Behind the Arab Revolt Is a Word We Dare Not Speak
by
John Pilger
by John Pilger
Recently by John Pilger: The
Revolt in Egypt Is Coming Home
Shortly after
the invasion of Iraq in 2003, I interviewed Ray McGovern, one of
an elite group of CIA officers who prepared the President’s daily
intelligence brief. McGovern was at the apex of the "national
security" monolith that is American power and had retired with
presidential plaudits. On the eve of the invasion, he and 45 other
senior officers of the CIA and other intelligence agencies wrote
to President George W. Bush that the "drumbeat for war"
was based not on intelligence, but lies.
"It was
95 per cent charade," McGovern told me.
"How did
they get away with it?"
"The press
allowed the crazies to get away with it."
"Who are
the crazies?"
"The people
running the [Bush] administration have a set of beliefs a lot like
those expressed in Mein Kampf … these are the same people
who were referred to in the circles in which I moved, at the top,
as ‘the crazies’."
I said, "Norman
Mailer has written that he believes America has entered a pre-fascist
state. What’s your view of that?"
"Well
… I hope he’s right, because there are others saying we are already
in a fascist mode."
On 22 January,
Ray McGovern emailed me to express his disgust at the Obama administration’s
barbaric treatment of the alleged whistleblower Bradley Manning
and its pursuit of WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange. "Way
back when George and Tony decided it might be fun to attack Iraq,"
he wrote, "I said something to the effect that fascism had
already begun here. I have to admit I did not think it would get
this bad this quickly."
On 16 February,
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton gave a speech at George Washington
University in which she condemned governments that arrested protesters
and crushed free expression. She lauded the liberating power of
the Internet while failing to mention that her government was planning
to close down those parts of the Internet that encouraged dissent
and truth-telling. It was a speech of spectacular hypocrisy, and
Ray McGovern was in the audience. Outraged, he rose from his chair
and silently turned his back on Clinton. He was immediately seized
by police and a security goon and beaten to the floor, dragged out
and thrown into jail, bleeding. He has sent me photographs of his
injuries. He is 71. During the assault, which was clearly visible
to Clinton, she did not pause in her remarks.
Fascism is
a difficult word, because it comes with an iconography that touches
the Nazi nerve and is abused as propaganda against America’s official
enemies and to promote the West’s foreign adventures with a moral
vocabulary written in the struggle against Hitler. And yet fascism
and imperialism are twins. In the aftermath of world war two, those
in the imperial states who had made respectable the racial and cultural
superiority of "western civilization," found that Hitler
and fascism had claimed the same, employing strikingly similar methods.
Thereafter, the very notion of American imperialism was swept from
the textbooks and popular culture of an imperial nation forged on
the genocidal conquest of its native people. And a war on social
justice and democracy became "US foreign policy."
As the Washington
historian William Blum has documented, since 1945, the US has destroyed
or subverted more than 50 governments, many of them democracies,
and used mass murderers like Suharto, Mobutu and Pinochet to dominate
by proxy. In the Middle East, every dictatorship and pseudo-monarchy
has been sustained by America. In "Operation Cyclone,"
the CIA and MI6 secretly fostered and bankrolled Islamic extremism.
The object was to smash or deter nationalism and democracy. The
victims of this western state terrorism have been mostly Muslims.
The courageous people gunned down last week in Bahrain and Libya,
the latter a "priority UK market," according to Britain’s
official arms "procurers," join those children blown to
bits in Gaza by the latest American F-16 aircraft.
The revolt
in the Arab world is not merely against a resident dictator but
a worldwide economic tyranny designed by the US Treasury and imposed
by the US Agency for International Development, the IMF and World
Bank, which have ensured that rich countries like Egypt are reduced
to vast sweatshops, with half the population earning less than $2
a day. The people’s triumph in Cairo was the first blow against
what Benito Mussolini called corporatism, a word that appears in
his definition of fascism.
How did such
extremism take hold in the liberal West? "It is necessary to
destroy hope, idealism, solidarity, and concern for the poor and
oppressed," observed Noam Chomsky a generation ago, "[and]
to replace these dangerous feelings with self-centered egoism, a
pervasive cynicism that holds that [an order of] inequities and
oppression is the best that can be achieved. In fact, a great international
propaganda campaign is under way to convince people – particularly
young people – that this not only is what they should feel but that
it’s what they do feel."
Like the European
revolutions of 1848 and the uprising against Stalinism in 1989,
the Arab revolt has rejected fear. An insurrection of suppressed
ideas, hope and solidarity has begun. In the United States, where
45 per cent of young African-Americans have no jobs and the top
hedge fund managers are paid, on average, a billion dollars a year,
mass protests against cuts in services and jobs have spread to heartland
states like Wisconsin. In Britain, the fastest-growing modern protest
movement, UK Uncut, is about to take direct action against tax-avoiders
and rapacious banks. Something has changed that cannot be unchanged.
The enemy has a name now.
John
Pilger was born and educated in Sydney, Australia. He has been
a war correspondent, filmmaker and playwright. Based in London,
he has written from many countries and has twice won British journalism's
highest award, that of "Journalist of the Year," for his
work in Vietnam and Cambodia. His latest book is Freedom
Next Time: Resisting the Empire.
Copyright
© John Pilger 2011
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