Empire
Project. His book, The
End of Victory Culture, has recently been updated in a newly
issued edition. He edited, and his work appears in, the first best
of TomDispatch book, The
World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso), an alternative history of the mad Bush years. His new book
is The
American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s.
Copyright
© 2011 Tom Engelhardt
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