It
was predictable.
For
years I've been writing that the U.S. Government
has
been making more enemies than Americans really need,
all
over the globe,
and
that one of these days some of them would have a nasty surprise for us.
In fact it nearly happened a few years ago,
when
Islamic radicals tried to blow up the World Trade Center.
But of course they made a botch of it and got caught.
This time, though,
someone
pulled off what must have been an extremely cunning conspiracy,
a
criminal feat for the ages.
They
managed to execute a secret plan calling for four simultaneous hijackings
of airplanes.
Those
who committed these coordinated deeds
--
in spite of all security measures --
also
had the determination to die in hitting their targets.
This wasn't "terrorism." This was war.
It
wasn't a random attempt to scare people with an arbitrary atrocity,
like
the bombing of a pizza joint;
it
was a serious attempt to kill as many people
and
do as much material damage as possible at two strategic targets,
the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
But, as I write, hours after the attacks,
we
don't know who is at war with us.
We
may never know. Who has reason to hate this country?
Only
a few hundred million people
--
Arabs, Muslims, Serbs, and numerous others whose countries have been hit
by U.S. bombers.
Imagine hating a country so much that you were willing to cross an ocean
and
carry out an elaborate revenge against its people,
killing
yourself in the process.
This
is something far more than the sort of ideological anti-Americanism
that
leads student mobs to throw stones at U.S. embassies abroad;
that's
kid stuff.
This is an obsessive, fanatical, soul-consuming hatred.
Foreigners aren't quite real to Americans,
and
most Americans are unaware of how profoundly their government
antagonizes much of the human race.
We
are easy-going people who generally have no idea
how
bullying we seem to foreigners.
Until
now, we have had no experience of what the U.S. Government
has
so often inflicted on others.
Now, at least, we have an inkling of what it feels like.
Government spokesmen have responded with their usual cant of
"cowardly
attacks" by "terrorists" who "hate democracy and freedom.
"
Rubbish. A fanatic who is ready to die is the opposite of a coward, and
nobody can "hate"
such abstractions as "democracy and freedom" with that kind of intensity.
It's dangerous to belittle your enemy,
especially
when his courage and cunning
have
already proved as formidable as his hatred and cruelty.
The
first question you should ask about your enemy is
why
he is your enemy in the first place.
You may be deluding and flattering yourself if you assume he hates you
for your virtues.
But
our "leaders" assure us that our enemies are unnaturally evil people
who hate us only because we are so wonderful.
And
they manage to utter this nonsense with an air of tough-minded realism.
True realism, on the other hand,
doesn't
mean blaming Americans for bringing these horrifying and truly evil acts
on themselves.
It
does mean trying to imagine alien perspectives from which our government's
conduct
might appear so intolerable that some people might be driven to take atrocious
revenge.
"To understand all is to forgive all," says the French aphorism. Not true.
But
understanding all can at least teach you how to avoid making enemies,
and
avoiding making enemies is the best defense --
better
than a $300 billion "defense" budget that didn't defend the World Trade
Center.
The great director Jean Renoir was once asked why
there were no villains in his films.
He
answered simply:
"Everyone has his reasons."
Your
bitterest enemy may have his reasons for hating your guts.
You
may not think they are good or sufficient reasons,
but
you'd better take them into account.
If
he has any brains, he may find a way to hurt you.
The United States is now a global empire
that
wants to think of itself as a universal benefactor,
and
is nonplussed when foreigners don't see it that way.
None
of the earlier empires of this world,
as
far as I know, shared this delusion;
the
Romans, the Mongols, the British, the Russians and Soviets
didn't
expect to rule and to be loved at the same time.
Why
do we?
is
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