The Lessons of Blowback

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Originally published on Sunday, September 30, 2001 in the LAT

Former CIA consultant Chalmers Johnson offered wise advice that, as things turned out, was quite prescient indeed. The truly wise are relatively few and far between ..... they merit some attention and consideration.

The Lessons of Blowback

Even carefully planned actions can have unintended consequences. Let's not do something that ultimately benefits terrorists.


by Chalmers Johnson

SAN DIEGO -- One of the objectives of terrorism is to provoke the ruling elites of a target regime into disastrous overreaction. When it works, as it has in Israel over the past year, the results can be devastating for all sides. Who does this ultimately benefit? The terrorists.

Carlos Marighella, the Brazilian guerrilla leader whose writings influenced political terrorists in the 1960s and 1970s, explained why. If the government can be provoked into a military response to terrorism, he wrote, this will alienate the masses, causing them to "revolt against the army and the police and blame them for this state of things."

The overreaction doesn't necessarily have to alienate only domestic "masses." If we inflict great misery on innocent people in the Middle East, there will almost certainly be what the CIA refers to as "blowback"--unintended negative consequences of our actions. Vacillating supporters of the terrorists might be drawn into committing terrorist acts. Moderate governments throughout the Islamic world, especially in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, would almost certainly face growing internal dissent and could even be overthrown. Perhaps the prime example of terrorism succeeding is the Philippeville massacre of Aug. 20, 1955, in which Algerian revolutionaries killed 123 French colonials. A conscious act of terrorism carried out by revolutionaries who until then had enjoyed only slight popular backing, the Philippeville massacre led to a massive and bloody retaliation by the French. It also converted a leading French reformer (Jacques Soustelle, then governor-general of Algeria) into an advocate of suppression. The French crackdown eliminated most of the moderates on the Muslim side and caused influential French citizens back home to turn against their country's policies. This chain of events ultimately provoked a French army mutiny, brought Gen. Charles de Gaulle back to power as the savior of the nation and caused a French withdrawal from Algeria. Franco-Algerian relations are still strained today.

No political cause can justify the killing on Sept. 11 of thousands of innocent people in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania. But neither would our killing innocent people in retaliation be justifiable. Terrorists attack the vulnerable because their intended targets (the military might of a rich country) are inaccessible. By attacking the innocent, terrorists intend to draw attention to the sins of the invulnerable. Like the anarchism of the 19th century, terrorism is propaganda by deed.

The perpetrators of the Sept. 11 attacks are all dead. Now we must identify, apprehend and convict their accomplices. If it is discovered that a state harbored or backed them, then a declaration of war against that state would be appropriate. So far, the available evidence pointing to Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda organization is circumstantial: Bin Laden has issued edicts calling on Muslims to kill Americans; one of the hijackers had ties to the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, whose leader is a known associate of Bin Laden's; and U.S. and German intelligence officers have intercepted telephone conversations in which Al Qaeda groups were told of the attacks. But there has been no evidence linking the attackers to Afghanistan. Of the 19 hijackers, 11 have been identified by the FBI as probably Saudi Arabians, three others as, respectively, an Egyptian, a Lebanese and a citizen of the United Arab Emirates. The countries of origin of the others are unknown.

So far, the United States has reacted to the terrorist attacks with an almost classic repetition of the French blunders following Philippeville. From his first remarks to the nation on the evening of Sept. 11, President Bush has been pointlessly, even comically, belligerent (the U.S. wants Bin Laden "dead or alive," we must "smoke them out of their caves and get them running"). By initially calling his retaliation plan "Operation Infinite Justice," he gave it a needlessly religious and messianic coloration. He seems to lack insight or candor about what we actually face and the seriousness of the problem (we were attacked because we are a "beacon of freedom" and our attackers are without motives, merely "evil doers, those barbaric people"). The president has rebuffed calls from countries such as China and Iran that the U.S. obtain United Nations sanction for its retaliatory actions. Instead, his hyperbole has led thoughtful listeners to question what sort of actions he intends to pursue. "Our war on terror," Bush said to Congress and the nation on Sept. 20, "begins with Al Qaeda, but it does not end there. It will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been found, stopped and defeated." Presumably, the words "global reach" were inserted to reassure listeners that he did not intend to bomb supporters of Irish terrorists in Boston or anti-Castro terrorists in Miami.

The gaffes of the United States and its leaders are not just verbal. On Sept. 15, Congress passed a joint resolution that gave President Bush more sweeping authority than has ever been given to a president. "The president is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on Sept. 11, 2001." The appropriate comparisons here are with Abraham Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus during the Civil War, which led to violent protests and court challenges, and to the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution of Aug. 7, 1964, which escalated the Vietnam War.

The resolution of Sept. 15 passed the Senate by a vote of 98-0 and the House by 420-1. Whereas two senators voted against the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, this time only one member of Congress, Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Oakland), voted no. Now, nearly three weeks after the attacks, consequences of the congressional action have begun to emerge. President Bush has formed the largest air armada since World War II and brought it into position to bomb Afghanistan. He has assembled at least 630 U.S. military aircraft, three times as many as were deployed in the Gulf War against Saddam Hussein. An additional 280 aircraft are on board four U.S. aircraft carriers moving into position, as well as about 120 special forces.

If this armada is used against the hopeless and impoverished people of Afghanistan, there is no doubt that it will produce a general crisis throughout the Islamic world, probably affecting even moderate nations such as Indonesia and Malaysia. The end result will not be "victory" in a "war on terrorism" but a further cycle of terrorist attacks, American casualties and escalation.

What should we do instead? The answers seem obvious. We must recognize that the terrorism of Sept. 11 was not directed against America but against American foreign policy. We should listen to the grievances of the Islamic peoples, stop propping up repressive regimes in the area, protect Israel's security but denounce its apartheid practices in Palestinian areas and reform our "globalization" policies so that they no longer mean that the rich are getting richer and the poor poorer. If the United States' only response to terrorism is more terrorism, it will have discredited itself and can expect to be treated as the rogue state it will have become.
 

Moot

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
Excellent article. I missed it 10 years ago. Probably a bit of a buzz kill at the time, what with trying to get the masses whipped up into a retaliation frenzy. I think it is more relevant today, or at least should be, for most Americans than it was when originally written.

The gaffes of the United States and its leaders are not just verbal. On Sept. 15, Congress passed a joint resolution that gave President Bush more sweeping authority than has ever been given to a president. "The president is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on Sept. 11, 2001." The appropriate comparisons here are with Abraham Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus during the Civil War, which led to violent protests and court challenges, and to the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution of Aug. 7, 1964, which escalated the Vietnam War.

The temporary suspension of habeas corpus by Lincoln pales in comparison to the creation of the Department of Homeland Security which will be with us forever. Or until superseded by the ministries of Truth, Love, Peace and Plenty.
 

cheri1122

Veteran Expediter
Driver
Just waiting for the announcement that the beatings will continue until morale improves....
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Just waiting for the announcement that the beatings will continue until morale improves....
In the case of Pakistan, that largely has been the announcement - our drone attacks - as well things like the open murder of Pakistani civilians on the streets of Lahore by CIA murdering thug Raymond Allen Davis (who, by the way recently, in Colorado, allegedly beat up a US citizen, in front of the individual's two little girls ...... because Davis thought the guy was trying to "steal" his parking spot .... :rolleyes:)

raymond-davis.jpg

have largely turned the entire country against us ....

They (the GoP) told us to knock it off ..... and we've (via the USG) have basically said: We ain't gonna .... get used it ....

Considering that it's a country of 177,000,000 people .... which possesses nuclear weapons .... perhaps it wasn't, and isn't, too "bright" of a move .....

..... jus' keep on pokin' that hornets nest with the stick .... I'm absolutely sure that they will never come out .... :rolleyes:

BTW .... after having seen some actual footage of a terrorist interrogation (leaked I would assume, as I can't imagine the military would let something like that ever see the light of day) your comment metaphorically reflects what I saw ....

It's not too terribly difficult to understand how an individual could be turned into someone who now carries an undying hatred against the thing which practices what, in fact, constitutes subhuman conduct ..... particularly if they are innocent of what they are being accused of ....

One has to ask: Is it just the case that those in leadership positions in our government and in some cases, our military, are complete idiots and are totally frickin' stupid ?

Or is it the case that it simply serves their own (if not our country's) self-interest ?

Having viewed a small subset of both groups, I'm afraid that the answer I come up with is ....

IT'S BOTH
 
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RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Excellent article. I missed it 10 years ago. Probably a bit of a buzz kill at the time, what with trying to get the masses whipped up into a retaliation frenzy.
Yup - it was a message that probably didn't get much play at the time, thoughts that "didn't fit" the state-sanctioned narrative ....

I think it is more relevant today, or at least should be, for most Americans than it was when originally written.
I think you are right - simply because we've all had 10 years to become at least somewhat acquainted with what is being wrought in our names - even if much of it doesn't get covered in the US media, some amount of it does make it: Wikileaks "Collateral Murder" video, Abu Ghraib, etc. ..... and to see how certain things are affecting our daily lives ..... being questioned like you are some kind of criminal at the border by CBP, and the gropes by the TSA goons at the airport tend to be quite personal reminders ...

The temporary suspension of habeas corpus by Lincoln pales in comparison to the creation of the Department of Homeland Security which will be with us forever.
Not very likely that it will be abolished is it ? .... or that it won't continue to grow.

Or until superseded by the ministries of Truth, Love, Peace and Plenty.
Yes Winston ...... there is always that to look forward to I guess .....
 
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greg334

Veteran Expediter
Well the thing that is forgotten is that Pakistan holds more problems for us than does Iran, Afghanistan and Iraq combined. Many forget the nukes they have, thinking they too are backwards thinking people in a country that is not in our century but there is a lot more to them than we, the public, actually can get.

One of these problems is we do a lot of banking processing and other financial outsourcing through India and Pakistan and we do not have any safeguards for the access to and use of personal information or to protect the access to the systems that we use.

Our security should have started with this, but it didn't by any means and our entire country failed to take any steps for prevention any and all attacks on our systems, illustrated by the hacking of our computer systems. Pakistan presents a worse case because of the access already established.

So given an idea we cut off Pakistan to protect ourselves, the related issue of the use of India is still there as a threat and simply put with the Kashmir issue, and the involvement of three countries, China, India and Pakistan, if there is an all out war between the two countries - Pakistan and India - China may end up forcing us to do nothing other than deal with the interruption of our lives and the serious problems with our financial system under the threat they will step in on the side of Pakistan.
 

cheri1122

Veteran Expediter
Driver
As long as Raymond Allen Davis & the CIA/Blackwater 'above the law' clones [they even look identical!] are the face of the United States to most civilians in other countries, it's not surprising that hatred for America is the result. What's surprising is the official attitude of condoning their behavior [getting Allen out of the jam he got himself in only cost a couple million] - it destroys any good faith credibility America could have had around the world.
Just another resource trashed....:mad:
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
Well Cheri, I think that they are just the icing on the cake, not the real face of the country. Our state department and the past four administrations, well five did really well in portraying us in bad manner.

I was getting a real lesson this past weekend on middle east and Asiatic history from the point of view of those who live there. It is interesting to say the least that much of the problems were caused by colonization in those areas and our reluctance to be involved in making things fair for those in the colony. A lot of hatred was spurred on from our being part of the western culture.
 

cheri1122

Veteran Expediter
Driver
Well Cheri, I think that they are just the icing on the cake, not the real face of the country.
That was my point: they're not the 'real face' of the US, but they're the only faces the people who live in other countries see, in many cases.
And they're NOT making a good impression.

Our state department and the past four administrations, well five did really well in portraying us in bad manner.

I was getting a real lesson this past weekend on middle east and Asiatic history from the point of view of those who live there. It is interesting to say the least that much of the problems were caused by colonization in those areas and our reluctance to be involved in making things fair for those in the colony. A lot of hatred was spurred on from our being part of the western culture.

They [officials] never learn, do they? Colonization didn't do much for the British Empire [or its' colonies] either.
And lately, 'fair' seems to be a dirty word in the US...
 

x06col

Veteran Expediter
Charter Member
Retired Expediter
US Army
Well Cheri, I think that they are just the icing on the cake, not the real face of the country.
That was my point: they're not the 'real face' of the US, but they're the only faces the people who live in other countries see, in many cases.
And they're NOT making a good impression.

Our state department and the past four administrations, well five did really well in portraying us in bad manner.

I was getting a real lesson this past weekend on middle east and Asiatic history from the point of view of those who live there. It is interesting to say the least that much of the problems were caused by colonization in those areas and our reluctance to be involved in making things fair for those in the colony. A lot of hatred was spurred on from our being part of the western culture.

They [officials] never learn, do they? Colonization didn't do much for the British Empire [or its' colonies] either.
And lately, 'fair' seems to be a dirty word in the US...

Oh but, the Brits gained mucho from Colonization. They took, and took, and took some more, and left nothing but the tea break .
 
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