
| THE HANDSTAND |
2ndWINTER2011 November-December
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Can Revolutionary
Pacificism Deliver Peace?By Noam Chomsky
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Professor Noam
Chomsky has been awarded this years Sydney Peace
Prize, Australias only international peace prize.
This is a full transcript of Professor Chomskys
City of Sydney Peace Prize Lecture, Revolutionary
Pacifism: Choices and Prospects, reproduced with
permission from the Sydney Peace Foundation.
November 06, 2011 "Information Clearing
House"
-- As we all know, the United Nations was founded
"to save succeeding generations from the scourge of
war." The words can only elicit deep regret when we
consider how we have acted to fulfill that aspiration,
though there have been a few significant successes,
notably in Europe.
For centuries, Europe had been the most violent place on
earth, with murderous and destructive internal conflicts
and the forging of a culture of war that enabled Europe
to conquer most of the world, shocking the victims, who
were hardly pacifists, but were "appalled by the all-destructive
fury of European warfare," in the words of British
military historian Geoffrey Parker. And enabled Europe to
impose on its conquests what Adam Smith called "the
savage injustice of the Europeans," England in the
lead, as he did not fail to emphasise.
The global conquest took a particularly horrifying form
in what is sometimes called "the Anglosphere,"
England and its offshoots, settler-colonial societies in
which the indigenous societies were devastated and their
people dispersed or exterminated. But since 1945 Europe
has become internally the most peaceful and in many ways
most humane region of the earth which is the
source of some its current travail, an important topic
that I will have to put aside.
In scholarship, this dramatic transition is often
attributed to the thesis of the "democratic peace":
democracies do not go to war with one another. Not to be
overlooked, however, is that Europeans came to realize
that the next time they indulge in their favorite pastime
of slaughtering one another, the game will be over:
civilisation has developed means of destruction that can
only be used against those too weak to retaliate in kind,
a large part of the appalling history of the post-World
War II years. It is not that the threat has ended. US-Soviet
confrontations came painfully close to virtually terminal
nuclear war in ways that are shattering to contemplate,
when we inspect them closely.
And the threat of nuclear war remains all too ominously
alive, a matter to which I will briefly return.
Can we proceed to at least limit the scourge of war? One
answer is given by absolute pacifists, including people I
respect though I have never felt able to go beyond that.
A somewhat more persuasive stand, I think, is that of the
pacifist thinker and social activist A.J. Muste, one of
the great figures of 20th century America, in my opinion:
what he called "revolutionary pacifism." Muste
disdained the search for peace without justice. He urged
that "one must be a revolutionary before one can be
a pacifist" by which he meant that we must
cease to "acquiesce [so] easily in evil conditions,"
and must deal "honestly and adequately with this
ninety percent of our problem" "the
violence on which the present system is based, and all
the evil material and spiritual this
entails for the masses of men throughout the world."
Unless we do so, he argued, "there is something
ludicrous, and perhaps hypocritical, about our concern
over the ten per cent of the violence employed by the
rebels against oppression" no matter how
hideous they may be.
He was confronting the hardest problem of the day for a
pacifist, the question whether to take part in the anti-fascist
war. In writing about Muste's stand 45 years ago, I
quoted his warning that "The problem after a war is
with the victor. He thinks he has just proved that war
and violence pay. Who will teach him a lesson?" His
observation was all too apt at the time, while the
Indochina wars were raging. And on all too many other
occasions since.
The allies did not fight "the good war," as it
is commonly called, because of the awful crimes of
fascism. Before their attacks on western powers, fascists
were treated rather sympathetically, particularly "that
admirable Italian gentleman," as FDR called
Mussolini. Even Hitler was regarded by the US State
Department as a "moderate" holding off the
extremists of right and left. The British were even more
sympathetic, particularly the business world. Roosevelt's
close confidant Sumner Welles reported to the president
that the Munich settlement that dismembered
Czechoslovakia "presented the opportunity for the
establishment by the nations of the world of a new world
order based upon justice and upon law," in which the
Nazi moderates would play a leading role.
As late as April 1941, the influential statesman George
Kennan, at the dovish extreme of the postwar planning
spectrum, wrote from his consular post in Berlin that
German leaders have no wish to "see other people
suffer under German rule," are "most anxious
that their new subjects should be happy in their care,"
and are making "important compromises" to
assure this benign outcome.
Though by then the horrendous facts of the Holocaust were
well known, they scarcely entered the Nuremberg trials,
which focused on aggression, "the supreme
international crime differing only from other war crimes
in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of
the whole": in Indochina, Iraq, and all too many
other places where we have much to contemplate.
The horrifying crimes of Japanese fascism were virtually
ignored in the postwar peace settlements. Japan's
aggression began exactly 80 years ago, with the staged
Mukden incident, but for the West, it began 10 years
later, with the attack on military bases in two US
possessions. India and other major Asian countries
refused even to attend the 1951 San Francisco Peace
Treaty conference because of the exclusion of Japan's
crimes in Asia and also because of Washington's
establishment of a major military base in conquered
Okiniwa, still there despite the energetic protests of
the population.
It is useful to reflect on several aspects of the Pearl
Harbor attack. One is the reaction of historian and
Kennedy advisor Arthur Schlesinger to the bombing of
Baghdad in March 2003. He recalled FDR's words when Japan
bombed Pearl Harbor on "a date which will live in
infamy."
"Today it is we Americans who live in infamy,"
Schlesinger wrote, as our government adopts the policies
of imperial Japan thoughts that were barely
articulated elsewhere in the mainstream, and quickly
suppressed: I could find no mention of this principled
stand in the praise for Schlesinger's accomplishments
when he died a few years later.
We can also learn a lot about ourselves by carrying
Schlesinger's lament a few steps further. By today's
standards, Japan's attack was justified, indeed
meritorious. Japan, after all, was exercising the much
lauded doctrine of anticipatory self-defense when it
bombed military bases in Hawaii and the Philippines, two
virtual US colonies, with reasons far more compelling
than anything that Bush and Blair could conjure up when
they adopted the policies of imperial Japan in 2003.
Japanese leaders were well aware that B-17 Flying
Fortresses were coming off the Boeing production lines,
and they could read in the American press that these
killing machines would be able to burn down Tokyo, a
"city of rice-paper and wood houses."
A November 1940 plan to "bomb Tokyo and other big
cities" was enthusiastically received by Secretary
of State Cordell Hull. FDR was "simply delighted"
at the plans "to burn out the industrial heart of
the Empire with fire-bomb attacks on the teeming bamboo
ant heaps of Honshu and Kyushu," outlined by their
author, Air Force General Chennault. By July 1941, the
Air Corps was ferrying B-17s to the Far East for this
purpose, assigning half of all the big bombers to this
region, taking them from the Atlantic sea-lanes. They
were to be used if needed "to set the paper cities
of Japan on fire," according to General George
Marshall, Roosevelt's main military adviser, in a press
briefing three weeks before Pearl Harbor.
Four days later, New York Times senior correspondent
Arthur Krock reported US plans to bomb Japan from
Siberian and Philippine bases, to which the Air Force was
rushing incendiary bombs intended for civilian targets.
The US knew from decoded messages that Japan was aware of
these plans.
History provides ample evidence to support Muste's
conclusion that "The problem after a war is with the
victor, [who] thinks he has just proved that war and
violence pay." And the real answer to Muste's
question, "Who will teach him a lesson?," can
only be domestic populations, if they can adopt
elementary moral principles.
Even the most uncontroversial of these principles could
have a major impact on ending injustice and war. Consider
the principle of universality, perhaps the most
elementary of moral principles: we apply to ourselves the
standards we apply to others, if not more stringent ones.
The principle is universal, or nearly so, in three
further respects: it is found in some form in every moral
code; it is universally applauded in words, and
consistently rejected in practice. The facts are plain,
and should be troublesome.
The principle has a simple corollary, which suffers the
same fate: we should distribute finite energies to the
extent that we can influence outcomes, typically on cases
for which we share responsibility. We take that for
granted with regard to enemies. No one cares whether
Iranian intellectuals join the ruling clerics in
condemnation of the crimes of Israel or the United States.
Rather, we ask what they say about their own state.
We honored Soviet dissidents on the same grounds. Of
course, that is not the reaction within their own
societies. There dissidents are condemned as "anti-Soviet"
or supporters of the Great Satan, much as their
counterparts here are condemned as "anti-American"
or supporters of today's official enemy. And of course,
punishment of those who adhere to elementary moral
principles can be severe, depending on the nature of the
society.
In Soviet-run Czechoslovakia, for example, Vaclav Havel
was imprisoned. At the same time, in US-run El Salvador
his counterparts had their brains blown out by an elite
battalion fresh from renewed training at the John F.
Kennedy School of Special Warfare in North Carolina,
acting on explicit orders of the High Command, which had
intimate relations with Washington. We all know and
respect Havel for his courageous resistance, but who can
even name the leading Latin American intellectuals,
Jesuit priests, who were added to the long bloody trail
of the Atlacatl brigade shortly after the fall of the
Berlin Wall along with their housekeeper and
daughter, since the orders were to leave no witnesses?
Before we hear that these are exceptions, we might recall
a truism of Latin American scholarship, reiterated by
historian John Coatsworth in the recently published
Cambridge University History of the Cold War: from 1960
to "the Soviet collapse in 1990, the numbers of
political prisoners, torture victims, and executions of
nonviolent political dissenters in Latin America vastly
exceeded those in the Soviet Union and its East European
satellites." Among the executed were many religious
martyrs, and there were mass slaughters as well,
consistently supported or initiated by Washington. And
the date 1960 is highly significant, for reasons we
should all know, but I cannot go into here.
In the West all of this is "disappeared," to
borrow the terminology of our Latin American victims.
Regrettably, these are persistent features of
intellectual and moral culture, which we can trace back
to the earliest recorded history. I think they richly
underscore Muste's injunction.
If we ever hope to live up to the high ideals we
passionately proclaim, and to bring the initial dream of
the United Nations closer to fulfillment, we should think
carefully about crucial choices that have been made, and
continue to be made every day not forgetting
"the violence on which the present system is based,
and all the evil material and spiritual
this entails for the masses of men throughout the world."
Among these masses are 6 million children who die every
year because of lack of simple medical procedures that
the rich countries could make available within
statistical error in their budgets. And a billion people
on the edge of starvation or worse, but not beyond reach
by any means.
We should also never forget that our wealth derives in no
small measure from the tragedy of others. That is
dramatically clear in the Anglosphere. I live in a
comfortable suburb of Boston. Those who once lived there
were victims of "the utter extirpation of all the
Indians in most populous parts of the Union" by
means "more destructive to the Indian natives than
the conduct of the conquerors of Mexico and Peru"
the verdict of the first Secretary of War of the
newly liberated colonies, General Henry Knox.
They suffered the fate of "that hapless race of
native Americans, which we are exterminating with such
merciless and perfidious cruelty
among the heinous
sins of this nation, for which I believe God will one day
bring [it] to judgement" the words of the
great grand strategist John Quincy Adams, intellectual
author of Manifest Destiny and the Monroe Doctrine, long
after his own substantial contributions to these heinous
sins. Australians should have no trouble adding
illustrations.
Whatever the ultimate judgment of God may be, the
judgment of man is far from Adams's expectations. To
mention a few recent cases, consider what I suppose are
the two most highly regarded left-liberal intellectual
journals in the Anglosphere, the New York and London
Reviews of Books.
In the former, a prominent commentator recently reported
what he learned from the work of the "heroic
historian" Edmund Morgan: namely, that when Columbus
and the early explorers arrived they "found a
continental vastness sparsely populated by farming and
hunting people
. In the limitless and unspoiled
world stretching from tropical jungle to the frozen north,
there may have been scarcely more than a million
inhabitants." The calculation is off by tens of
millions, and the "vastness" included advanced
civilizations, facts well known to those who choose to
know decades ago.
No letters appeared reacting to this truly colossal case
of genocide denial. In the companion London journal a
noted historian casually mentioned the "mistreatment
of the Native Americans," again eliciting no comment.
We would hardly accept the word "mistreatment"
for comparable or even much lesser crimes committed by
enemies.
Recognition of heinous crimes from which we benefit
enormously would be a good start after centuries of
denial, but we can go on from there. One of the main
tribes where I live was the Wampanoag, who still have a
small reservation not too far away. Their language has
long ago disappeared.
But in a remarkable feat of scholarship and dedication to
elementary human rights, the language has been
reconstructed from missionary texts and comparative
evidence, and now has its first native speaker in 100
years, the daughter of Jennie Little Doe, who has become
a fluent speaker of the language herself. She is a former
graduate student at MIT, who worked with my late friend
and colleague Kenneth Hale, one of the most outstanding
linguists of the modern period.
Among his many accomplishments was his leading role in
founding the study of aboriginal languages of Australia.
He was also very effective in defense of the rights of
indigenous people, also a dedicated peace and justice
activist. He was able to turn our department at MIT into
a center for the study of indigenous languages and active
defense of indigenous rights in the Americas and beyond.
Revival of the Wampanoag language has revitalized the
tribe. A language is more than just sounds and words. It
is the repository of culture, history, traditions, the
entire rich texture of human life and society. Loss of a
language is a serious blow not only to the community
itself but to all of those who hope to understand
something of the nature of human beings, their capacities
and achievements, and of course a loss of particular
severity to those concerned with the variety and
uniformity of human languages, a core component of human
higher mental faculties.
Similar achievements can be carried forward, a very
partial but significant gesture towards repentance for
heinous sins on which our wealth and power rests.
Since we commemorate anniversaries, such as the Japanese
attacks 70 years ago, there are several significant ones
that fall right about now, with lessons that can serve
for both enlightenment and action. I will mention just a
few.
The West has just commemorated the tenth anniversary of
the 9/11 terrorist attacks and what was called at the
time, but no longer, "the glorious invasion" of
Afghanistan that followed, soon to be followed by the
even more glorious invasion of Iraq. Partial closure for
9/11 was reached with the assassination of the prime
suspect, Osama bin Laden, by US commandos who invaded
Pakistan, apprehended him and then murdered him,
disposing of the corpse without autopsy.
I said "prime suspect," recalling the ancient
though long-abandoned doctrine of "presumption of
innocence." The current issue of the major US
scholarly journal of international relations features
several discussions of the Nuremberg trials of some of
history's worst criminals.
There we read that the "U.S. decision to prosecute,
rather than seek brutal vengeance was a victory for the
American tradition of rights and a particularly American
brand of legalism: punishment only for those who could be
proved to be guilty through a fair trial with a panoply
of procedural protections." The journal appeared
right at the time of the celebration of the abandonment
of this principle in a dramatic way, while the global
campaign of assassination of suspects, and inevitable
"collateral damage," continues to be expanded,
to much acclaim.
Not to be sure universal acclaim. Pakistan's leading
daily recently published a study of the effect of drone
attacks and other US terror. It found that "About 80
per cent [of] residents of [the tribal regions] South and
North Waziristan agencies have been affected mentally
while 60 per cent people of Peshawar are nearing to
become psychological patients if these problems are not
addressed immediately," and warned that the "survival
of our young generation" is at stake. In part for
these reasons, hatred of America had already risen to
phenomenal heights, and after the bin Laden assassination
increased still more.
One consequence was firing across the border at the bases
of the US occupying army in Afghanistan which
provoked sharp condemnation of Pakistan for its failure
to cooperate in an American war that Pakistanis
overwhelmingly oppose, taking the same stand they did
when the Russians occupied Afghanistan. A stand then
lauded, now condemned.
The specialist literature and even the US Embassy in
Islamabad warn that the pressures on Pakistan to take
part in the US invasion, as well as US attacks in
Pakistan, are "destabilizing and radicalizing
Pakistan, risking a geopolitical catastrophe for the
United States and the world which would
dwarf anything that could possibly occur in Afghanistan"
quoting British military/Pakistan analyst Anatol
Lieven. The assassination of bin Laden greatly heightened
this risk in ways that were ignored in the general
enthusiasm for assassination of suspects. The US
commandos were under orders to fight their way out if
necessary.
They would surely have had air cover, maybe more, in
which case there might have been a major confrontation
with the Pakistani army, the only stable institution in
Pakistan, and deeply committed to defending Pakistan's
sovereignty. Pakistan has a huge nuclear arsenal, the
most rapidly expanding in the world. And the whole system
is laced with radical Islamists, products of the strong
US-Saudi support for the worst of Pakistan's dictators,
Zia ul-Haq, and his program of radical Islamization.
This program along with Pakistan's nuclear weapons are
among Ronald Reagan's legacies. Obama has now added the
risk of nuclear explosions in London and New York, if the
confrontation had led to leakage of nuclear materials to
jihadis, as was plausibly feared one of the many
examples of the constant threat of nuclear weapons.
The assassination of bin Laden had a name: "Operation
Geronimo." That caused an uproar in Mexico, and was
protested by the remnants of the indigenous population in
the US. But elsewhere few seemed to comprehend the
significance of identifying bin Laden with the heroic
Apache Indian chief who led the resistance to the
invaders, seeking to protect his people from the fate of
"that hapless race" that John Quincy Adams
eloquently described. The imperial mentality is so
profound that such matters cannot even be perceived.
There were a few criticisms of Operation Geronimo
the name, the manner of its execution, and the
implications. These elicited the usual furious
condemnations, most unworthy of comment, though some were
instructive. The most interesting was by the respected
left-liberal commentator Matthew Yglesias. He patiently
explained that "one of the main functions of the
international institutional order is precisely to
legitimate the use of deadly military force by western
powers," so it is "amazingly naïve" to
suggest that the US should obey international law or
other conditions that we impose on the powerless.
The words are not criticism, but applause; hence one can
raise only tactical objections if the US invades other
countries, murders and destroys with abandon,
assassinates suspects at will, and otherwise fulfills its
obligations in the service of mankind. If the traditional
victims see matters somewhat differently, that merely
reveals their moral and intellectual backwardness. And
the occasional Western critic who fails to comprehend
these fundamental truths can be dismissed as "silly,"
Yglesias explains incidentally, referring
specifically to me, and I cheerfully confess my guilt.
Going back a decade to 2001, from the first moment it was
clear that the "glorious invasion" was anything
but that. It was undertaken with the understanding that
it might drive several million Afghans over the edge of
starvation, which is why the bombing was bitterly
condemned by the aid agencies that were forced to end the
operations on which 5 million Afghans depended for
survival. Fortunately the worst did not happen, but only
the most morally obtuse can fail to comprehend that
actions are evaluated in terms of likely consequences,
not actual ones. The invasion of Afganistan was not aimed
at overthrowing the brutal Taliban regime, as later
claimed.
That was an afterthought, brought up three weeks after
the bombing began. Its explicit reason was that the
Taliban were unwilling to extradite bin Laden without
evidence, which the US refused to provide as later
learned, because it had virtually none, and in fact still
has little that could stand up in an independent court of
law, though his responsibility is hardly in doubt. The
Taliban did in fact make some gestures towards
extradition, and we since have learned that there were
other such options, but they were all dismissed in favor
of violence, which has since torn the country to shreds.
It has reached its highest level in a decade this year
according to the UN, with no diminution in sight.
A very serious question, rarely asked then or since, is
whether there was an alternative to violence. There is
strong evidence that there was. The 9/11 attack was
sharply condemned within the jihadi movement, and there
were good opportunities to split it and isolate al-Qaeda.
Instead, Washington and London chose to follow the script
provided by bin Laden, helping to establish his claim
that the West is attacking Islam, and thus provoking new
waves of terror. The senior CIA analyst responsible for
tracking Osama bin Laden from 1996, Michael Scheuer,
warned right away and has repeated since that "the
United States of America remains bin Laden's only
indispensable ally."
These are among the natural consequences of rejecting
Muste's warning, and the main thrust of his revolutionary
pacifism, which should direct us to investigating the
grievances that lead to violence, and when they are
legitimate, as they often are, to address them. When that
advice is taken, it can succeed very well. Britain's
recent experience in Northern Ireland is a good
illustration. For years, London responded to IRA terror
with greater violence, escalating the cycle, which
reached a bitter peak. When the government began instead
to attend to the grievances, violence subsided and terror
has effectively disappeared. I was in Belfast in 1993,
when it was a war zone, and returned a year ago to a city
with tensions, but hardly beyond the norm.
There is a great deal more to say about what we call 9/11
and its consequences, but I do not want to end without at
least mentioning a few more anniversaries. Right now
happens to be the 50th anniversary of President Kennedy's
decision to escalate the conflict in South Vietnam from
vicious repression, which had already killed tens of
thousands of people and finally elicited a reaction that
the client regime in Saigon could not control, to
outright US invasion: bombing by the US Air Force, use of
napalm, chemical warfare soon including crop destruction
to deprive the resistance of food, and programs to send
millions of South Vietnamese to virtual concentration
camps where they could be "protected" from the
guerrillas who, admittedly, they were supporting.
There is no time to review the grim aftermath, and there
should be no need to do so. The wars left three countries
devastated, with a toll of many millions, not including
the miserable victims of the enormous chemical warfare
assault, including newborn infants today.
There were a few at the margins who objected
"wild men in the wings," as they were termed by
Kennedy-Johnson National Security Adviser McGeorge Bundy,
former Harvard Dean. And by the time that the very
survival of South Vietnam was in doubt, popular protest
became quite strong. At the war's end in 1975, about 70%
of the population regarded the war as "fundamentally
wrong and immoral," not "a mistake,"
figures that were sustained as long as the question was
asked in polls. In revealing contrast, at the dissident
extreme of mainstream commentary the war was "a
mistake" because our noble objectives could not be
achieved at a tolerable cost.
Another anniversary that should be in our minds today is
of the massacre in the Santa Cruz graveyard in Dili just
20 years ago, the most publicized of a great many
shocking atrocities during the Indonesian invasion and
annexation of East Timor. Australia had joined the US in
granting formal recognition to the Indonesian occupation,
after its virtually genocidal invasion. The US State
Department explained to Congress in 1982 that Washington
recognized both the Indonesian occupation and the Khmer
Rouge-based "Democratic Kampuchea" regime. The
justification offered was that "unquestionably"
the Khmer Rouge were "more representative of the
Cambodian people than Fretilin was of the Timorese people"
because "there has been this continuity [in Cambodia]
since the very beginning," in 1975, when the Khmer
Rouge took over.
The media and commentators have been polite enough to all
this languish in silence, not an inconsiderable feat. A
few months before the Santa Cruz massacre, Foreign
Minister Gareth Evans made his famous statements
dismissing concerns about the murderous invasion and
annexation on the grounds that "the world is a
pretty unfair place,
littered
with examples of
acquisitions of force," so we can therefore look
away as awesome crimes continue with strong support by
the western powers. Not quite look away, because at the
same time Evans was negotiating the robbery of East Timor's
sole resource with his comrade Ali Alatas, foreign
minister of Indonesia, producing what seems to be the
only official western document that recognizes East Timor
as an Indonesian province.
Years later, Evans declared that "the notion that we
had anything to answer for morally or otherwise over the
way we handled the Indonesia-East Timor relationship, I
absolutely reject" a stance that can be
adopted, and even respected, by those who emerge
victorious. In the US and Britain, the question is not
even asked in polite society.
It is only fair to add that in sharp contrast, much of
the Australian population, and media, were in the
forefront of exposing and protesting the crimes, some of
the worst of the past half-century. And in 1999, when the
crimes were escalating once again, they had a significant
role in convincing US president Clinton to inform the
Indonesian generals in September that the game was over,
at which point they immediately withdrew allowing an
Australian-led peacekeeping force to enter.
There are lessons here too, for the public. Clinton's
orders could have been delivered at any time in the
preceding 25 years, terminating the crimes. Clinton
himself could easily have delivered them four years
earlier, in October 2005, when General Suharto was
welcomed to Washington as "our kind of guy."
The same orders could have been given 20 years earlier,
when Henry Kissinger gave the "green light" to
the Indonesian invasion, and UN Ambassador Daniel Patrick
Moynihan expressed his pride in having rendered the
United Nations "utterly ineffective" in any
measures to deter the Indonesian invasion later to
be revered for his courageous defense of international
law.
There could hardly be a more painful illustration of the
consequences of the failure to attend to Muste's lesson.
It should be added that in a shameful display of
subordination to power, some respected western
intellectuals have actually sunk to describing this
disgraceful record as a stellar illustration of the
humanitarian norm of "right to protect."
Consistent with Muste's "revolutionary pacifism,"
the Sydney Peace Foundation has always emphasized peace
with justice. The demands of justice can remain
unfulfilled long after peace has been declared. The Santa
Cruz massacre 20 years ago can serve as an illustration.
One year after the massacre the United Nations adopted
The Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from
Enforced Disappearance, which states that "Acts
constituting enforced disappearance shall be considered a
continuing offence as long as the perpetrators continue
to conceal the fate and the whereabouts of persons who
have disappeared and these facts remain unclarified."
The massacre is therefore a continuing offence: the fate
of the disappeared is unknown, and the offenders have not
been brought to justice, including those who continue to
conceal the crimes of complicity and participation. Only
one indication of how far we must go to rise to some
respectable level of civilised behaviour.
On Wednesday 2nd November, Prof Chomsky delivered the
City of Sydney Peace Prize Lecture. Welcomed to the stage
by a standing ovation, the 2000-strong crowd were eager
to show their appreciation to Prof Chomsky, whose life's
work as a challenger of unjust power has lent influence
and inspiration to activists world wide.
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