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Noam Chomsky
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Monday 4 June 2012
In the history of human rights, the worst atrocities are always committed by somebody else, never us – whoever “us” is.

Somebody Else’s Atrocities

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In his penetrating study “Ideal Illusions: How the U.S. Government Co-Opted Human Rights,” international affairs scholar James Peck observes, “In the history of human rights, the worst atrocities are always committed by somebody else, never us” – whoever “us” is.

Almost any moment in history yields innumerable illustrations. Let’s keep to the past few weeks.

On May 10, the Summer Olympics were inaugurated at the Greek birthplace of the ancient games. A few days before, virtually unnoticed, the government of Vietnam addressed a letter to the International Olympic Committee expressing the “profound concerns of the Government and people of Viet Nam about the decision of IOC to accept the Dow Chemical Company as a global partner sponsoring the Olympic Movement.”

Dow provided the chemicals that Washington used from 1961 onward to destroy crops and forests in South Vietnam, drenching the country with Agent Orange.

These poisons contain dioxin, one of the most lethal carcinogens known, affecting millions of Vietnamese and many U.S. soldiers. To this day in Vietnam, aborted fetuses and deformed infants are very likely the effects of these crimes – though, in light of Washington’s refusal to investigate, we have only the studies of Vietnamese scientists and independent analysts.

Joining the Vietnamese appeal against Dow are the government of India, the Indian Olympic Association, and the survivors of the horrendous 1984 Bhopal gas leak, one of history’s worst industrial disasters, which killed thousands and injured more than half a million.

Union Carbide, the corporation responsible for the disaster, was taken over by Dow, for whom the matter is of no slight concern. In February, Wikileaks revealed that Dow hired the U.S. private investigative agency Stratfor to monitor activists seeking compensation for the victims and prosecution of those responsible.

Another major crime with very serious persisting effects is the Marine assault on the Iraqi city of Fallujah in November 2004.

Women and children were permitted to escape if they could. After several weeks of bombing, the attack opened with a carefully planned war crime: invasion of the Fallujah General Hospital, where patients and staff were ordered to the floor, their hands tied. Soon the bonds were loosened; the compound was secure.

The official justification was that the hospital was reporting civilian casualties, and therefore was considered a propaganda weapon.

Much of the city was left in “smoking ruins,” the press reported while the Marines sought out insurgents in their “warrens.” The invaders barred entry to the Red Crescent relief organization. Absent an official inquiry, the scale of the crimes is unknown.

If the Fallujah events are reminiscent of the events that took place in the Bosnian enclave of Srebrenica, now again in the news with the genocide trial of Bosnian Serb military commander Ratko Mladic, there’s a good reason. An honest comparison would be instructive, but there’s no fear of that: One is an atrocity, the other not, by definition.

As in Vietnam, independent investigators are reporting long-term effects of the Fallujah assault.

Medical researchers have found dramatic increases in infant mortality, cancer and leukemia, even higher than Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Uranium levels in hair and soil samples are far beyond comparable cases.

One of the rare investigators from the invading countries is Dr. Kypros Nicolaides, director of the fetal-medicine research center at London’s King’s College Hospital. “I’m sure the Americans used weapons that caused these deformities,” Nicolaides says.

The lingering effects of a vastly greater nonatrocity were reported last month by U.S. law professor James Anaya, the U.N. rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples.

Anaya dared to tread on forbidden territory by investigating the shocking conditions among the remnants of the Native American population in the U.S. – “poverty, poor health conditions, lack of attainment of formal education (and) social ills at rates that far exceed those of other segments of the American population,” Anaya reported. No member of Congress was willing to meet him. Press coverage was minimal.

Dissidents have been much in the news after the dramatic rescue of the blind Chinese civil-rights activist Chen Guangcheng.

“The international commotion,” Samuel Moyn wrote in The New York Times last month, “aroused memories of earlier dissidents like Andrei D. Sakharov and Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn, the Eastern bloc heroes of another age who first made ‘international human rights’ a rallying cry for activists across the globe and a high-profile item on Western governments’ agendas.”

Moyn is the author of “The Last Utopia: Human Rights in History,” released in 2010. In The New York Times Book Review, Belinda Cooper questioned Moyn’s tracing the contemporary prominence of these ideals to “(President Jimmy) Carter’s abortive steps to inject human rights into foreign policy and the 1975 Helsinki accords with the Soviet Union,” focusing on abuses in the Soviet sphere. She finds Moyn’s thesis unpersuasive because “an alternative history to his own is far too easy to construct.”

True enough: The obvious alternative is the one that James Peck provides, which the mainstream can hardly consider, though the relevant facts are strikingly clear and known at least to scholarship.

Thus in the “Cambridge History of the Cold War,” John Coatsworth recalls that from 1960 to “the Soviet collapse in 1990, the numbers of political prisoners, torture victims, and executions of nonviolent political dissenters in Latin America vastly exceeded those in the Soviet Union and its East European satellites.” But being nonatrocities, these crimes, substantially traceable to U.S. intervention, didn’t inspire a human-rights crusade.

Also inspired by the Chen rescue, New York Times columnist Bill Keller writes that “Dissidents are heroic,” but they can be “irritants to American diplomats who have important business to transact with countries that don’t share our values.” Keller criticizes Washington for sometimes failing to live up to our values with prompt action when others commit crimes.

There is no shortage of heroic dissidents within the domains of U.S. influence and power, but they are as invisible as the Latin American victims. Looking almost at random around the world, we find Abdulhadi al-Khawaja, co-founder of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, an Amnesty International prisoner of conscience, now facing death in prison from a long hunger strike.

And Father Mun Jeong-hyeon, the elderly Korean priest who was severely injured while holding mass as part of the protest against the construction of a U.S. naval base on Jeju Island, named an Island of Peace, now occupied by security forces for the first time since the 1948 massacres by the U.S.-imposed South Korean government.

And Turkish scholar Ismail Besikci, facing trial again for defending the rights of Kurds. He already has spent much of his life in prison on the same charge, including the 1990s, when the Clinton administration was providing Turkey with huge quantities of military aid – at a time when the Turkish military perpetrated some of the period’s worst atrocities.

But these instances are all nonexistent, on standard principles, along with others too numerous to mention.

© The New York Times Company
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ABOUT Noam Chomsky

Noam Chomsky is an American linguist, philosopher, cognitive scientist, and activist. He is an Institute Professor and pressor emeritus of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Techonology. Chomsky is well known in the academic and scientific communities as one of the fathers of modern linguistics, and a major figure of analytic philosophy. Chomsky is the author of more than 150 books and has received worldwide attention for his views.

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11 comments on "Somebody Else’s Atrocities"

Dr. Zeki Ergas

June 06, 2012 7:20am

well, i have been reading noam chomsky's comments for years. he has been doing it for decades. and they are always true. i admire him, and i am sure many people in the US and all over the world do too. but the question is: has anything changed for the better? On the contrary, in the last few years, things have been seriously deteriorating in the US. that is a fact too. and it doesn't really matter which party is in power, and who is or will be president in november 2012. it is the system that is wrong. it is not working. it needs to be changed. what the US - and the world need is global systemic change: new values, a new civilization based on sustainable development, and not unlimited economic growth, widening inequality, a financial economy that doesn't serve the real economy, and a plutocracy that has stolen the democracy from the american people. the only hope is that the OWS will grow into a true and massive revolutionary movement that will make it possible for real change to occur. but i am not holding my breath, alas, things will get much worse before they can get any better.

Yesca_Again

June 05, 2012 12:12pm

All the facts in the article & post are maddeningly real. Ever more so for they are done in 'Our Name'. And we do nothing, to change this. So Far.

That's the message. Can we, will we write a better story, henceforth? Begin now in the real world we live in, with those around you.

Then these deeds done in 'Our Name' may be naturally spoken of with honor & pride, by those who come this way after us...

This realization we've allowed to become, is not some aberration of our government. Which, if I perceive the country I live in correctly, is merely a reflection of what we the people hold & encourage through passive acceptance to be the implementation of that 'for the common good'.

It isn’t? Then why, are we just posting & not at least calling out & speaking in person to those around each of us, out loud in the real world & stop out loud these insult to America. Those ‘evil doers’ are us, too.

I hate to find that more of us, We, the people think it's, OK?

If this real hideous activity & intent are of no consequence to all of us. Then, like torture, which was made every day, the sort of activity we do, like defecate, stinks like hell & may be a strain, but damn what a pain if you don't, common procedure but only with that proverbial ticking bomb. However, now none of us pitch much of a bitch about it, and sadder still, avoid making it stop & just let it be.

So we've lost our soul on that so far & now this other stuff comes to light? Do we, the people have to once again to do the old, 'in order to form a more perfect union..'?

I will, if you will, because we are being left so little alternative. I sure at this point if you've read this far, I'm a whack, frothing. No, I'm an American who under our flag & in ‘Our Name’ did what my country ordered, without hesitation, without compunction.

For as a soldier, that was my duty, also for this one, that paid the very price of & for, my birth right, the admission & participation to this democracy. I was born here. As an American one is graced with obligation & responsibility, that is our freedom & liberty. As such, it is our duty as Americans We cannot accept others, if anything, to not be participants & equally responsible for our society's basis & sensibility. That is our reason for existence as a nation with a people. Both, born here and/or by acquired citizenship.

I want to try a more procedural political action route first, and I believe & hold will work, but would not stop there if it didn’t. Like I pointed out, a violent revolution is always an option. One not to be fear but the price sometimes, like it has always been for us, ‘for the common good’.

Be serious, this is no stomping our little foot in feigned anger. The real world is at stake here our, real actual, freedoms & liberties are in a precarious balance in this nexus we as a people are at. It maybe months, years, hopefully not decades, but all this can & will be corrected. I pray we can come out at the resolves of our national malaises able to say, ‘ I didn’t die. And Damn we won.’

We are the people, we are the government. Make it so! Or we, the people will not be America anymore. That would be sad.

I ask, you reread the first three or four paragraphs of our ‘Declaration of Independence’, those first Americans state it so simply, humanly, honest, so well. They, too be us, we be them, always.

God don't bless America! WE, the people ... DO!

Jeffrey Hill

June 05, 2012 10:04am

Psychopaths in power depend on useful idiots to help them to stay in power.

The media (propaganda apparatus) is a crucial tool for the psychopaths.

Sandy Oestreich

June 04, 2012 9:35pm

I agree.
Did you know that new figures show that the USA is now determined to be SECOND on the list of global nations and the level of childhood POVERTY! Remember how we were urged as children to finish our meals and to think of the "poor children overseas"? We are now THEM.
But what to do?

Myself, I spearhead the still not passed Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) with 2 bills for TWELVE YEARS before the Florida legislature, and help mentor the 6 other states also filing ERA ratification bills. (We only need THREE more states' legislatures to vote YES!, and ERA passes into the US Constitution.)
Oh, and, I partnered with ERA leaders from 3 other states to create and get filed a brand new ERA before US Senate and House in the past year.

I am evermore dragged down by the ugly turn of US philosophy. It makes it impossible for me to sit still and watch the world go around. So, at 78, and with my 300 000+ members, I work for you for free 18/7 year-around speaking, rallying, lobbying, organizing and fundraising to get enough gas for our cars to go do the lobbying necessary. A few experiences stand out. One is the response by my own Florida state senator. When I asked him if he could be against equality for all Americans, he said, "I'd have to THINK about that." He said it for 7 years as we constituents lobbied him for SEVEN YEARS. I now have him co-sponsoring my ERA FL senate bill every year. It takes guts and it take persistence. I have been run off the road in front of my home, and have had death threats from bigots. I have told the Florida legislature that they will continue to see me in the halls of the capitol and in their offices, whether in a wheelchair and on oxygen BECAUSE WE WILL DO THIS. Absolutely.

The re-ignited ERA is making progress, though glacial. There is terrible hatred of women by men in powerful positions. Note this Republican legislative War on Women and their families. It is truly frightening. And I don't scare easily.

anono

June 04, 2012 6:17pm

Love, unconditional love is the ultimate dissidence. It can be crucified, but never erradicated. Unite against the beast.

wildthang

June 04, 2012 4:48pm

It is so easy to point out the atocities of others while ignoring our own. Then you still can't be sure of those by others whether they are riddles wtih disinformation too... seems the Athenians, or Herodotus, may have stung the Spartans with some baby killing rumors that have persisted up until today.

paulyih

June 04, 2012 1:52pm

Dr. Chomsky is totally correct -- I would like to add to remind us all -- time to turn the page -- the word psychology and psychology proper will have to address more of the soulful side of men -- yes, the affective side of men and not only the cognitive side of intelligence -- but yes, soul , heart and wisdom -- Only by us embracing the non religious soul, we then can do the sort of "filtering" of our judgment and to find out compassion, in doing good for the people, the community we live in and the nation. Psychology has been kidnapped by the religious organization for way too long -- from the time of Inquisition to the present time in how religions in the West had set up those "Conditionality" of forced in faith -- and the threatening of the fear of hell and damnation -- Religion as a culture and like most culture, we grew up with a certain value-thus, we all have our own cultural and religious experience -- but we have to be AWAKEN to see the wisdom side of us -- and that will take effort -- From the Asian perspective by way of Zen -- we need to be awaken from our "entrapment" , basically our ignorance -- and only then, we can be enlightened by our next round of self reflection, introspection and more thinking of now and into the future -- This is one way to De-programmed us --
Do me the favor, do watch this four hours document and about " The Century of the self" by BBC, as you will see how we have been CONDITIONED by the misguidance of the wrongful psychoanalysis by Edward Bernays -- and how we have been entrapped to make wars, to have replace Democracy by way of materialism and consumption -- based on the sexual /libidinal side of Freud -- and we have been manipulated by the merchants -- and also bank whores .
Time tow wake up from this "aimless" illusion.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cq5Fi1vQ68Q

Sandy Oestreich

June 04, 2012 9:46pm

Sandy Oestreich is my name but this naughty site won't let me enter it where it's supposed to be, at "your name".

I enjoyed your small treatise and it made me think. One small favor I might ask: do you think that next time you could include the majority of the population in your writings that are so full of male pronouns? We are darned angry at being left out of everything, especially being "protected" from gender-equal wages for equal work and all things gender-equal, the ERA. Few people still fall into mischief unwittingly by naming us ALL as "men", "he" etc. And that's soo easy to correct. Please?

Sageman69

June 04, 2012 12:35pm

Chomsky, brilliant and insightful as ever about our history, ends by stating that "...these instances are all but nonexistent, on standard principles, along with others too numerous to mention."

True, so true, and for a careful reader of Chomsky, one of his more important contributions I believe. He pulls the propaganda veil of accepted belief away to show that a basic human prejudice or mental construct is at work. The construct that what "we do" is good, right, acceptable and judicious, if not necessary given the evil in the world, and what "the other" does, our enemies or opponents, is to be grimly and relentlessly opposed or undermined.

Setting aside the "means to an end" argument, the US now openly engages in terrorism, economic and political dirty tricks, chemical warfare, war crimes, human rights violations, spying on our own citizens, rejection of habeas corpus, indefinite imprisonment,etc. The US has, since the first Bush administration, carried out propaganda and lies on the citizenry of such magnitude it has become the background of our entire political and social thinking--the murky water in which we all live but sometimes do not or refuse to see clearly.

The antidote? That, of course, is not so simply obvious. A beginning might be found, however, in confronting our own cognitive tendencies to believe ourselves without culpability, without responsibility for perpetuating the myths that currently prevail. A basic compassion for ourselves and others, a grounded commitment to see all of us as human, as contributors to a future that perhaps cannot endure these present times, but somehow must be thought possible, if we or our planet is to survive.

The cognitive and emotional distortions that populate our minds and thinking need to be rooted out, understood, and changed. Education should focus on making all of us more aware of how we think about ourselves and "others," whoever they might be.To review and understand how we relate to them, oppose them, work with them, or how, in a human system, all are party to the problems and to the potential solutions we face.

Wouldn't it be something if a groundswell of such magnitude were part of the 99% movment? If it were to spread to congress, the halls of schools and universities and think tanks? What if it spread to the media itself and a revolution in political, social and economic thought were to carry us into a more stable, sane and ecologically sound world? What if profit, as a motive, were only one of a few benchmarks motivating good management and business practices? What about the social good?

These are just some of the questions that come to mind when I read Chomsky, whose work in linguistics and modes of thinking is central to his thesis here.

Rebel with a Cause

June 04, 2012 5:19pm

Dr. Chomsky hits the nail right on its ugly head! And so do you!
Simply put: we must stop letting ourselves be conned into thinking it's us and them. There are no 'them', only us...
Except from the tiny group of megagreedmongers who grab everything they can and exploit the entire planet. They have not only sold their Mother... Mere wealth is not enough for 'them' Nothing will ever be enough for 'them' so it seems.
But they are outnumbered by 'us', all we need to do is wake up. WAKE UP!

woetopoe

June 04, 2012 1:19pm

Very well said. I would only add that until a plurality of Americans can be "de-programmed" from the pernicious influence of the idolatry inherent in worshiping the "dollar," vast numbers of us will continue to buy into the propaganda perpetuated by our mass media, our wholly bought off politicians and their own insecurities concerning the ever present "need" to acquire more "bells and whistles," despite the deleterious effects on our psyche's, our nation and our world. Chomsky, on target as usual.