I turned with interest to Oliver Kammโs critique (Prospect, November 2005) of the โcrude and dishonest argumentsโ he attributes to me, hoping to learn something. And learn something I did, though not quite what Kamm intended; rather, about the lengths to which some will go to prevent exposure of state crimes and their own complicity in them.
His substantive charges are as follows. To demonstrate โa particularly dishonest handling of source material,โ Kamm alleges that, Chomsky โmanipulates a self-mocking reference in the memoirs of the then US ambassador to the UNรขโฌยฆ to yield the conclusion that Moynihan took pride in Nazi-like policies.โ The topic is Indonesiaโs 1975 invasion of East Timor, condemned by the security council, which ordered Indonesia to withdraw, to no effect. Moynihan explains why: โThe US wished things to turn out as they did, and worked to bring this about. The department of state desired that the UN prove utterly ineffective in whatever measures it undertook. This task was given to me, and I carried it forward with no inconsiderable success.โ He then refers to reports that within two months 60,000 people had been killed, โ10 per cent of the population, almost the proportion of casualties experienced by the Soviet Union during the second world warโรขโฌโat the hands of Nazi Germany. His comparison, not mine, as Kamm pretends.
Atrocities continued through to the final paroxysm of violence in August-September 1999, until Clinton ordered a halt a few weeks later. Indonesia instantly withdrew, making it clear who bears responsibility for one of the closest approximations to true genocide of the postwar period.
According to Kamm, I โdeployed fanciful arithmetic to draw an equivalenceโ between 9/11 and Clintonโs destruction of the al-Shifa pharmaceutical plant, which produced half of Sudanโs medical supplies. The equivalence is, again, his fanciful construction. Discussing the โhorrendous crimeโ committed on 9/11 with โwickedness and awesome cruelty,โ I mentioned that the toll may be comparable to the consequences of Clintonโs bombing of the Sudan, about which I said nothing further. This single phrase was a considerable understatement, judging by the โfanciful arithmetic,โ which Kamm ignores. Among other sources I later cited were the German ambassador to Sudan, who wrote in the Harvard International Review that โseveral tens of thousandsโ died as a result of the bombing, and a similar estimate in the Boston Globe by the regional director of the Near East Foundation.
Kamm claims that I provided no evidence that the US was bombing Afghanistan with the knowledge that it might lead to the death of millions of people. But I cited extensive evidence from credible sources. Once again, more instructive than the transparent falsification is Kammโs cold indifference to reports he claims do not exist.
To demonstrate further how my โpolitical judgements have only become more startling over the past decade,โ Kamm cites my statement that the situation in Bosnia is โnot so simple.โ I deteriorated further as a โprophet of the amoral quietism of the Major government,โ in Kammโs rendition, by โdepicting Milosevicโs regime as a wronged partyโ by documenting the fact that Nato โmoved at once to violateโ the agreements it had signed to end the Kosovo conflict.
To demonstrate my โcentralโ doctrine, Kamm misquotes my statement that, โWe have to ask ourselves whether what is needed in the US is dissentรขโฌโor denazification.โ The context, which he omits, is a 1968 report in the New York Times of a protest against an exhibit at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry where children could โenter a helicopter for simulating firing of a machine gun at targetsโ in Vietnam, with a light flashing when a hit was scored on a hut. This was a year after the warning by the highly respected military historian and Vietnam specialist Bernard Fall that โVietnam as a cultural and historic entityรขโฌยฆ is threatened with extinctionรขโฌยฆ [as]รขโฌยฆ the countryside literally dies under the blows of the largest military machine ever unleashed on an area of this size.โ
Apart from misquoting and omitting the crucial context, Kamm also fails to tell us how one should react to this performance, aside from his own standard tacit acquiescence to horrendous crimes and his dedicated efforts, failing with impressive consistency, to find something to criticise in the efforts to terminate state crimes for which he and I share responsibility, particularly as in a free society, we cannot plead fear as an excuse for silent complicity.
ZNetwork sola largitione legentium funditur.
Donate