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Noam Chomsky: a jester at their court.

Foreign Press Foundation - Henk Ruyssenaars | 20.06.2006 12:25 | Analysis | Anti-militarism | Globalisation | World

Noam Chomsky belongs to this group of so called 'liberals' which on behalf of their masters have betrayed humanity. And try to keep betraying most of us. Those 'Megaphones of the Mighty' for instance can write thousands of words about the 'Problems in the Middle East' without even mentioning the word 'Israel' once.

Concerning Noam Chomsky

by Henk Ruyssenaars

FPF - June 20th 2006 - Below is a comment on one of those articles by Noam Chomsky again, which was published by 'The Guardian' in England. The Guardian, The Independent and The Observer by the way, are usually called the 'Secret Service Trio'. They have for decades cooperated with the 'spooks' that needed them, like the CIA, the Israeli Mossad, the German BND, the Swedish Säpo, the Dutch AIVD, the British MI6 etc. They all use the same media strategy to 'sell' the ideas: 25% criticism making the other 75% propaganda go down as well.

The Chomsky article concerns the so called 'Iranian Danger' - the wholly by the US group whipped up fake 'nuclear crisis' which Chomsky of course calls an 'Iranian crisis' - ''A negotiated solution to the Iranian nuclear crisis is within reach. The US must take three basic steps to defuse this confrontation. The consequences of not doing so could be grim.'' - By Noam Chomsky - 06/19/06 - "The Guardian" - Url.:  http://tinyurl.com/hdxzh

Information Clearing House* where it was published too, is by the way one of the absolutely best web sites concerning real information there is, and this only proofs that even the sun has spots...

As a senior foreign correspondent I have more than four decades of global experience. I've seen the group managing the United States at work in reality, from the war in Vietnam - including the Bertrand Russell War Crimes Tribunals in Scandinavia - via Kissinger's slaughter in Chile and the death squads in Latin America, to South- and lately North Africa and the Middle East. Working and living abroad all the time.

THEIR MASTER'S VOICES

From 1987 until 1997 I based myself in North Africa, in Tunis, working for many European and international media. Covering among many cases the military coup in Tunisia by US trained general Zine el Abedine Ben Ali (7 Nov. 1987) - and the following slaughter of the leaders of the Palestine Liberation Organsation (PLO) in Tunis. Plus the rest of the area also during the atrocious 'Gulf War'. Including some 'live' reporting for the BBC in German and English as well as for CBS with Dan Rather, when the media still (sometimes) understood what honest reporting was and I still thought it could be done. Now they - like all other major media in the PNAC colonies globally - are 'Their Master's Voices'.

From the point of view of international journalists - and I mean 'real' journalists and not the prompter-reading TV propagandists the world is poisoned with - and in the eyes of many foreign correspondents Noam Chomsky is a treacherous jester at the propaganda court of the group that build him up, formed his career and whom's policy he defends.

THE TACTIC IS THE USUAL: 25% CRITICISM TO MAKE THEIR SO CALLED 'CRITICAL ARGUMENTS' CREDIBLE, MIXED WITH 75% PROPAGANDA THAT THIS WAY IS SOLD AS WELL.

What Chomsky writes about the 'offers' made to Iran is not only misleading, it is total crap. What about the nukes in Israel? They never even signed the NPT. And, Iran has been controlled from the beginning by this UN nuclear power 'sales office' called IAEA - Url.:  http://www.countercurrents.org/u...- henk160805.htm

The group which has managed the US, and much of the world as well, planted those misleading jesters via the by them owned propaganda press in an unsuspecting and brainwashed audience and readership, from where Chomsky c.s. could be sold, internationally too. And gave them a nice (sinecure) position at one of their PR boasted universities like MIT to enhance the fake 'credibility'.

WRITING ABOUT THE MIDDLE EAST PROBLEMS WITHOUT EVEN MENTIONING ISRAEL?

Noam Chomsky belongs to this group of so called 'liberals' which on behalf of their masters have betrayed humanity. And try to keep betraying most of us. Those 'Megaphones of the Mighty' can write thousands of words about the 'Problems in the Middle East' without even mentioning the word 'Israel' or 'genocide' once. Or write about Iraq without using the word 'genocide'. Because that is exactly what it is. Genocide for millions of us by uranium radiation (DU) too. And publish about the lousy US$ economy without mentioning the usurer's money print shop, the 'Federal Reserve' which is privately owned by the warmongers.

But, please do remember forever: without them - the 'Chomskys' of our by them abused world and the other collaborators - all the wars and massacres, and I've seen and covered some of them, would absolutely NOT have been possible. Never!

I've said and written it before, because of what I have seen with my own eyes and always protested against: their media manure all the time has been fertilizing their master's battlefields.

Noam Chomsky - however well he may phrase all the disguised lies and propaganda, and however hard they are selling him - Chomsky like many of the others is a traitor.

THOSE PROPAGANDA PRESS COLLABORATORS OF ALL NATIONALITIES ARE GUILTY OF CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY, AND SHOULD BE JUDGED AND TREATED AS SUCH.

THEY LIED AND THE PEOPLE DIED.


HENK RUYSSENAARS


Foreign correspondent.

Comments on Chomsky's role - 20-06-2005 - 10.40 GMT - Url.:  http://tinyurl.com/zbxkg

* Those who first of all start shouting about 'conspiracy theory' and 'paranoïa' or similar, are always the evil INFORMANTS. The paid INFILTRATORS which are afraid of being disclosed. They are the real Judas's working for their treacherous 'masters' of the PNAC: the 'Project for a New American Cemetery' - They are the 'Quislings' that will go and must go to jail. - Url.:  http://tinyurl.com/clcjn

* ROME TRIBUNAL ON WAR CRIMES: Media Held Guilty of Deception - The tribunal said mainstream media reportage on Iraq also violated article six of the Nuremberg Tribunal (set up to try Nazi crimes) which states: "Leaders, organisers, instigators and accomplices participating in the formulation or execution of a common plan or conspiracy to commit any of the foregoing crimes (crimes against peace, war crimes and crimes against humanity) are responsible for all acts performed by any persons in execution of such a plan." - Url.:  http://tinyurl.com/68jws

* Information Clearing House - Url.:  http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/index.html

* STRONGLY RELATED LINKS - Url.:  http://tinyurl.com/gkgrb

* FPF-COPYRIGHT NOTICE - In accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. Section 107 - any copyrighted work in this message is distributed by the Foreign Press Foundation under fair use, without profit or payment, to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the information. Url.:  http://liimirror.warwick.ac.uk/uscode/17/107.html

FOREIGN PRESS FOUNDATION
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Editor: Henk Ruyssenaars
 http://tinyurl.com/amn3q
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 fpf@chello.nl

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Foreign Press Foundation - Henk Ruyssenaars
- e-mail: fpf@chello.nl
- Homepage: http://tinyurl.com/zbxkg

Comments

Hide the following 15 comments

'Secret Service Trio'?

20.06.2006 13:32

Can you cite one example of anyone calling these papers the 'Secret Service Trio' apart from you?

In Britain the intelligence services keep contact with and use all media outlets to place information and stories, possibly even indymedia, so why fetishise these newspapers?

How come someone living in Holland knows how British intelligence works better than British people?

What is your secret agenda in dissing Chomsky. He's human he fucks up sometimes. Being inconsistent is a normative for most people. Your primary goal is not to produce news but simply anti-Chomsky propaganda, why?

Bullshit Detector


Where Noam will not roam

20.06.2006 13:55

"That's an internet theory and it's hopelessly implausible. Hopelessly implausible. So hopelessly implausible I don't see any point in talking about it."

- Noam Chomsky, at a FAIR event at New York's Town Hall, 22 January 2002, in response to a question from the audience about US government foreknowledge of 9/11. At that time, 9/11 investigators had already presented substantial documented evidence for: prior warnings, Air Force stand-down, anomalous insider trading connected to CIA, cover-up of the domestic anthrax attacks, inconsistencies in identities & timelines of "hijackers", US connections to al Qaeda in Balkans, a Pak ISI-al Qaeda funding connection, etc etc etc.

 http://www.oilempire.us/chomsky.html

chomp


Left Denial on 9/11 Turns Irrational

20.06.2006 13:59

Excerpt:

People like Noam Chomsky and Ward Churchill are turning toward the irrational as they continue to deny increasing signs that 9/11 was an inside job.

Ever since the events of 9/11, the American Left and even ultra-Left have been downright fanatical in combating notions that the U.S. government was complicit in the attacks or at least had foreknowledge of the events. Lately, this stance has taken a turn towards the irrational.

Read the full article here:  http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/05/06/17363671.php

indybay


And your concern is because...?

20.06.2006 14:22

Perhaps he is one of the staunchest defenders of the "official narrative" (which is, of course, an absurd conspiracy theory...) of 9/11?

"Chomsky’s rationalization for the September 11 attacks is every bit as deceitful as his apology for Pol Pot "

 http://www.newcriterion.com/archive/21/may03/chomsky.htm

Spook Detector


.

20.06.2006 20:03

Most people prefer not to publicly acknoledge the possibility of a 9/11 insider job because they worry that people would laugh at them and never take them seriously.

.


Understandable

20.06.2006 21:30

I think that there is also an element of fear, since repression on the part of the Bush/PNAC Regime and their ilk has become a daily occurence.

I also think they fear what the answers will tell them about everything they hold true ...

911 = PNAC, CIA, Mossad


No people in the world would accept being expelled en masse from their country.

20.06.2006 21:44

"The tragedy of the people of Palestine is that their country was ‘given’ by a foreign power to another people for the creation of a new state. The result was that many hundreds of thousands of innocent people were made permanently homeless. With every new conflict their numbers increased. How much longer is the world willing to endure this spectacle of wanton cruelty? It is abundantly clear that the refugees have every right to the homeland from which they were driven, and the denial of this right is at the heart of the continuing conflict. No people anywhere in the world would accept being expelled en masse from their country; how can anyone require the people of Palestine to accept a punishment which nobody else would tolerate? A permanent just settlement of the refugees in their homeland is an essential ingredient of any genuine settlement in the Middle East".

"Message from Bertrand Russell to the International Conference of Parlimentarians in Cairo, February 1970." Reprinted in The New York Times, Feb. 23, 1970.

Ramirez


9-11

21.06.2006 07:31

Then again perhaps he dismissed the 9-11 'prior knowledge' theory because it's a load of conspiracy loon bollocks.
MI5 agent

phats


Requiem for Noam's dream

21.06.2006 11:18

There are men who fight one day and are good.
There are men who fight one year and are better.
There are some who fight many years and they are better still.
But there are some that fight their whole lives,
these are the ones that are indespensable.

Bertolt Brecht

Dispensable Boy


fakir

21.06.2006 21:22

"The Guardian, The Independent and The Observer by the way, are usually called the 'Secret Service Trio'."
Odd that the Observer took time out to smear Chomsky too this week, and in just as weak terms as you. Maybe they knew you were going to write this and wanted to get their rebuttal in first, you should keep your tin-foil hat on in future. Odd too that you allude to the Propaganda Model too given Chomsky is such a fraud.

din


The Laughing Noam

22.06.2006 19:56

So, Chomsky is a (Zionist) plant just because he thinks 9/11 Truth is a pile of cobblers based on pseudo-evidence.

He's totally right!

Hurray for the sanity of Noam Chomsky yet again.

LMFAO


Chomsky's stance in the run up to the invasion of Iraq in 1991

26.06.2006 09:23

Dear friends,

I think B. J. Sabri's article below on Noam Chomsky's stance in the run up to the first
stage of invasion of 1991 complements Henk Ruyssenaars' article quite well.

Cem



 http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/printer_378.shtml



A one-way bombardment called Gulf War

by B. J. Sabri, Online Journal, December 31, 2005



"U.S. Economy: It has always been said that the war is good for the economy,
and in terms of dollars and cents that is usually the case. But much of the
new uncertainty in the outlook stems from the situation in Iraq. The risks
still evident there are one of the factors putting up oil and gasoline prices.
Iraq is also depressing consumer confidence . . . etc." --James C. Cooper &
Kathleen Madigan, War Jitters Won't Wipe Out This Recovery, BusinessWeeK, June
7, 2004, page 33. [Italics added]

Just four months before he obliterated Iraq in a one-way bombardment called
Gulf War (Iraq did not shoot a single bullet on American soil), George H. W.
Bush postulated how the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait provided the opportunity for
the creation of a new world; meaning a unipolar world ruled by the United
States. In his address to a joint session of Congress (September 11, 1990),
Bush senior, described the coming birth of that world with these words: "The
crisis in the Persian Gulf, as grave as it is, also offers a rare opportunity
to move toward an historic period of cooperation. Out of these troubled times,
our fifth objective -- a new world order. . . . )

By logic of a system aiming at world domination, the U.S. bombardment of Iraq
meant three things: a demonstration of American power at the "epicenter" and
master of the new order; a celebration in blood and destruction for the birth
of the same; and a message for those who dare to oppose it. It also announced
the new regulations of the "epicenter": (1) the self-arrogation of the right
to interfere in any part of the world to suit its imperialist interests, and
(2) the method with which it would resolve regional disputes inside its
periphery after the expected demise of the USSR: unilateral war.

But, considering the history of a power that has been thriving on pretexts and
wars, it is not difficult to speculate as to why Bush senior called the
invasion of Iraq, "crisis," and then elevated it to, a "rare opportunity" for
new "world order." Although, technically, a crisis is a predicament requiring
a resolution, in the imperialist lexicon it means an opportunity for
intervention.

Since George H. Bush used the term, "crisis" in the context of opportunity,
how did progressives use that term in the context of the Iraqi invasion of
Kuwait, and how is this relevant to the occupation of Iraq? To discuss this
topic, I selected Noam Chomsky. Chomsky, an outstanding political thinker and
a lucid critic of U.S. imperialism in Latin America, but equivocal in other
regions, also employed the word "crisis" to describe the aftermath of the
Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. Though, in contrast with Bush, he cogently
demystified it by noting:

The crisis began with the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait a year ago. There was some
fighting; leaving hundreds killed according to Human Rights groups. That
hardly qualifies as war. Rather, in terms of crime against peace and humanity,
it falls roughly into the category of the Turkish invasion of northern Cyprus,
Israel's invasion of Lebanon in 1978, and the U.S. invasion of Panama. In
these terms, it falls well short of Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon, and
cannot remotely be compared to the near-genocidal Indonesian invasion and
annexation of East Timor, to mention only two cases of aggression that are
still in progress with continuing atrocities, and with the crucial support of
those who most passionately professed their outrage over Iraq's aggression.
[1]

As for the notion of a "rare opportunity for a new world order," this needs no
explanation -- a USSR in a dissolution phase was no longer in any material
position to contest U.S. objectives for war and dominance in Iraq. Thus, for
his new order to be born, George H. W. Bush, a stolid war criminal in the
American tradition of extermination, devastated Iraq and murdered a great
number of its military personnel and civilian population with jingoistic
enthusiasm and imperialist vengeance. (I shall discuss Iraq's fatalities in
parts 41 and 42.)

Still, considering that Iraq refused not to withdraw its forces before
negotiation, and considering that the U.S. rejected all of Iraq and Saudi
Arabia's proposals for a settlement, let us assume for a moment that war was
the only means to evict Iraq from Kuwait. The imposing question remains, Why
the massive destruction of Iraq before liberating Kuwait? In other words, if
the purpose of U.S.-U.N. resolutions was to restore the sovereignty of Kuwait,
and since the United States could have easily defeated and dislodged the Iraqi
occupation force stationed there, why then destroy Iraq? What was the
purpose?

You may ask, "Why am I talking about a war that happened 15 years ago, while
new realties -- invasion, occupation, and resistance -- should have priority?"
That may be; but before addressing that, we have to remember one thing:
dialectically, without the Gulf War and subsequent U.S.-U.N. resolutions that
imposed further sanctions on Iraq, and tied their lifting to Iraq's compliance
with an open-end disarmament process totally controlled by the United States,
that invasion would have never occurred despite dramatic changes worldwide.

Conclusively, while the Gulf War was the cornerstone for the future invasion
of Iraq, its aftermath transformed Iraq from a sovereign state into a hostage
in the hands of the United States, and by implication, Israel and U.S.
Zionists. For all practical reasons, the fate of Iraq has passed from the UN,
which authorized war against it, to the United States that made of it an
exclusive American issue.

Moreover, while the war ended with Iraq's surrender, it did not end with a
peace pact but with a ceasefire agreement. Did the UN sign it? No. General
Norman Schwarzkopf signed it on behalf of the United States; i.e., it was an
American-Iraqi agreement. Since then and up to the invasion, the U.S. used the
alibis that Iraq violated the terms of the agreement to launch a war of
attrition lasting 13 years.

Reevaluating the objectives of the Gulf war in relation to the neocon strategy
to conquer Iraq years later is, therefore, a prerequisite to understanding the
multiple purposes of the ongoing occupation, its failure, and, yes, its
"success" in destroying the ageless civilizations of Iraq, the imperialist
deformation of its social fabric, society, economy, culture, and national
character.

The need for reevaluation could never be more important. Take U.S. propaganda
as an example. How many writers disputed Bush and Powell's statements that
Iraq, 13 years after that war was still an aggressive state, despite the fact
that Iraq, besieged by sanctions and deprived of necessities, could not move a
finger against any one in the region? Not only that, but before the invasion
of Iraq in 2003, all propaganda themes that accompanied the pre-Gulf War
period, returned intact, but with new additions: Iraq was cheating on U.N.
resolutions, and the baseless accusation of Iraq's involvement in the
unresolved event of 9/11.

As you can see, the arguments on the Iraqi question from the Gulf War until
present form one logical sequence. To see how this sequence works, let us go
back to Noam Chomsky. In 1991, Chomsky explained the origins of the Gulf War
as follows: "It is plain enough that Washington has little impact on
developments and no idea what to do as the Soviet system lurches from one
crisis to another. The response to Saddam Hussein's aggression, in contrast,
was an operation throughout, with Britain loyally in tow, reflecting the U.S.
insistence upon sole authority in the crucial energy-producing regions of the
Middle East." [1] [Italics added]

Surprisingly, Chomsky's essay was not without inconsistencies. Aside from not
addressing (at least, in passing) the regional conditions that preceded the
Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, he started from the invasion as an act, but avoided
a crucial argument whose treatment could have persuaded the skeptics on his
firm anti-imperialist stance, and, of course, analytical neutrality in
dissecting U.S. imperialistic decisions.

I am pointedly alluding to the fact that Chomsky's early years as a Zionist
settler living in a kibbutz in occupied Palestine (now Israel), did not allow
him to include Israel, U.S. Zionism, and their role in the war as an important
factor. He just mentioned the "U.S. insistence upon sole authority in the
crucial . . . etc." In essence, he excluded a plethora of irrefutable evidence
that firmly point to the "Gulf War" as Israel's war by its American proxy. It
is reasonable, therefore, to conclude that Chomsky's attitude toward the Iraqi
question is not objective and possibly mired by ulterior motives.

Second, it is not clear why Chomsky patronized the USSR and gave the U.S. the
higher ground as in his phrase, "the U.S. did not know what to do . . . etc.,"
and why did he refer to the Soviet Union as the "Soviet system," but referred
to the American system by calling on its capital -- Washington. As a master
linguist, he should have juxtaposed countries, capitals, or systems. This
raises the question whether Chomsky thinks that the United States is not a
system but a natural order.

Third, he sanctioned the U.S. imperialist hold on the Middle-Eastern Arab
nations by calling them abstractly, "crucial energy-producing regions of the
Middle East." But in writing so, Professor Chomsky reduced the lives of the
Arabs to nothing more than a crucial tool to satisfy American oil consumption
and imperialist whims.

Fourth, it is also not clear why Chomsky call the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait,
"aggression," and why did he qualify it as, "Saddam Hussein's aggression?" In
my reading of Chomsky, and unless I was inattentive, I have never come across
him referring to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, as, "Menachem Begin's
aggression." It was always: the Israeli invasion of Lebanon. Did Chomsky imply
there is a distinction between aggression and invasion depending on who is the
felon?

Let us clear the ground. Of course, an invasion is a form of aggression, but
aggression, definitively, is not an invasion. In fact, there is a solid
distinction between aggression and invasion. Aggression presupposes and is
always indicative of the innocence of the invaded party who committed no
provocation to warrant either aggression, or invasion. But aggression denotes
an incursion on an adversary. Examples include the Israeli attack against the
Iraqi nuclear reactor of Osiraq in 1981, and Reagan's attack against Libya in
1987. Protracted aggression could also evolve into an invasion or the
occupation of a whole state or a part of its territory; an example is the
Israeli invasion of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian West Bank.

Invasion in the modern use, on the other hand, is a calculated move in
response to disputes mostly among adjacent states. Strength but not size is
the only factor that determines who initiates the invasion. But in no case, is
the size of a country an indication of its innocence or lack of aggression
(Israel is tiny, but it had invaded four adjacent states, and its
aggressiveness is boundless.) Examples of invasion include the Soviet invasion
of Afghanistan, the Iraqi invasions of Iran and Kuwait, and the American
invasions of Panama and Iraq -- both countries are not adjacent to the U.S.,
thus indicating the global imperialist nature of both invasions.

Since he chose to write, "Saddam Hussein's aggression," Chomsky insinuated the
perfidy of Saddam Hussein (thus his demonization), as opposed to the innocence
of the Emir of Kuwait. Although I firmly opposed the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait
as a way to resolve outstanding matters between the two countries, I also
firmly believe that no one has the right to claim the innocence of Kuwait
without knowing historical facts. Kuwait (an Iraqi territory severed by
Britain in 1921), was always aware of Iraq's claim over it, has been
constantly involved in anti-Iraqi activities since the 1960s, that is, even
before the advent of Saddam Hussein coming to power.

By branding Iraq as an aggressor, Chomsky overlooked Kuwait's intransigence
toward Iraq, pre-invasion disputes, Kuwaiti financing of Kurdish militia to
harass the Iraqi central government, and Kuwait's close work with the CIA to
overthrow the Iraqi regime. He only aimed at declaring Iraq as the sole
culpable party for that invasion by calling it "aggressor." This is fine,
except we need to establish culpability after investigating the case. To issue
a judgment solely based on the reputation assigned by the United States to
Saddam Hussein, while dismissing Iraq as a country and people, was a basic
U.S. strategy. The similarity between U.S. policy and Chomsky's conclusion
appears striking . . .

To delve inside the argument of Iraq's devastation, however, and to give you a
wider picture on how imperialist propaganda finds its way (either by choice --
scholars of history should search the archives before putting forward opinions
-- or by limitations imposed by the writer on the breadth of investigation) to
progressive writers, I have to add one more thing. In the same essay, Chomsky
made two more statements: one was right, and the other was pure
disinformation.

You recall that Chomsky stated, "There was some fighting; leaving hundreds
killed according to Human Rights groups." This statement is most likely
correct. According to several sources, the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait had
possibly cost the lives of about 380 Kuwaitis and over 120 Iraqis. In
addition, Chomsky correctly qualified the body count with the phrase,
"according to," which, to a certain extent, is an acceptable approximation of
probable statistics in the absence of official data.

Oddly, in the following sentence, Chomsky hastily abandoned his caution and
embraced U.S. and Israeli propaganda on Kuwaiti fatalities without modifying
an iota. In effect, he became a posteriori, an apologist and a voluntary
mouthpiece for U.S. imperialism, as when he stated, "During the subsequent
months, Iraq was responsible for terrible crimes against Kuwait, with several
thousand killed and many tortured. But that is not war, rather state
terrorism, of the kind familiar among U.S. clients." The salient aspect of
this statement is that Chomsky did not specify the nature of these "terrible"
crimes, and his statement of "several thousand" killed and "many" tortured,
sounded, decidedly, unrealistic considering that immediately after the
invasion, there had not been any resistance against the occupation, hence no
reprisals by the occupiers.

To inform the reader, not even a few weeks into the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait,
an anti-Arab and anti-Muslim, Alabaman Zionist, named Jean P. Sasson,
published a small propaganda booklet detailing flagrantly false accounts on
Iraq's atrocities in Kuwait and the thousands of Kuwaitis that Iraqis killed.
She called her mound of lies, "The Rape of Kuwait: the True Story of Iraqi
Atrocities against a Civilian Population." Sasson's Zionist propaganda
blitzkrieg baptized under the adjective, "true story," inundated media and
cluttered the mouths of all talking heads of the United States. Of course, I
did not hear that Sasson has ever written any book about the Zionist rape of
Palestine, Sharon's ordered massacres of Sabra and Shatila, the American rape
of Iraq, or Abu Ghraib prison atrocities.)

By force of similar words and concepts, I submit that Chomsky's long phrase,
"Iraq was responsible for terrible crimes against Kuwait," echoes Sasson's
subtitle, "The True Story of Iraqi Atrocities against a Civilian Population."
Consequently, it seems that we have a problem: Chomsky, as Sasson, talked
about the Iraq invasion of Kuwait, but without corroborating or providing the
sources as to where he obtained all the information on those "terrible crimes"
and those "several thousand" killed and "many" tortured.

Further note, in my research of the Gulf War, the only sources that provided
disinformation on Iraqi atrocities, incubators, and the Kuwaitis that Iraq
abducted and took to Iraq were Zionist-controlled U.S. media to increase the
disposition of the American public for war. (Before the invasion of Iraq,
Chomsky wrote another masterpiece of imperialist literature, so convoluted, so
arcane, so insidious, that after publishing it, Znet hurried to reclassify it,
as "a satire." I shall discuss that article in the upcoming parts.)

Did Chomsky report facts or "Necessary Illusions" just to write an essay?
Beyond that, Chomsky, made the matter worse, as when he, to reinforce his
reports of those "several thousands killed . . . etc.," added, "But that is
not war . . . etc."

Implication: Chomsky decided to attribute those "several thousand" killed by
Iraq to state terrorism. Arguably, while state terrorism could be the right
definition to describe aggression, the concept presented by Chomsky is sternly
equivocal: while it provides hearsay as proof that the Iraqi invaders killed
all those Kuwaitis, it decidedly, but obliquely, implied that Iraq is a
terrorist state. A denomination so much cherished and used by U.S. ruling
circles, it made the propaganda war that preceded U.S. wars against Iraq up to
its invasion flow easier, and transformed the bombardment of the Iraqi
population into an inaudible rumble inside American homes.

One may rebut that this is an article about Chomsky, and that I put him
unnecessarily on trial because of drifting semantics. Two points: (1)
semantics is not the shell but the core of thought, and (2) by addressing the
political thought of Chomsky in relation to the Iraqi question, I am
attempting to point out a structural "crisis" within the anti-imperialist
camp.

To sum up, it is unsettling to see countless writers of all progressive
persuasions compete to highlight the excesses of the Saddam's regime without
addressing the historical conditions of Iraq or verifying claims. Inevitably,
this contributes, indirectly or directly, to the amplification of the
ideological wave to invade Iraq and a latent justification for the same. . . .
After the invasion, most of the progressive crowd ran to denounce the empire,
the cloths of the emperor, and the machinations of the coterie . . .

Having established the general debate on the Gulf War, was the bombardment of
Iraq really an inaudible rumble?

Weapons Used

In his outstanding essay, "The Myth of Surgical Bombing in the Gulf War"
(which first appeared in "War Crimes," edited by Ramsey Clark and others),
Paul walker gives an exhaustive account of the weapons the United States used
against the Iraqi people:

Some 88,500 tons of bombs have been dropped in over 109,000 sorties flown by a
total of 2,800 fixed-wing aircraft.


The total number of bombs dropped by allied forces in the war comes to about
250,000, of these only 22,000 were the so-called "smart bombs" or guided
bombs. About 10,000 of these guided bombs were laser-guided and about 10,000
were guided anti-tank bombs. The remaining 2,000 were radiation-guided bombs
directed at communication and radar installations.


2,095 HARM missiles


217 Walleye missiles


5,276 guided anti-tank missiles
44,922 cluster bombs and rockets


136,755 conventional bombs


4,077 guided bombs
Were these all the weapons the U.S. used to destroy Iraq as a nation? What was
the strategy behind the bombing? Was the targeting of Iraq's infrastructures
accidental? Did U.S. military planners predict the aftermath of bombardment?
To answer these and other questions, I shall quote more of Paul Walker's
article, bringing in other authors and sources, and discuss Iraq's casualties,
fatalities, health conditions, and related matters.

Next: Part 41: The choice: obedience or annihilation

Notes

(1) City Lights Books, War After War, 1992; Noam Chomsky/Essay: The Gulf War
in Retrospect, Page 13

B. J. Sabri is an Iraqi-American antiwar activist. Email:  bjsabri@yahoo.com

Cem Ertur
mail e-mail: ertur@usa.net


re Noam Chomsky and the Left emporer's clothes

12.12.2006 10:18

re "Chomsky's stance in the run up to the invasion of Iraq in 1991". Excellent post!

I'm not surprised at Chomsky's intellectual slipperyness/sloppiness/disengenuousness here, regarding Iraq (or, otherwise, Iran), as both Israel and the Israel Lobby in the U.S. had most mightily pushed for war (i.e., a *U.S.* attack, invasion and occupation) against both Iraq and Iran.

Chomsky has long been a 5th columnist for the Zionist movement. He is a "Leftist" cover for the more general Zionists causes and goals, that of a Jewish-supremacist/-exclusivist state in Palestine, though he is not a hardcore Zionist -- he's smarter than that, lest Israel lose the whole matzo ball of having a Zionist state in Palestine, as opposed to a reunified secular democratic state for all. Chomsky has _never_ repudiated this racist, Jewish-supremacist ideology in Palestine to which he has admitted that he was an acolyte in his younger days.

The problem is that, at least, most white-American progressives and Leftists have been so charmed, so enamored, so beguiled, so Leftist 'messiah'-seeking, and spoonfed on Chomsky's cult celebrity and his apparent leftism, regarding other areas of American foreign policy, that Chomsky can use that as a cover for his covert Zionism (not a hardcore racist Zionism, but a racist Zionism nonetheless): those other American progressives and leftists don't even know what to think about the world until Chomsky thinks *for* them and then tells them what to say. Chomsky has used his general anti-imperialist language to calculatedly sprinkle false history and fallacious concepts: it's more sophisticated propaganda than just lying all the time -- it sounds good (leftist) and mixes some some general basis of truth with, frankly, calculatedly planted lies. It's propaganda directed to the Left.

If you were to note, NOTHING that Israel does does Chomsky EVER blame on ISRAEL -- or even Jews: he blames EVERTHING that Israel does on the, implicitly, *GENTILES* in the U.S. government. (That too is a racist position.) I guess that Israel "is just following orders" from a higher authority. Gee, where have we heard that before?

In addition, Chomsky opposes ANY international sanctions, divestment or boycotts against Israel. So, Chomsky can talk the talk, but not walk the walk. Chomsky opposes anything *PRACTICAL* to at least directly put Israel's behavior and policies in check.

Well, American intellectualism has declined a great deal since the U.S. has turned more conservative -- whether under arch-conservative "Christian Right" presidents like Reagan, Bush 1st and George II, or even under Bill "I Feel Your Pain" Clinton (who had beguiled as many people as Chomsky has); it has also greatly declined even on the Left.

For a great encapsulated view on what Chomsky has become, Yahoo/Google search the name "Gnome Chomsky" for a great poem describing exactly what Chomsky has been over the years as Zionism's and Israel's covert, sleight-of-hand protector.

For a few good analyses on Chomsky read:

The Israel Lobby and the Left: Uneasy Questions -- by Jeffrey Blankfort

The Left and the Israel Lobby -- by Joseph Anderson

and the much longer analysis

Damage Control: Noam Chomsky and the Israel-Palestine Conflict

Joseph Anderson


Noam Chomsky -- the Left emporer's and his clothes

12.12.2006 17:24

re "Chomsky's stance in the run up to the invasion of Iraq in 1991". Excellent post!

I'm not surprised at Chomsky's intellectual slipperyness/sloppiness/disengenuousness here, regarding Iraq (or, otherwise, Iran), as both Israel and the Israel Lobby in the U.S. had most mightily pushed for war (i.e., a *U.S.* attack, invasion and occupation) against both Iraq and Iran.

Chomsky has long been a 5th columnist for the Zionist movement. He is a "Leftist" cover for the more general Zionists causes and goals, that of a Jewish-supremacist/-exclusivist state in Palestine, though he is not a hardcore Zionist -- he's smarter than that, lest Israel lose the whole matzo ball of having a Zionist state in Palestine, as opposed to a reunified secular democratic state for all. Chomsky has _never_ repudiated this racist, Jewish-supremacist ideology in Palestine to which he has admitted that he was an acolyte in his younger days.

The problem is that, at least, most white-American progressives and Leftists have been so charmed, so enamored, so beguiled, so Leftist 'messiah'-seeking, and spoonfed on Chomsky's cult celebrity and his apparent leftism, regarding other areas of American foreign policy, that Chomsky can use that as a cover for his covert Zionism (not a hardcore racist Zionism, but a racist Zionism nonetheless): those other American progressives and leftists don't even know what to think about the world until Chomsky thinks *for* them and then tells them what to say. Chomsky has used his general anti-imperialist language to calculatedly sprinkle false history and fallacious concepts: it's more sophisticated propaganda than just lying all the time -- it sounds good (leftist) and mixes some some general basis of truth with, frankly, calculatedly planted lies. It's propaganda directed to the Left.

If you were to note, NOTHING that Israel does does Chomsky EVER blame on ISRAEL -- or even Jews: he blames EVERTHING that Israel does on the, implicitly, *GENTILES* in the U.S. government. (That too is a racist position.) I guess that Israel "is just following orders" from a higher authority. Gee, where have we heard that before?

In addition, Chomsky opposes ANY international sanctions, divestment or boycotts against Israel. So, Chomsky can talk the talk, but not walk the walk. Chomsky opposes anything *PRACTICAL* to at least directly put Israel's behavior and policies in check.

Well, American intellectualism has declined a great deal since the U.S. has turned more conservative -- whether under arch-conservative "Christian Right" presidents like Reagan, Bush 1st and George II, or even under Bill "I Feel Your Pain" Clinton (who had beguiled as many people as Chomsky has); it has also greatly declined even on the Left.

For a great encapsulated view on what Chomsky has become, Yahoo/Google search the name "Gnome Chomsky" for a great poem describing exactly what Chomsky has been over the years as Zionism's and Israel's covert, sleight-of-hand protector.


For a few good analyses on Chomsky read:

The Israel Lobby and the Left: Uneasy Questions -- by Jeffrey Blankfort

The Left and the Israel Lobby -- by Joseph Anderson

and the much longer analysis

Damage Control: Noam Chomsky and the Israel-Palestine Conflict -- by Jeffrey Blankfort

Joseph Anderson


re Noam Chomsky

12.12.2006 22:01

re "Chomsky's stance in the run up to the invasion of Iraq in 1991". Excellent post!

I'm not surprised at Chomsky's intellectual slipperyness/sloppiness/disengenuousness here, regarding Iraq (or, otherwise, Iran), as both Israel and the Israel Lobby in the U.S. had most mightily pushed for war (i.e., a *U.S.* attack, invasion and occupation) against both Iraq and Iran.

Chomsky has long been a 5th columnist for the Zionist movement. He is a "Leftist" cover for the more general Zionists causes and goals, that of a Jewish-supremacist/-exclusivist state in Palestine, though he is not a hardcore Zionist -- he's smarter than that, lest Israel lose the whole matzo ball of having a Zionist state in Palestine, as opposed to a reunified secular democratic state for all. Chomsky has _never_ repudiated this racist, Jewish-supremacist ideology in Palestine to which he has admitted that he was an acolyte in his younger days.

The problem is that, at least, most white-American progressives and Leftists have been so charmed, so enamored, so beguiled, so Leftist 'messiah'-seeking, and spoonfed on Chomsky's cult celebrity and his apparent leftism, regarding other areas of American foreign policy, that Chomsky can use that as a cover for his covert Zionism (not a hardcore racist Zionism, but a racist Zionism nonetheless): those other American progressives and leftists don't even know what to think about the world until Chomsky thinks *for* them and then tells them what to say. Chomsky has used his general anti-imperialist language to calculatedly sprinkle false history and fallacious concepts: it's more sophisticated propaganda than just lying all the time -- it sounds good (leftist) and mixes some some general basis of truth with, frankly, calculatedly planted lies. It's propaganda directed to the Left.

If you were to note, NOTHING that Israel does does Chomsky EVER blame on ISRAEL -- or even Jews: he blames EVERTHING that Israel does on the, implicitly, *GENTILES* in the U.S. government. (That too is a racist position.) I guess that Israel "is just following orders" from a higher authority. Gee, where have we heard that before?

In addition, Chomsky opposes ANY international sanctions, divestment or boycotts against Israel. So, Chomsky can talk the talk, but not walk the walk. Chomsky opposes anything *PRACTICAL* to at least directly put Israel's behavior and policies in check.

Well, American intellectualism has declined a great deal since the U.S. has turned more conservative -- whether under arch-conservative "Christian Right" presidents like Reagan, Bush 1st and George II, or even under Bill "I Feel Your Pain" Clinton (who had beguiled as many people as Chomsky has); it has also greatly declined even on the Left.

For a great encapsulated view on what Chomsky has become, Yahoo/Google search the name "Gnome Chomsky" for a great poem describing exactly what Chomsky has been over the years as Zionism's and Israel's covert, sleight-of-hand protector.

For a few good analyses on Chomsky read:

The Israel Lobby and the Left: Uneasy Questions -- by Jeffrey Blankfort

The Left and the Israel Lobby -- by Joseph Anderson

and the much longer analysis

Damage Control: Noam Chomsky and the Israel-Palestine Conflict

Joseph Anderson


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