{"id":837,"date":"2023-02-12T12:00:39","date_gmt":"2023-02-12T12:00:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/?p=837"},"modified":"2023-05-08T14:31:15","modified_gmt":"2023-05-08T12:31:15","slug":"why-the-word-terrorism-is-more-dangerous-than-terrorists","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/why-the-word-terrorism-is-more-dangerous-than-terrorists\/","title":{"rendered":"Why the Word \u201cTerrorism\u201d is more Dangerous than Terrorists"},"content":{"rendered":"<blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">[Excerpt from the 1966 film <em>The Battle of Algiers<\/em>]<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">Reporter: <em>\u201cMr. Ben M\u2019hidi, isn\u2019t it a filthy thing to use women\u2019s baskets to carry explosives for killing people?\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">Larbi Ben M&#8217;hidi: <em>\u201cDoesn\u2019t it seem even filthier to drop napalm bombs on defenseless villages, wreaking even greater havoc? It would be better if we, too, had planes. Give me the bombers, and you can have the baskets.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">If I could banish one word from the English language it would be \u201cterrorism\u201d or its accompanying moniker \u201cterrorist\u201d. As both a noun and adjective, terrorist is one of the few terms with no agreed upon legal definition, because there is no consensus on what one is. The term is equally pejorative, polemical, and propagandistic, as nearly nobody self-identifies as a terrorist and both sides in any conflict will reflexively accuse the other of being one.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Further calling into question the terms legitimacy, one only needs to look at history to see how the same Mujahideen in Afghanistan magically went from Ronald Reagan\u2019s \u201cfreedom fighters\u201d greeted at the White House when they were shooting Soviet troops, to the terrorist Taliban that the US then spent over two trillion dollars to bomb for twenty years. But this irrationality was known over a century ago, when the French journalist Octave Mirbeau prophetically cautioned us how, \u201cThe greatest danger of a terrorist\u2019s bomb is in the explosion of stupidity that it provokes.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">One way to sardonically define a \u2018terrorist\u2019 would be: Someone who has a bomb, but lacks an air force. However, a more cynical (but no less accurate) definition might also be: When an ideological opponent with less sophisticated weaponry has the audacity to reply to your government in the same language they are being spoken to with\u2014unbridled violence. As a discrediting neologism, \u2018terrorism\u2019 is the word that essentially means nothing, yet somehow justifies everything in countering it; primarily because it is the symptom not the disease. There is also negligible moral difference between a stealth bomber and a suicide bomber, since both kill people for political reasons, and all murders are terrifying (and thus produce terror).<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Moreover, the idea of terrorism is so insidious because to many people being against it is perceived as a neutral, natural, nonideological, and commonsensical position. Thus, dislodging this intractable hegemony of \u2018common sense\u2019 can be extremely difficult, as very few people would even think twice before agreeing that \u2018of course\u2019 we should do everything possible to \u2018stop terrorism\u2019 or \u2018defeat the terrorists\u2019. On the other hand, the problem lies in the reality that this desire does not include one\u2019s own tacit support or participation in the very thing they believe they are against (terrorism)\u2014particularly on the state level (state terrorism)\u2014and often under the guise of preventing it.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>Stop Terrorizing and Die Quietly<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Stopping terrorism also typically suspends one\u2019s critical thinking skills and dilutes their ability to rationally analyze a situation, since it induces a powerfully cathected social amnesia towards the overall chronology of events. Whereas every action by an entrenched power\u2014even those which incongruously occurred first\u2014becomes \u2018payback\u2019 for any \u2018terrorist attack\u2019 which may occur, and all proportionality is rendered irrelevant. The answer for why certain states can get away with killing, as Derrick Jensen explains in his work <em>Endgame, Volume 1: The Problem of Civilization<\/em>, is that:<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><em>\u201cCivilization is based on a clearly defined and widely accepted yet often unarticulated hierarchy. Violence done by those higher on the hierarchy to those lower is nearly always invisible, that is, unnoticed. When it is noticed, it is fully rationalized. Violence done by those lower on the hierarchy to those higher is unthinkable, and when it does occur is regarded with shock, horror, and the fetishization of the victims.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Such fixations help explain how sanctions or heavy bombing that kills thousands of people from the periphery or third world will barely garner a mention in the Western press, while a single lone act of \u2018terrorism\u2019 in a major American or European city\u2014even if it only features a few victims\u2014has the capacity to dominate the news cycle, fully capture the global public consciousness, and eventually engender immense public pressure to ensure it never happens again.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Unfortunately, on the whole, typically preventing those relatively rare instances of \u2018terror attacks\u2019 comes with an extremely heavy human price on those populations suspected of potentially producing future attackers. And it is served up alongside a heaping dose of \u2018collateral damage\u2019\u2014a deceptively clinical term only applied to the dead children killed by non-terrorists and ostensibly produced in an attempt to stop \u2018terrorism\u2019.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">But the reason why dissecting the empty social construct of terrorism is important and critical, is that nation states only operate under this disingenuous claim that \u2018all is fair in war\u2019 when they are the ones doing the killing. Every oppressive government, regime, or dictatorship when confronted with a guerrilla insurgency will claim that asymmetrical attacks are somehow \u2018unfair\u2019. Not much different than British Empire redcoats who objected to 18<sup>th<\/sup> century American colonists sniping at them with muskets from treetops, rather than lining up into orderly columns and calmly walking into cannon fire; in our modern era, the term \u2018terrorism\u2019 is now increasingly being used to disqualify any and all armed resistance, even when the targets are exclusively military personnel.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Essentially, \u2018crying terrorist\u2019 when confronted by any form of violent opposition, is an intellectually inane attempt to pre-emptively render all grievances of the aforementioned \u2018heretical\u2019 party illegitimate, a tactic which often works intoxicatingly well. Principally, a common characteristic of oppressive regimes is that any resistance is used as justification for their dominance, establishing a feedback loop where control is vindicated both through acquiescence and confrontation, unfairly leaving the victims no behavioral response that does not justify their own bondage.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>Kurdish Resistance as Case in Point<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">In the case of Turkey, following each PKK (Kurdistan Workers\u2019 Party) defensive attack, the Turkish military will basically claim: \u2018Your resistance to my occupation is the reason I behave this way in the first place!\u2019 And the effect of such rhetorical loops is that they attempt to neuter all legitimate resistance of Kurds both internally and to the outside world (as I previously explained in my KCS article on how <span style=\"color: #333399;\"><a style=\"color: #333399;\" href=\"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/nonviolence-is-a-privilege-denied-to-kurdish-guerrillas\/\">\u2018Nonviolence is a Privilege Denied to Kurdish Guerrillas\u2019<\/a><\/span>).\u00a0For example, Turkey continually massacres Kurdish civilians and then cries foul when a single PKK fighter ambushes an advancing army convoy or assaults a police station where tortures are being carried out, while conveniently maintaining an extreme obliviousness at how the actions of their military could engender a desperate Kurdish person to carry out such a retaliatory attack of retribution.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Now while it is true that not all violence is liberatory, or even effective at achieving an objective, the ones who ought to get to make that decision should not be those hierarchies with most of the weapons, power, and rising body count of victims, who traditionally are also the ones who chronologically began the hostilities to begin with. As not allowing for any justified armed resistance would mean that occupying or oppressive armies would be allowed to essentially do whatever they like to civilian populations, and the only \u2018morally acceptable\u2019 or \u2018non-terroristic\u2019 recourse would be to accept submission or die. Or as one Kurdish guerrilla told me years ago in an interview: \u201cLetting Turkey define us is like asking a rapist to describe his victim.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Yet, my extensive studying of resistance movements has displayed to me that insurgencies\u2014and the inevitable claims of terrorism when they strike back at those attempting to destroy them\u2014almost always arrive at the end of a long timeline of domination, repression, and cruelty. As essentially, to borrow a phrase from the French Revolution, guerrillas like the PKK are, \u201cA storm that had been gathering for years. Just because it burst, you cannot blame the thunderbolt.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">For instance, in the direct case of the PKK and the Turkish occupation of Northern Kurdistan, set aside the 4,000+ Kurdish villages that Turkey\u2019s military burned down throughout the 1990s and just take the situation recently at the end of 2015. At that time, Erdo\u011fan\u2019s dictatorship began enforcing inhumane curfews as protective cover for reducing the Kurdish districts of Sur in Amed, Nis\u00eab\u00een in M\u00eard\u00een,\u200e and Ciz\u00eer and Silopi in \u015eirnex to rubble. Meanwhile, the HDP deputy Ziya Pir described a situation where, \u201cThe [Turkish] soldiers, police or some unregistered people that I call \u2018head hunters\u2019 rake through everything from top to bottom wherever they see life.\u201d While Professor Sebnem Fincanci\u2014the president of the Human Rights Foundation of Turkey (TIHV)\u2014recounted a scene where, \u201cThe [Turkish Army] snipers shoot at water reservoirs. They cut off electricity. The shoot at people directly. It reminds me of the Bosnian genocide, the mass graves where I worked.\u201d In an additional description of the carnage inflicted upon Kurdish civilians, the Turkish journalist Uzay Bulut <span style=\"color: #333399;\"><a style=\"color: #333399;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.gatestoneinstitute.org\/7122\/turkey-assault-kurds\">described how<\/a><\/span>:<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><em>\u201cDuring these curfews, the Turkish military and police have targeted, terrorized and demolished entire Kurdish neighborhoods. The curfews are accompanied by military assaults against civilian populations\u2014their homes, businesses, offices, historical monuments, reservoirs and infrastructure, are being bombed and destroyed\u2026 The Turks are using aerial bombardment, sniper fire, artillery fire, tanks, helicopters and thousands of soldiers. When someone is wounded or gets seriously sick, and their family members need to take them to hospital, they are shot by snipers, or sometimes they are shot just at the windows of their homes. In the Kurdish town of Silopi, police vehicles broadcast announcements that it is forbidden to look out of the windows.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">In fact, it was in Silopi where a fifty-seven-year-old Kurdish mother of eleven named Taybet Inan was soon sniped and murdered for violating the curfew, as Turkish soldiers ensured that her lifeless body openly rotted on the street for seven days, while her children helplessly watched from their home 150 meters away. Her son Tamer later explained how they tried to retrieve her body, but in so doing their uncle was shot as well. In another curfew-related murder, a ten-year-old Kurdish girl Cemile Cagirga was executed by Turkish soldiers outside her home in Ciz\u00eer, and her family was forced to store her corpse in their freezer for three days because of their street being under constant siege.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">So, you effectively had a situation where the Turkish Government was terrorizing the local Kurdish population with every military means at their disposal and traumatizing thousands of Kurdish children, while also killing hundreds of Kurdish civilians. For instance, in just one tragic sequence the Turkish military mass murdered and burned alive 178 people trapped in three basements in the town of Ciz\u00eer. However, if a Kurdish teenager who had one of their family members killed had decided to take a gun and shoot a Turkish sniper who was targeting his civilian neighbors from the rooftops, then the Turkish press would have reported the story as \u2018a Kurdish terrorist killed a Turkish martyr\u2019, and give the fallen soldier a state funeral replete with all the pomp and circumstance that Turkish ultra-nationalism can provide. Which is exactly why the idea of \u2018terrorism\u2019 is so insidious, because it complicates the inherent morality of situations and excuses nearly all state-based tyranny. Or as a Kurdish guerrilla rhetorically asked me in 2014: \u201cIf a slave owner is terrified of his abused slaves rising up against him, is this terrorism?\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>Saving is not the same as Enslaving<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Now, are there lumpenized armed groups without sufficient grievances\u2014who are heinously driven by sociopathic anti-humanist tendencies\u2014and purposefully target civilians to induce panic? Of course, and those groups deserve to suffer defeat and be brought to justice for their crimes. I would also argue that past systemic persecution is not a sufficient justification to then carry out your own collective abuses and cruelty. So for instance, a group like ISIS would not be justified in carrying out mass rape or enslavement of Yazidi (\u00cazid\u00ee) women, regardless of the inhumane conditions which created them, and consequently they deserve to be defeated for attempting such callous actions that also violate the inalienable rights of their victims. But such stark and clear cases of terrorists like ISIS are relatively rare, and even then, I would argue the term \u2018terrorist\u2019 is not useful, as it does far more harm than good because of the numerous ways it is dishonestly weaponized.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">For example, the dubiousness of the distinction is directly present in the aforesaid case of ISIS, as one of the groups that most effectively defeated them and pushed them back from their campaign of wanton sadism, were the foreign \u2018terrorist-listed\u2019 PKK. Making matters even worse and more illogical, one of the chief sponsors and strategic benefactors of ISIS was the Turkish Government, a regime responsible for giving the PKK their unjustified \u2018terrorist\u2019 label to the outside world. So, you have a situation where female PKK guerrillas helped famously save 40,000 Yazidis (many of them women and young girls) from sexual enslavement by ISIS terrorists on Mount Sinjar in 2014, and people expect the public not to scratch their head and wonder why both parties share the same verbal classification? The reason is because the term has become hollow, contextual to vantage point, and meaningless.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">A further reason why \u2018terrorism\u2019 is dangerous as a construct is that acts of \u2018terror\u2019 are almost never desultory occurrences, but are usually a reaction to some repeated form of structural subjugation. In reality, such attacks are typically a signal that human desperation is growing, and that a situation is being fostered where a confluence of people see very few options available to them to stop their suffering. Take for instance the words of Salih O\u011fuz, a civilian Kurdish walnut farmer from the recently destroyed village of Ak\u00e7abudak, who told a reporter in the mid-1990s:<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><em>\u201cThe Turkish soldiers came and told us we were terrorists and that they wanted to burn the place. All my friends and I are living in Amed now; there is no way we can support ourselves here and we don\u2019t know what to do.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">The reality is that many Kurds with no other options \u2018headed to the mountains\u2019, a shorthand phrase for becoming a PKK guerrilla. As the calculation was made that if unbearable anguish is inevitable regardless of how much one resists, then they may as well retain some of their dignity through fighting back. And in so doing, they either help defeat the enemy and emancipate themselves, or die in the process and thereby release themselves from further despair anyway. Consequently, if you want to stop \u2018terrorism\u2019, then the best course of action may be for occupying states to stop terrorizing the future \u2018terrorists\u2019.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[Excerpt from the 1966 film The Battle of Algiers] Reporter: \u201cMr. Ben M\u2019hidi, isn\u2019t it a filthy thing to use women\u2019s baskets to carry explosives for killing people?\u201d Larbi Ben M&#8217;hidi: \u201cDoesn\u2019t it seem even filthier to drop napalm bombs on defenseless villages, wreaking even greater havoc? It would be better if we, too, had [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9,"featured_media":853,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_crdt_document":"","jnews-multi-image_gallery":[],"jnews_single_post":[],"jnews_primary_category":[],"jnews_social_meta":[],"jnews_override_counter":[],"jnews_post_split":[],"footnotes":""},"categories":[16,61],"tags":[126,42,43,41,50,130,131,132],"ppma_author":[79],"class_list":["post-837","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-analysis","category-slider","tag-guerrillas","tag-kurdish","tag-kurdistan","tag-kurds","tag-pkk","tag-terrorism","tag-terrorist","tag-violence"],"authors":[{"term_id":79,"user_id":9,"is_guest":0,"slug":"thoreau-redcrow","display_name":"Thoreau Redcrow","avatar_url":{"url":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/04\/Thoreau-Redcrow-5.jpg","url2x":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/04\/Thoreau-Redcrow-5.jpg"},"0":null,"1":"","2":"","3":"","4":"","5":"","6":"","7":"","8":""}],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/837","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/9"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=837"}],"version-history":[{"count":15,"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/837\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2213,"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/837\/revisions\/2213"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/853"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=837"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=837"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=837"},{"taxonomy":"author","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/nlka.net\/eng\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ppma_author?post=837"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}