This is an article by Kai Frithjof
Brand-Jacobsen of the Transcend network about the implications of the terrorist
attacks on New York and Washington. Please post it on your web-sites or
forward it further. You may also print it in newspapers or journals/magazines if
you wish. Kai will be in India until early November, without access to email.
You can send any comments you have to me.
With many thanks and best wishes, Dieter
<fischer@transcend.org>
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SEPTEMBER 11
Kai Frithjof Brand-Jacobsen
The terrible tragedy of the attacks on the United States on September 11th, 2001
have threatened to transform--or rather to intensify--many of the most dangerous
elements of today's world order: increasing militarism and militarisation on a
global scale, further dehumanisation and polarisation of entire peoples and
civilisations, and the deepening of structures and cultures of violence,
escalating direct violence at all levels.
A future of escalating violence, spirals of revenge and dehumanisation stands
before us all as an all too real scenario. Voices seeking to understand the
underlying causes and context in which the attacks took place and to address the
reasons behind them, at the same time recognising and sharing in deep horror at
the deaths of more than 6000 innocent victims, are marginalised in favour
of those seeking a violent response and escalation of the crisis.
In light of this, the following are nine theses related to the September 11th
attacks, what might result from them, and a call for action sent out to every
single human being, government, and organisation in the world:
(1) The attacks on September 11th in New York, Washington, and rural
Pennsylvania which resulted in the deaths of over 6000 human beings--primarily
janitors, secretaries, fire fighters, office workers, and police--were a
devastating and horrible tragedy. Victims of the attacks came from at
least 63 different countries, the vast majority of them citizens of the United
States. Our sympathies and deep grief reach out to all the victims, families of
victims, and all those affected by these terrible acts of violence, incredible
anger and hatred, and destruction of human life. No words can express the sorrow
of the many whose loved ones, wives, husbands, children, and parents were taken
from them. We are left with a feeling of deep sadness and remorse, shared in
this moment by people from all corners of the world.
(2) While unbelievably horrible in both their nature and scale, the attacks on
September 11th were foreseeable, and, in many ways, inevitable--the result of
deepening structures and cultures of violence and increasing acts of violence in
nearly all parts of the world. The association which many people have between
these trends and the practices and policies of the United States economic,
political and military power made the choosing of the United States as the
target of these attacks something which many had long predicted, and warned of.
U.S. economic, political and military policies since World War II have resulted
in the impoverishment, marginalisation, and devastation of hundreds of millions
of people world-wide.
US military attacks and interventions over the past five decades, increasing
again over the last ten years, have bred deeply held resentment, anger and
hatred in the hearts and minds of many. While the world focusses now upon the
horrible tragedy of these recent attacks, the road which led to them was long
and devastating, resulting in the deaths of many innocent victims-- reaching
well into the millions--in countries around the world.
(3) The recent Day of Mourning held in Europe and many other parts of the world
in solidarity with the United States was therefore in many ways insulting,
racist,
and deeply humiliating to those whose lives were taken in these horrible
attacks, and to the millions around the world who have died in war and atrocious
violence.
This was not a Day of Mourning for those whose lives were taken, or for the
horror of innocents killed in an abominable and tragic attack.
While the countless acts of individuals offering their sorrow, sympathies and
condolences was heartfelt and sincere--an outpouring of human solidarity in the
face
of awesome sadness--the acts of governments and heads of state showed more
clearly a deep disrespect and disregard for human life.
There were no days of mourning for the 800,000 innocent victims of the war in
Rwanda who died equally horrible and tragic deaths, or for the 300 - 500,000
killed in Burundi, the more than 600 Palestinians and over 100 Israelis (and the
far more killed in that conflict over the past five decades), or the Kurds,
Afghans, and indigenous peoples all over the world.
This Day of Mourning was far more the political act of subservient and vassal
states offering their loyalty to the United States of America in a time of
potential war. As a politically motivated act by governments in many parts of
the world, taken far more out of self-interest than human solidarity, it was
despicable and insulting to those who died, and disrespectful of human life in
general.
(4) The impact and aftermath of these attacks will most likely serve to deepen
U.S. feelings of alienation and separateness from the rest of the world, and may
worsen those elements of cultural pathology and cultural violence which are
already strongly present in US deep culture. The possibility that Americans will
be led to see themselves as surrounded by evil--intent on destroying all that is
good, free, humane, just and civilised represented by the United States and
threatened in all moments by the scourge of demonic and barbaric
terrorists--will only deepen and further escalate the trauma and human
suffering emanating from these attacks, placing Americans and the world in a
state of constant tension and cultures and realities of violence and fear. The
possibility that the horror of these outrageous acts of violence will serve to
legitimise and make acceptable the use of violence and attacks upon innocent
civilians--as evidenced by recent polls in the US showing the majority of
American citizens strongly in favour of war against other countries, even
if it means the deaths of thousands of innocent civilians in those
countries--will only exacerbate cultures of war and hatred.
(5) The effects of these attacks upon the U.S. are therefore likely to result in
an escalation/increase in U.S. practices of violence, an increase in the U.S.
military budget, and the strengthening of the role of the military and weapons
producers in U.S. domestic and foreign policy. Calls for military retaliation
and a promise to exact revenge upon the perpetrators of the Sept. 11th attacks
and those who harbour them--widely supported by American economic, military and
political elites--have led to one of the largest military build-ups since the
Second World War. As U.S. forces and those of its allies (primarily Britain)
head towards the Mediterranean, the Middle East and the Indian Ocean, the
U.S., European and world populations are being prepared for the prospect of a
long, drawn-out war, different from any previous war.
The NATO alliance has been mobilised, while the US Senate and Congress are
united behind one of the most aggressive and belligerent US cabinets (even
before
the attacks of Sept. 11), of the last 100 years. Military interventions,
including attacks which will result in the deaths of large numbers of civilians
far in excess of the 6000 killed in the New York and Washington attacks, appear
probable.
(6) Dehumanisation of the other, division of the world between good and evil,
and the use of violence in place of addressing the underlying dynamics and
causes
of the attacks will further multiply acts of violence and the human trauma and
suffering which results from them. A military response on the part of the United
States will reenforce and further the claims of those critical of the exercise
of US military power world-wide. Embracing and perpetuating the logic of
violence and terrorism, for whatever cause or purpose, will result in further
militarisation and militarism, setting off a vicious spiral of violence in which
the number of casualties and emotions/feelings of hatred, fear, and insecurity
on all sides will increase, multiplying the number of victims of this horrible
attack on an appalling scale. Violence
breeds violence, which itself will breed even greater violence in return.
To quote Gandhi: An eye for an eye will only end up leaving the whole world
blind.
(7) The only way to heal the pain and trauma brought about by the devastating
attacks on September 11th is to address the underlying causes and dynamics
behind
the violence, and to embrace its victims--and all victims of violence--with deep
empathy and compassion, while seeking solutions and approaches which take us
beyond the logic of war and destruction. Simplistic, war-culture driven attempts
to portray the other as absolute evil and devoid of any human feeling or
sentiment will only serve to further obfuscate and mystify the factors which led
to the attack. Peace, and the principles of freedom, basic needs, democracy,
human rights, and justice, which are associated with it, can only be built by
peaceful means. Violence, and the perpetuation of violence, is the antithesis of
these values, and will
end up producing more of what it seeks to eradicate. It is the path of
cowardice and hatred.
What is needed is not further destruction, but the building of a positive,
constructive programme uniting people working, learning, and sharing together to
create through active and involved participation the security, well-being and
freedom we seek. The alternative, is to take part ourselves in the destruction
of all we hold dear, and bringing to others the very pain and devastation we
seek to avoid.
(8) Throughout the United States and much of the world in the days following the
attacks many people united in prayer, reflection, and deep remorse and sadness.
Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us, and Do
unto others as you would have done unto yourself are two values found in all
the great religions and secular belief systems of the world. If peace is our
goal, we must remember these values, and form our actions accordingly. The unity
of
life, the right of all peoples to feel secure from threat and destruction, and
the need for deep understanding and compassion, must be stronger than the blind
urge for hatred and revenge.
(9) What is needed therefore, is to act. For people in every country, every
society, every community in the world to unite together, to reach out, and to
work
actively for the promotion of peace--for the building of peace by peaceful
means, and for the transforming of all forms of direct, structural and cultural
violence. Those who wish to see an alternative to violence, who are
appalled by the pain, the devastation, and the destruction which violence and
war create, who reach
out in deep sympathy and understanding with those who have suffered the loss of
having loved ones taken from them, must have the courage to stand up and to take
the path of principled non-violence and peace. Governments, politicians,
citizens groups, civil society organisations, non-governmental organisations,
teachers, students, religious institutions, parents, children, must all have the
courage to raise a voice of calm, to promote reason, dialogue, and
understanding, and to refuse to accept and to submit to the rule of violence and
the logic of terror and war.
If there are those in the world who are willing to die for what they believe in,
we must show how much greater courage is needed to be willing to live. Peace
by peaceful means is not a way. It is the only way. The threat of a war
which will bring about catastrophic levels of death and destruction and the
escalation of direct, structural and cultural violence is real and immanent.
Only by making the choice to unite and to act for peace do we stand the hope of
avoiding it. The challenge is there. What is necessary, is to act.