Killing
Live 8, Noisily: The G-8, Liberal Dissent and the London Bombings
Sheila Carapico
© Middle East Report Online
The organizers of Live 8,
the week-long, celebrity-driven musical campaign for increased aid and debt
relief for poverty-stricken nations, plugged their July 6 concert in an
Edinburgh stadium as "a celebration of the largest and loudest cry to
make poverty history the world has ever seen." By rush hour the next
morning, four coordinated bombings in the London transit system had stolen
the show from the well-orchestrated international extravaganza and handed
the microphone to Tony Blair and George W. Bush. Talk about a vast
right-wing conspiracy: the London terrorists could not have done more to
strengthen the hand of the world's richest states against dissident voices
in the West and beyond if they had actually been in cahoots.
The July 7 bombings in
London interrupted the sanctimonious conversation between the British prime
minister, the US president and other "world leaders" at a
luxurious Scottish resort concerning global warming and what to do about
those perennially poor Africans. Instantly, the podium at the Group of Eight
summit became a pulpit, from which Blair and Bush preached against evil and
claimed the mantle of the Live 8 concerts for themselves. "It's
particularly barbaric," Blair intoned, "that this has happened on
a day when people are meeting to try to help the problems of poverty in
Africa, the long-term problems of climate change and the environment."
His American confrere concurred: "On the one hand, we got people here
who are working to alleviate poverty and to help rid the world of the
pandemic of AIDS and that are working on ways to have a clean environment.
And on the other hand, you've got people killing innocent people. And the
contrast couldn't be clearer." The moral of their story is: either you
are with the G-8 or you are with the terrorists.
The us-against-them rhetoric
relegated popular demonstrations against the G-8's managed haute finance to
the sidelines, and muffled the cry of the Live 8 concerts attended by tens
of thousands of rock fans and activists in cities across the globe and
watched by millions more. Timed to coincide with the summit, and
symbolically as much a strike at trappings of global capitalism as the
attacks on the World Trade Center, instead the explosions silenced voices
against forced debt repayment and the war in Iraq. Blair got to pretend to
be the patron, instead of the target, of debt relief activists. The G-8 got
to portray themselves as civilized governments magnanimously doling out
charity to Africans, Palestinians and AIDS victims, rather than a resented
club of the geopolitically advantaged. Legitimate counter-narratives about
what "the West" or "the civilized world" are and ought
to be doing about pressing economic and environmental problems were hushed
by another act of senseless destruction.
Not
Exactly Revolutionaries
There was a time when
peacenik rock stars glorified revolutionaries. In the old days of the
Algerian resistance and the Viet Cong, the predecessors to the protesters
outside the G-8 gathering had sympathy for the rebels. Some of the ideas of
Jean-Paul Sartre and Frantz Fanon found expression in the crooning of Bob
Dylan, John Lennon and Bob Marley. Rock concerts resembled anti-war protests
and protest rallies sounded like rock concerts. In what in those days was
called a New Left analysis, which laced Marxism with anti-colonial
nationalism, Che Guevara and Ho Chi Minh were standard bearers; as the
anti-war movement gained momentum, they became folk heroes. In
counter-establishment pop culture, the armed vanguard of the
anti-imperialist resistance had a real panache. This is because the
revolutionaries offered a cogent and compelling analysis with wide appeal
across continents and cultures, one that spoke intellectually to Africans
and Europeans or Asians and Americans alike. There was a basis for
solidarity, a sense of common cause.
Al-Qaeda is transparently
not the spearhead of a progressive movement for peace and justice -- either
in perception or in fact. Osama bin Laden is not Che Guevara, even if in
places like Honduras and the Philippines one can buy T-shirts depicting him
as such. There is nothing in the statements of al-Qaeda and the other
jihadists that speaks to the G-8 protesters, nor even to the Afro-Asian
masses for whom they sometimes claim to speak. Actually, they offer no
coherent ideology at all, but only vacuous far-right incitement like
"death to Jews and Crusaders." There is nothing romantic or
righteous about blowing up London trains. Nor is there a shred of evidence
that the bombers in London admire the protesters or sympathize with their
goals.
Al-Qaeda, or whatever
spinoff group planned and executed this none too daring exploit, is not
lighting the way to relief of African debt. They are not fighting for
Palestinian, Iraqi or Chechen independence, or for a revolution in Saudi
Arabia, or to free political prisoners in Egypt. They do not respect or
abide by Islamic law as understood by those who know what it is about. They
are reactionary nihilist-anarchists with no positive vision or program: even
the goal of an "Islamic state" per se is more imputed than
articulated. They want to destroy the nation-state, the world system and the
tourism industry. Issuing no manifestos, they are rebels without much of a
cause at all. In post-Orwellian fashion, the medium -- detonating explosives
-- is the message. The goal is not even killing, as is so often said, but
the cheap thrill of making very loud noises, blowing things apart and
letting horrified audiences watch the mayhem replay endlessly on television.
The bombing tactic is not particularly directed against democracies. Nor are
democracies particularly vulnerable, as targets in Saudi Arabia, Yemen,
Kenya and other places show. Nor, it has now been widely recognized, is this
a centralized operation: for all we know, the London bombers were trying to
show up bin Laden for laying low these past few years. The tactic of
randomly setting off explosions is not going to go away, whether or not al-Qaeda
loses its patent.
The Live 8 musicians are not
exactly revolutionaries, either. Bono and U2, the specially reunited Pink
Floyd, Paul McCartney, Stevie Wonder, Madonna, Elton Jon, Bon Jovi and other
stars with a conscience hoped, in the words of Live 8 organizer and Irish
rocker Bob Geldof, that their show-biz blitz would "tilt the world a
little bit on its axis in favor of the poor." Their modest mission, in
the Band Aid tradition, is to evince and thereby elicit some compassion for
the rest of humanity.
Casualties
of War
But yet another high-profile
bombing in the Western heartland further limits the scope for even the Live
8 brand of consciousness raising, by casting global conflict in cultural or
civilizational terms, not economic ones. That conflict, pace Blair and Bush,
is not about the wealth of the North perpetuating the poverty of the global
South, or the G-8 riding herd over the G-88, or any material issues at all,
but instead an ideological struggle that pits East against West and Islam
against Christianity, equating this with those who love freedom against
those who hate freedom, or the civilized world against barbarism. Blair
ascribed the London bombings to people who "act in the name of
Islam." Though he hastened to add that the vast majority of Muslims in
Britain and elsewhere are "decent and law-abiding," his
attribution of religious motivation can only leave non-Muslims wondering
what in Islam could justify such acts even as every imam in the isles seeks
to disavow any connection between Islam and "violence." The
Islamist militants exaggerate their own power by claiming to be backed by a
billion believers, princes and paupers alike. For their part, US, British
and Russian leaders perpetuate this telescopic magnification of "the
other side" in a "global war" because it positions them as
defenders of the Free World against a transcontinental army "over
there" rather than scattered cells of narcissistic anarchists in their
own midst. So even when the bombers turn out to be homegrown Anglo-Asian
cultural hybrids, as appears to be the case with the London attackers, the
problem has already been classified as "foreign."
There is no evidence of a
mass following or widespread public support in North Africa, the Levant or
the Arabian Peninsula for a group calling itself al-Qaeda, much less al-Qaeda
in Europe. To be sure, Islamist parties have flourished above ground and
underground in many countries, often thanks to their governments' campaigns
to obliterate what a generation ago was a flourishing Arab left. A number of
Arab despots feel threatened by Islamism, as well they might, since
nationalism and national solutions to the challenge of social order have
been discredited by the likes of Saddam Hussein, the Palestinian sovereignty
conundrum and downright crummy governance. A strong majority of Arabs and
Muslims undoubtedly share European disgust with the Iraq war, and most
deplore uncritical US support for Israel. So yes, they hate US and Western
policies. But al-Qaeda is not representative of Islamism and its
pronouncements are not consonant with those of any major Islamist party. Nor
do the political sentiments of Arabs and Muslims make them natural al-Qaeda
constituents, and anyway many more Arabs than Westerners have died at the
hands of the violent salafi fringe. There is no sense conjuring the
jihadists as a vast military machine capable of inspiring masses of
volunteers and conscripting huge infantries, comparable to the Third Reich
or Communism.
If insight is the first
casualty of this quasi-war, humanitarianism is the second. Those who would
forge North/South alliances, challenge the economic tyranny of the G-8 or
march against world hunger have been thrown back on the defensive after only
a weak recovery from the blow of the September 11 attacks. The Islamic
catchphrases on jihadist websites, the political reaction, especially in the
United States, and the failure of progressive and/or Arabist scholars to
publicize a more accurate analysis of the problems that face the world in
the twenty-first century leave a broad swath of the Euro-American public
unable to identify or sympathize with Arabs or Muslims at all. Instead,
cracks from Thomas Friedman that "only the Muslim world can root out
[this] death cult" again insinuate a pan-Islamic responsibility for the
loss of innocent Western life. Friedman's confident, but completely
erroneous pronouncement that "to this day -- to this day -- no major
Muslim cleric or religious body has ever issued a fatwa condemning Osama bin
Laden" puts off more heat than light. Meanwhile, scholars who write
knowledgeably about Arabs and Islam, but not terrorism, are open to
suspicions of sympathy or even collusion with the enemy.
Setback
When the G-8 summit
concluded, Blair, who used to represent the once social-minded, left-leaning
Labor Party, announced that loans and technical assistance from the world's
wealthiest nations to Africa would be raised to a whopping $50 billion by
2010. While reminding Africans that they alone are responsible for their
impoverishment and must pull themselves up by their sandal-straps, he also
promised future cuts in the massive farm subsidies G-8 governments use to
fertilize domestic agriculture in violation of their own free-market mantras
and at the expense of farmers in poor countries. Fifty billion dollars
sounds like an impressive sum until it is divided by five years and among
three dozen countries, or until it is compared with the $82 billion
allocated by Congress in May for one more year's prosecution of the US wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan. In any case, it is far less than activists had
hoped for, and everyone knows promises are not budgetary appropriations or
subsidy reductions. Summiteers acknowledged that global warming may be a
problem, but bowed to the Bush administration's fears that doing something
about it might interfere with wealth creation inside the world's richest
economy.
It is too early to tell
whether the British public will respond, as Spaniards did after the March
2004 Madrid bombings, by blaming the government that allowed such a thing to
happen. Initial reactions indicate that, to the contrary, Blair's tarnished
public image may regain its shine, as did Bush's after September 11, 2001.
Bono himself blessed Blair's African aid pledges by saying that "the
world spoke and the politicians listened." So much for liberal dissent
from the G-8's poverty policy.
Already it would seem that
death and destruction in downtown London have tightened central,
self-interested management of global capitalism at the G-8 level and shored
up the reactionary national security state within both the US and Britain
while obliterating British, American and international voices calling for a
more genuinely global sense of justice and fairness. Together, the violence
and the rhetorical response sow distrust and "racial" fears within
the West as well as between East and West, bolstering nativism and
rationalizing the retraction of civil liberties. The attacks of July 7
ultimately strengthen, not weaken, the power centers of the world system
their targets ostensibly represent. This episode, like the September 11
attacks and the Madrid bombings, set back the cause of peace and justice.
Sheila Carapico teaches
political science and international studies at the University of Richmond
and serves on the editorial committee of Middle East Report.
This article first appeared
in Middle East Report Online, the web magazine of the Middle East Research
and Information Project (www.merip.org)