Violence Doesn't Work
Howard Zinn
September 14, 2001
The images on television have been heartbreaking.
People on fire leaping to their deaths from a hundred
stories up. People in panic and fear racing from the scene in clouds of dust
and smoke.
We knew that there must be thousands of human beings
buried alive, but soon dead under a mountain of debris. We can only imagine
the terror among the passengers of the hijacked planes as they contemplated
the crash, the fire, the end. Those scenes horrified and sickened me.
Then our political leaders came on television, and I was
horrified and sickened again. They spoke of retaliation, of vengeance, of
punishment.
We are at war, they said. And I thought: they have learned
nothing, absolutely nothing, from the history of the twentieth century, from
a hundred years of retaliation, vengeance, war, a hundred years of terrorism
and counter-terrorism, of violence met with violence in an unending cycle of
stupidity.
We can all feel a terrible anger at whoever, in their
insane idea that this would help their cause, killed thousands of innocent
people. But what do we do with that anger? Do we react with panic, strike
out violently and blindly just to show how tough we are? "We shall make
no distinction," the President proclaimed, "between terrorists and
countries that harbor terrorists." Will we now bomb Afghanistan, and
inevitably kill innocent people, because it is in the nature of bombing to
be indiscriminate, to "make no distinction"? Will we then be
committing terrorism in order to "send a message" to terrorists?
We have done that before. It is the old way of thinking,
the old way of acting. It has never worked. Reagan bombed Libya, and Bush
made war on Iraq, and Clinton bombed Afghanistan and also a pharmaceutical
plant in the Sudan, to "send a message" to terrorists. And then
comes this horror in New York and Washington. Isn't it clear by now that
sending a message to terrorists through violence doesn't work, only leads to
more terrorism?
Haven't we learned anything from the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict.
Car bombs planted by Palestinians bring air attacks and
tanks by the Israeli government. That has been going on for years. It
doesn't work.
And innocent people die on both sides.
Yes, it is an old way of thinking, and we need new ways.
We need to think about the resentment all over the world felt by people who
have been the victims of American military action. In Vietnam, where we
carried out terrorizing bombing attacks, using napalm and cluster bombs,on
peasant villages. In Latin America, where we supported dictators and death
squads in Chile and El Salvador and other countries. In Iraq, where a
million people have died as a result of our economic sanctions, And, perhaps
most important for understanding the current situation, in the occupied
territories of the West Bank and Gaza, where a million and more Palestinians
live under a cruel military occupation, while our government supplies Israel
with high-tech weapons.
We need to imagine that the awful scenes of death and
suffering we are now witnessing on our television screens have been going on
in other parts of the world for a long time, and only now can we begin to
know what people have gone through, often as a result of our policies. We
need to understand how some of those people will go beyond quiet anger to
acts of terrorism.
We need new ways of thinking. A $300 billion dollar
military budget has not given us security. Military bases all over the world,
our warships on every ocean, have not given us security. Land mines and a
"missile defense shield" will not give us security. We need to
rethink our position in the world. We need to stop sending weapons to
countries that oppress other people or their own people. We need to decide
that we will not go to war, whatever reason is conjured up by the
politicians of the media, because war in our time is always indiscriminate,
a war against innocents, a war against children. War is terrorism, magnified
a hundred times.
Our security can only come by using our national wealth,
not for guns, planes, bombs, but for the health and welfare of our people -
for free medical care for everyone, education and housing guaranteed decent
wages and a clean environment for all. We can not be secure by limiting our
liberties, as some of our political leaders are demanding, but only by
expanding them.
We should take our example not from our military and
political leaders shouting "retaliate" and "war" but
from the doctors and nurses and medical students and firemen and policemen
who have been saving lives in the midst of mayhem, whose first thoughts are
not violence, but healing, not vengeance but compassion.