On radical-emancipatory
movements and false rationales for war.
BY SLAVOJ ŽIŽEK
[...]
As I have written before,
we all remember President Obama's smiling face, full of hope and trust, when he
repeatedly delivered the motto of his first campaign, “Yes, we can!”—we can get
rid of the cynicism of the Bush era and bring justice and welfare to the
American people. Now that the United States is backing off its push to attack Syria, we can
imagine peace protesters shouting at President Barack Obama: “How can you
advocate another military intervention?” Obama the reluctant warrior looks back
at them and murmurs perplexed: “Can I? Should I?”
And this time, he is right
to second-guess himself. All that was false in the idea and practice of
humanitarian interventions explodes in a condensed form apropos Syria. OK,
there is a bad dictator who is (allegedly) using poisonous gases against the
population of his own state. But who is opposing his regime? It seems that
whatever remained of the democratic-secular resistance is now more or less
drowned in the mess of fundamentalist Islamist groups supported by Turkey and
Saudi Arabia, with a strong presence of al-Qaeda in the shadows.
As for Assad, his Syria at
least pretends to be a secular state, so no wonder that Christian and other
minorities now tend to take his side against the Sunni rebels. In short, we are
dealing with an obscure conflict, vaguely resembling the Libyan revolt against
Gaddafi. There are no clear political stakes, no signs of a broad
emancipatory-democratic coalition, just a complex network of religious and
ethnic alliances overdetermined by the influence of superpowers (the United
States and Western Europe on the one side, Russia and China on the other). In
such conditions, any direct military intervention means political madness with
incalculable risks. What if radical Islamists take over after Assad’s fall?
Will the United States repeat their Afghanistan mistake of arming the future
al-Qaeda and Taliban cadres? What if the U.S. missiles or bombs land on Syria’s
stockpile of Sarin gas weapons? After the attack, then what?
In such a messy situation,
military intervention can only be justified by a short-term, self-destructive
opportunism. The moral outrage evoked to provide a rational cover for the
compulsion-to-intervene—“We cannot allow the use of poisonous gases on civil
population!”—is a such a sham, it doesn’t even take itself seriously. As we now
know, the United States more than tolerated the use of poisonous gases against
the Iranian army by Saddam Hussein. During the Iraq-Iran war of 1980-1988, the
United States sided with the Iraqis to quell Iranian influence in the Gulf,
despite being well aware of Iraq’s
liberal use of mustard and tear gas, according to declassified
government reports. The United States even secretly supplied Iraq with
satellite images of Iranian battlefield weaknesses to aid in the targeting of
Iranian troops. Where were moral concerns then?
The situation in Syria
should be compared to the one in Egypt. Now that the Egyptian Army has broken
the stalemate and cleansed the public space of the Islamist protesters, the
result is hundreds, maybe thousands, of dead. One should take a step back and
focus on the absent third party in the ongoing conflict: the explosion of
heterogeneous organizations (of students, women, workers) in which civil
society began to articulate its interests outside the scope of state and
religious institutions. This vast network of new social forms is the principal
gain of the Arab Spring, independent of big political changes like the Army’s
coup against the Muslim Brotherhood government or the Assad regime’s war with
Islamist extremists. It goes deeper than the religious/liberal divide. (And
even in the case of clearly fundamentalist movements, one should be careful not
to miss their social component.)
The only way for the
civil-democratic protester—in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya or Syria—to avoid being
sidestepped by religious fundamentalists is by adopting a much more radical
agenda of social and economic emancipation.
And this brings us back to
Syria: The ongoing struggle there is ultimately a false one, a struggle towards
which one should remain indifferent. The only thing to keep in mind is that
this pseudo-struggle thrives because of the absent Third, a strong
radical-emancipatory opposition whose elements were clearly perceptible in
Egypt.
As we used to say almost
half a century ago, one doesn’t have to be a weatherman to know which way the
wind blows. In Egypt’s case, I’ve argued, it
blows toward Iran—and in Syria, it blows toward Afghanistan. Even if Assad
somehow wins and stabilizes the situation, his victory will probably breed an
explosion similar to the Taliban revolution that will sweep over Syria in a
couple of years. What can save us from this prospect is only the radicalization
of the struggle for freedom and democracy into a struggle for social and
economic justice.
So what is happening in
Syria these days? Nothing really special, except that China is one step closer
to becoming the world’s new superpower while her competitors are eagerly
weakening each other.
[...]
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