Global Struggle Against Violent Extremism: Marketing Gimmick or Ominous Turn?
by
Robert Higgs
by Robert Higgs
Say
good-bye to the GWOT and, so far as the Bush administration is concerned,
good riddance, too. This acronym for the global war on terrorism often
rendered global war on terror an unpronounceable
monstrosity with all the charm of the verbiage in a Pentagon planning
document, never caught on with the public anyhow. So nothing is
lost. The question is: what does the administration seek to gain
by relabeling its efforts as the global struggle against violent
extremism? Is the shift to a new slogan nothing more than
that, or does it signify a move toward a different approach to the
governments ongoing exploitation of the opportunity
the presidents most influential advisers perceived in the
events of 9/11?
The
governments successive labels for its actions in response
to 9/11 have attracted ridicule from the start. War on terror
made no sense: you cant drop a bomb on an emotion. War
on terrorism scarcely made any more sense, inasmuch as terrorism
is not something you can blast with a howitzer, but a tactic available
to countless millions of determined persons in one form or another.
Evidently none of the governments public-relations geniuses
ever saw any merit in the more sensible phrase war on terrorists.
In due course, the GWOT came along, attracting it own share of ridicule
(gigantic waste of time, and so forth). It did have
the merit of emphasizing the worldwide reach of the governments
actions, giving fair warning that nobody on earth can occupy a neutral
zone, that anyone on the planet might be visited by a Predator drones
Hellfire missile if he raised sufficient suspicions at Langley.
Whatever
the previous terminologys deficiencies in helping the government
sell its program to the public, the latest shift of catchwords bespeaks
a more substantial difficulty. Prosecution of the war in Iraq is
going from bad to worse, and the slumbering public is finally beginning
to rouse itself and to notice that something is amiss. Polls report
continuing declines in public approval of President Bushs
handling of the war. All the progress the governments spokespersons
have ballyhooed since the beginning of the U.S. occupation has obviously
failed to make a favorable impression on the legions of resistance
fighters and suicide bombers in Iraq. Unless the people in the upper
reaches of the Bush administration are even denser than they seem,
they must understand that their liberation of Iraq is
a bust, that they have placed U.S. forces in a hornets nest,
and that persistence in poking the nest only brings forth more hornets.
If the Bush administration cant solve this problem, perhaps
it can divert the publics attention from the governments
manifest failure to fulfill its promise to establish a peaceful
democracy in Iraq. Having failed to demonstrate any truth in its
prewar claims about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction or in its
repeated insinuations of a link between 9/11 and Saddam Husseins
regime, it now seeks to shift the focus away from the war it is
losing in Iraq.
Politicians
are always trying to deflect the publics attention from their
policy failures. If the governments most recent terminological
shift were nothing more than another instance of such political
skullduggery, we might simply dismiss it as more of the same old
same old. The explanations government officials have given, however,
suggest that we may have more substantial cause for concern. The
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Richard B. Myers, asserts
that although the governments current efforts rely heavily
on military force, the threat should be defined as violent
extremists, and therefore the solution is more diplomatic,
more economic, more political than it is military. Does anyone
doubt that the actual diplomatic, economic, and political measures
the government intends to adopt will adversely affect a million
ordinary persons for every potential terrorist those measures touch?
By means of the actions authorized by the USA PATRIOT Act and by
various other actions, the government has already taken a big bite
out of our liberties since 9/11. Now it seemingly threatens to eat
away even more of them by employing, in Myerss words, all
instruments of our national power.
This
threat seems only the greater when we consider the vagueness of
the term violent extremism. Already we have seen that
people who committed no acts of violence whatever, indeed who did
nothing more than raise or transmit funds on behalf of charitable
organizations or associate with certain persons in their neighborhood
or mosque, have been treated as terrorists. Anyone who has bothered
to read the anti-terrorism laws knows how elastic their language
is, how far it may be stretched by a gung-ho FBI agent or an ambitious
prosecutor itching for higher office. What, we may well wonder,
will the government make of the term extremism?
We
know a great deal about this matter already, merely from observing
the conduct of U.S. politics. People are constantly being labeled
extremists in the news media or in congressional proceedings. Even
prominent, respectable men and women nominated for positions in
the federal judiciary are routinely branded as extremists. Nothing
is easier than calling someone whose views or actions go outside
the 40-yard lines of American politics an extremist. Gone are the
days when Barry Goldwater had the courage to stand before the world
and declare that extremism in defense of liberty is no vice.
Now the government seemingly seeks to equate extremism with terrorism.
Nothing good can come of such a move. If the government cant
even identify unambiguously the persons it aims to destroy, then
it has no proper business mounting attacks.
Apart
from the governments desire to divert the publics attention
from the dire situation in Iraq and to repress alleged purveyors
of extremism, key government officials have emphasized that the
new slogan reflects a desire to wage a fiercer ideological war.
They have in mind not the ideological war they wage ceaselessly
against American citizens they can scarcely wage that war any
more fiercely but the ideological war they wage against potential
foreign perpetrators of terrorism against Americans and their allies.
According to national security adviser Steven J. Hadley, we
need to dispute both the gloomy vision and offer a positive alternative.
Under secretary of defense Douglas J. Feith elaborates: ultimately
winning the war requires addressing the ideological
part of the war that deals with how the terrorists recruit and indoctrinate
new terrorists. In short, U.S. policy makers intend to allay
the terrorist threat posed to Americans and their allies by pursuing
a public-relations program designed to persuade Islamic fundamentalists
to surrender their present ideology in favor of a spiffy American-made
alternative that offers a brighter vision and a positive alternative,
much as a detergent manufacturer might offer consumers a product
that will get rid of unsightly ring around the collar.
Should
we laugh or cry? Are top U.S. officials this stupid? Do they have
no idea how people come by their deepest convictions? Do they see
no cause-and-effect in the relation between U.S. foreign policy
and the reactions it predictably brings forth? Are they so accustomed
to bamboozling the American public that they believe they can do
the same to the people they are bombing, shelling, shooting, bullying,
and humiliating every day in Iraq and Afghanistan or to the billions
around the world whose local news media present less sanitized images
and accounts of brutal U.S. actions than those served up by Fox
News and the Wall Street Journal?
U.S.
policy makers want to pursue a policy of global hegemony and to
impress it with special force on the areas of the world located
atop great deposits of petroleum or astride pipeline routes for
transporting oil and gas to world markets. They want to prop up
tyrannical but cooperative governments in places such as Egypt,
Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia. They want to take Israels side
every time in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. They want to position
their armed forces in more than a hundred foreign countries and,
in all too many cases, to employ those forces against politically
aggrieved locals who might upset the status quo. Yet U.S. policy
makers pretend to believe that in the midst of all their provocations
of Muslims and other people far and wide, they can either kill or
hoodwink those who resist and who fight back sometimes by terrorist
means morally reprehensible in their own right, to be sure, yet
nonetheless comprehensible. In sum, U.S. leaders seek to achieve
the impossible.
Unfortunately,
no matter how absurd this course of action may be in relation to
achieving its ostensible public purposes, it serves the private
interests of key parties in the upper reaches of the administration,
the Congress, the military, certain sectors of industry (most notably
military contracting and the oil business), and at the same time
it caters to the ideological yearnings of neoconservative zealots
and the religious fantasies of certain fundamentalist Christians.
Only
the American people in mass can effectively demand an end to such
U.S. foreign policy. At present, the people do seem, ever so slowly,
to be coming around, although history shows that often they can
be deflected from their natural tendencies by artful propaganda,
bogus crises, or other political trickery. We can only hope that
eventually the American people at large will weary of playing the
patsies for their duplicitous leaders and tell them emphatically
that enough is enough, that the government must change the policy,
not the slogan.
August
11, 2005
Robert
Higgs [send him mail] is
senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute and editor of The
Independent Review. His most recent book is Against
Leviathan.
Copyright
© 2005 Independent Institute
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