BOOK REVIEW:
The New Military Humanism: Lessons from Kosovo, by Noam Chomsky (Monroe,
Maine: 1999, Common Courage Press)
December 1999
Chomsky ignores lessons of wars in Kosova
By Peter Hudis
There once was a time when the radical critic, faced with rape camps and
mass killings against an ethnic minority, could be counted on to attack the
offending regime, expose the complicity of the Western powers, and extend
solidarity to the victims of oppression. But no more-at least judging from
Noam Chomsky's latest book on the war in Kosova.
Chomsky debunks the myth that the U.S. went to war over Kosova for
"humanitarian" reasons. He is right that this wasn't the first time U.S.
imperialism tried to justify a military intervention through ideological
double talk. As he shows, the U.S. bombed Serbia to bolster the prestige of
NATO, not to aid the victims of "ethnic cleansing."
The problem, however, is that not one but TWO wars were fought in Kosova
this year. One was the U.S. war against Serbia. The other was Serbia's war
against the Kosovars. Reading Chomsky, you'd barely know the second ever
occurred. Neither the nature of Milosevic's regime nor the struggle of the
Kosovars receives any serious discussion.
A 'NEW HUMANISM'?
Chomsky does the imperialists one better by not only debunking what they
say, but attributing to them what they never claimed-namely, that the
bombing of Serbia represents "the New Humanism of the New Millennium." (The
phrase was actually first used by the German intellectual Ulrich Beck.)
This is an incredible choice of words. Far from having anything to do with
the actions of imperialist commanders, the quest for a "New Humanism" has
been integral to the freedom struggles of our time, from the East European
revolts against statist "Communism" to the African Revolutions to the Black
freedom struggles in the U.S. By attributing to the rulers the opposite of
what they are about-a "New Humanism"-Chomsky manages to purge from his
purview the ACTUAL humanism which comes from mass struggles for freedom.
This is most of all seen from his callous treatment of the Kosovars.
He first of all denies that genocide was ever at issue, since "only" 2,500
Kosovars were supposedly killed by Serb troops prior to the start of NATO's
air war. Most of the killing of Kosovars by Serbs, he says, occurred after
the bombing started. Serbia is therefore not to blame for the mass killings
and expulsions; it's really the fault of the U.S.
He does mention that before the U.S. bombing Milosevic made plans for a
massive invasion of Kosova, code-named Operation Horseshoe, but he
dismisses it. After all, he says, the U.S. probably has contingency plans
to invade Canada but that hardly means it's planning on taking imminent
action. Chomsky doesn't mention that Operation Horseshoe was named after
the tactic used by Serb paramilitaries in Bosnia of surrounding a village
in a U-shaped formation, killing and raping those caught in it while
forcing the rest of the populace to flee. Nor does he mention that
Milosevic sent 40,000 troops into Kosova BEFORE the U.S. invasion replete
with veterans of the paramilitaries in Bosnia who knew very well what was
expected of them with "Operation Horseshoe."
The one time he mentions genocide is by citing Miranda Vicker's comment
about "genocidal tactics of Albanian separatists." Since he has told us
that the killing of "only" 2,500 Kosovars prior to the U.S. bombing did not
constitute genocide, one is left wondering how the killing of a few dozen
Serbs by Kosovars up to then constituted genocide-especially when most of
those killed were Serb policemen.
For all his acumen in criticizing the media, Chomsky's critical reasoning
comes to a dead stop when it comes to considering the Kosovars. He accepts
without criticism THE NEW YORK TIMES writer Chris Hedges' statement that
"between 1966 and 1989 an estimated 130,000 Serbs left [Kosova] because of
frequent harassment and discrimination by the Kosovar Albanian majority."
The revocation of Kosova's autonomous status by Milosevic in 1989 comes out
sounding like a benign act of a man trying to protect the Serb minority.
Chomsky either doesn't know, or doesn't bother to tell us, that Milosevic
used such exaggerated tales about the suffering of Serbs to consolidate his
hold on power in 1989 and then launch a genocidal war against Bosnia.
Incredibly, Bosnia hardly figures in the book at all. It's as if the
massacre of hundreds of thousands through a carefully orchestrated genocide
were a historical trifle without relevance to what Milosevic was doing in
Kosova.
ONE-SIDED ANTI-IMPERIALISM
The gist of Chomsky's approach is seen when he draws an analogy to the U.S.
in explaining why Serbia responded harshly to attacks by the Kosova
Liberation Army (KLA): "We need scarcely tarry on how the U.S. would
respond to attacks by a guerrilla force with foreign bases and supplies,
seeking, say, independence for Puerto Rico" (p.31). No one need be told
what would be the response of the U.S. But what would be the response of
those opposed to U.S. imperialism? Obviously, to support the fighters for
Puerto Rican independence. But when it comes to Kosova, Chomsky uses the
analogy to ATTACK the KLA's fight for independence, on the grounds that it
provoked the Serbs!
Though an anarchist, Chomsky suffers from such tunnel-vision
anti-imperialism that he becomes a virtual apologist for Milosevic: "Serbia
is one of those disorderly miscreants that impedes the institution of the
U.S.-dominated global system" (p.13).
This statement leaves one speechless. He has apparently forgotten that
Serbia was a virtual ALLY of the U.S. during 1995-98, following the signing
of the Dayton accords-which REWARDED Milosevic by dividing Bosnia into
distinct ethnic cantons.
Chomsky's failure to support the fighters against genocide in Bosnia and
Kosova, after writing eloquently for years in defense of the victims of
"ethnic cleansing" in Guatemala, East Timor and elsewhere, shows that the
power of U.S. militarism has become so total that even anti-statist
radicals are being drawn into making apologies for any force, no matter how
reactionary, so long as it can be considered a bulwark against U.S.
dominance.
It isn't that Chomsky actually SUPPORTS Serbia. He knows the regime has
committed unspeakable crimes. But that just doesn't matter that much to
him. He instead wants to expose the hypocrisy of U.S. foreign policy. The
inevitable result of such a one-sided approach when a TOTAL view is needed
is that the HUMAN dimension-those struggling against Serbian policies in
Kosova-drops from sight.
Last spring some of Chomsky's writings on the war were circulated by the
Tanjug press-Milosevic's state-run propaganda bureau. No doubt this book
too will be used by those out to defend Serbia as the "lesser evil." It's a
sad commentary that Chomsky allows himself to be used in this way.
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