“Swallowing War Propaganda” by Nathan J. Robinson
Here’s
an excellent article contributed by Southern. Thank you, Southern.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Swallowing War Propaganda
Cutting
through bad arguments, distractions, and euphemisms to see murder for what it
is.
filed
05 January 2020 in INTERNATIONAL
The Trump administration has
assassinated Iran’s top military leader, Qassim Suleimani, and with the
possibility of a serious escalation in violent conflict, it’s a good time to
think about how propaganda works and train ourselves to avoid accidentally
swallowing it.
The Iraq War, the bloodiest and
costliest U.S. foreign policy calamity of the 21st century,
happened in part because the population of the United States was insufficiently
cynical about its government and got caught up in a wave of nationalistic
fervor. The same thing happened with World War I and the Vietnam War. Since a
U.S./Iran war would be a disaster, it is vital that everyone make sure they do
not accidentally end up repeating the kinds of talking points that make war
more likely.
Let us bear in mind, then, some of
the basic lessons about war propaganda.
Things are not true because a government official says them.
I do not mean to treat you as stupid
by making such a basic point, but plenty of journalists and opposition party
politicians do not understand this point’s implications, so it needs to be said
over and over. What happens in the leadup to war is that government officials
make claims about the enemy, and then those claims appear in newspapers (“U.S.
officials say Saddam poses an imminent threat”) and then in the public
consciousness, the “U.S. officials say” part disappears, so that the claim is
taken for reality without ever really being scrutinized. This happens because
newspapers are incredibly irresponsible and believe that so long as you attach
“Experts say” or “President says” to a claim, you are off the hook when people
end up believing it, because all you did was relay the fact that a person said
a thing, you didn’t say it was true. This is the approach the New York
Times took to Bush administration allegations
in the leadup to the Iraq War, and it meant that false claims could become
headline news just because a high-ranking U.S. official said them.
[UPDATE: here’s an example from Vox, today, of a
questionable government claim being magically transformed into a certain fact.]
In the context of Iran, let us
consider some things Mike Pence tweeted about Qassim Suleimani:
“[Suleimani]
assisted in the clandestine travel to Afghanistan of 10 of the 12 terrorists
who carried out the September 11 terrorist attacks in the United States…
Soleimani was plotting imminent attacks on American diplomats and military
personnel. The world is a safer place today because Soleimani is gone.”
It is possible, given these tweets,
to publish the headline: “Suleimani plotting imminent attacks on American
diplomats, says Pence.” That headline is technically true. But you should not
publish that headline unless Pence provides some supporting evidence, because
what will happen in the discourse is that people will link to your news story
to prove that Suleimani was plotting imminent attacks.
To see how unsubstantiated claims
get spread, let’s think about the Afghanistan hijackers bit. David Harsanyi of
the National Review defends Pence’s claim about Suleimani
helping the hijackers. Harsanyi cites the 9/11 Commission report, saying that the
9/11 commission report concluded Iran aided the hijackers. The report does indeed say that Iran allowed free
travel to some of the men who went on to carry out the 9/11 attacks. (The
sentence cut off at the bottom of Harsanyi’s screenshot, however, rather crucially says: “We have no evidence
that Iran or Hezbollah was aware of the planning for what later became the 9/11
attack.”) Harsanyi admits that the report says absolutely nothing about
Suleimani. But he argues that Pence was “mostly right,” pointing out that Pence
did not say Iran knew these men would be the hijackers, merely that it allowed
them passage.
Let’s think about what is going on
here. Pence is trying to convince us that Suleimani deserved to die, that it
was necessary for the U.S. to kill him, which will also mean that if Iran
retaliates violently, that violence will be because Iran is an aggressive power
rather than because the U.S. just committed an unprovoked atrocity against one
of its leaders, dropping a bomb on a popular Iranian leader. So Pence wants to
link Suleimani in your mind with 9/11, in order to get you blood boiling the
same way you might have felt in 2001 as you watched the Twin Towers fall.
There is no evidence that either
Iran or Suleimani tried to help these men do 9/11. Harsanyi says that Pence
does not technically allege this. But he doesn’t have to! What impression are
people going to get from helped the hijackers? Pence hopes
you’ll conflate Suleimani and Iran as one entity, then assume that if Iran ever
aided these men in any way, it basically did 9/11 even if it didn’t have any
clue that was what they were going to do.
This brings us to #2:
Do not be bullied into accepting simple-minded sloganeering
Let’s say that, long before Ted
Kaczynski began sending bombs through the mail, you once rented him an
apartment. This was pure coincidence. Back then he was just a Berkeley
professor, you did not know he would turn out to be the Unabomber. It is,
however, possible, for me to say, and claim I am not technically lying, that
you “housed and materially aided the Unabomber.” (A friend of mine once sold his
house to the guy who turned out to be the Green River Killer, so this kind of
situation does happen.)
Of course, it is incredibly
dishonest of me to characterize what you did that way. You rented an apartment
to a stranger, yet I’m implying that you intentionally helped the Unabomber
knowing he was the Unabomber. In sane times, people would see me as the
duplicitous one. But the leadup to war is often not a sane time, and these
distinctions can get lost. In the Pence claim about Afghanistan, for it to have
any relevance to Suleimani, it would be critical to know (assuming the 9/11
commission report is accurate) whether Iran actually could have known what the
men it allowed to pass would ultimately do, and whether Suleimani was involved.
But that would involve thinking, and War Fever thrives on emotion rather than
thought.
There are all kinds of ways in which
you can bully people into accepting idiocy. Consider, for example, the
statement “Nathan Robinson thinks it’s good to help terrorists who murder civilians.”
There is a way in which this is actually sort of true: I think lawyers who aid
those accused of terrible crimes do important work. If we are simple-minded and
manipulative, we can call that “thinking it’s good to help terrorists,” and
during periods of War Fever, that’s exactly what it will be called. There is a
kind of cheap sophistry that becomes ubiquitous:
·
I don’t
think Osama bin Laden should have been killed without an attempt to apprehend
him. —> So you think it’s good that Osama bin Laden was alive?
·
I think
Iraqis were justified in resisting the U.S. invasion with force. —> So
you’re saying it’s good when U.S. soldiers die?
·
I do not
believe killing other countries’ generals during peacetime is acceptable. —>
So you believe terrorists should be allowed to operate with impunity.
I remember all this bullshit from my
high school years. Opposing the invasion of Iraq meant loving Saddam Hussein
and hating America. Thinking 9/11 was the predictable consequence of U.S.
actions meant believing 9/11 was justified. Of course, rational discussion can
expose these as completely unfair mischaracterizations, but every time war
fever whips up, rational discussion becomes almost impossible. In World War I,
if you opposed the draft you were undermining your country in a time of war.
During Vietnam, if you believed the North Vietnamese had the more just case,
you were a Communist traitor who endorsed every atrocity committed in the name
of Ho Chi Minh, and if you thought John McCain shouldn’t have been bombing civilians
in the first place then clearly you believed he should have been tortured and
you hated America.
“If you oppose assassinating
Suleimani you must love terrorists” will be repeated on Fox News (and probably
even on MSNBC). Nationalism advocate Yoram Hazony says there is something wrong with those
who do not “feel shame when our country is shamed”—presumably those who do not
feel wounded pride when America is emasculated by our enemies are weak and
pitiful. We should refuse to put up with these kinds of cheap slurs, or even to
let those who deploy them place the burden of proof on us to refute them. (In
2004, Democrats worried that they did appear unpatriotic, and
so they ran a decorated war veteran, John Kerry, for president. That didn’t
work.)
Scrutinize the arguments
Here’s Mike Pence again:
“[Suleimani]
provided advanced deadly explosively formed projectiles, advanced weaponry,
training, and guidance to Iraqi insurgents used to conduct attacks on U.S. and
coalition forces; directly responsible for the death of 603 U.S. service
members, along with thousands of wounded.”
I am going to say something that is
going to sound controversial if you buy into the kind of
simple-minded logic we just discussed: Saying that someone was “responsible for
the deaths of U.S. service members” does not, in and of itself, tell us
anything about whether what they did was right or wrong. In order to believe it
did, we would have to believe that the United States is automatically right,
and that countries opposing the United States are automatically wrong.
That is indeed the logic that many
nationalists in this country follow; remember that when the U.S. shot down an
Iranian civilian airliner, causing hundreds of deaths, George H.W. Bush said that he would never apologize for
America, no matter what the facts were. What if America did
something wrong? That was irrelevant, or rather impossible, because to Bush, a
thing was right because America did it, even if that thing was the mass murder
of Iranian civilians.
One of the major justifications for
murdering Suleimani is that he “caused the deaths of U.S. soldiers.” He was
thus an aggressor, and could/should have been killed. That is where people like
Pence want you to end your inquiry. But let us remember where those soldiers
were. Were they in Miami? No. They were in Iraq. Why were they in Iraq? Because
we illegally invaded and seized a country. Now, we can debate whether
(1) there is actually sufficient evidence of Suleimani’s direct involvement and
(2) whether these acts of violence can be justified, but to say that Suleimani
has “American blood on his hands” is to say nothing at all without an
examination of whether the United States was in the right.
We have to think clearly in
examining the arguments that are being made. Here’s the Atlantic‘s George
Packer on the execution:
“There
was a case for killing Major General Qassem Soleimani. For two decades, as the
commander of the Revolutionary Guards’ Quds Force, he executed Iran’s long game
of strategic depth in the Middle East—arming and guiding proxy militias in
Lebanon and Iraq that became stronger than either state, giving Bashar al-Assad
essential support to win the Syrian civil war at the cost of half a million
lives, waging a proxy war in Yemen against the hated Saudis, and repeatedly
testing America and its allies with military actions around the region for
which Iran never seemed to pay a military price.”
The article goes on to discuss
whether this case is outweighed by the pragmatic case against killing him. But
wait. Let’s dwell on this. Does this constitute a case for
killing him? He assisted Bashar al-Assad. Okay, but presumably then killing
Assad would have been justified too? Is the rule here that our government is
allowed unilaterally to execute the officials of other governments who are
responsible for many deaths? Are we the only ones who can do this? Can any
government claim the right?
He assisted Yemen in its fight against
“the hated Saudis.” But is Saudi Arabia being hated for good reason? It is not
enough to say that someone committed violence without analyzing the underlying
justice of the parties’ relative claims.
Moreover, assumptions are made that
if you can prove somebody committed a heinous act, what Trump did is justified.
But that doesn’t follow: Unless we throw all law out the window, and
extrajudicial punishment is suddenly acceptable, showing that Suleimani was a
war criminal doesn’t prove that you can unilaterally kill him with a drone.
Henry Kissinger is a war criminal. So is George W. Bush. But they should be
captured and tried in a court, not bombed from the sky. The argument that
Suleimani was planning imminent attacks is relevant to whether
you can stop him with violence (and requires persuasive proof), but mere
allegations of murderous past acts do not show that extrajudicial killings are
legitimate.
It’s very easy to come up with
superficially persuasive arguments that can justify just about anything. The
job of an intelligent populace is to see whether those arguments can actually
withstand scrutiny.
Keep the focus on what matters
“The main question about the strike
isn’t moral or even legal—it’s strategic.” — The Atlantic
“The real question to ask about the American drone attack that killed Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani was not whether it was justified, but whether it was wise” — The New York Times
“I think that the question that we ought to focus on is why now? Why not a month ago and why not a month from now?” — Elizabeth Warren
“The real question to ask about the American drone attack that killed Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani was not whether it was justified, but whether it was wise” — The New York Times
“I think that the question that we ought to focus on is why now? Why not a month ago and why not a month from now?” — Elizabeth Warren
They’re going to try to define the
debate for you. Leaving aside the moral questions, is this good
strategy? And then you find yourself arguing on those terms: No, it
was bad strategy, it will put “our personnel” in harms way, without noticing
that you are implicitly accepting the sociopathic logic that says “America’s
interests” are the only ones in the world that matters. This is how debates
about Vietnam went: They were rarely about whether our actions were good for
Vietnamese people, but about whether they were good or bad for us,
whether we were squandering U.S. resources and troops in a “fruitless”
“mistake.” The people of this country still do not understand the kind of
carnage we inflicted on Vietnam because our debates tend to be about whether
things we do are “strategically prudent” rather than whether they are just. The Atlantic calls
the strike a “blunder,” shifting the discussion to be about the wisdom of the
killing rather than whether it is a choice our country is even permitted to
make. “Blunder” essentially assumes that we are allowed to do these things and
the only question is whether it’s good for us.
There will be plenty of attempts to
distract you with irrelevant issues. We will spend more time talking about
whether Trump followed the right process for war, whether he
handled the rollout correctly, and less about whether the underlying action
itself is correct. People like Ben Shapiro will say things like:
“Barack
Obama routinely droned terrorists abroad—including American citizens—who
presented far less of a threat to Americans and American interests than
Soleimani. So spare me the hysterics about ‘assassination.”
In order for this to have any
bearing on anything, you have to be someone who defends what Obama did. If you
are, on the other hand, someone who belives that Obama, too, assassinated
people without due process (which he did), then Shapiro has proved exactly
nothing about whether Trump’s actions were legitimate. (Note, too, the
presumption that threatening “America’s interests” can get you killed, a
standard we would not want any other country using but are happy to use
ourselves.)
Emphasis matters
Consider three statements:
·
“The top
priority of a Commander-in-Chief must be to protect Americans and our national
security interests. There is no question that Qassim Suleimani was a threat to
that safety and security, and that he masterminded threats and attacks on
Americans and our allies, leading to hundreds of deaths. But there are serious
questions about how this decision was made and whether we are prepared for the
consequences.”
·
“Suleimani
was a murderer, responsible for the deaths of thousands, including hundreds of Americans.
But this reckless move escalates the situation with Iran and increases the
likelihood of more deaths and new Middle East conflict. Our priority must be to
avoid another costly war.”
·
“When I
voted against the war in Iraq in 2002, I feared it would lead to greater
destabilization of the country and the region. Today, 17 years later, that fear
has unfortunately turned out to be true. The United States has lost
approximately 4,500 brave troops, tens of thousands have been wounded, and
we’ve spent trillions on this war. Trump’s dangerous escalation brings us
closer to another disastrous war in the Middle East that could cost countless
lives and trillions more dollars. Trump promised to end endless wars, but this
action puts us on the path to another one.”
These are statements made by Pete
Buttigieg, Elizabeth Warren, and Bernie Sanders, respectively. Note that each
of them is consistent with believing Trump’s decision was the
wrong one, but their emphasis is different. Buttigieg says Suleimani was a “threat”
but that there are “questions,” Warren says Suleimani was a “murderer” but that
this was “reckless,” and Sanders says this was a “dangerous escalation.” It
could be that none of these three would have done the same thing themselves,
but the emphasis is vastly different. Buttigieg and Warren lead with
condemnation of the dead man, in ways that imply that there was nothing that unjust
about what happened. Sanders does not dwell on Suleimani but instead talks
about the dangers of new wars.
We have to be clear and emphatic in
our messaging, because so much effort is made to make what should be clear
issues appear murky. If, for example, you gave a speech in 2002 opposing the
Iraq War, but the first half was simply a discussion of what a bad and
threatening person Saddam Hussein was, people might actually get the opposite of
the impression you want them to get. Buttigieg and Warren, while they appear to
question the president, have the effect of making his action seem reasonable.
After all, they admit that he got rid of a threatening murderer! Sanders admits
nothing of the kind: The only thing he says is that Trump has made the world
worse. He puts the emphasis where it matters.
I do not fully like Sanders’
statement, because it still talks a bit more about what war means for our people, but
it does mention destabilization and the total number of lives that can be lost.
It is a far more morally clear and powerful antiwar statement. Buttigieg’s is
exactly what you’d expect of a Consultant President and it should give us
absolutely no confidence that he would be a powerful voice against a war,
should one happen. Warren confirms that she is not an effective advocate for
peace. In a time when there will be pressure for a violent conflict, we need to
make sure that our statements are not watery and do not make needless
concessions to the hawks’ propaganda.
Imagine how everything would sound if the other side said
it.
If you’re going to understand the
world clearly, you have to kill your nationalistic emotions. An excellent way
to do this is to try to imagine if all the facts were reversed. If Iraq had
invaded the United States, and U.S. militias violently resisted, would it
constitute “aggression” for those militias to kill Iraqi soldiers? If Britain
funded those U.S. militias, and Iraq killed the head of the British military
with a drone strike, would this constitute “stopping a terrorist”? Of course,
in that situation, the Iraqi government would certainly spin it that way,
because governments call everyone who opposes them terrorists. But rationality
requires us not just to examine whether violence has been
committed (e.g., whether Suleimani ordered attacks) but what the full
historical context of that violence is, and who truly deserves the “terrorist”
label.
Is there anything Suleimani did that
hasn’t also been done by the CIA? Remember that we actually engineered the
overthrow of the Iranian government, within living people’s lifetimes.
Would an Iranian have been justified in assassinating the head of the CIA? I
doubt there are many Americans who think they would. I think most Americans
would consider this terrorism. But this is because terrorism is a word that, by
definition, cannot apply to things we do, and only applies to the things others
do. When you start to actually reverse the situations in your mind, and see how
things look from the other side, you start to fully grasp just how crude and
irrational so much propaganda is.
Watch out for euphemisms
·
“It was not an assassination.” —
Noah Rothman, conservative commentator
·
“That’s an outrageous thing to say.
Nobody that I know of would think that we did something wrong in getting the
general.” — Michael Bloomberg, on Bernie Sanders’ claim that this was an
“assassination”
Our access to much of the world is
through language alone. We only see our tiny sliver of the world with our own
eyes, much of the rest of it has to be described in words or shown to us
through images. That means it’s very easy to manipulate our perceptions. If you
control the flow of information, you can completely alter someone’s
understanding of the things that they can’t see firsthand.
Euphemistic language is always used
to cover atrocities. Even the Nazis did not say they were “mass murdering
innocent civilians.” They said they were defending themselves from subversive
elements, guaranteeing sufficient living space for their people, purifying
their culture, etc. When the United States commits murder, it does not say it
is committing murder. It says it is engaging in a stabilization program and
restoring democratic rule. We saw during the recent Bolivian coup how easy it is to portray
the seizure of power as “democracy” and democracy as tyranny. Euphemistic
language has been one of the key tools of murderous regimes. In fact, many of
them probably believe their own language; their specialized vocabulary allows
them to inhabit a world of their own invention where they are good people
punishing evil.
Assassination sounds bad. It sounds
like something illegitimate, something that would call into question the
goodness of the United States, even if the person being assassinated can be
argued to have “deserved it.” Thus Rothman and Bloomberg will not even admit
that what the U.S. did here was an assassination, even though we literally
targeted a high official from a sovereign country and dropped a bomb on him.
Instead, this is “neutralization.” (Read this fascinatingly feeble attempt by the
Associated Press to explain why it isn’t calling an obvious assassination an
assassination, just as the media declined to call torture torture when Bush did
it.)
Those of us who want to resist
marches to war need to insist on calling things exactly what they are and
refuse to allow the country to slide into the use of language that conceals the
reality of our actions.
Remember what people were saying five minutes ago
Five minutes ago, hardly anybody was
talking about Suleimani. Now they all speak as if he was Public Enemy #1.
Remember how much you hated that guy? Remember how much damage he did? No, I do
not remember, because people like Ben Shapiro only just discovered their hatred
for Suleimani once they had to justify his murder.
During the buildup to a war there is
a constant effort to make you forget what things were like a few minutes ago.
Before World War I, Americans lived relatively harmoniously with Germans in
their midst. The same thing with Japanese people before World War II. Then,
immediately, they began to hate and fear people who had recently been their
neighbors.
Let us say Iran responds to this
extrajudicial murder with a colossal act of violent reprisal, after the
killing unifies the country around a demand for
vengeance. They kill a high-ranking American official, or wage an attack that
kills our civilians. Perhaps it will attack some of the soldiers that are now
being moved into the Middle East. The Trump administration will then want you
to forget that it promised this assassination was to “stop a war.” It will then want you to focus
solely on Iran’s most recent act, to see that as the initial
aggression. If the attack is particularly bad, with family members of victims
crying on TV and begging for vengeance, you will be told to look into the face
of Iranian evil, and those of us who are anti-war will be branded as not caring
about the victims. Nobody wants you to remember the history of U.S./Iran
relations, the civilians we killed of theirs or the time we destabilized their
whole country and got rid of its democracy. They want you to have a two-second
memory, to become a blind and unthinking patriot whose sole thought is the
avenging of American blood. Resisting propaganda requires having a memory,
looking back on how things were before and not accepting war as the “new
normal.”
Listen to the Chomsky on your shoulder.
“It is perfectly insane to suggest
the U.S. was the aggressor here.” — Ben Shapiro
They are going to try to convince
you that you are insane for asking questions, or for not accepting what the
government tells you. They will put you in topsy-turvy land, where thinking
that assassinating foreign officials is “aggression” is not just wrong,
but sheer madness. You will have to try your best to remember
what things are, because it is not easy, when everyone says the emperor has
clothes, or that Line A is longer than Line B, or that shocking people to death
is fine, to have confidence in your independent judgment.
This is why I keep a little
imaginary Noam Chomsky sitting on my shoulder at
all times. Chomsky helps keep me sane, by cutting through lies and euphemisms
and showing things as they really are. I recommend reading his books,
especially during times of war. He never swallowed Johnson’s nonsense about
Vietnam or Bush’s nonsense about Iraq. And of course they called him insane,
anti-American, terrorist-loving, anti-Semitic, blah blah blah.
What I really mean here though is:
Listen to the dissidents. They will not appear on television. They will be
smeared and treated as lunatics. But you need them if you are going to be able
to resist the absolute barrage of misinformation, or to hear yourself think
over the pounding war drums. Times of War Fever can be wearying, because there
is just so much aggression against dissent that your resistance wears down.
This is why a community is so necessary. You may watch people who previously
seemed reasonable develop a pathological bloodlust (mild-mannered moderate
types like Thomas Friedman and Brian Williams going suck on our
missiles). Find the people who see clearly and stick close to them.
Someday peace will prevail.
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