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Tuesday, 10.16.2012, 07:32pm (GMT+1) Those who hunt monsters must take caution in the process that they themselves do not become monsters…Anonymous “Terrorism is the war of the poor…war is the
terrorism of the rich”, though coined many years ago by Sir Peter Ustinov,
these prophetic words resonate with an unmistakable poignancy to this day. Such
historical caveats as international precedent, proscribed aggressive warfare
under international sanction, had any semblance of cautionary influence on the
Bush Administration. Hailed as a ‘war on terror’ and in retributive response to
9/11, America’s mighty military armada attacked Afghanistan in October of 2001. Both the Bush and Obama Administrations had,
and have falsely labeled Afghanistan as the ‘hub of international terrorism.’ Afghanistan, it has been certifiably proven
beyond any reasonable-doubt among all but Hawkish Republicans, had no role
whatsoever in 9/11. Not a single, solitary Afghan citizen participated in the orchestration
or implementation of the fateful, deadly attack against the World Trade Center
on 11 September 2001. Additionally, of equal import is the fact that the
Taliban made numerous concessions regarding the residency and extradition of
Osama bin Laden to the Bush Administration yet were rebuffed at each and every
turn. In light of the available evidence, the farcical claims underscoring the president’s
stated justification for war in Afghanistan were therefore rendered as
imperialist posturing, cowboy braggadocio, rhetorical dogma and an unlawful,
premeditated crime against peace. The
question therefore becomes… who and what entity defines ‘terrorism’ in the modern
day parlance of statecraft and public media intercourse? (1) History
accords that the term ‘terrorism’ was issued during the 17th century
while France was embroiled in revolution and was used as a literary device to
portray the so-called Jacobins, a
ruthless and oppressive government who institutionalized torture, imprisonment,
rape, and summary execution by guillotine to thwart opposition to their brutal
and bloody reign. Terrorism is not new, and even though it has been used since
the beginning of recorded history, it can be difficult to define. Terrorism has
been described variously as both a tactic and a strategy; a crime and a holy
duty; a justified reaction to oppression and an inexcusable abomination. The
United States defines terrorism as ‘the calculated use of unlawful violence or
threat to inculcate fear; intended to coerce or to intimidate government or
societies in the pursuit of goals that are generally political, religious, or
ideological. The UN defines terrorism: An
anxiety-inspiring method of repeated violent action employed by (semi
-clandestine) individual, group, or state actors, for idiosyncratic, criminal
or political reasons.’ In
1974, Great Britain defined terrorism as: The use of violence for political ends, and
includes any use of violence for the purpose of putting the public or any
sector of the public in fear. In the
real world, there are three perspectives of terrorism: the terrorist, the
victims, and the general public. Shaping the narrative, however, we find that the
US, as other of powerful nations, are
highly ideological, jingoistic cliques, masquerading as objective scholars, all
to justify militarism, and through their respective media organizations which
function as ministries of information engaging in unwarranted, covert actions that
can only be described as state-sponsored terrorism while defining what they
wish to convey to the public as to what constitutes the literal, lawful, internationally-accepted
definition of terrorism as opposed to legitimate resistance to invasion and occupation. Misconceptions
surrounding the subject of terrorism are legion. Were one to commission a poll
amongst rank-and-file Americans, the data collection would with certainty
reflect political and ideologically- expedient and connected media functioning
as a government ministry of information, who therefore have become complicit
enablers and the ever-present Christian Evangelical and government
pronouncements manifest as stereotypical-characterizations. That is to say; the
singular-most often held perception is that ‘terrorism is unique to Islam’. The data would also indicate that a majority
of Americans believe that the ubiquitous car bomb was the invention of a
deranged Muslim. Further, our hypothetical poll would corroborate the widely
held notion that responsibility for a majority of terrorist attacks worldwide
lies with Muslim extremists. However, the trouble with this data is that it is
without foundation…it is simply untrue! (2) The
first-known terrorists were not Muslims but Jews. According to history, the world’s first
terrorists were two militant Jewish revolutionary groups, the Zealots and the Sicarii. Determined to liberate Judea from Roman occupation, these
groups used violence to provoke a popular uprising which historians credit with
precipitating the Jewish War of A.D. 66, committing numerous public
assassinations and other acts of violence in Judea from approximately 4 B.C. to
A.D. 70. Their struggle for independence would end at Masada. Contrary
to politically expedient claims by both the Bush and Obama Administrations and
NATO, the widespread use of the car bomb is thought by a number of leading
asymmetrical or counterinsurgency (COIN) warfare experts to have originated
with the Irish Republican Army (IRA), a
Catholic secessionist group enmeshed in an eight-hundred year struggle against
Protestant Britain. During the 1990s, terrorism spread to several additional
countries. Starting in July of 1990, the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam initiated a
series of deadly attacks against Sri Lankan political leaders, military
targets, and civilian activists. The explicitly anti-religious Liberation Tigers are of a secular caste
or background in a country that embraces Hinduism and are credited with
committing more acts of violence than any other group worldwide. The
term ‘terrorist’ is used today injudiciously. To cast one who self- obliterates
himself with an explosive-laden vest and who attacks the troops and interests
of the invading and occupation army as a ‘terrorist’, and then sanction the
dropping of thousands-of-tons of high explosives on rural villages as a noble
cause and portraying such monstrous activity as fighting the ‘war on terror’ is
barbaric, monstrous and decidedly inhuman. When foreign troops break into
private homes in the nighttime clad in armor and bristling with weapons and
bright lights, shouting at the frightened inhabitants in an unintelligible
language and appearing as an invasion force from outer space, is this not an
act of terror? I submit that that is precisely what it represents! On
Wednesday night, February 8th, NATO aircraft struck a rural village in Kapisa
Province that took the lives of eight children. The raid was the result of
French troops forwarding bogus information to NATO. The information obtained
from an informant alleged that children herding sheep outside the village of
Geyaba, ‘were preparing to attack the village.’ Unfortunately this is all too
common and far from an isolated incident. Members of the Northern Alliance, for
example, often present falsified information to US and or NATO personnel as a
device to induce attack against their political rivals. When
children herding sheep are not protected from marauding aircraft or criminal
informants seeking bounty payments and subject to indiscriminate bombing or
strafing, is this not an act of terror?
In October of 2005, Frank Wuterich led a Marine death squad in the Anbar
Province town of Haditha and slaughtered 24 people, all civilians in an
apparent revenge killing. Those on the receiving end of this massacre and their
surviving family members will with certainty see this as an act of
‘terrorism.’ The casualty rate among Afghan civilians, callously
and inhumanely cast as ‘collateral damage’ by the Obama Administration is
extraordinarily high, numbering in the many tens-of thousands. Most fall victim
to indiscriminate air assault and pilotless drones, one of which took the lives
(47) of an entire wedding party. Some have died from exposure, especially the
children who have been separated from their normal support groups and services
through dislocation caused by the imperatives and priorities of a war of
occupation. Civilians
that are victimized by carpet bombing, helicopter gunships, or alien troops
entering their homes in the nighttime are all being terrorized as a result of
an illegal war of aggression. For the architects of this bloodshed, this war of
aggression, to hold an exclusive on the issuance and definition of what
constitutes terrorism in the world court and public arena is inarguably mind
numbing, and therefore makes a mockery of international law and people-oriented
organizations such as UNHCR and others. (3) Notes: Tampa Bay Times, 13 August
2012:‘Senior ranking US military leaders have so distorted the truth when
communicating with the US Congress and the American people in regards to
conditions on the ground in Afghanistan that the truth has become
unrecognizable’ ,Lt. Colonel Daniel L. Davis, US Army Afghanistan veteran. (1)
The mainstream and alternative news
media, through their overt censorial practices, their consistent failure to
place events in meaningful historical contexts, their obscurantism and overall
deliberate obeisance to dubious and unaccountable authorities, compound the
conspiracy by ensnaring the public in questionable realities from which it
cannot escape. (2) But
with Afghanistan, as with Iraq, public indifference swiftly took hold,
absolving American leaders of responsibility for the human costs of war, while
its proponents practiced the politics of reductionism…that is, presenting the
war as a stark choice between good and evil. America’s wars are always
presented by the leadership, the political-cognoscente, and their acolytes in
the sympathetic media as ‘good and just.’ But killing innocent people…including
children…for the purpose of war aims is terrorism. Those defending these
murderous acts on the basis of necessity are defending the indefensible. Select
Bibliography: The Body of Secrets, Anatomy of the
ultra-secret NSA, by James Bamford, 2002 War by Other Means: an Insider’s
Account of the War on Terror, by Richard Posner, 2006. How A Good Versus Evil Mentality,
Destroyed the Bush Presidency, by Glenn Greenwald, 2007. The Future of Justice: In the Age of
Terror, by Benjamin Wittes, 2008. Takeover: Return of the Imperial
Presidency and the Subversion of American Democracy, by Charlie Savage, 2007. The War on Terror: And the Rule of
Law, by Richard M. Pious, 2006. The Trial of Donald Rumsfeld; A
Prosecution by Book, Michael Ratner, 2008. Afghanistan: Political Frailty and
External Interference, by Dr. Nabi Misdaq, 2006. American Raj, Liberation or Domination?
Resolving the Conflict between the West
and the Muslim World by Eric S. Margolis, 2008. Afghanistan, A Search for Truth, by
Bruce G. Richardson, 2009. Bruce G.
Richardson
Those who
hunt monsters must take caution in the process that they themselves do not
become monsters…Anonymous “Terrorism is the war of the poor…war is the
terrorism of the rich”, though coined many years ago by Sir Peter Ustinov,
these prophetic words resonate with an unmistakable poignancy to this day. Such
historical caveats as international precedent, proscribed aggressive warfare
under international sanction, had any semblance of cautionary influence on the
Bush Administration. Hailed as a ‘war on terror’ and in retributive response to
9/11, America’s mighty military armada attacked Afghanistan in October of 2001. Both the Bush and Obama Administrations had,
and have falsely labeled Afghanistan as the ‘hub of international terrorism.’ Afghanistan, it has been certifiably proven
beyond any reasonable-doubt among all but Hawkish Republicans, had no role
whatsoever in 9/11. Not a single, solitary Afghan citizen participated in the orchestration
or implementation of the fateful, deadly attack against the World Trade Center
on 11 September 2001. Additionally, of equal import is the fact that the
Taliban made numerous concessions regarding the residency and extradition of
Osama bin Laden to the Bush Administration yet were rebuffed at each and every
turn. In light of the available evidence, the farcical claims underscoring the president’s
stated justification for war in Afghanistan were therefore rendered as
imperialist posturing, cowboy braggadocio, rhetorical dogma and an unlawful,
premeditated crime against peace. The
question therefore becomes… who and what entity defines ‘terrorism’ in the modern
day parlance of statecraft and public media intercourse? (1) History
accords that the term ‘terrorism’ was issued during the 17th century
while France was embroiled in revolution and was used as a literary device to
portray the so-called Jacobins, a
ruthless and oppressive government who institutionalized torture, imprisonment,
rape, and summary execution by guillotine to thwart opposition to their brutal
and bloody reign. Terrorism is not new, and even though it has been used since
the beginning of recorded history, it can be difficult to define. Terrorism has
been described variously as both a tactic and a strategy; a crime and a holy
duty; a justified reaction to oppression and an inexcusable abomination. The
United States defines terrorism as ‘the calculated use of unlawful violence or
threat to inculcate fear; intended to coerce or to intimidate government or
societies in the pursuit of goals that are generally political, religious, or
ideological. The UN defines terrorism: An
anxiety-inspiring method of repeated violent action employed by (semi
-clandestine) individual, group, or state actors, for idiosyncratic, criminal
or political reasons.’ In
1974, Great Britain defined terrorism as: The use of violence for political ends, and
includes any use of violence for the purpose of putting the public or any
sector of the public in fear. In the
real world, there are three perspectives of terrorism: the terrorist, the
victims, and the general public. Shaping the narrative, however, we find that the
US, as other of powerful nations, are
highly ideological, jingoistic cliques, masquerading as objective scholars, all
to justify militarism, and through their respective media organizations which
function as ministries of information engaging in unwarranted, covert actions that
can only be described as state-sponsored terrorism while defining what they
wish to convey to the public as to what constitutes the literal, lawful, internationally-accepted
definition of terrorism as opposed to legitimate resistance to invasion and occupation. Misconceptions
surrounding the subject of terrorism are legion. Were one to commission a poll
amongst rank-and-file Americans, the data collection would with certainty
reflect political and ideologically- expedient and connected media functioning
as a government ministry of information, who therefore have become complicit
enablers and the ever-present Christian Evangelical and government
pronouncements manifest as stereotypical-characterizations. That is to say; the
singular-most often held perception is that ‘terrorism is unique to Islam’. The data would also indicate that a majority
of Americans believe that the ubiquitous car bomb was the invention of a
deranged Muslim. Further, our hypothetical poll would corroborate the widely
held notion that responsibility for a majority of terrorist attacks worldwide
lies with Muslim extremists. However, the trouble with this data is that it is
without foundation…it is simply untrue! (2) The
first-known terrorists were not Muslims but Jews. According to history, the world’s first
terrorists were two militant Jewish revolutionary groups, the Zealots and the Sicarii. Determined to liberate Judea from Roman occupation, these
groups used violence to provoke a popular uprising which historians credit with
precipitating the Jewish War of A.D. 66, committing numerous public
assassinations and other acts of violence in Judea from approximately 4 B.C. to
A.D. 70. Their struggle for independence would end at Masada. Contrary
to politically expedient claims by both the Bush and Obama Administrations and
NATO, the widespread use of the car bomb is thought by a number of leading
asymmetrical or counterinsurgency (COIN) warfare experts to have originated
with the Irish Republican Army (IRA), a
Catholic secessionist group enmeshed in an eight-hundred year struggle against
Protestant Britain. During the 1990s, terrorism spread to several additional
countries. Starting in July of 1990, the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam initiated a
series of deadly attacks against Sri Lankan political leaders, military
targets, and civilian activists. The explicitly anti-religious Liberation Tigers are of a secular caste
or background in a country that embraces Hinduism and are credited with
committing more acts of violence than any other group worldwide. The
term ‘terrorist’ is used today injudiciously. To cast one who self- obliterates
himself with an explosive-laden vest and who attacks the troops and interests
of the invading and occupation army as a ‘terrorist’, and then sanction the
dropping of thousands-of-tons of high explosives on rural villages as a noble
cause and portraying such monstrous activity as fighting the ‘war on terror’ is
barbaric, monstrous and decidedly inhuman. When foreign troops break into
private homes in the nighttime clad in armor and bristling with weapons and
bright lights, shouting at the frightened inhabitants in an unintelligible
language and appearing as an invasion force from outer space, is this not an
act of terror? I submit that that is precisely what it represents! On
Wednesday night, February 8th, NATO aircraft struck a rural village in Kapisa
Province that took the lives of eight children. The raid was the result of
French troops forwarding bogus information to NATO. The information obtained
from an informant alleged that children herding sheep outside the village of
Geyaba, ‘were preparing to attack the village.’ Unfortunately this is all too
common and far from an isolated incident. Members of the Northern Alliance, for
example, often present falsified information to US and or NATO personnel as a
device to induce attack against their political rivals. When
children herding sheep are not protected from marauding aircraft or criminal
informants seeking bounty payments and subject to indiscriminate bombing or
strafing, is this not an act of terror?
In October of 2005, Frank Wuterich led a Marine death squad in the Anbar
Province town of Haditha and slaughtered 24 people, all civilians in an
apparent revenge killing. Those on the receiving end of this massacre and their
surviving family members will with certainty see this as an act of
‘terrorism.’ The casualty rate among Afghan civilians, callously
and inhumanely cast as ‘collateral damage’ by the Obama Administration is
extraordinarily high, numbering in the many tens-of thousands. Most fall victim
to indiscriminate air assault and pilotless drones, one of which took the lives
(47) of an entire wedding party. Some have died from exposure, especially the
children who have been separated from their normal support groups and services
through dislocation caused by the imperatives and priorities of a war of
occupation. Civilians
that are victimized by carpet bombing, helicopter gunships, or alien troops
entering their homes in the nighttime are all being terrorized as a result of
an illegal war of aggression. For the architects of this bloodshed, this war of
aggression, to hold an exclusive on the issuance and definition of what
constitutes terrorism in the world court and public arena is inarguably mind
numbing, and therefore makes a mockery of international law and people-oriented
organizations such as UNHCR and others. (3) Notes: Tampa Bay Times, 13 August
2012:‘Senior ranking US military leaders have so distorted the truth when
communicating with the US Congress and the American people in regards to
conditions on the ground in Afghanistan that the truth has become
unrecognizable’ ,Lt. Colonel Daniel L. Davis, US Army Afghanistan veteran. (1)
The mainstream and alternative news
media, through their overt censorial practices, their consistent failure to
place events in meaningful historical contexts, their obscurantism and overall
deliberate obeisance to dubious and unaccountable authorities, compound the
conspiracy by ensnaring the public in questionable realities from which it
cannot escape. (2) But
with Afghanistan, as with Iraq, public indifference swiftly took hold,
absolving American leaders of responsibility for the human costs of war, while
its proponents practiced the politics of reductionism…that is, presenting the
war as a stark choice between good and evil. America’s wars are always
presented by the leadership, the political-cognoscente, and their acolytes in
the sympathetic media as ‘good and just.’ But killing innocent people…including
children…for the purpose of war aims is terrorism. Those defending these
murderous acts on the basis of necessity are defending the indefensible. Select
Bibliography: The Body of Secrets, Anatomy of the
ultra-secret NSA, by James Bamford, 2002 War by Other Means: an Insider’s
Account of the War on Terror, by Richard Posner, 2006. How A Good Versus Evil Mentality,
Destroyed the Bush Presidency, by Glenn Greenwald, 2007. The Future of Justice: In the Age of
Terror, by Benjamin Wittes, 2008. Takeover: Return of the Imperial
Presidency and the Subversion of American Democracy, by Charlie Savage, 2007. The War on Terror: And the Rule of
Law, by Richard M. Pious, 2006. The Trial of Donald Rumsfeld; A
Prosecution by Book, Michael Ratner, 2008. Afghanistan: Political Frailty and
External Interference, by Dr. Nabi Misdaq, 2006. American Raj, Liberation or Domination?
Resolving the Conflict between the West
and the Muslim World by Eric S. Margolis, 2008. Afghanistan, A Search for Truth, by
Bruce G. Richardson, 2009. Bruce G.
Richardson
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