April 14, 2013 "Information Clearing House" - Almost 30 years ago, cultural critic Neil Postman argued in Amusing Ourselves to Death that television’s gradual replacement of the printing press has created a dumbed-down culture driven by mindless entertainment. In this context, Postman claimed that Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World correctly foresaw our dystopian future, as opposed to George Orwell’s 1984.
Contrary
to Postman’s critique, however, the principles of Newspeak and
Doublethink dominate modern political discourse. Their
widespread use is a testament to Orwell’s profound insight into
how language can be manipulated to restrict human thought.
WAR IS PEACE
Formulating the Language of Perpetual War
– From AUMF to “Associates of Associates.”
The
semantic deception began shortly after September 11, 2001. “Our
war on terror begins with al Qaeda,” Bush said in his State of
the Union address, “but it does not end there. It will
not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been
found, stopped and defeated (emphasis added).”
The
defining feature of this rhetoric is that it declares war on a
particular method of violence used by
disaffected states or groups. In fact, the phrase “war on
terror” functions as what semiotics calls a
floating signifier,
a term devoid of any real meaning and thus open to any
interpretation.
Terrorism
has no shape, mass, or boundary; it is an abstraction, a
tactic of asymmetrical warfare used to achieve
political goals. Imagine if Franklin D. Roosevelt had declared
“war on surprise attacks” in the wake Pearl Harbor, or if Lyndon
Johnson had vowed to defeat guerrilla warfare in Vietnam. This
linguistic construct, therefore, ensures an open-ended conflict
with no conceivable end.
Unperturbed by this paradox, British Prime Minister
Tony Blair
dutifully reiterated that, "The fact is we are at war with
terrorism.” But the bombing sorties over Afghanistan had barely
begun when the label morphed into “The Long War,” and then the
“decisive ideological struggle of the 21st Century and the
calling of our generation.” And now, the targeted killings
program has been “extended
to militant groups”
with no connection to September 11, 2001 – that is, “associates
of associates.” Removing the requirement for any linkage to al
Qaeda gives the government unfettered discretion to assassinate
anyone without due process of law.
This
phraseology makes it impossible to distinguish the dialectical
concepts of war and peace. It makes peace synonymous
with a state of warfare. Peace is defined in terms of a
generational commitment to war and, in turn, war is framed as a
necessity to keep the peace. In other words,
War is Peace.
This is
the lexicon of perpetual war, the vocabulary of a conflict that
is never meant to end. “You can’t end the war,” as one official
admits to The Washington Post, “if you keep adding
people to the enemy who are not actually part of the original
enemy.”
Aggression is Self-Defense –Waging Full Scale War to Prevent
War.
Operation
Iraqi Freedom represented Phase Two in a linguistic framework
meant to fuse two diametrically opposite concepts in the public
mind: preemption and prevention.
The
purpose of preemptive war is to thwart or neutralize an
imminent attack – one that is “instant,
overwhelming, and leaving no choice of means, and no moment for
deliberation" – without absorbing the first blow. Conversely,
preventive war is pure aggression – it is not tied to any notion
of imminence and is primarily directed at securing some
strategic advantage. Thus, the
dimension of time
is the primary difference between the former and the latter.
The Bush
Doctrine blurred the lines between preventive and preemptive
wars. It represented a seismic shift in national security
strategy from one dominated by the Cold War doctrines of
deterrence and containment, to one that now enshrined
preventive war as a permanent feature of US policy.
During his 2002 commencement speech at West Point, Bush stated:
“If we
wait for threats to fully materialize, we
will have waited too long . . . . Yet the war on terror will
not be won on the defensive. We must take the battle to the
enemy, disrupt his plans and confront the worst threats
before they emerge . . . .” (emphasis added).”
Furthermore, the 2006 US National Security Strategy Paper states
that “If necessary, however, under long-standing principles of
self-defense, we do not rule out the use of force before
attacks occur, even if uncertainty remains as to the
time and place of the enemy's attack” (emphasis
added). In true Newspeak fashion, such a conception of
“preemptive action” inverts the traditional model of
self-defense under
customary international law
by rendering imminence completely irrelevant. In doing so, it
strips self-defense of any practical meaning. It
conflates preventive war with preemptive war;
it packages aggression as self-defense.
But
as Cheney’s
one-percent doctrine
later revealed, the threat need not even be likely, let
alone imminent, for self-defense (read aggression) to
apply. According to this logic, even a one percent chance of an
event occurring is sufficient to treat it as a certainty. “It's
not about our analysis,” Cheney reportedly said, “It's
about our response (emphasis added).” Put simply, the
likelihood of an event occurring is not a necessary prerequisite
to wage war. This embeds the
supreme international crime
of aggressive war in the fabric of national security policy.
Aggression is self-defense, Winston.
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
The
Obama Administration gave the War on Terror a facelift by
rebranding it “Overseas Contingency Operations.” But the
sanitizing nomenclature has done little to halt the
institutionalization
of the apparatus of tyranny– from Kill Lists to Disposition
Matrices to Drone Playbooks to indefinite detentions to
persecuting whistleblowers to pervasive domestic surveillance.
These developments are strikingly at odds with the post-9/11
metanarrative that frames this conflict as a clash between the
forces of freedom and despotism. As Bush phrased it:
Americans are asking, why do they hate us? They hate what we
see right here in this Chamber, a democratically elected
government. Their leaders are self-appointed. They hate our
freedoms--our freedom of religion, our freedom of speech,
our freedom to vote and assemble and disagree with each
other.
From this
point onward, spreading “freedom and democracy” abroad became
the rallying point for a nation enraptured by its new messianic
role. But it soon became apparent that freedom at home cannot
coexist with hyper-militarism abroad.
Accusation Is Guilt - Killing You for Your Own Safety.
What
could be more destructive to the cherished freedoms that make
America a “shining city on a hill” than giving a “high
level official”
the power to kill Americans on
US soil
without any due process, accountability or transparency? What
could be more Orwellian than asserting such dictatorial
authority, which has always been the hallmark of totalitarian
states, in the name of protecting the public’s safety? The cost
of war is not measured solely in terms of blood and treasure.
War also corrodes human morality to a point where even the most
inhumane acts become perfectly acceptable. In fact, summary
executions without due process and the right to a fair trial
served as one of the justifications for removing Saddam
Hussein’s regime.
Not
only does the recent Department of Justice White Paper
resoundingly affirm this power grab, it also destroys the
foundation of Anglo-American jurisprudence by nullifying the
principle of “innocent until proven guilty.” It eviscerates the
Fifth Amendment, which prohibits any deprivation of “life,
liberty, or property, without due process of law.” It
obliterates the protections afforded by the Sixth Amendment,
including the “right to a speedy and public trial,” by asserting
that government allegations alone, based on secret
evidence, are sufficient to establish guilt. Accusation
is guilt, Winston. As Glenn Greenwald cogently
observes:
But of
course, when this memo refers to "a Senior Operational
Leader of al-Qaida", what it actually means is this: someone
whom the President--in total secrecy and with no due
process--has accused of being that. Indeed,
the memo itself makes this clear, as it baldly states that
presidential assassinations are justified when "an
informed, high-level official of the US government has
determined that the targeted individual poses an
imminent threat of violent attack against the US.
This
is the crucial point: the memo isn't justifying the
due-process-free execution of senior al-Qaida leaders who
pose an imminent threat to the US. It is justifying the
due-process-free execution of people secretly
accused by the president and his underlings, with no due
process, of being that (emphasis in original).
Rarely do
apologists for the normalization of extra-judicial murder
realize that this represents a permanent erosion of core
liberties, an ever-lasting debasement of the Bill of Rights. “We
know that no one ever seizes power with the intention of
relinquishing it,” Orwell said. “Power is not a means; it is an
end. One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard
a revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the
dictatorship. The object of persecution is persecution. The
object of torture is torture. The object of power is power.”
Secret assassinations are here to stay.
The Great Shift Inward -- From Enemy Combatants to Homegrown
Terrorists.
Under international law, captured enemy soldiers are considered
Prisoners of War (POWs), and thus shielded by the Geneva
Conventions and the
jus cogens
prohibition against torture. Furthermore, terrorism was
traditionally treated as a federal criminal offense before 9/11.
Accordingly, those accused of terrorism could still invoke the
protections of the Bill of Rights, including the right to
counsel, right to a jury trial, right to confront one’s
accusers, right against self-incrimination and conviction based
on guilt proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
As
the 2002
Padilla Case
demonstrated, however, the enemy combatant doctrine
creates a category of detainees that are neither POWs nor
terrorists. As such, they are beyond the reach of both the Bill
of Rights and Geneva Conventions. This undefined label
essentially circumvents the safeguards of the legal system and
allows the state to treat the accused like a medieval king would
a serf. It sets the groundwork for a parallel gulag system in
the United States operating on the model of indefinite detention
without charge or trial, no access to a lawyer, and confessions
obtained through torture.
And
then came Attorney General Holder’s recent premonition about a
new threat: the “homegrown terrorist.”
Speaking to ABC News,
Holder’s statement signals a decisive shift in the script
governing the ongoing campaign:
"It's a
very serious threat. I think what it says is that the scope, our
scope, has to be broadened. We can't think that it's just a
bunch of people in caves in some part of the world. We have
to be concerned about the homeland to the same extent that we
are worried about the threat coming from overseas"
(emphasis added).
The
implications of this statement are staggering, for it turns the
United States into the new “battlefield.”
Systems of tyranny perfected abroad are always turned inward. It
only took a decade for the same tactics of warfare that were
previously restricted to foreign countries to now being applied
domestically.
Responding to Senator Rand Paul’s question whether the President
can authorize drone strikes on US citizens on domestic soil,
Holder revealingly states
that “It is possible . . . to imagine an extraordinary
circumstance in which it would be necessary and appropriate
under the Constitution and applicable laws of the United States
for the President to authorize the military to use lethal force
within the territory of the United States.” Even though the
Posse Comitatus Act of 1878
generally prohibits military involvement in domestic law
enforcement, notice how Holder sees no problem with the
military, not police, using lethal force against Americans on US
soil.
Furthermore, when combined with the DOJ White Paper’s assertion
that drone assassinations do “not require that the US have clear
evidence that a specific attack . . . will take place in the
immediate future,” it becomes frighteningly clear that
an anonymous “high level official” can deploy these “faceless
ambassadors of death” to strike you dead anytime, even absent
any imminent or likely threat. This gives government
the power of God. It repudiates every principle of liberty this
constitutional republic was founded upon.
This is no
exaggeration, as Holder’s follow-up response to Senator Paul
clarifies: “Does the President have the authority to use a
weaponized drone to kill an American not engaged in
combat on American soil? The answer to that question is no
(emphasis added).” As any lawyer can attest, Holder’s heavily
qualified statement creates more ambiguity.
Note the
following points: (1) Holder is not saying that the President
cannot kill an American on US soil. The phrasing of his question
is much narrower, which can arguably be interpreted as allowing
the President to kill without using “weaponized drones;” (2)
most important of all, his statement implies that the President
does have the authority to kill Americans “engaged in
combat.”
Hence, the issue of how
“combat”
is defined carries great importance. In this regard, William
Grigg brilliantly points out that al-Awlaki’s assassination sets
a precedent that stretches the interpretation of “combat” to a
point where there are few, if any, restraints on the President's
power to kill:
“Combat”
can consist of expressing support for Muslims mounting armed
resistance against U.S. military aggression, which was the
supposed crime committed by Anwar al-Awlaki, or sharing the
surname and DNA of a known enemy of the state, which was the
offense committed by Awlaki’s 16-year-old son, Abdel. Under the
rules of engagement used by the Obama Regime in Pakistan, Yemen,
and Afghanistan, any “military-age” male found within a targeted
“kill zone” is likewise designated a “combatant,” albeit usually
after the fact.
More than
half a century ago, Orwell had warned us that the scourge of war
eventually turns inward. “The war is waged by each ruling group
against its own subjects, and the object of the war is
not to make or prevent conquests of territory, but to keep
the structure of society intact. The very word "war,"
therefore, has become misleading” (emphasis added). Stated
differently, war becomes a buzzword for concealing a rather
insidious internal dynamic, one that treats those who oppose the
status quo--the intrepid whistleblower, the outspoken
journalist, the vocal activist--as a legitimate target for
persecution.
Dissent Is Treason.
It is
precisely the ability to express unpopular opinions and the
autonomy to diverge from convention without fear of persecution
that makes any society free. As Edward R. Murrow reminded us
during the McCarthy era, dissent should never be confused with
disloyalty because “we are not descended from fearful men […]
who feared to write, to speak, to associate, and to defend
causes that were, for the moment, unpopular.” That same
principle holds true today, regardless of the nature of the
claimed emergency.
Bradley Manning was
caged
like an animal under insanity-inducing conditions for more than
two and a half years
without trial. Manning’s treatment is an epiphenomenon of the
current administration’s unprecedented
war against whistleblowers,
which makes an example of any lowly prole who dare expose
corruption at the highest levels of the Inner Party. John
Kiriakou rots in prison for the “crime” of informing the people
about the CIA’s illegal waterboarding, whereas John Brennan
ascends to the heights of power for endorsing torture and
assassinations. The operative effect of such incidents is to
create a culture of intimidation and silence by making it a
“thoughtcrime” to deviate from the official version of events.
Investigative journalist
Chris Hedges
points out that the NDAA (the Homeland Battlefield Bill)
“permits the military to detain anyone, including U.S. citizens,
who ‘substantially support’—an undefined legal term—al-Qaida,
the Taliban or ‘associated forces,’ again a term that is legally
undefined.” This represents a clear step toward the
criminalization of activities
that were formerly protected under the First Amendment. It
equates any meaningful dissent with treason.
As
if this weren’t bad enough, some government employees are told
to view
“protests” as a form of “low-level terrorism,”
and consider “Fury
at the West for reasons ranging from personal problems to global
policies of the U.S.”
as a potential indicator of terrorist activity.
Recall that the PATRIOT Act was also billed a necessary
counterterrorism tool. Even though it vastly expanded the
state’s investigative power without any attendant checks and
balances, Congress was given no time to read it due to the
claimed exigency of the circumstances. Almost a decade later,
however, its application has been expanded to ordinary,
non-terrorism cases
like drug dealing and child pornography.
Understanding how this process works is vital, for tyranny
always treads a familiar path: first it clamors for unfettered
authority to resolve some overriding problem; then it
consolidates that power; next it gradually expands its
vocabulary and application; finally, it turns around and uses
that power to persecute everyone. Indeed, those who wield
unrestrained power will inevitably abuse it.
Big Brother Is Watching You – Argus, TrapWire, Stingray, EARS
and Total Information Awareness.
Reporting on DARPA’s most recent project called Effective
Affordable Reusable Speech-to-text (EARS),
Wired magazine
reports that “Darpa wants to make systems so accurate, you’ll be
able to easily record, transcribe and recall all the
conversations you ever have.” It’s a “little freaky,” the author
admits, since it gives those who wield this technology total
omniscience – the power to know everything about everyone at any
time.
The
parallels to 1984 are obvious: “Always the eyes watching
you and the voice enveloping you. Asleep or awake, working or
eating, indoors or out of doors, in the bath or in bed — no
escape. Nothing was your own except the few cubic
centimetres inside your skull (emphasis added).” The only
vestige of privacy is in one’s own mind – for now at least.
But
even though the average citizen’s privacy has been eviscerated,
the government continues to operate at unprecedented levels of
secrecy. As the
Associated Press
reports:
…the
government cited national security to withhold information
at least 5,223 times — a jump over 4,243 such cases in 2011
and 3,805 cases in Obama’s first year in office. The
secretive CIA last year became even more secretive: Nearly
60 percent of 3,586 requests for files were withheld or
censored for that reason last year, compared with 49 percent
a year earlier.
In that
context, privacy is not dead per se; it is flourishing insofar
as the government’s inner workings are concerned.
IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH.
“They
could be made to accept the most flagrant violations of reality
. . . and were not sufficiently interested in public events
to notice what was happening. By lack of understanding they
remained sane. They simply swallowed everything . . . .”
Like
Orwell’s Ministry of Truth, the opinion molders – the
handful of corporations that control the flow of
information
– sanitize reality to cover for even the worst cases of
executive wrongdoing. Their paternalism regards people as mere
casual observers to be controlled, not stakeholders to be
informed about the democratic process. Their function is to
control the narrative of events, for “Who controls the past,
controls the future: who controls the present controls the
past.”
Oceania Has
Always
Never Been At War With East Asia.
Orwell
explained Doublethink as “holding two contradictory beliefs in
one's mind simultaneously, and accepting both of them . . . To
tell deliberate lies while genuinely believing in them, to
forget any fact that has become inconvenient, and then, when it
becomes necessary again, to draw it back from oblivion for just
as long as it is needed . . . .”
A
recently declassified memorandum
written by former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in 2001,
almost a year and a half before Operation Iraqi Freedom, adds to
the plethora of evidence that Rumsfeld, along with the rest of
the neoconservative war hawks, concocted false pretexts to
market the invasion of Iraq. The same Donald Rumsfeld, who
invoked Saddam Hussein’s non-existent Weapons of Mass
Destruction (WMDs) as a casus belli to invade Iraq in
2003, previously armed the same Iraqi dictator with chemical and
biological weapons as
Ronald Reagan's Middle East envoy
during the 1980s. Oceania was never at war with East
Asia.
But this
was an inconvenient fact in the prelude to Operation Iraqi
Freedom, and therefore had to be forgotten. It never happened.
“Everything faded into mist. The past was erased, the erasure
was forgotten, the lie became truth.” Oceania has always
been at war with East Asia.
Conclusion – The Grand Contradiction.
In a
historical irony, Orwell’s
proposed preface
to Animal Farm about censorship in the English press was
suppressed and remained undiscovered for years after his death.
In it, Orwell mounts a principled defense of intellectual
freedom during a time when the western press brooked no
criticism of Joseph Stalin or his murderous regime. “These
people don't see that if you encourage totalitarian methods, the
time may come when they will be used against you instead of for
you,” Orwell warned. “Make a habit of imprisoning Fascists
without trial, and perhaps the process won't stop at Fascists.”
Make a habit of endorsing drone strikes in far off lands, and
perhaps the next drone will show up in your neighborhood.
In
conclusion, the grand contradiction lurking behind all the
rhetorical smoke screens is simply this: in trying to rid the
world of evil using the tactics of evil, we unleash even greater
horrors; we become what we seek to destroy.
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