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 Post subject: Re: CHOMSKY - "THE GALILEO OF POWER, LANGUAGE & POLITICS"
PostPosted: 2009-10-28, 07:19:27 pm 
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Chomsky on the 9/11 Truth Movement :

http://matterik.blogspot.com/2009/10/no ... nt-12.html


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 Post subject: Re: CHOMSKY - "THE GALILEO OF POWER, LANGUAGE & POLITICS"
PostPosted: 2009-10-28, 07:24:55 pm 
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Chomsky - Blankfort - The Israel Lobby

http://www.arguewitheveryone.com/genera ... think.html


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 Post subject: Re: CHOMSKY - "THE GALILEO OF POWER, LANGUAGE & POLITICS"
PostPosted: 2009-10-28, 07:31:17 pm 
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Chomsky & The Manufacture of Consent - "It's dangerous to be a Muslim in America"

http://rehmat1.wordpress.com/2009/10/28 ... n-america/


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 Post subject: Re: CHOMSKY - "THE GALILEO OF POWER, LANGUAGE & POLITICS"
PostPosted: 2009-10-28, 11:32:35 pm 
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Chomsky has his all-too-familiar critics - this one is typical of many :

http://futureoftheconservativeparty.blo ... l#comments


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 Post subject: Re: CHOMSKY - "THE GALILEO OF POWER, LANGUAGE & POLITICS"
PostPosted: 2009-10-28, 11:55:16 pm 
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Noam Chomsky - "Hopes and Prospects" - Annual Amnesty International Lecture - Belfast - Friday Oct 30 2009

http://www.amnesty.org.uk/events_details.asp?ID=1332


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 Post subject: Re: CHOMSKY - "THE GALILEO OF TRUTH, LANGUAGE & THE MEDIA" (RWS)
PostPosted: 2009-10-29, 09:35:09 am 
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Amnesty Sabotage ?
Part 1 of 4
http://srebrenica-genocide.blogspot.com ... nesty.html

Richard W. wrote:
WILLIAMS v CHOMSKY - PART 1 - WILLIAMS

http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/6320

Kofi Annan's greatest achievement as UN secretary general was his deft steering of the UN General Assembly to accept the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine at the 2005 World Summit.

Rather than attempting the impossible task of rewriting the UN Charter, Annan got the assembled delegates to reinterpret it. The assembled government leaders declared that the threats to international peace and security that came under the organization's remit included crimes against humanity, even when committed by a sovereign state within its borders.

Annan's successor Ban Ki Moon is a staunch supporter of the concept of R2P. The report he delivered last week, as requested in 2005, framed the discussion in a way that precluded reopening the principle. But opponents at the General Assembly and their ideological allies outside were sedulously determined to weaken R2P in practice as much as possible.

The Chinese delegate, for instance, stood the whole concept on its head by declaring that the UN must not waver from "the principles of respecting state sovereignty and non-interference of internal affairs." In contrast, Ban's report referred with more nuance to the "abiding principles of responsible sovereignty."

Debating R2P
To avert attempts to reverse the 2005 declaration R2P's proponents, not least the UN secretariat, are keeping to a tightly written script. R2P isn't the same as humanitarian intervention, they argue. Its three pillars are the responsibility of sovereign states to prevent crimes against their people, the responsibility of the international community to detect and avert such criminal situations, and the responsibility to apply varying degrees of coercion against the perpetrators from monitoring to sanctions to, if necessary, military intervention.

Proponents of R2P stress that only the UN Security Council can authorize such intervention. Ban Ki Moon's report, however, does mention the General Assembly's Uniting for Peace procedure, which the United States originally invoked to fight the Korean war in spite of the Soviet veto in the Security Council. Washington has since dismissed the procedure after the Palestinians used it to bypass the U.S. veto for Israel.

Humanitarian intervention — invoked by Hitler in the Sudetenland and Japan in Manchuria — is indeed a slippery and easily abused concept. Most recently, Tony Blair's attempt to justify the invasion of Iraq as humanitarian intervention and Moscow's attempt to invoke in Georgia the principle it denied in Kosovo show the dangers.

Of course, expediency is a global disease. Cuba, which sent Che Guevara to lead rebellions across the globe, is a determined advocate of national sovereignty. Ironically, some of the most determined upholders of state sovereignty are heirs to the Leninist tradition which, in the name of proletarian internationalism, took the Red Army variously to Warsaw, Budapest, and Hungary. One of the most vocal opponents is Hugo Chavez's government, which has hardly been reticent to interfere in the politics of the neighbors.

Chomsky's Intervention
The president of the General Assembly invited noted critic of U.S. foreign policy Noam Chomsky to address the audience on the issue of R2P. Chomsky quite rightly raised the question of why there was no intervention in East Timor or why the UN stood by as Israel attacked Lebanon and Gaza. However, he claimed that the NATO air raids on Serbia actually precipitated the worst atrocities in Kosovo. This latter claim isn't only untrue but morally unpalatable in its spurious causality, like claiming that the British air raids on Germany precipitated the Nazi gas chambers. But at least Chomsky admitted that atrocities had taken place in Kosovo, which is much farther than some of his would-be acolytes have gone.

It also begs the question: Does Chomsky want international action to stop atrocities in Gaza, the Congo, or situations like Timor, or is he only opposed to "Western" interventions? Indeed, the astute delegate from Ghana took him to task for failing to address the principle of "noninterference." The African Union's charter specifically adopted "non-indifference." Its charter includes the organization's obligation to intervene.

Chomsky is quite right to point out the core weakness of the R2P proposals, which puts the onus of decision-making on the Security Council. The permanent five members of the Security Council (P5) use their veto power to protect their friends even as they accuse others of doing likewise. China protects Sudan, North Korea, and Zimbabwe, in the latter case following in British footsteps, since Britain vetoed resolutions on Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) in times past. France covers for Morocco in Western Sahara. The United States has until now automatically covered for Israel, and Russia for Serbia. Britain and the United States were confident that they could use their vetoes to prevent their invasion of Iraq from appearing on the Security Council agenda just as Beijing ensures the exclusion of Taiwan from the UN and the issues of Tibet and the Uighurs from its agenda.

This expediency has given opponents of the R2P plenty of ammunition, even if their high-minded declarations about the sacredness of sovereignty tend to conceal an ugly, oligarchic self-interest. In effect, apologists for authoritarian sovereignty imply that they would happily let all murders go unchecked because some states get away with it. This argument boils down to saying that if the United States can do something, everybody else can as well, an anti-imperialism that ends up playing into the hands of leaders like Saddam Hussein, Slobodan Milosevic, Fidel Castro, and Kim Jong Il. Despite their disparate ideologies, these authoritarian leaders share a deep rhetorical attachment to their countries' national sovereignty combined with a cavalier disregard for the sovereignty of others, including their own citizenry.

The Problem of Implementation
While the 2005 summit overturned the principle that what governments did within their national borders was no one else's concern, it has some way to go before achieving practical implementation. In fact, despite Bolivarian bluster from Venezuela and a few others, the real problem is not the possibility of a complaisant Security Council authorizing dubiously humanitarian interventions. The problem remains the paralysis of the body in the face of humanitarian disasters. In fact, conditioning the principle on reform of the Security Council is tantamount to making it contingent on pigs flying in formation past UN headquarters.

The possibility, the probability, and even better the certainty, of retribution would surely give pause to future leaders. The R2P principle will in the end come to life because of global public opinion forcing action. For example, even China was forced to moderate its support of Sudan in the face of international public opinion.

But Ban Ki Moon, who is tougher than his mild diplomatic manner may suggest, strongly reminded delegates that the "Secretary-General has an obligation to tell the Security Council — and in this case the General Assembly as well — what it needs to know, not what it wants to hear." His report says that the Secretary General "must be the spokesperson for the vulnerable and the threatened when their Governments become their persecutors instead of their protectors or can no longer shield them from marauding armed groups," and he singles out the P5, who "bear particular responsibility because of the privileges of tenure and the veto power they have been granted under the Charter. I would urge them to refrain from employing or threatening to employ the veto in situations of manifest failure to meet obligations relating to the responsibility to protect...and to reach a mutual understanding to that effect."

Ban can do a great deal to foment that global opinion, and is giving every appearance of wanting to do so. While the U.S. press treats Ban as invisible, the rest of the world has leant him their ears. In a recent global poll, he was the second most trusted global figure after Obama. Only global public opinion can force the P5 to live up to their responsibilities — the first of which is to ensure that no regime, not even their close friends, has a guaranteed veto against international action.

The single most significant step the United States could take to disarm some of the critics is to reverse John Bolton's dubiously legal "unsigning" of the Rome Treaty on the International Criminal Court. Washington can hardly call upon the Sudanese to respect the indictment of a court that it has refused to accept itself. To ensure greater global public support for R2P — and answer some of the legitimate charges of the doctrine's critics — the United States must end its own double standards on international treaties and military intervention. Obama is more likely than any president in 40 years to make moves in that direction, so R2P has more of a future than it did a year ago.


Senior Foreign Policy In Focus analyst Ian Williams is a journalist and author. Much of his work can be found on his blog, Deadline Pundit.


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 Post subject: Re: CHOMSKY - "THE GALILEO OF TRUTH, LANGUAGE & THE MEDIA" (RWS)
PostPosted: 2009-10-29, 09:38:16 am 
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Amnesty Sabotage ?
Part 2 of 4
http://srebrenica-genocide.blogspot.com ... nesty.html

Richard W. wrote:
WILLIAMS v CHOMSKY - PART 2 - CHOMSKY

http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/6363

In a discussion of Responsibility to Protect (R2P) in Foreign Policy In Focus, Ian Williams vehemently denies my uncontroversial observation, well-known to everyone familiar with the Kosovo events, that "NATO air raids on Serbia [beginning March 24 1999] actually precipitated the worst atrocities in Kosovo." He declares that this familiar observation "isn't only untrue but morally unpalatable in its spurious causality, like claiming that the British air raids on Germany precipitated the Nazi gas chambers."

Williams doesn't explain what he regards as untrue and morally offensive, so let us review carefully what he should certainly know well, and ask what might support his charges.

There is massive evidence about Kosovo in impeccable Western sources, never questioned. That includes two compilations of documents by the State Department, detailed reports of the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe Kosovo Verification Mission monitors, a British parliamentary inquiry, reports of NATO, the UN, and more. As I wrote in the paper on R2P to which Williams refers, the results are unequivocal: The worst atrocities began as the bombing started (to be precise, there was a slight increase a few days earlier when the monitors were withdrawn, over Serbian objections, in preparation for the bombings). On March 27, NATO Commander General Wesley Clark informed the press that the vicious Serbian reaction was "entirely predictable." He added shortly after that the sharp escalation of atrocities had been "fully anticipated" and was "not in any way" a concern of the political leadership.

Clark clarified the matter further in his memoirs. He reports that on March 6, 1999, he had informed Secretary of State Madeline Albright that if NATO proceeded to bomb Serbia, "almost certainly [the Serbs] will attack the civilian population," and NATO will be able to do nothing to prevent that reaction. Correspondingly, the Milosevic indictment kept to crimes after the bombing, with a single exception, which we know could not have offended the consciences of the United States, the United Kingdom, and their supporters, as discussed in my R2P paper.

We may ask, then, what is untrue and morally offensive in my repeating uncontroversial facts that Williams doesn't happen to like. Was it untrue and morally offensive, for example, for General Clark to inform the White House and the press that the bombing would precipitate the worst atrocities — correctly, as it quickly turned out?

Considerably more remarkable even than these apologetics for NATO is what Williams says about the crimes in East Timor at the same time. These crimes were far worse than anything reported in Kosovo prior to the NATO bombing, and had a background far more grotesque than anything claimed in the Balkans. He writes that "Chomsky quite rightly raised the question of why there was no intervention in East Timor." It would have been outlandish to raise that question, and I did not do so. Since Williams favors Holocaust analogies, it would be like raising the question of why Nazis didn't intervene to stop the slaughter of Jews by local forces in the regions they occupied.

The question doesn't arise, and for a simple reason: The United States and United Kingdom had been intervening for decades, providing decisive support for atrocities, and continued to do so right through the escalation of crimes in 1999, even after the vast destruction in early September. There was no secret about the reasons. In my R2P paper I quoted National Security Council advisor Sandy Berger who, after the September atrocities, dismissed the matter by saying "I don't think anybody ever articulated a doctrine which said that we ought to intervene wherever there's a humanitarian problem" — in this case, a "problem" we are directly expediting. Britain and Australia reacted the same way. As discussed further in the same paper, there would have been no need for any form of intervention: it would have been enough for the United States, United Kingdom, and their allies to have withdrawn their decisive participation in Indonesia's crimes. That was demonstrated a few days after Berger's dismissal of the "problem" when, under strong domestic and international pressure, Clinton finally informed the Indonesian generals that the game was over and they instantly withdrew, allowing a UN peacekeeping force to enter unopposed — a step that could have been taken at any time during the 25-year horror story.

It is understandable that Williams doesn't like to look at the blood on his hands, but it cannot be so simply washed or wished away.

If Williams really is uninformed about the topics he is addressing, he can find easily accessible sources that review them in some detail, including my book A New Generation Draws the Line (Verso, 2000) and a great deal more since.

On R2P, I have nothing to add beyond what is in the R2P paper. As pointed out there, the version of R2P adopted by the 2005 UN summit affirms what had already been accepted, at most with a shift of emphasis, which is why it was so easily adopted. There is, however, a radically different version of R2P, presented by the 2001 Evans Commission, which adds a provision allowing "regional" organizations to act without Security Council authorization in their "area of jurisdiction." That provision is sharply distinct from the African Union (AU) exception, which permits AU intervention within the AU. In practice, the Evans extension refers solely to NATO, which claims an extremely broad "area of jurisdiction." The Evans version of R2P simply reinstates "the so-called 'right' of humanitarian intervention," which has always been vigorously opposed by the non-aligned countries, the traditional victims.

Much of the discussion underway evades or obscures this crucial distinction, as well as the fact, which I also discussed, that the great powers right now are adopting Berger's principle, refusing to exercise the responsibility they like to orate about, as could be done in some cases in quite straightforward ways. I also discussed the AU exception, and why it differs so radically from the OAS Charter. Judging by the irrelevant question on non-intervention he raises, Williams did not hear or read that section of my talk. I cannot, of course, take responsibility for his baseless beliefs about my views on this and other matters.


Noam Chomsky is a noted linguist, author, foreign policy expert, and contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus.



Name: Bob Petrovich Date: Aug 17, 2009
The only "morally unpalatable in its spurious causality" is Williams' Holocaust analogy. Such analogy is an act of Holocaust revisionism that goes on unpunished.

The purveyors of Kosovo myth as a just intervention resort to the equation "kosovo=holocaust" whenever an opportunity arises or whenever their myths got exposed.

This equation is very disturbing. The logic says that if A=B, then B=A.

In this case, A (their Kosovo lies) is a hidden way to imply that B is a lie also.

Shame !


Name: Ari Date: Aug 18, 2009
Not true. Serbia was already planning to comit whatever they committed after NATO started bombing - the (planned) operation was called "horseshoe". Its another issue that NATO bombing gave Serbia a "reason" and "good excuse" to accuse NATO for everything that happened afterwards. However, the Kosovo Albanians, which are the ultimate people impacted, would have much more "preferred" to suffer a little bit more and for NATO to bomb rather than continue the uncertainty. There was hope when NATO started bombing!

Name: Mendo Date: Aug 25, 2009
@ Ari

I fully agree with your comment, but thank God the West don't buy the Serbian propaganda anymore, those days are over when the west was misled by the Serbian myths and propaganda.

Name: Mike Date: Aug 25, 2009
Plan Horseshoe was a simple contingency plan. Its existence makes the Serbs no more guilty than it makes the United States for having a contingency plan to invade Canada. This isn't evidence of anything. The consequences that followed the bombing were anticipated, making American and NATO intervention hella criminal. Looking forward to Chomsky's next reply; surely he will clean up this mess. There is no precedent for one-upping Chomsky. This surely won't be it.


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 Post subject: Re: CHOMSKY - "THE GALILEO OF TRUTH, LANGUAGE & THE MEDIA" (RWS)
PostPosted: 2009-10-29, 09:42:18 am 
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Amnesty Sabotage ?
Part 3 of 4
http://srebrenica-genocide.blogspot.com ... nesty.html


[/i]
Richard W. wrote:
WILLIAMS v CHOMSKY - PART 3 - WILLIAMS

http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/6376

I am afraid that simply because Noam Chomsky makes an ex cathedra observation does not make it "uncontroversial" — not even when he hyperbolically accuses me of having "blood on my hands." He still defends his statement that "NATO air raids on Serbia [beginning March 24, 1999] actually precipitated the worst atrocities in Kosovo," and is surprised that I find this untrue — let alone morally unpalatable.

One hesitates to teach logic, let alone linguistics, to the distinguished professor, but his use of the world "precipitate" shifts the blame for the massacres and mass deportations that he admits took place from the actual perpetrators to those who were trying to stop them. (Incidentally, at the time Bogdan Denitch and I called for intervention but also condemned the form of intervention that President Clinton chose — high-level bombing.)

One can certainly accuse the West of neglecting the plight of the Kosovars, but it was Milosevic and his regime that deprived the Kosovars of their rights and then began to kill and deport them. It was that regime that had recently killed up to 8,000 Bosnians at Srebrenica, whose dismembered and reburied bodies are still being found. There was no NATO bombing to blame for that rather shameful inaction.

In fact, faced with that cold-blooded massacre, NATO leaders had every reason to fear the worst in Kosovo.

I would recommend that Chomsky read the judgment of the UN war crimes tribunal, after it had considered the evidence of 113 witnesses for the prosecution and 118 for the defense, not to mention tens of thousands of pages of documents submitted by both sides. It found five Serb officials guilty of the "criminal enterprise" that he attributes to NATO. It concludes that "the direct testimony from many witnesses demonstrates that the Kosovo Albanian population was fleeing from the actions of the forces of the FRY [Federal Republic of Yugoslavia] and Serbia, rather than the NATO bombing and the KLA."

For a flourish that should excite some indignation, the report added that "there is no doubt that a clandestine operation consisting of exhuming over 700 bodies originally buried in Kosovo and transferring them to Serbia proper took place during the NATO bombing" and adds that the "great majority of the corpses moved were victims of crime and civilians, including women and children."

In finding the Serbian officials guilty, the tribunal noted that "the NATO bombing provided an opportunity to the members of the joint criminal enterprise — an opportunity for which they had been waiting and for which they had prepared by moving additional forces to Kosovo and by the arming and disarming process described above — to deal a heavy blow to the KLA and to displace, both within and without Kosovo, enough Kosovo Albanians to change the ethnic balance. And now this could all be done with plausible deniability because it could be blamed not only upon the KLA, but upon NATO as well [italics mine]." The blame-shifting certainly seems to have worked with Chomsky, but the judges looked at the mass of evidence and decided to the contrary.

Chomsky betrays a persistent Manichaean worldview in which the United States is always the source of evil in the world. Even with that in mind he would surely like to reconsider his implied comparison of the United States with Nazis. ("It would be like raising the question of why Nazis didn't intervene to stop the slaughter of Jews by local forces in the regions they occupied.")

The United States is often, but not always wrong, and its enemies are sometimes, but not always right. The United States was certainly wrong in East Timor, and indeed in the near contemporary situation in Western Sahara, and I have been reporting on those injustices for many decades. Along with the other members of the Security Council the United States had a clear duty to intervene to assert international law. In the absence of effective international (i.e., U.S.) intervention, the Indonesian military would have been every bit as brutal and aggressive.

We could deplore this intervention as much as we like, but I fail to see what was going to stop Indonesia's brutality otherwise. Indeed, Chomsky points out that it was Clinton's intervention that persuaded the Indonesian general's that the game was up in East Timor. Yes it was long overdue, but it was an American intervention, which deserves some grudging credit. Also, by delegating U.S. forces to the UN on the Macedonian border, the United States successfully prevented yet another former Yugoslav republic being sucked into Milosevic's bloodstained mire. There are hundreds of thousands of dead Rwandans who would have welcomed a U.S. intervention there.

However, Chomsky takes an absolutist position on intervention in principle, which would have had him picketing the Normandy beaches to stop the war against German workers.

The United States is culpable in many ways over East Timor, but that should not detract from the primary role of the Indonesian government and military. Nor should any person of ethics try to shield the Milosevic regime from its unique culpability for events in Srebrenica and Kosovo. Chomsky's quasi-theological conception of the United States as the supreme evil power tends to exonerate the less evil powers, turning Ariel Sharon, the Indonesian generals, Milosevic, and the others into mere secondary agents. Meanwhile, condemning in principle any effective action to stop these malign actors actually lends them aid and comfort — while doing nothing for their victims.


Senior Foreign Policy In Focus analyst Ian Williams is a journalist and author. Much of his work can be found on his blog, Deadline Pundit.




Name: Mano Zezez Date: Aug 22, 2009
You start by disputing that "NATO air raids on Serbia actually precipitated the worst atrocities in Kosovo" but go on to argue only that the atrocities were carried out by "Serb officials" and that "the NATO bombing provided an opportunity" to carry out these crimes, "an opportunity for which they had been waiting".

Chomsky agrees on both of these points. His argument is precisely as you and the UN war crimes tribunal have outlined: that the NATO bombing provided an opportunity for those atrocities to be carried out. Had the bombing not occurred, that opportunity would not have arisen. That means it played a causal role in making matters worse, which is a good argument against intervention, especially since this outcome was anticipated "by the NATO command and the White House" (as Chomsky notes). This point is not, and as far as I know was never intended to be a reason to attribute a greater level of blame to NATO forces than to the Serbian officials who carried out the atrocities.

On the issue of East Timor, you have grossly misrepresented Chomsky and the truth with respect to US intervention when you said "Chomsky points out that it was Clinton's intervention that persuaded the Indonesian general's that the game was up in East Timor. Yes it was long overdue, but it was an American intervention, which deserves some grudging credit."

The point you seem to have completely missed is that what you have referred to as US 'intervention' involved ending it's military support for the Suharto regime in Indonesia. To quote Chomsky on the subject from his speech on Responsibility To Protect (R2P), delivered to the UN in July 2009:

"To end the atrocities in this case would not have required bombing, or sanctions, or indeed any act beyond withdrawal of participation. That was demonstrated ... when, under strong domestic and international pressure, Clinton formally ended US participation. The invaders immediately withdrew, and a UN peacekeeping force was able to enter facing no army. That could have been done any time in the preceding quarter-century. Astonishingly, this horrendous story was soon reinterpreted as vindication of R2P, a reaction so shameful that words fail."


Name: John Williamson Date: Aug 24, 2009
Well-researched article and you make your points forcefully. See "The Anti-Chomsky Reader" for much more along these lines. And please don't give the Chompster too much credit in linguistics. None of his many theories have been able to shed much light on how language works.

Name: Daniel Date: Aug 25, 2009
I don't see any difference between Mr. Noam Chomsky and his associate Edward S. Herman. Both of these gentlemen deny Srebrenica genocide.

"By seeking to eliminate a part of the Bosnian Muslims, the Bosnian Serb forces committed genocide. They targeted for extinction the forty thousand Bosnian Muslims living in Srebrenica... " - Judge Theodor Meron [Polish-American Jew] http://www.icty.org/sid/8409

From 1992-95 Serbs constantly attacked Bosnian Muslim villages and towns around Srebrenica and burned alive scores of Bosniak women and children (view photos http://srebrenica-genocide.blogspot.com ... ve-by.html ).

Contrary to Chomsky/Herman claims, Serbs never demilitarized around Srebrenica. They had repeatedly violated the 1993 demilitarization agreement.

In several days of July 1995, Srebrenica genocide resulted in the ethnic cleansing of 30,000 and summary executions of more than 8,000 Bosniaks (DNA confirmed by the ICMP http://srebrenica-genocide.blogspot.com ... enica.html).


Name: Zlatko Beretovac Date: Aug 25, 2009
I find this response confused and confusing, misrepresenting its target as if the author had read nothing of Chomsky's work on the 1999 Kosovo conflict, apart from the (seriously misread) quotations provided.

You appear to confuse Chomsky's emphasis on US responsibility with a blinkered worldview, and his contextualisation of the Serbian army's guilt with exculpation. He has said repeatedly that Milosevic's regime committed atrocities, and has harped on virtually everywhere about the cultural and political virtues of life in the US - the phrase "most free society on earth" recurs in his writing to the point of eye-rolling familiarity.

The point he makes in writing about the Kosovo conflict is that the manichean framing of the issue in the media leads to both a structural misunderstanding of the issue and to outcomes which have only a glancing resemblance to the announced purpose of a particular intervention, in this case the bombing of Kosovo and Serbia.

The record of the Rambouillet negotiations (which included last-minute US demands known to be unacceptable, added after the Serbian parliament had agreed to allow an international force in) demonstrates at the very least that NATO and the US preferred the bombing option, and casts doubt upon the official story that this was a humanitarian intervention.

Other acts bore out a characterisation of NATO motives as revolving around asserting its credible threat by jumping into a conflict partly of its own creation, as Chomsky and others noted at the time.

The timing of the bombing was a crucial event in that, Chomsky argues, it works as a paradigm of media distortion. The Serbian army reacted to the announcement of the bombing, but news media presented the massive acceleration of expulsions and violence as provoking the bombing and justifying it. Surely this contributes to an important controversy about strategy, motives and consequences. The timing of the bombing certainly permits Chomsky's analysis of it as "precipitating" the outrages. Your reading of this as excusing the Serb military actions seems to be a misreading of Chomsky's attempt to distinguish between different agents and their respective roles.

You seem to be labouring under the illusion that Chomsky was trying to excuse or minimise atrocities carried out by the Serbs, as implicit in your use of the verb "admit":

the massacres and mass deportations that he admits took place

The insinuation is that he would rather think they hadn't happened, that he has an investment in one side being the good guys. I am assuming you are arguing in good faith and not deliberately distorting Chomsky's work, which is really not concerned with scoring points but with a sincere attempt to analyse US responsibility.

Chomsky has repeatedly said his work is a corrective, that the crimes of "official enemies" are already described in detail in the works of others, and that his role is to provide a reading of US foreign policy and the role of systematically distorted information in the pursuit of rational (but brutal) superpower goals.

He has never said that the US is the supreme evil; rather, US government and business elites should be rationally analysed like any other group, and one should not accept the propaganda of moral goals when actions and consequences contradict such claims.

His position on guilt is perhaps the point you misunderstand; he has often contended that US citizens who have not done what they could to understand and oppose their government's unjust policies (not the just ones, of which he "admits" there are some representatives) participate in a kind of civic guilt.

I imagine that you could argue against this moral charge quite convincingly, but the inaccurate and misleading analysis of Chomsky as a manichean absolutist undermines your case and irrelevantly confounds one thing with another.


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 Post subject: Re: CHOMSKY - "THE GALILEO OF TRUTH, LANGUAGE & THE MEDIA" (RWS)
PostPosted: 2009-10-29, 09:46:08 am 
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Amnesty Sabotage ?
Part 4 of 4 (Final)
http://srebrenica-genocide.blogspot.com ... nesty.html

Richard W. wrote:
WILLIAMS v CHOMSKY - PART 4 - CHOMSKY

http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/6394

Ian Williams angrily denied that "NATO air raids on Serbia [beginning March 24 1999] actually precipitated the worst atrocities in Kosovo" and charged that it is deeply immoral for me to say so, "like claiming that the British air raids on Germany precipitated the Nazi gas chambers."

In response, I asked the obvious question: Why does he issue this quite serious charge against NATO Commander General Wesley Clark and the White House, comparing them to Nazi apologists? The question is quite apt. I quoted Clark's statement, made to the press a few days after the bombing began, that Serbian atrocities in reaction to the bombing were "entirely predictable," "fully anticipated," and "not in any way a concern of the political leadership"; and several weeks earlier to the White House, that if NATO attacked, "almost certainly [Serbia] will attack the civilian population" and NATO will be able to do nothing about it. Thus Clark very explicitly predicted, and the White House recognized, that NATO bombing would precipitate Serbian atrocities — exactly what happened, as the voluminous Western record demonstrates.

In responding, Williams ignores all of this completely and instead haughtily affirms exactly what I wrote: that the Serbian crimes followed the bombing. Throughout, he pretends not to understand the difference between "perpetrate" and "precipitate" (my accurate paraphrase of Clark's warning). He writes that the bombing provided "an opportunity" for which Milosevic had been waiting. Perhaps true, but if so that clearly reinforces the conclusion of General Clark and the White House that the NATO bombing would precipitate these crimes, as it did. (I'll put it aside here because it is irrelevant, but there is a good deal more to say about the nature and timing of the Serbian buildup to which he refers, matters I've reviewed elsewhere, relying on the Western records). He writes further that NATO "had every reason to fear the worst in Kosovo," because of what had happened in Bosnia. It is quite true that NATO had "every reason to fear" the atrocities it regarded as an "entirely predictable" consequence of its bombing — a small fact that Williams omits.

I can only interpret the bluster and evasions as his way of admitting that his charges are groundless, mere slander, and that he recognizes, at some level, his own complicity.

Much more shocking are Williams' continued efforts to deny U.S.-UK crimes in East Timor. His reference to Bosnia as a justification for bombing Serbia illustrates again the depth of his commitment to denial of Western crimes. As I wrote, the crimes in East Timor — carried out with decisive U.S.-UK support throughout — were vastly greater than anything charged in Bosnia, coming as close to authentic genocide as anything in the modern period. If he means what he is saying, Williams should have been calling for the bombing of Jakarta, Washington, and London as the crimes in East Timor escalated again in 1999, to a level far beyond Kosovo before the NATO bombing, always with firm U.S.-UK support. And as I also pointed out in the article to which Williams is responding, East Timor is only one of many such cases as NATO prepared to bomb Serbia, facts that tell us a lot about the orgy of self-congratulation that accompanied the bombing, part of the hypocrisy about R2P that continues dramatically to the present, one of the topics of the paper of mine to which Williams responds in his curious way.

Williams writes that the United States was "certainly wrong" in failing to intervene to prevent the horrendous Indonesian crimes. That has been the standard line of apologists: We "looked away" instead of intervening to stop the crimes. But as Williams and others who resort to this evasion know very well, the United States and United Kingdom most definitely did not fail to intervene during the quarter-century of Indonesian aggression and atrocities. Rather, they did intervene, and massively: By providing decisive support for these crimes, continuing to do so as the crimes accelerated again in 1999, even after the destruction of Dili in September, which elicited from Clinton's National Security Adviser Sandy Berger the statement that "I don't think anybody ever articulated a doctrine which said that we ought to intervene wherever there's a humanitarian problem" — so therefore the United States and United Kingdom continued their crucial participation.

Even more remarkably, Williams writes that "Chomsky points out that it was Clinton's intervention that persuaded the Indonesian generals that the game was up in East Timor. Yes it was long overdue, but it was an American intervention, which deserves some grudging credit."

The intervention Williams praises was Clinton's termination of U.S. participation in the aggression and atrocities. By Williams' logic, he should praise Russia for intervening in Afghanistan by withdrawing its troops in 1989. It would be instructive to see if even the most extreme Communist Party loyalist stooped to that.

The nature of his apologetics becomes even clearer when we consider the statement of mine to which he is responding:

To end the atrocities in [East Timor] would not have required bombing, or sanctions, or indeed any act beyond withdrawal of participation. That was demonstrated shortly after Berger's reaffirmation of Western policy, when, under strong domestic and international pressure, Clinton formally ended US participation. The invaders immediately withdrew, and a UN peacekeeping force was able to enter facing no army. That could have been done any time in the preceding quarter-century. Astonishingly, this horrendous story was soon reinterpreted as vindication of R2P, a reaction so shameful that words fail.

Williams' reiteration of this shameful stance leaves one truly speechless.

In responding to Williams' praise for Clinton's "intervention," I wrote: "Since Williams favors Holocaust analogies, it would be like raising the question why the Nazis did not intervene to stop the slaughter of Jews by local forces in the regions they occupied." Williams claims falsely that I was implying a comparison of the United States to the Nazis (the reference, explicitly, is to his stance), and omits the phrase in boldface, which shows that I was borrowing the resort to Nazi analogies from him — and I agree with him that his resort to this practice is objectionable. The analogy referring to his stance is, however, quite accurate, unlike his slanderous Holocaust analogy, which was flatly and unequivocally false.

The rest is an effort to blow smoke that merits no comment. Along with his evasion of everything relevant, it merely underscores the fact that, as I wrote, the blood on his hands is not easy to wish or wash away.


Noam Chomsky is a noted linguist, author, foreign policy expert, and contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus.


ANOTHER VERSION

In FPIF, Aug. 13, Ian Williams angrily denied that “NATO air raids on Serbia [beginning March 24 1999] actually precipitated the worst atrocities in Kosovo” and charged that it is deeply immoral for me to say so, “like claiming that the British air raids on Germany precipitated the Nazi gas chambers.”

In response (Aug. 19), I asked the obvious question: Why does he issue this quite serious charge against NATO Commander General Wesley Clark and the White House, comparing them to Nazi apologists? The question is quite apt. I quoted Clark’s statement to the press a few days after the bombing began that Serbian atrocities in reaction to the bombing were “entirely predictable,” “fully anticipated,” and “not in any way a concern of the political leadership”; and several weeks earlier, to the White House, that if NATO attacked, “almost certainly [Serbia] will attack the civilian population” and NATO will be able to do nothing about it. Thus Clark very explicitly predicted, and the White House recognized, that NATO bombing would precipitate Serbian atrocities – exactly what happened, as the voluminous Western record demonstrates.

Responding (Aug. 20), Williams ignores all of this completely, and instead haughtily affirms exactly what I wrote: that the Serbian crimes followed the bombing. Throughout, he pretends not to understand the difference between “perpetrate” and “precipitate” (my accurate paraphrase of Clark’s warning). He writes that the bombing provided “an opportunity” for which Milosevic had been waiting. Perhaps true, but if so that clearly reinforces the conclusion of General Clark and the White House that the NATO bombing would precipitate these crimes, as it did (I’ll put it aside here because it is irrelevant, but there is a good deal more to say about the nature and timing of the Serbian build-up to which he refers, matters I’ve reviewed elsewhere, relying on the Western records). He writes further that NATO “had every reason to fear the worst in Kosovo,” because of what had happened in Bosnia. It is quite true that NATO had “every reason to fear” the atrocities that it regarded as an “entirely predictable” consequence of its bombing – a small fact that Williams omits.

I can only interpret the bluster and evasions as his way of admitting that his charges are groundless, mere slander, and that he recognizes, at some level, his own complicity.

Much more shocking are Williams’s continued efforts to deny US-UK crimes in East Timor. His reference to Bosnia as a justification for bombing Serbia illustrates again the depth of his commitment to denial of Western crimes. As I wrote, the crimes in East Timor -- carried out with decisive US-UK support throughout -- were vastly greater than anything charged in Bosnia, coming as close to authentic genocide as anything in the modern period. If he means what he is saying, Williams should have been calling for bombing of Jakarta, Washington, and London as the crimes in East Timor escalated again in 1999, to a level far beyond Kosovo before the NATO bombing, always with firm US-UK support. And as I also pointed out in the article to which Williams is responding, East Timor is only one of many such cases as NATO prepared to bomb Serbia, facts that tell us a lot about the orgy of self-congratulation that accompanied the bombing, part of the hypocrisy about R2P that continues dramatically to the present, one of the topics of the paper of mine to which Williams responds in his curious way.

Williams writes that the US was “certainly wrong” in failing to intervene to prevent the horrendous Indonesian crimes. That has been the standard line of apologists: we “looked away” instead of intervening to stop the crimes. But as Williams and others who resort to this evasion know very well, the US-UK most definitely did not fail to intervene during the quarter-century of Indonesian aggression and atrocities. Rather, they did intervene, and massively: by providing decisive support for these crimes, continuing to do so as the crimes accelerated again in 1999, even after the destruction of Dili in September, which elicited from Clinton’s National Security Adviser Sandy Berger the statement that “I don’t think anybody ever articulated a doctrine which said that we ought to intervene wherever there’s a humanitarian problem” – so therefore the US-UK continued their crucial participation.

Even more remarkably, Williams writes that “Chomsky points out that it was Clinton’s intervention that persuaded the Indonesian generals that the game was up in East Timor. Yes it was long overdue, but it was an American intervention, which deserves some grudging credit.”

The intervention Williams praises was Clinton’s termination of US participation in the aggression and atrocities. By Williams’s logic, he should praise Russia for intervening in Afghanistan by withdrawing its troops in 1989. It would be instructive to see if even the most extreme CP loyalist stooped to that.

The nature of his apologetics becomes even more clear when we consider the statement of mine to which he is responding:

To end the atrocities in [East Timor] would not have required bombing, or sanctions, or indeed any act beyond withdrawal of participation. That was demonstrated shortly after Berger’s reaffirmation of Western policy, when, under strong domestic and international pressure, Clinton formally ended US participation. The invaders immediately withdrew, and a UN peacekeeping force was able to enter facing no army. That could have been done any time in the preceding quarter-century. Astonishingly, this horrendous story was soon reinterpreted as vindication of R2P, a reaction so shameful that words fail.

Williams’s reiteration of this shameful stance leaves one truly speechless.

In responding to Williams’s praise for Clinton’s “intervention,” I wrote: “Since Williams favors Holocaust analogies, it would be like raising the question why the Nazis did not intervene to stop the slaughter of Jews by local forces in the regions they occupied.” Williams claims falsely that I was implying a comparison of the US to the Nazis (the reference, explicitly, is to his stance), and omits the phrase in boldface, which shows that I was borrowing the resort to Nazi analogies from him – and I agree with him that his resort to this practice is objectionable. The analogy referring to his stance is, however, quite accurate, unlike his slanderous Holocaust analogy, which was flatly and unequivocally false.

The rest is an effort to blow smoke that merits no comment. Along with his evasion of everything relevant, it merely underscores the fact that, as I wrote, the blood on his hands is not easy to wish or wash away.



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 Post subject: Re: CHOMSKY - "THE GALILEO OF POWER, LANGUAGE & POLITICS"
PostPosted: 2009-10-29, 11:00:17 am 
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Joined: 2007-10-31, 11:00:34 am
Posts: 6758
Anonymous Srebrenica Genocide Blog Editor said...
http://srebrenica-genocide.blogspot.com ... nesty.html

Some time ago I had an E-mail exchange with Chomsky in which he denied the Srebrenica genocide without even considering what I had to say. He dismissed my factual responses to his genocide denial by saying that I am just "blowing the wind." Chomsky is also on record for denying his own denial.

Chomsky is a man who has no character, no moral values, no appreciation for proven historical facts, and a man who is not intelligent, but rather cleverly manipulative. His rhetoric appeals to lower quality audience, those belonging to various groups of genocide deniers, war crimes apologists, conspiracy theorists, anti-western nutcases, and similar types of filth that poison this world.

http://www.paulbogdanor.com/chomskyhoax.html


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