Chomsky: 'There Is No War On Terror' By Geov Parrish, AlterNet Posted on January 14, 2006, Printed on January 16, 2006 http://www.alternet.org/story/30487/ Geov Parrish is a Seattle-based columnist and reporter for Seattle Weekly, In These Times and Eat the State! He writes the "Straight Shot" column for WorkingForChange. Noam Chomsky is an acclaimed linguist and political theorist. Among his latest books are Hegemony or Survival from Metropolitan Books and Profit Over People: Neoliberalism and the Global Order published by Seven Stories Press.
There is no war on terror. I am pretty sure Chomsky isn't the first one to see this and acknowledge it.
This is such perfect Chomsky. Moan about the media and America for a while, and then give a perfectly useless non-answer. Who is impressed by this?
"Now let's talk about withdrawal. Take any day's newspapers or journals and so on. They start by saying the United States aims to bring about a sovereign democratic independent Iraq. I mean, is that even a remote possibility? Just consider what the policies would be likely to be of an independent sovereign Iraq. If it's more or less democratic, it'll have a Shiite majority. They will naturally want to improve their linkages with Iran, Shiite Iran. Most of the clerics come from Iran. The Badr Brigade, which basically runs the South, is trained in Iran. They have close and sensible economic relationships which are going to increase. So you get an Iraqi/Iran loose alliance. Furthermore, right across the border in Saudi Arabia, there's a Shiite population which has been bitterly oppressed by the U.S.-backed fundamentalist tyranny. And any moves toward independence in Iraq are surely going to stimulate them, it's already happening. That happens to be where most of Saudi Arabian oil is. Okay, so you can just imagine the ultimate nightmare in Washington: a loose Shiite alliance controlling most of the world's oil, independent of Washington and probably turning toward the East, where China and others are eager to make relationships with them, and are already doing it. Is that even conceivable? The U.S. would go to nuclear war before allowing that, as things now stand." That part scares me.
Chomsky was the one who wasn't elloquent enough to debate Christopher Hitchens so he pretty much forced him to resign from The Nation right? What a vivid point the man makes.
This is such perfect Chomsky. Moan about the media and America for a while, and then give a perfectly useless non-answer. Who is impressed by this? Well, he sure did a better job of making his points than you've done at refuting them.
He sure did a great job of making the point that "you have to deal with the real situation, not some imaginary situation". How can I refute that? It doesn't need to be refuted BECAUSE IT DOESN'T MEAN ANYTHING, can't you tell when you are being bullshitted? Did you read that and think "Damn, I never thought of that! Chomsky is so smart - its true, we really should be dealing with the real situation! No wonder he is public intellectual #1!"
He gave specific areas where extreme mistakes were made, and cited the result accurately. There are a few areas where I might disagree, but he certainly did a lot more in that piece than merely, as you say, "Moan about the media and America for a while, and then give a perfectly useless non-answer."
Until Chomsky acknowledges the probability (or at least possibility) that the attacks of 9/11 were orchestrated by the top brass of the U.S. government, he'll have no legitimacy to me.
Amen to that! I see the man as less than genuine, personally. This article about Chomsky brings up a lot of valid points: http://thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?ID=3632