FROM A CELL IN WAYNESBURG, Pa.—The woman’s voice on the phone
was as plaintive as a tear, as she implored the non-responsive talk show
host to please tell her, "Why do they hate us so much? Why?"
Her voice, while not commonly projected in the current media,
resonates in the consciousness of millions of Americans, who look at the
carnage of the World Trade Center, shiver at the violent audacity of it,
and wonder, "Why?"
This is a particularly American response, one made in a culture that
has no yesterdays, and only a tomorrow of creature comforts, no-fat ice
cream and luxury cars.
History, to millions of Americans, is John Wayne, or the vaunted
founding fathers, who have no blemishes, nor flaws. Much of the outer
world are of no import, as they are subjects of the Empire, and thus
expendable.
Their histories, deeply intertwined with the U.S., are of no serious
consequence. Hence, the question, "Why?"
This almost willful ignorance of millions of Americans allows them to
look at the bombing of the U.S.S. Cole, and the veering jet liners of
Sept. 11, and ask, "Why?"
If you, the reader, don’t want to hear an answer to this rhetorical
question, feel free to turn the page, for the writer’s response will not
please you.
The airplane bombing of the World Trade Center towers and of the
Pentagon didn’t begin on Sept. 11. Nor are they, as some politicians
glibly suggest, "A war against civilization." But it ain’t the job of
politicians to inform you.
It is the job of the media, but their central concern is to sell you,
and therefore they don’t want to upset you. Their primary responsibility
is not to their readers, but to the owners, or the stockholders. And it
is in the interests of the military-industrial complex that millions
remain uninformed and misinformed.
The suicide flights over New York, Washington and Pennsylvania had
their beginnings in the mountainous terrain of Afghanistan, in the
10-year guerilla war against the former Soviet Union. That war was
supported and facilitated by the CIA, which pumped billions into the
anti-Soviet insurgency.
The result? An Algerian sociologist said in a 1996 Los Angeles Times
interview in Algiers, "Your government participated in creating a
monster." The sociologist added, "Now it has turned against you and the
world—16,000 Arabs were trained in Afghanistan, made into a veritable
killing machine."
A U.S. diplomat in Pakistan echoed these sentiments when he told the
Los Angeles Times, "This is an insane instance of the chickens coming
home to roost. You can’t plug billions of dollars into an anti-Communist
jihad, accept participation from all over the world and ignore the
consequences. But we did. Our objectives weren’t peace and grooviness in
Afghanistan. Our objective was killing Communists and getting the
Russians out."
How did the Afghanis pay for the weapons in such a poor, war-ravaged
country? How many know that Afghanistan is the world’s greatest producer
of heroin?
Short on hard dough, the Afghan mujahadeen traded heroin for arms
with their CIA suppliers, and the "Golden Crescent" heroin ring was
born.
When the Soviets were whipped, and the war ended, the insurgents
looked around and saw, not Soviet, but U.S. dominance in the region.
They saw the U.S. military presence in the Islamic holy places in Saudi
Arabia, its backing of anti-democratic client states, its ravaging of
Iraq, and its one-sided support of Israel at the expense of the
beleaguered Palestinians, and as they examine the U.S., they see the
imperial similarities to the Soviets.
Afghanistan, one of the poorest, most rugged places on earth, has a
population with a male life expectancy of 46 (45 for females!). It has a
literacy rate of about 29 percent. It looks at the swollen opulence of
the Americans, the global reach of the American empire, and bristles.
This nationalist, cultural, religious and class distance fuels a deep
and abiding hatred of American dominance.
Humiliation, of which the Islamic world has had a great deal since
the fall of the Ottoman Empire in 1922, and the colonial era of the
early-to-middle 20th century, is a powerful force. It brought a humbled
Germany to the brink of world conquest after World War I. It is not to
be taken lightly.
Afghanistan may prove another turning point in world history, which
is why we all should learn about it.
(Mumia Abu-Jamal is on death row in Pennsylvania and
author of "Live from Death Row;" "Death Blossoms;" and "All Things
Censored." A new biography, "On A Move: The Story of Mumia Abu-Jamal,"
is available at www.MumiaBook.com. Write to Mumia directly at: Mumia
Abu-Jamal AM 8335, SCI-Greene, 175 Progress Dr., Waynesburg, Pa.,
15370.)