Freedom Daily
Almost a decade after the 9/11 attacks, the war on terrorism
continues chugging along. Despite the trillions of dollars that the U.S. government has spent supposedly in response
to 9/11, few people have raised questions about the fundamental definition of
what the United States
is fighting. The U.S.
government’s definition of terrorism almost guarantees that the so-called war
on terrorism will be a failure — and will last forever.
Federal agencies have an array of definitions for
“terrorism”:
- The Defense Department defined terrorism as “the unlawful use or threatened use of force or violence by a revolutionary organization against individuals or property, with the intention of coercing or intimidating governments or societies, often for political or ideological purposes.”
- The Federal Bureau of Investigation defined terrorism as “the unlawful use of force or violence against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a government, the civilian population, or any segment thereof, in furtherance of political or social objectives.”
- The State Department defined terrorism as “the use or threat of the use of force for political purposes in violation of domestic or international law.”
When the UN General Assembly tried to enact a convention to
advance the international war on terrorism in 2002, the effort was paralyzed by
conflicts over how to define terrorism. “The United States, backed by most
European nations, says the convention should not apply to any acts of violence
against civilians committed by the military forces of recognized states — a
provision fought by Arab states and others that insist that ‘state terrorism’
should also be penalized,” the Los Angeles Times reported on
April 16, 2002.
Double standard
The United States ’s
official definition of terrorism — that terrorism is a private, not a
governmental, crime — drives the U.S.
government’s perception of the Middle East
conflict. The New York Times noted on April 7, 2002, “Israel , as
American officials often note, is a democracy accountable to the norms of
international law. The practical effect is that only the Palestinians, who lack
a state, are generally labeled terrorists.”
Former President Bill Clinton fully embraced this absurd
double standard when he declared in 2009 that “‘terror’ means killing and
robbery and coercion by people who do not have state authority and go beyond
national borders.” That is the same standard tactic invoked by tyrants and
authoritarian regimes throughout history. A few years ago, after the Ethiopian government
brutalized protesters, Ethiopian Minister of Information Bereket Simon warned,
“Anyone who incites violence, other than those elected, will have to face the
law.”
The same double standard has long permeated the thinking of
the American ruling class. In the days after the 1995 Oklahoma
City bombing, the Clinton
administration launched a full-court press to whitewash federal action two
years earlier at Waco .
When a journalist stated in April 1995 on CNN that he considered the 1993
federal attack on the Branch Davidians a terrorist act, Labor Secretary Robert
Reich rushed to distinguish between what the feds did at Waco and the bombing
at Oklahoma City: “We are talking about acts of violence that are not
sanctioned by the government — that are not official.” Reich sounded as if the
government has a moral magic wand that can automatically absolve
law-enforcement officials of any abuse, regardless of how many dead babies are
left when the smoke clears. Atrocities committed by the government cannot really
be considered to be atrocities — instead, they are merely policy errors — or,
more accurately, public-relations mistakes.
The notion that “states cannot be terrorists” extends back
at least to the early 20th century. The League of Nations in 1937 defined terrorism
as “criminal acts directed against a State and intended or calculated to create
a state of terror in the minds of particular persons or the general public.”
The League’s efforts to build an international consensus against private
terrorists ended after Hitler’s seizure of Czechoslovakia
and invasion of Poland .
Unfortunately, the U.S. government is continually
creating new definitions of terrorism in order to more easily prosecute those
it disfavors. The USA PATRIOT Act created the new crime of “domestic
terrorism,” defined as violent or threatening private actions intended “to
influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion.” That
definition reaches far beyond the box-cutter crowd. It could take only a few
scuffles at a rally to transform a protest group into a terrorist entity. It
could allow the government to drop the hammer on environmental extremists (even
those not spiking trees), anti-trade fanatics (even those not trashing
Starbucks), and anti-abortion protesters (even those not attacking doctors). If
the violence at a rally is committed by a government agent provocateur — as
happened at some 1960s anti-war protests — the government could still treat all
the group’s members as terrorists. Likewise, anyone who donates to an organization
that becomes classified as a terrorist entity — be it Greenpeace, the Gun
Owners of America, or Operation Rescue — could face long prison terms.
The PATRIOT Act also included a different definition of
terrorism for aliens than for U.S.
citizens. Aliens are now considered guilty of terrorism if they are convicted
of “the use of any explosive, firearm, or other weapon or dangerous device
(other than for mere personal monetary gain), with intent to endanger, directly
or indirectly, the safety of one or more individuals or to cause substantial
damage to property.” As Micah Herzog noted in the Georgetown
Immigration Law Journal, “The parenthetical frees common thieves from
classification as a terrorist, but the angry boyfriend who intentionally harms
his former girlfriend’s car is now in a different class of crime.”
The denunciation of terrorism is often an exercise in
demonology — converting a semantic distinction into a pretext for denying the
nature of government or the reality of oppression. One grave danger in letting
politicians define evil is that they will exempt their own crimes from any
onus.
Terrorists cannot compete with governments when it comes to
persistently wreaking mass carnage. By raising terrorist attacks to the
pinnacle of political evil, the war on terrorism implicitly sanctifies whatever
tactics governments use in the name of repressing terrorism. Exaggerating the
risk from terrorists puts people at greater risk of destruction from their
political overlords. Unleashing governments to fight terrorists is like opening
the lion cages at the zoo in the hope that the lions will devour some pesky
squirrels. If the squirrels have rabies, they need to be exterminated. But
there are better ways to suppress such threats.
“Under color of law”
Government is the only institution that has the privilege of
investigating and judging its own killings. It is routine for governments to
block external or independent investigations of its actions. Government
killings are almost never considered to be murders because government officials
have the final word in labeling a shooting as accidental or justified. Even
when a government “self-investigation” report is openly derided as a
“whitewash” — as the New York Times characterized the first
Justice Department report on Waco
— the report’s conclusions about the government’s innocence are still repeated
far and wide.
Intentions are the great exonerator of government action.
Governments almost always conclude that the motives of their own agents are
exculpable, regardless of how many people they killed. But a focus on motive as
the prime determinant of the morality of action is inherently flawed when
judging state actions because politicians and governments routinely
misrepresent their motives. It is far easier to count the dead than to
determine the thoughts in the minds of the killers.
What a government says to justify its killing is also
important. “Under color of law” is a phrase that magically transforms senseless
violence into public service. All that is necessary for a government killing to
become blameless is for the government to announce — preferably before the
funeral or memorial service — that the killing was accidental. For many
statists, the only “wrongful government killing” occurs when a government agent
shoots someone different from the person he was aiming at.
Any action taken by private citizens that would be
considered terrorism should also be considered terrorism if taken by government
agents. If a government persistently slaughters innocent civilians, then it is
morally equivalent to evil gangs that blow up buses and airplanes. A consistent
definition of terrorism will not end the terrorist threat or suddenly make
al-Qaeda operatives around the world turn themselves in and plead for mercy.
Nor will it lessen the grief of the survivors and relatives of those slain by
senseless violence. But it will help citizens better understand the danger of
unleashing government agents to scourge terrorists — and anyone else
politicians or bureaucrats decide needs whacking.
It is unlikely that either Congress or federal agencies will
rush to adopt this proposed definition of terrorism. Instead, citizens will be
at risk from rulers who continually create new definitions to sanctify their
own power and delegitimize any resistance. Sixteen years ago, FBI Director
Louis Freeh announced, “Terrorism is the work of people and groups seeking to
further their causes through fear and intimidation.” If that definition had
been accepted, then much of the fear-mongering out of Washington since 9/11 would itself have been
labeled a terrorist offense.
James Bovard is the author of Attention Deficit Democracy [2006] as well asThe Bush Betrayal [2004], Lost Rights [1994] and Terrorism and Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice and Peace to
Rid the World of Evil (Palgrave-Macmillan, September 2003) and
serves as a policy advisor for The Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
This article originally appeared in the June 2011 edition
of Freedom Daily.Subscribe to the
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