HITCHENS: J'ACCUSE CHOMSKY
by
GEORGE SCIALABBA
____________________________________
George
Scialabba
is a book critic living in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His reviews
have appeared in the Boston Globe, Dissent, the Virginia
Quarterly Review, The Nation, The American
Prospect, and many others. Scialabba received the first
Nona Balakian Excellence in Reviewing Award from the National
Book Critics Circle.
After
9/11, Noam Chomsky wrote that, from a historical point of view,
what was new about the murder of 3000 civilians was that it
was carried out against the United States rather than by the
United States. Our national conversation about 9/11, he suggested,
ought to include some reflection on the question raised by President
Bush in the bombing’s immediate aftermath: “Why
do they hate us?”
For
the sake of our national security, not to mention honour, Chomsky
argued, we should try to answer that question honestly, taking
into account our longstanding opposition to independent Arab
nationalism and Iranian democracy; our ardent support for the
brutal dictatorship of Saddam Hussein in the 1980s, followed
abruptly by our horrifying degradation of Iraqi society through
bombing and boycott in the 1990s; our indifference to the dispossession
of Palestinian Arabs, especially since 1967; and in the background
of these, of moral if not immediate historical relevance, the
holocaust visited on Indochina in the 1960s and 70s; our collaboration
with massacre and repression in Latin America, and particularly
Central America, throughout the 20th century; our material and
diplomatic support for near-genocidal violence by Indonesia
against East Timor and by Turkey against the Kurds, and so on.
Chomsky
was generally reviled for this suggestion. It was widely assumed
-- in an immemorial tradition of moral obtuseness -- that to
explain was to excuse. Notwithstanding the terrorists’
frequent declarations that it was not America’s secular
culture or democratic ideals but rather its violence against
Muslims and support for Middle Eastern dictators that prompted
their attacks, to assign any motive except impotent envy, theological
rancour, or eliminationist anti-Semitism to al-Qaeda and its
allies was ruled “anti-American.”
Christopher
Hitchens joined this anti-American exercise, writing in December
2001 that for Chomsky:
Over
the last decade, Hitchens has reenacted the drama of Dorian
Gray: his prose style has waxed ever more elegant, while his
political judgment and his polemical morality have decayed.
A bagatelle
is a trifle. To say or imply that a “horrifying atrocity”
(Chomsky in 9-11, referring to 9/11) or a “colossal
atrocity” (ibid.) or a “terrorist crime” (ibid.)
or a “crime against humanity” (ibid.) is a trifle
would be execrable. To falsely accuse a political opponent of
saying such a thing would also, of course, be execrable. Did
Chomsky imply -- Hitchens was not brazen enough to claim he
actually said -- that 9/11 was a trifle? Consider this (hypothetical)
sentence: “The bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was a
mere bagatelle compared with the cataclysm Kennedy and Khrushchev
nearly unleashed on the world in October 1962.” Does this
sentence imply that Hiroshima and Nagasaki were trifles? Could
an honest polemicist claim that it does?
But
this slur about “9/11 denial” is only an hors d’oeuvre.
The main course is “moral equivalence.”
“It’s
not a very big step,” Hitchens continued, “to the
conclusion that we must change the subject.” If the subject
is “What should America do about terrorism?” then
at least part of the answer must be: we should understand why
others commit it, against us in particular. If those who commit
it say they do so because we have behaved and continue to behave
criminally toward them or their communities, then, if we are
either honorable or prudent, we must ask ourselves whether this
accusation is true. If it is true, then we should stop behaving
criminally. Of course, there’s no reason why we can’t
simultaneously take steps to protect ourselves against further
violence, though any steps that don’t address the source
of the danger won’t help permanently.
What
did those in charge of protecting us actually do after 9/11?
They did everything possible to prevent public discussion of
the terrorists’ declared motives and grievances. Hitchens
did his part by ridiculing those who suggested that resentment
against American actions, and not merely against American virtues,
may have incited the terrorist attack. And then someone really
did change the subject. Our leaders, once again with Hitchens’s
help, changed the subject to Iraq, with what consequences we
know.
Asked
recently for a response to the killing of bin Laden, Chomsky
made three points:
1)
The U.S. government appears to have behaved lawlessly in this
episode, ordering an extrajudicial execution, as well as in
earlier episodes involving bin Laden: for example, by not requesting
extradition after 9/11, despite the professed willingness of
the Afghan government to discuss the matter, but simply demanding
that he be turned over and invading the country when he was
not; and by never bothering to produce judiciable evidence of
bin Laden’s individual involvement in 9/11, however easy
it may have been to do this.
2)
American intellectuals and media have adhered to their usual
double standard, criticizing Pakistan for its indignation over
the raid while never considering their own and other Americans’
likely reaction if Iraqi or Cuban or Nicaraguan or Vietnamese
commandos had raided the United States and killed Kissinger,
Reagan, or George W. Bush, all of whom have or had even more
innocent blood on their hands than bin Laden does. (Chomsky
has used this analogy frequently, usually adding for the benefit
of his more obtuse and malicious critics that “it would
be wrong” for the Cubans, Nicaraguans, et al
to do any such thing. (source, source)
American
intellectuals, whose responsibility it was to lead the national
conversation beyond uncritical acceptance of the premises of
state policy, failed entirely.
3)
Other evidence of imperial hypocrisy and arrogance, likewise
generally unremarked, include: unwillingness to apply to ourselves
the “Bush doctrine” that “societies that harbour
terrorists are as guilty as the terrorists themselves and should
be treated accordingly (the US has long harboured right-wing
Cuban and Haitian terrorists), and the unfortunate naming of
the Abbottabad raid “Operation Geronimo.”
Hitchens now returns to the attack , as scrupulous as before.
Alleging “9/11 denial,” he reports Chomsky’s
position as: “we do not know who organized the attacks
of Sept. 11, 2001, or any other related assaults, though it
would be a credulous fool who swallowed the (unsupported) word
of Osama bin Laden that his group was the one responsible.”
Repeatedly in 9/11 -- at least a dozen times in that
very short book -- Chomsky refers to “the bin Laden network”
as the perpetrators of 9/11 and those “other related assaults.”
Also dozens of times in essays and interviews since then. Still,
his oddly inconsistent denial in the Guernica piece
that “we quickly learned that the 9/11 attacks were carried
out by al Qaeda” (perhaps he meant, “by al-Qaeda
with bin Laden’s direct involvement”) offered an
opening to the panting polemicist.
But
this slur about “9/11 denial” is only an hors d’oeuvre.
The main course is “moral equivalence.” During the
Cold War, whenever anyone pointed out that the US was also an
imperialist power or speculated that unrelenting, often violent
Western hostility might have partly explained, though of course
it did not justify Soviet repression, Hilton Kramer or Norman
Podhoretz would thunderously accuse the speculator of asserting
“moral equivalence” between Jeffersonian democracy
and Stalinism. Chomsky argues that terrorism, whether American
or Islamicist, should not be punished extra-judicially. Hitchens’s
answer is that this implies moral equivalence -- between what
and what is unstated, though he seems to mean, recalling his
famous outburst after 9/11, between “everything I love”
and “everything I hate.” But no, Chomsky only means
that terrorism, whether American or Islamicist, should not be
punished extra-judicially.
Hitchens’s
most contemptible gambit is this: Chomsky “doesn’t
trouble himself to conceal an unstated but self-evident premise,
which is that the United States richly deserved the assault
on its citizens and its civil society.” It is not that
Chomsky has ever said such a thing -- Hitchens is not such a
liar as to suggest this. It is not that Chomsky has not said
the opposite many times -- see, for example, the phrases quoted
above from 9/11, which Hitchens has presumably read, or at least
glanced at. It is that Chomsky (and the “paranoid left”)
must believe it, whether he (or they) knows he does or not.
Suppose
someone says that Pearl Harbor so inflamed American feeling
that the firebombing of Japanese cities and the atomic bombing
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, though morally indefensible, were
all but inevitable. Does saying this absolve the American officials
who ordered the bombings or imply that the fate of the hundreds
of thousands of Japanese civilians who died as a result was
“richly deserved”? By Hitchens’s logic, yes.
Over
the last decade, Hitchens has reenacted the drama of Dorian
Gray: his prose style has waxed ever more elegant, while his
political judgment and his polemical morality have decayed.
Of course, Hitchens’s inability to discuss Chomsky fairly
and intelligently is a mere bagatelle, significant only as a
symptom of a more widespread and troubling failure. Public understanding
of the nature and consequences of American foreign policy, past
and present, was even more urgently necessary -- morally as
well as prudentially necessary -- after 9/11 than before. No
such understanding has dawned. American intellectuals, whose
responsibility it was to lead the national conversation beyond
uncritical acceptance of the premises of state policy, failed
entirely. If the American citizenry ever learn, in relation
to their country’s international behavior, Auden’s
simple yet difficult lesson that “Those to whom evil is
done/Do evil in return” (or their benighted sympathizers
do), it will be despite rather than because of the efforts of
Hitchens and the large majority of American intellectuals who,
about these matters at least, agree with him.