|
Home
Leading
U.S. Thinker says Bush Administration is:
"the most dangerous administration in American history"
Comment by Larry
Ross, January 6, 2006
Noam Chomsky claims "There are two major threats that face the world,
threats of the destruction of the species and they're not a joke. One
of them is nuclear war, and the other is environmental catastrophe, and
they (the Bushites)are driving toward destruction in both domains."
"The most dangerous Administration in American history" have
harnessed the most massive engine of destruction in history and they are
"driving toward destruction" as Chomsky said.
I agree with him as shown in my writings.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Last Word: Noam
Chomsky
A Tale
of Two Quagmires
01/03/06 "Newsweek"
-- -- Jan. 9, 2006 issue - Noam Chomsky has been called one of the most
influential intellectuals of the 20th century, but it's an accolade the
77-year-old MIT professor doesn't take very seriously. "People just
want to hear something outside the rigid dogma they're used to,"
he says. "They're not going to hear it in the media." The linguistics
prodigy turned political theorist has been a leading mind in the antiwar
movement since the early '60s; he's also still a prolific author, producing
more than six books in the past five years. He spoke to NEWSWEEK's Michael
Hastings about the current geopolitical climate. Excerpts:
Hastings: Where do you see Iraq
heading right now?
Chomsky: Well, it's extremely difficult to talk about this because of
a very rigid doctrine that prevails in the United States and Britain which
prevents us from looking at the situation realistically. The doctrine,
to oversimplify, is that we have to believe the United States would have
so-called liberated Iraq even if its main products were lettuce and pickles
and [the] main energy resource of the world were in central Africa. Anyone
who doesn't accept that is dismissed as a conspiracy theorist or a lunatic
or something. But anyone with a functioning brain knows that that's not
trueas all Iraqis do, for example. The United States invaded Iraq
because its major resource is oil. And it gives the United States, to
quote [Zbigniew] Brzezinski, "critical leverage" over its competitors,
Europe and Japan. That's a policy that goes way back to the second world
war. That's the fundamental reason for invading Iraq, not anything else.
Once we recognize that, we're able to begin talking about where Iraq is
going. For example, there's a lot of talk about the United States bringing
[about] a sovereign independent Iraq. That can't possibly be true. All
you have to do is ask yourself what the policies would be in a more-or-less
democratic Iraq. We know what they're likely to be. A democratic Iraq
will have a Shiite majority, [with] close links to Iran. Furthermore,
it's right across the border from Saudi Arabia, where there's a Shiite
population which has been brutally repressed by the U.S.-backed fundamentalist
tyranny. If there are any moves toward sovereignty in Shiite Iraq, or
at least some sort of freedom, there are going to be effects across the
border. That happens to be where most of Saudi Arabia's oil is. So you
can see the ultimate nightmare developing from Washington's point of view.
You were involved in the antiwar
movement in the 1960s. What do you think of the Vietnam-Iraq analogy?
I think there is no analogy whatsoever. That analogy is based on a misunderstanding
of Iraq, and a misunderstanding of Vietnam. The misunderstanding of Iraq
I've already described. The misunderstanding of Vietnam had to do with
the war aims. The United States went to war in Vietnam for a very good
reason. They were afraid Vietnam would be a successful model of independent
development and that would have a virus effectinfect others who
might try to follow the same course. There was a very simple war aimdestroy
Vietnam. And they did it. The United States basically achieved its war
aims in Vietnam by [1967]. It's called a loss, a defeat, because they
didn't achieve the maximal aims, the maximal aims being turning it into
something like the Philippines. They didn't do that. [But] they did achieve
the major aims. It was possible to destroy Vietnam and leave. You can't
.....
Continue.....
|
|