Deep Blade Archive
Cutting through the machinations and effects of the U.S. empire
Why?
Examining the roots of the September 11, 2001 terror attack on the United States
There is no doubt that we Americans are generous, gentle, peace-loving people who certainly did not deserve the destruction inflicted upon us last Tuesday. The airline hijackings and subsequent destruction in New York and Washington D.C. were among the most sickening, heartbreaking things I have ever seen. There has not been one waking moment since these events that I have not been praying for all of the people and families affected, the men and women performing Police, Fire and Rescue work, and every soul in the entire world who must live with the burden that other members of our own species are ready to kill, destroy, and be killed in such vile acts.
Naturally, our first reaction is that we want those responsible punished. And they should be punished. But I have a great deal of fear that the U.S. will retaliate, blindly, with actions that would put us on the same disgusting moral level of terrorism of the hijackers. If we as a generous, free, peace-loving people, want justice, there should be justice, not just vengeance. This is no time for blind patriotism that could become the justification for the killing of innocents in the manner of the hijackers. Justice must be calm and measured in a fair Court of Law. Justice must involve not only punishment of perpetrators, but also an examination of the conditions giving those perpetrators the passions they possess lest such attacks will happen again. We must ask and answer fully—Why?
What follows is a conversation every American who wants to know why this happened should begin to have. Though there is no public proof at this point, I will assume that the hijackers belonged to some ultra-radical group formed by extreme elements within popular movements in the Middle East. In no way do I suggest that all members of these societies and movements support this kind of violence. In fact few of them do. But the perpetrators of Tuesday's attack probably have their roots in these movements.
To understand how the hijackers could resort to something so extreme, Americans must do something that is very difficult for us. We must imagine ourselves in the lives of the vast majority of people in the Arab world who have little wealth, little control of their own lives, and their core beliefs under assault from the airwaves and all around them every day. U.S. President George W. Bush has it wrong. He says the perpetrators of these crimes "can't stand freedom." Wrong. There is nothing they want more than freedom-freedom of religion, freedom from cultural domination, freedom to live, freedom to work and be paid a fair wage, and, very importantly, freedom to enjoy the wealth and resources of their homelands. In essence they want the same freedoms that Americans enjoy.
They see Israel as an occupying power, sustained with billions of dollars of aid and military assistance from the United States. After all, Israel's arrival as a nation was accompanied by the eviction of hundreds of thousands of Arabs from their homes, losses exacerbated in the 1967 war and since through a series of wars, massacres, and the expansion of Israeli settlements.
But the existence of Israel, or even the influx of Western culture do not alone explain the depth and intensity of anger towards America that is felt by Arab populations in the Middle East. The real source of this anger, well understood by U.S. leaders, and evident to every person living in the Middle East, is that America is busily extracting the energy resources and wealth of these lands while leaving the vast majority of the population destitute.
The US relationship with Israel, and other states of the Middle East is based on control of the oil. The US, Israel, and Saudi Arabia form a tight nexus of authoritarian political control (including terror, provision of military hardware, etc.) that the region's populations are not able to resist, except through acts of skulking violence by quasi-secret groups. In his book from the 1980s, Towards a New Cold War, Noam Chomsky examines the early documents, State Department and national security memoranda from the 40s and 50s, that established the US policy persisting to this day. These documents are full of references to "the most stupendous energy reserves that the world has ever known", how popular resistance cannot be allowed to be an obstacle to extracting "our oil," and how we must expect "jealousy" of the wealth these extractions will bring. By the end of the last century,  the US giant had formed a global financial and trading system in its own interest, ditched treaties and international law it finds inconvenient, and put troops in every corner of the globe to enforce its claim on world resources.
Herein lie the root causes of the September 11, 2001 attacks. From the hijackers point of view, they were conducting a war made of decades of American exploitation of their homelands. The symbolism and irony of the attacks are palpable, but will be lost on most Americans—the seat of global capitalism has been brought down by a couple of airliners depositing burning loads of capitalism's fuel. In fact, they must see their actions as not dissimilar from America's own when it bombed large buildings in Sudan, Yugoslavia, and Iraq in recent years. This should cause us to rethink these decades of policy. How long can we extract and burn the world's wealth and resources, backed by a powerful war-making machine, before the chickens come home to roost?
There doesn't seem to be any public insight into these matters emanating amongst our leaders, Democrat or Republican. It's all about this innocent, shining beacon of freedom and financial enlightenment being ruthlessly attacked by madmen. The message is for us to pull together, wave the flag, and get ready for war against the madmen. Because they are madmen, it's okay to blow up anyone who is perceived to look like them. Our leaders and their $40 billion appropriation of Social Security funds to fight fire with fire are irresponsible. They should be calming us rather than inciting us. We become our enemy. Violence begets violence. We learn this in church and history bears it out.
Their terrorists will find they have gained nothing except perverse symbolism. Our terrorists will inspire more attacks by their terrorists. The US will flail with its big guns and make everything worse than it was. Where will it stop? It could be pretty damn bad, especially if things go nuclear. I pray that our country has the right conversation about these events, but I fear there will be more destruction and many more whys? to answer.
Eric T. Olson
September 14, 2001



Americans cannot ignore what their government does abroad

by Seumas Milne
Thursday September 13, 2001

Nearly two days after the horrific suicide attacks on civilian workers in New York and Washington, it has become painfully clear that most Americans simply don't get it. From the president to passersby on the streets, the message seems to be the same: this is an inexplicable assault on freedom and democracy, which must be answered with overwhelming force - just as soon as someone can construct a credible account of who was actually responsible....the rest is archived at The Guardian