Noam Chomsky: Why America and Israel Are the Greatest Threats to Peace
Imagine if Iran -- or any other country --
did a fraction of what American and Israel do at will.
It
is not easy to escape from one’s skin, to see the world differently from the
way it is presented to us day after day. But it is useful to try. Let’s take a
few examples.
The war drums are beating ever more loudly over Iran. Imagine the
situation to be reversed.
Iran is carrying out a murderous and destructive low-level war
against Israel with great-power participation. Its leaders announce that
negotiations are going nowhere. Israel refuses to sign the Non-Proliferation
Treaty and allow inspections, as Iran has done. Israel continues to defy the
overwhelming international call for a nuclear-weapons-free zone in the region.
Throughout, Iran enjoys the support of its superpower patron.
Iranian leaders are therefore announcing their intention to bomb
Israel, and prominent Iranian military analysts report that the attack may
happen before the U.S. elections.
Iran can use its powerful air force and new submarines sent by
Germany, armed with nuclear missiles and stationed off the coast of Israel.
Whatever the timetable, Iran is counting on its superpower backer to join if
not lead the assault. U.S. defense secretary Leon Panetta says that while we do
not favor such an attack, as a sovereign country Iran will act in its best
interests.
All unimaginable, of course, though it is actually happening, with
the cast of characters reversed. True, analogies are never exact, and this one
is unfair – to Iran.
Like its patron, Israel resorts to violence at will. It persists
in illegal settlement in occupied territory, some annexed, all in brazen
defiance of international law and the U.N. Security Council. It has repeatedly
carried out brutal attacks against Lebanon and the imprisoned people of Gaza,
killing tens of thousands without credible pretext.
Thirty years ago Israel destroyed an Iraqi nuclear reactor, an act
that has recently been praised, avoiding the strong evidence, even from U.S.
intelligence, that the bombing did not end Saddam Hussein’s nuclear weapons
program but rather initiated it. Bombing of Iran might have the same effect.
Iran too has carried out aggression – but during the past several
hundred years, only under the U.S.-backed regime of the shah, when it conquered
Arab islands in the Persian Gulf.
Iran engaged in nuclear development programs under the shah, with
the strong support of official Washington. The Iranian government is brutal and
repressive, as are Washington’s allies in the region. The most important ally,
Saudi Arabia, is the most extreme Islamic fundamentalist regime, and spends
enormous funds spreading its radical Wahhabist doctrines elsewhere. The gulf
dictatorships, also favored U.S. allies, have harshly repressed any popular
effort to join the Arab Spring.
The Nonaligned Movement – the governments of most of the world’s
population – is now meeting in Teheran. The group has vigorously endorsed
Iran’s right to enrich uranium, and some members – India, for example – adhere
to the harsh U.S. sanctions program only partially and reluctantly.
The NAM delegates doubtless recognize the threat that dominates
discussion in the West, lucidly articulated by Gen. Lee Butler, former head of
the U.S. Strategic Command: “It is dangerous in the extreme that in the
cauldron of animosities that we call the Middle East,” one nation should arm
itself with nuclear weapons, which “inspires other nations to do so.”
Butler is not referring to Iran, but to Israel, which is regarded
in the Arab countries and in Europe as posing the greatest threat to
peace In the Arab world, the United States is ranked second as a threat,
while Iran, though disliked, is far less feared. Indeed in many polls
majorities hold that the region would be more secure if Iran had nuclear
weapons to balance the threats they perceive.
If Iran is indeed moving toward nuclear-weapons capability – this
is still unknown to U.S. intelligence – that may be because it is “inspired to
do so” by the U.S.-Israeli threats, regularly issued in explicit violation of
the U.N. Charter.
Why then is Iran the greatest threat to world peace, as seen in
official Western discourse? The primary reason is acknowledged by U.S. military
and intelligence and their Israeli counterparts: Iran might deter the resort to
force by the United States and Israel.
Furthermore Iran must be punished for its “successful defiance,”
which was Washington’s charge against Cuba half a century ago, and still the
driving force for the U.S. assault against Cuba that continues despite
international condemnation.
Other events featured on the front pages might also benefit from a
different perspective. Suppose that Julian Assange had leaked Russian documents
revealing important information that Moscow wanted to conceal from the public,
and that circumstances were otherwise identical.
Sweden would not hesitate to pursue its sole announced concern,
accepting the offer to interrogate Assange in London. It would declare that if
Assange returned to Sweden (as he has agreed to do), he would not be extradited
to Russia, where chances of a fair trial would be slight.
Sweden would be honored for this principled stand. Assange would
be praised for performing a public service – which, of course, would not
obviate the need to take the accusations against him as seriously as in all
such cases.
The most prominent news story of the day here is the U.S.
election. An appropriate perspective was provided by U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Louis Brandeis, who held that “We may have democracy in this country, or we may
have wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we cannot have both.”
Guided by that insight, coverage of the election should focus on
the impact of wealth on policy, extensively analyzed in the recent study “Affluence
and Influence: Economic Inequality and Political Power in America” by Martin
Gilens. He found that the vast majority are “powerless to shape government
policy” when their preferences diverge from the affluent, who pretty much get
what they want when it matters to them.
Small wonder, then, that in a recent ranking of the 31 members of
the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development in terms of social
justice, the United States placed 27th, despite its extraordinary advantages.
Or that rational treatment of issues tends to evaporate in the
electoral campaign, in ways sometimes verging on comedy.
To take one case, Paul Krugman reports that the much-admired Big
Thinker of the Republican Party, Paul Ryan, declares that he derives his ideas
about the financial system from a character in a fantasy novel – “Atlas
Shrugged” – who calls for the use of gold coins instead of paper currency.
It only remains to draw from a really distinguished writer,
Jonathan Swift. In “Gulliver’s Travels,” his sages of Lagado carry all their
goods with them in packs on their backs, and thus could use them for barter
without the encumbrance of gold. Then the economy and democracy could truly
flourish – and best of all, inequality would sharply decline, a gift to the spirit
of Justice Brandeis.
Labels: America, Israel, Why America and Israel Are the Greatest Threats to Peace