Another 9/11 – in a Long Series
by
Robert Higgs
by Robert Higgs
DIGG THIS
September 11,
2001, has become an exceptionally memorable date, and a great deal
more, for Americans. Not simply the date on which the infamous terrorist
attacks took place and the great World Trade Center towers collapsed
with horrific loss of innocent life, 9/11 has become a compelling
ideological symbol as only a few other dates in our history, such
as July 4, 1776, and December 7, 1941, have become. A visual representation
of the burning skyscrapers brings a plethora of 9/11 associations
instantly to mind and triggers a suite of strong emotions.
Any symbol
of such tremendous evocative potency invites exploitation, and each
anniversary of that terrible day brings us an abundance of efforts
to place its symbolic power in the service of various exploiters.
The news media, of course, use the remembrance of 9/11 to attract
consumers to their broadcasts and printed materials, and hence to
gain advertising revenue. In the United States, everything memorable
becomes an article of commerce in some fashion, and 9/11 is no exception.
Many of these commercial offerings are maudlin or otherwise in bad
taste, to be sure, but in this country no one is shocked when sellers
market tasteless products successfully, and anyone who does not
fancy the goods may simply decline to consume them. Indeed, one
suspects that by this time, the demand for 9/11 media extravaganzas
may be wearing rather thin even among those of mawkish sensibilities.
Far more
troubling and much more dangerous, however, is the state's exploitation
of 9/11. During the past six years, 9/11 has often served as an
all-purpose instrument in the state's propaganda kit. For the Bush
administration, it has provided the answer to every critical question
about foreign and defense policies, among other things. If we challenge
the wisdom, legality, or morality of the U.S. invasions and occupations
of Afghanistan and Iraq, the government's spokesmen and supporters
throw 9/11 in our face. If we criticize the enormous run-up in spending
for military purposes and for "homeland security," much of it obvious
political pork that contributes nothing to the public's safety,
the response to our criticism is that the people dare not risk another
9/11. If we express doubts about the wildly ambitious and morally
presumptuous U.S. foreign policy of global hegemony, which, in its
present swollen form, followed closely on the heels of George W.
Bush's embrace of a humble
foreign policy with no nation building during the 2000 presidential
campaign ("I don't want to be the world's policeman"), we are told
that 9/11 changed everything. If we object to the government's multifaceted
assault on our civil liberties, the president stridently declares
that everything being done is necessary to prevent another 9/11.
If we wave our copy of the Constitution and express doubts about
the president's claim of overriding power as a "unitary executive,"
the government's lawyers assert that since 9/11 the nation has been
"at war," and hence the president's constitutional power as commander-in-chief
trumps everything else.
Although
9/11 has served as an "open sesame" for the government's seizures
of power, revenue, and liberties during the past six years, its
potency is waning with the passage of time, and eventually it will
no longer measure up as a "daily special" on the government's menu
of irresistible dishes. Not many Americans today feel an emotional
rush at the mention of December 7, and even the news media have
more or less abandoned their ritual anniversary remembrance of the
infamous "surprise attack" that caused a large majority of the populace
to switch instantly from opposing to favoring war in 1941. Now,
of course, this attenuation of the date's symbolic potency hardly
matters, because December 7 served its intended purposes extremely
well more than sixty years ago, and the consequences, for better
or worse, have become irretrievably embedded in the course of world
history.
Recalling
December 7, however, reminds us that eventually we may awaken to
discover that 9/11, like Pearl Harbor, was not exactly as the government
represented it to be. From the very beginning, the Roosevelt administration
described
the Japanese strikes on U.S. military bases in Hawaii and elsewhere
in the Pacific region as "sneak attacks" launched by a cunning and
deceitful enemy without provocation – "this form of treachery
. . . unprovoked and dastardly attack" – catching the somnolent
commanders completely unaware in Honolulu and the Philippines. Anyone
who has dipped into the serious literature on World War II, however,
understands that this official line is utter humbug. From the immediate
postwar revisionism of Charles
Beard, Harry
Elmer Barnes, and many others to the recent books by Robert
Stinnett and George
Victor, the facts have been sufficiently exposed for anyone
who cares to transcend the myth. Unbiased scholars appreciate, for
example, that the U.S. government systematically goaded the Japanese
Empire with a series of increasingly stringent economic-warfare
measures, eventually placing the Japanese in a natural-resources
chokehold from which their only means of escape, apart from war,
was acceptance of a U.S. ultimatum that struck at the very heart
of their foreign-policy commitments and their sense of honor.
Moreover,
because U.S., British, and Dutch cryptographers, who shared information
with one another, had broken the Japanese diplomatic and naval codes,
officials in Washington had ample warning that the Japanese were
moving toward an attack in the Pacific that included Pearl Harbor.
General Walter Short and Admiral Husband Kimmel, the commanders
in Hawaii, were consciously set up and made scapegoats for a devastating
attack that the U.S. government deliberately provoked and knew was
coming – an acceptable price, Roosevelt and his top advisers
believed, for gaining the public's approval of U.S. entry into the
war in Europe, to assist the British – and the government subsequently
conducted a far-reaching cover-up of what its leaders had known
and what they had done prior to the attack.
Everyone
with any critical sense understands that like the attack on Pearl
Harbor in its immediate aftermath, the attacks of 9/11 have thus
far left many unanswered questions. No one should be surprised if
twenty or thirty years hence, information has surfaced that completely
controverts the government's current story of what it knew and did
not know, and what it did and did not do, prior to the attacks.
Certainly everyone with a serious nonpartisan interest in the matter
already knows that the attackers did not carry out their murderous
plan simply because "they
hate our freedoms." More than fifty years of significant U.S.
government interventions
in the political and economic affairs of the Middle East did much
to sow the seeds of 9/11, even if those interventions did not foreordain
the 2001 attacks in every detail. As Stephen Kinzer aptly concludes
in his recently published book Overthrow,
"Fateful misjudgments by five presidents had laid the groundwork
not simply for the September 11 attacks but for the emergence of
the world-wide terror network from which they sprung."
No
one needs to wait twenty or thirty years, however, to understand
how the government has exploited 9/11 at every turn to provide a
knock-down justification of its irresponsible (and sometimes criminal)
political, legal, military, and fiscal actions. For the Bush administration,
no mistakes are ever made, because no matter what the government
chooses to do and no matter how disastrously that action works out
in practice, it is always alleged to rest on the same purportedly
unimpeachable foundation – 9/11.
September
10, 2007
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 Neither
Liberty Nor Safety: Fear, Ideology, and the Growth of Government.
He is also the author of Depression,
War, and Cold War: Studies in Political Economy, Resurgence
of the Warfare State: The Crisis Since 9/11 and Against
Leviathan: Government Power and a Free Society.
Copyright
© 2007 Robert Higgs
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