In the fight between Good and Evil, it is always the people who
contribute with their dead. The terrorists have killed workers from
fifty countries, in New York and in Washington, in the name of Good
against Evil. And, in the name of Good against Evil, Bush is vowing
vengeance: "We are going to eliminate Evil from this world," he
announces.
Eliminate Evil? What would happen to Good without Evil? It is not
only the religious fanatics who need enemies in order to justify
their madness. The arms industry and the huge military apparatus
of the United States also need enemies in order to justify their
existence. Good and evil, evil and good: the actors change masks,
heroes become monsters, and the monsters heroes, as those writing
the drama demand.
There is nothing new about that. The German scientist Werner von
Braun was evil when he invented the V-2 rockets which Hitler fired
on London, but he became good the day he put his talent at the service
of the United States. Stalin was good during the Second World War
and evil later, when he went on to lead the Evil Empire. During
the Cold War years, John Steinbeck wrote: "Perhaps the entire world
needs Russians. I would bet that they need Russians in Russia also.
Perhaps they call them Americans." Later the Russians became good.
Now Putin is also saying: "Evil must be punished."
Saddam Hussein was good, and the chemical weapons he used against
the Iranians and the Kurds were good. Later he became evil. He was
called Satan Hussein when the United States - who had invaded Panama
- invaded Iraq because Iraq had invaded Kuwait. Bush the Father
was in charge of this war against Evil. With the humanitarian and
compassionate spirit which characterizes his family, he killed more
than one hundred thousand Iraqis, most of them civilians.
Satan Hussein is still what he was, but this number one enemy of
humanity has fallen to the category of number two. The scourge of
the world is now called Osama Bin Laden. The Central Intelligence
Agency taught him everything he knows about terrorism: Bin Laden,
loved and armed by the United States government, was one of the
main "freedom fighters" against communism in Afghanistan. Bush the
Father was Vice President when President Reagan said that these
heroes were "the moral equivalent of the Founding Fathers of America."
Hollywood was in agreement with the White House. It was during those
times that Rambo 3 was filmed: the Afghan Muslims were the good
guys. Now they are the most evil of evil, in Bush the Son's times,
thirteen years later.
Henry Kissinger was one of the first to react to the recent tragedy.
"Those who lend support, financing and encouragement to them are
as guilty as the terrorists," he sentenced, with words which President
Bush would repeat a few hours later.
If that is so, then one would have to begin by bombing Kissinger.
He would be found to be guilty of many more crimes than Bin Laden,
and all the terrorists in the world, have committed. And in many
more countries: acting in the service of various United States governments,
he lent "support, financing and encouragement" to State terror in
Indonesia, Cambodia, Cyprus, Iran, South Africa, Bangladesh, and
in the South American countries which suffered from the dirty war
of the Condor Plan.
On September 11, 1973, exactly 28 years before today's fires, the
presidential palace in Chile was burning. Kissinger had anticipated
Salvador Allende's epitaph - and that of Chilean democracy - when
he commented on the election results: "There's no reason for us
to have to accept a country's becoming Marxist because of the irresponsibility
of its people."
Contempt for popular will is one of the many concurrences between
State terrorism and private terrorism. To give just one example,
the ETA, which kills people in the name of the independence of the
Basque Country, said, through one of its spokespersons: "Rights
have nothing to do with majorities and minorities." Home grown terrorism
and high level technology terrorism are very much alike, that of
the religious fundamentalists and that of market fundamentalists,
that of the desperate and that of the powerful, that of madmen on
the loose and that of uniformed professionals. All of them share
the same contempt for human life: the assassins of the five thousand
citizens crushed under the rubble of the Twin Towers, which collapsed
like castles built on sand, and the assassins of the two hundred
thousand Guatemalans, mostly indigenous, who have been exterminated
without TV or the newspapers of the world ever paying the slightest
bit of attention. They, the Guatemalans, were not sacrificed by
any Muslim fanatic, but by terrorist soldiers who received "support,
financing and encouragement" from successive United States governments.
All of those who are in love with death also share in their obsession
with reducing social, cultural and national conflicts to military
terms. In the name of Good against Evil, in the name of the One
Truth, they all resolve everything by killing first and asking questions
later. And in that way they end up feeding the enemy they are fighting.
It was the atrocities of the Shining Path which, in large measure,
provided a breeding ground for President Fujimori, who, with considerable
popular support, imposed a regime of terror and sold Peru for the
price of a banana. It was the atrocities of the United States in
the Middle East which, in large measure, have provided a breeding
ground for the Holy War of terrorism of Allah.
Even though the leader of Civilization is now urging a new Crusade,
Allah is innocent of the crimes which are being committed in his
name. At the end of the day, God did not order the nazi Holocaust
against Jehovah's faithful, and it was not Jehovah who dictated
the killings of Sabra and Chatila, nor who ordered the Palestinians
to be expelled from their lands. Are not Jehovah, Allah and God
three names for one same divinity?
A tragedy of misunderstandings: it is no longer known who is who.
The smoke from the explosions forms part of a much more enormous
smokescreen which is preventing us from seeing. From vengeance to
vengeance, terrorism is forcing us to walk to the grave. I am looking
at a recently published photograph: on a wall in New York some hand
had written: "An eye for an eye leaves the world blind."
The spiral of violence engenders violence, and also confusion: sorrow,
fear, intolerance, hate, madness. In Porto Alegre, Brazil, early
this year, the Algerian Ahmed Ben Bella warned: "This system, which
has already maddened cows, is driving the people mad." And the madmen,
mad with hate, are acting in the same way as the powers which generate
them.
A three year old child, called Luca, recently commented: "The world
doesn't know where its house is." He was looking at a map. He could
have been looking at a news program.
* Open Veins of Latin America
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