US Terrorism Report:
Selective Data, Wrong Lessons
By Ramzy Baroud
ccun.org, May 13, 2008
The data provided in the US State Department's annual terrorism report
for 2007 points to some interesting if puzzling conclusions. The much
publicised document, made available 30 April via the State Department's
website, makes no secret of the fact that Al-Qaeda is back, strong as
ever. It also suggests that violence worldwide is nowhere near
subsiding, despite President Bush's repeated assurances regarding the
success of his "war on terror".
Will the report inspire serious reflection on the US's detrimental
foreign policy and its role in the current situation?
Let's look at some of the data. To start with, take Pakistan. Al-Qaeda
or Al-Qaeda-inspired attacks in the country more than doubled (from 375
to 877) between 2006 and 2007. These attacks have claimed the lives of
1,335 people, compared to 335 in a previous report. That is a jump of
almost 300 per cent.
Then there's Afghanistan, which was supposedly "liberated" shortly after
11 September 2001. The number of attacks reported there increased a
sharp 16 per cent in 2007. Some 1,127 violent incidents killing 1,966
people represent a significant surge in violence compared to 2006's
1,257 deaths.
There have also been many other violent incidents around the world,
including but not limited to North Africa, the terrorist bombings in
Algeria in particular.
But this is barely half the story -- or 40 per cent of it, if we want to
be as specific as the terrorism report. Iraq accounted for 60 per cent
of worldwide terrorism fatalities.
Considering the fact that the horrifying violence currently witnessed in
Iraq was unheard of prior to the US invasion of 2003, will the Bush
administration take a moment to connect the dots? Even a third grader
could figure this one out: the US occupation was a major, if not sole
factor, in Iraq's relentless bloodbath. In order to right the wrong in
Iraq, the US military should clearly just withdraw, and Bush -- or
whoever next claims the White House -- should stop fabricating pretexts
to justify a prolonged mission.
On 1 May 2003, President Bush declared the end of major combat
operations in Iraq. As he stood on the deck of the aircraft carrier USS
Abraham Lincoln a huge banner behind him bore the words "Mission
Accomplished". The New York Times then wrote, "the Bush administration
is planning to withdraw most United States combat forces from Iraq over
the next several months and wants to shrink the American military
presence to less than two divisions by the fall."
Instead, more than five years after Bush's speech, the administration
seems determined to maintain a military surge, having added 20,000
soldiers. Making no apologies for the war's contribution to an increase
in terrorist activities, Bush's officials continue to rationalise the
surge as a commonsense response to ongoing violence, conveniently
omitting the US's own part in this violence. The State Department report
doesn't classify any of the thousands of innocent victims killed by US
or coalition forces as victims of terrorism.
Russ Travers, deputy director of the Counterterrorism Centre, stated on
the day the report was published, "It's a fair statement that around the
globe people are getting increasingly efficient at killing other
people." While Travers' assertion is undoubtedly true, there seems to be
no intention of providing any context, no connection drawn to the US's
direct invasions, or indirect but equally devastating role in campaigns
of violence, whether in Iraq, Afghanistan or Pakistan.
But what the State Department's terrorism report didn't fail to do was
once again identify Iran as the world's "most active" state sponsor of
terrorism. As reported in the Associated Press on 1 May, Iran was
responsible for "supporting Palestinian extremists and insurgents in
Afghanistan and Iraq, whereÉ elements of the Iranian Revolutionary
Guards Corps continued to give militants weapons, training and funding."
The irony is that the report further contributes to the US's long-touted
case for war against Iran; ironic because the report's findings, if
viewed responsibly, substantiate the claim that the Bush
administration's policies have only made the world more unsafe. Wouldn't
a war against Iran hike up the number of violent or terrorist incidents?
It also remains unclear how powerful Al-Qaeda really is, and how much of
its capabilities were hyped in order to enable the Bush administration
to continue its mission. Consider the two occasions Al-Qaeda was back in
the news recently.
News media cited official Afghani reports attributing the recent
assassination attempt on US-ally Afghani President Hamid Karzai to
Al-Qaeda. In other reports, the US rationalised its own assassination of
a leading Somali militia leader Aden Hashi Eyrow on 1 May as targeting a
key Al-Qaeda member. It's not the logic of the assassination that is key
here, but rather the fact that while Al- Qaeda has reached a position of
strength that can penetrate several layers of defences in Afghanistan,
the US is getting itself involved in a regional feud in Somalia. Why
would the Bush administration be chasing Al-Qaeda in Somalia, as in
Iraq, if the group is reportedly in the most powerful position in
Afghanistan?
Moreover, if Al-Qaeda indeed exists on such a large and influential
scale in so many countries, isn't it time to question the logic used by
the Bush administration's "war on terror" that was meant to weaken and
destroy Al- Qaeda in the first place?
It may be, of course, that Al-Qaeda's power and outreach is inflated for
political reasons, where every conflict the US is involved in becomes
immediately reduced to those who support, shield or host Al-Qaeda or Al-
Qaeda inspired groups, thus justifying US military intervention
anywhere.
Instead of dealing with the obvious truths that the terrorism report
highlights, the authors of the report have resorted to another logic
that places blame squarely on external circumstance, never holding the
US government accountable for its actions.
Finally, is there really a need for lengthy reports that cost large sums
of money and thousands of work hours if the lessons gleaned are always
the wrong ones, leading to more blunders that prompt more violence, and
more terrorism reports?
-Ramzy Baroud (
www.ramzybaroud.net ) is an
author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published
in many newspapers and journals worldwide. His latest book is The Second
Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press,
London).