![]() Please support independent media by subscribing and/or donating to In These Times magazine: http://www.inthesetimes.com/subscribe/ | http://www.inthesetimes.com/donate What Goes Around…INTERVIEW: Blowback author Chalmers Johnson
Chalmers Johnson saw the September 11 catastrophe coming. A renowned Asia specialist and founder of the Japan Policy Research Institute, Johnson is the author of more than a dozen books about world politics. His 2000 book, Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire, argued that U.S. interventionist foreign policy and military overextension would lead to unintended and unpredictable consequences. A year later, his warning seems eerily prescient. Johnson spoke with In These Times on September 13. Is what happened on September 11 an example of blowback? Osama bin Laden has been named the primary suspect in these
attacks. In the first chapter of Blowback, you talk about earlier
American attacks on Osama bin Laden as an example of "a spiral of
destructive behavior." Don't get me wrong. Everyone understands that the people of New York, the people of Washington, the people on the airplanes were innocent bystandersand that is the nature of this kind of warfare. Our Department of Defense invented the phrase "collateral damage" to deal with the dead Iraqis and the dead Serbs as a result of our bombings of their countries. ... I know it sounds cruel to say, but the people of New York were collateral damage of American foreign policy. It was inevitable that something like this would come back. You implied that this type of terrorist warfare seems to
be the warfare of the future. I assume that you would expect to
see more? People in Washington are continually talking about declaring warbut declaring war on whom? They don't know. If they are going to go out and attack Afghanistan, it will simply produce a further cycle of blowback and retaliation. In the meantime, it will also even further inflame the entire Middle East. If not military force, what could be effective against this
type of terrorist warfare? Clearly, what happened on September 11 was an almost catastrophic failure of intelligence by extremely expensive agencies that do not do anything. And so far, the American reaction seems to be to target the Bill of Rights more than anything else. Retaliation is not the answer. It hasn't worked for Israel, it has only exacerbated the situation. It won't work for us. Is it possible that blowback may take place internally as
well as externally? I fear that from this we are going to get even more militarism. That is, more and more functionsincluding domestic police functionswill be transferred from civilian institutions to the military, and the military will have ever greater authority in our society. We know how that will end. We're talking here about imperial overstretch, and the weaknesses of the imperial structure that will ultimately lead to a collapse. Often in times of crisis, there are opportunities. Might
this be an opportunity for the American public to look itself in
the mirror? |