with John Kurmann
& Bill Gresham

Photo courtesy of Earth Science Image Gallery.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Terrorism is too complex to be countered with easy answers

Frankly, America, you’re worrying me. It sounds like many of us are buying the absurdly simplistic explanations we’re being given for the New York and Washington attacks. Though easy answers can be tempting, these were not utterly inexplicable and “evil” assaults on “democracy” and “freedom.”

As reprehensible as this violence was to me, it didn’t occur in isolation, for no discernible reasons. Wisdom demands we ask some hard questions: Why do so many people around the world resent the U.S.? Why do some loathe this nation so fervently they’re willing to go to their deaths to strike at it?

Yes, these were acts of war, but this war began years ago and the U.S. has not been an innocent bystander. These are simply the first attacks with massive casualties here.

The U.S. has long used its military and economic power to intimidate other peoples. Too often, Americans have proceeded under the assumption that our way of life is the only way people should live, and so we’re justified in using whatever means necessary to bend other peoples to our will, our global vision.

Our government has propped up oppressive dictators with money and weapons, worked to destabilize defiant governments, fueled civil wars, made war in support of corporate colonialism, and continues to do its best to coerce the rest of the world into accepting an economic globalization that favors Western transnational corporations at the expense of local cultures everywhere. The evidence is clear for those who care to pay attention.

Moreover, just as with Manuel Noriega, Saddam Hussein, and too many others, the U.S. government is partially responsible for Osama bin Laden. He was trained by the CIA to use terrorism against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. What future “enemy” is the U.S. training right now?

If we don’t do our best to understand why these attacks happened, we’ll do the worst possible disservice to the victims of this violence: We’ll ensure that many more will suffer in the future as they have suffered. We must avoid creating more terrorists than we destroy.

No, I’m not saying we "deserved" what happened, but our nation does bear considerable responsibility for creating a world in which such things do happen. Let us ask ourselves what we can do to create a different kind of world.

It seems to me that the first, essential step is to avoid acting hastily out of rage. I suggest to you that restraint, self-reflection, and openness are the greatest displays of strength we could possibly make.

I’m not a pacifist. If I become convinced that focused violence can be used effectively to make the world safer from such attacks, I’ll support its use, but I’m not now convinced. I also fear our “leaders” aren’t even considering focused violence.

In the meantime, let us demand our government and corporations stop the intimidation and exploitation that give people just cause to hate the U.S. Nothing we gain from all this bullying is worth the many costs.

John Kurmann, September 2001

John has an earnest desire to save the world and thinks of himself as a community (of life) activist.  To contact him with any questions or comments, please e-mail to dsdnt@kctera.net.  John's writings also have appeared on Mind Like Water's column EcoLogic.  Click here for links to those articles.

To read other articles appearing on Rethinking the World, click here. 

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