Chris Hedges: The Evil America Does Is the Evil It Gets

The hijackers who carried out the attacks on 9/11, like all radical jihadist groups in the Middle East, spoke to the U.S. in the murderous language it taught them.

Original illustration by Mr. Fish.

By Chris Hedges
ScheerPost.com

I was in Times Square in New York City shortly after the second plane banked and plowed into the South Tower. The crowd looking up at the Jumbotron gasped in dismay at the billowing black smoke and the fireball that erupted from the tower.

There was no question now that the two attacks on the twin towers were acts of terrorism. The earlier supposition, that perhaps the pilot had a heart attack or lost control of the plane when it struck the North Tower seventeen minutes earlier, vanished with the second attack.

The city fell into a collective state of shock. Fear palpitated throughout the streets. Would they strike again? Where? Was my family safe? Should I go to work? Should I go home? What did it mean? Who would do this? Why?

The explosions and collapse of the towers, however, were, to me, intimately familiar. I had seen it before. This was the familiar language of empire.  I had watched these incendiary messages dropped on southern Kuwait and Iraq during the first Persian Gulf War and descend with thundering concussions in Gaza and Bosnia. The calling card of empire, as was true in Vietnam, is tons of lethal ordnance dropped from the sky.

The hijackers spoke to America in the idiom we taught them.

Remains of the World Trade Center. (Kafzeil/Wikimedia Commons)

The ignorance, masquerading as innocence, of Americans, mostly white Americans, was nauseating. It was the worst attack on American soil since Pearl Harbor. It was the greatest act of terrorism in American history. It was an incomprehensible act of barbarity. The stunningly naïve rhetoric, which saturated the media, saw the blues artist Willie King sit up all night and write his song “Terrorized”.

“Now you talk ‘bout terror,” he sang. “I been terrorized all my days.”

But it was not only Black Americans who were familiar with the endemic terror built into the machinery of white supremacy, capitalism, and empire, but those overseas who the empire for decades sought to subdue, dominate, and destroy.

They knew there is no moral difference between those who fire Hellfire and cruise missiles or pilot militarized drones, obliterating wedding parties, village gatherings or families, and suicide bombers. They knew there is no moral difference between those who carpet-bomb North Vietnam or southern Iraq and those who fly planes into buildings.

Lying Virtues

In short, they knew the evil that spawned evil. America was not attacked because the hijackers hated us for our values. America was not attacked because the hijackers followed the Quran — which forbids suicide and the murder of women and children. American was not attacked because of a clash of civilizations. America was attacked because the virtues we espouse are a lie.

We were attacked for our hypocrisy. We were attacked for the campaigns of industrial slaughter that are our primary way of speaking with the rest of the planet. Robert McNamara, the secretary of defense in the summer of 1965, called the bombing raids, which would eventually kill hundreds of thousands of civilians north of Saigon, a form of communication with the communist government in Hanoi. 

The lives of Iraqis, Afghanis, Syrians, Libyans, and Yemenis are as precious as the lives of those killed in the Twin Towers. But this understanding, this ability to see the world as the world saw us, eluded Americans who, refusing to acknowledge the blood on their own hands, instantly bifurcated the world into good and evil, us and them, the blessed and the damned.

The country drank deep of the dark elixir of nationalism, the heady elevation of us as a noble and wronged people. The flip side of nationalism is always racism. And the poisons of racism and hate infected the American nation to propel it into the greatest strategic blunder in its history, one from which it will never recover. 

We did not, and do not, grasp that we are the mirror image of those we seek to destroy. We too kill with an inchoate fury. Over the past two decades we have extinguished the lives of hundreds of thousands of people who never sought to harm the United States or were involved in the attacks on American soil. We too use religion, in our case the Christian faith, to mount a jihad or crusade. We too go to war to fight phantoms of our own creation. 

The Swimmers

The aftermath. (U.S. Navy/ Photographer’s Mate Eric J. Tilford)

I walked down the West Side Highway that morning to the moonscape the Twin Towers had become after they collapsed. Climbing over the rubble, hacking, and coughing because of the toxic fumes from the burning asbestos, jet fuel, lead, mercury, cellulose, and construction debris, I saw the tiny bits of human flesh and body parts that was all that remained from the towers’ nearly 3,000 victims. It was obvious no one in the towers when they collapsed survived.

The manipulation of the images, however, had already begun. The scores of “jumpers,” those who leapt to their deaths before the collapses, were censored from the live broadcasts. They seemed to wait for turns. They often fell singly or in pairs, sometimes with improvised parachutes made from drapes, sometimes replicating the motions of swimmers.

They reached speeds of 150 miles an hour during the ten seconds it took before they hit the pavement. The bodies made a sickening thud on impact. All who saw them fall spoke of this sound. 

The mass suicide was one of the pivotal events of 9/11. But it was immediately expunged from public consciousness. The jumpers did not fit into the myth the nation demanded. The hopelessness and despair were too disturbing. It exposed our smallness and fragility.

It illustrated that there are levels of suffering and fear that lead us to willingly embrace death. The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live. 

The story being fabricated out of the ashes of the twin towers was a story of resilience, heroism, courage and self-sacrifice, not collective suicide. So, the mass murder and mass suicide were replaced with an encomium to the virtues and prowess of the American spirit. 

The nation, fed this narrative, soon parroted back the clichés about terror. We became what we abhorred. The 9/11 deaths were used to justify the invasion of Afghanistan, “Shock and Awe”, targeted assassinations, torture, offshore penal colonies, gunning down families at checkpoints, air strikes, drone attacks, missile strikes and the killing of dozens and soon hundreds and then thousands and later tens of thousands and finally hundreds of thousands of innocent people.

The corpses piled up in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Somalia, Yemen, and Pakistan, justified by our beatified dead. Twenty years later these dead haunt us like Banquo’s ghost. 

War as Poison

Bush on ruble rousing call for war. (Eric Draper/courtesy of George W. Bush Presidential Library)

The intoxication of violence, the anodyne of war, is a poison. It condemns critical thought as treason. Its call to patriotism is little more than collective self-worship. It imparts a god-like power and license to destroy, not only things, but other human beings.

But war is, ultimately, about betrayal, as the defeat in Afghanistan elucidates. Betrayal of the young by the old. Betrayal of idealists by cynics. Betrayal of soldiers and marines by war profiteers and politicians. 

War, like all idols, begins by demanding the sacrifice of others but ends with the demand for self-sacrifice. The Greeks, like Sigmund Freud, grasped that war is the purist expression of the death instinct, the desire to exterminate all systems of life, including, ultimately, our own.

Ares, the Greek god of war, was frequently drunk, quarrelsome, impetuous, and a lover of violence for its own sake. He was hated by nearly all the other gods, except the god of the underworld, Hades, to whom he delivered a steady stream of new souls. Ares’s sister, Eris, the goddess of chaos and strife, spread rumor and jealousy to fan the flames of war.

The defeat in Afghanistan has not forced a reckoning. The media coverage does not acknowledge the defeat, replacing it with the absurd idea that, by withdrawing, we defeated ourselves. The plight of women under Taliban rule and the frantic effort of the elites and those who collaborated with the foreign occupation forces to flee are myopically used to ignore the two decades of unmitigated terror and death we perpetrated on the Afghan people. 

This moral fragmentation, where we define ourselves by tangential and often fictitious acts of goodness, is a psychological escape hatch. It allows us to avoid looking at who we are and what we have done. This willful blindness is what the psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton calls “doubling,” the “division of the self into two functioning wholes, so that the part-self acts as an entire self.”

This doubling, Lifton noted, is often done “outside of awareness.” And it is an essential ingredient to carrying out evil. If we refuse to see ourselves as we are, if we cannot shatter the lie perpetuated by our moral fragmentation, there is no hope of redemption. The gravest danger we face is the danger of alienation, not only from the world around us, but from ourselves.

Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist who was a foreign correspondent for 15 years for The New York Times, where he served as the Middle East bureau chief and Balkan bureau chief for the paper. He previously worked overseas for The Dallas Morning NewsThe Christian Science Monitor and NPR. He is the host of the Emmy Award-nominated RT America show “On Contact.” 

This column is from Scheerpost, for which Chris Hedges writes a regular columnClick here to sign up for email alerts.

The views expressed are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

 

18 comments for “Chris Hedges: The Evil America Does Is the Evil It Gets

  1. Stephen Warren Murray
    September 14, 2021 at 21:43

    Bomb went off in 1993. Extensive crater. 6 deaths. I was on floor 105 that day.

  2. michael888
    September 14, 2021 at 18:35

    Hedges rightly trashed Ares, but even the Greeks acknowledged he got the beautiful girl Aphrodite. The US is full of people who have never faced war, and without the Draft, never will. It is all a computer game to them, no real deaths, maiming and displacement of millions from their homes. And the thinktank neolibs/neocons are bristling for a REAL War.
    The days where the US built things and HELPED people globally are long gone (or were a myth anyway).

  3. September 14, 2021 at 11:11

    Excellent article. So true. Thank you for capturing in prose how I have felt since 9/11. We are constantly being lied to and manipulated by Uncle Sam who has morphed through the cold war into Scoundrel Sam. Anyone doubting it should read ‘The Brothers’ by Stephen Kinzer. To answer Rodney King, apparently no, we all can’t just get along.

  4. Marcus DeWitt
    September 14, 2021 at 08:31

    Excellently written, good as the days of the Frankfurt School, Reinhold Neibuhr, and Abraham Joshua Heschel.

  5. Zhu
    September 14, 2021 at 02:06

    Well, our Fearless Leaders seem eager to torture and shoot us, much as they do foreigners.

  6. Mark Thomason
    September 13, 2021 at 12:13

    You can’t say this.

    It is true. We don’t allow that.

  7. Georges Olivier Daudelin
    September 13, 2021 at 11:40

    La photo avec George W Bush est totalement et strictement dégueulasse, barbare, BESTIALE.

  8. Bob
    September 13, 2021 at 10:20

    the U.S. “war machine” got it’s WELL PLANNED, NEW PEARL Harbor

  9. Linda
    September 13, 2021 at 10:15

    It’s difficult to bear these profound truths Hedges notes. What Washington DC insiders (in particular, neocon militant globalists) and the US media did with 9/11/2001 won’t stop. Their CIA helped start al Qaeda to overthrow the late-70’s, pro-Soviet Afghanistan government and have been connected to al Qaeda ever since. Google: Grayzone; the CIA finances jihadists/terrorists; Optor/Popovich.

    • michael888
      September 14, 2021 at 18:27

      The MSM is now State Media, CIA controlled and, at the moment, aligned with the DNC, but always aligned with the Establishment (MICIMATT).

      As you note, the CIA (with willing partners in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan) destroyed Afghanistan’s secular, Westernized world, which means WE were responsible for the Wahhabi fundamentalist world Afghan women and girls now are trapped in. And of course the CIA relishes saying the US must remain for those very same women and children. Sadistic.

  10. Jeff Harrison
    September 13, 2021 at 09:59

    Thank you, Chris for pointing out that the US government has been guilty of terrorism.

  11. Dr. Hujjathullah M.H.B. Sahib
    September 13, 2021 at 09:02

    Though the title and subject reflect much truth to America’s general behaviour across the world and very weak and disjointed reactions to it ; still it is difficult to buy that both of those apply to 9\11 specifically. Remember that one of the WTC tower actually got bombed in 1993, an incident to which both the title and the theme better applies. The subsequent 9\11 false flag did not really take up from that, neither motivationally nor objectively. The truthers in America need to dig further to uncover the the real purpose for which both the towers were subsequently brought down dramatically to the loss of Islam and the Muslim world and the gain of the Zio-Con corporate structures and the Israeli Lobby in the USA and elsewhere !

    • Michael P Goldenberg
      September 14, 2021 at 09:21

      “Remember that one of the WTC tower [sic] actually got bombed in 1993.” No, there was an attempt but no bombing. The explosives left in a van that had been driven into a lower level of WTC never went off.

  12. Piotr Berman
    September 13, 2021 at 08:24

    … the poisons of racism and hate infected the American nation to propel it into the greatest strategic blunder in its history, one from which it will never recover.
    ——
    Those poisons are more insidious than a “military strategic blunder”. USA needed a government in Afghanistan, and a government in Iraq etc. But hate and racism resulted with the absence of people USA trusted, and the feeling was mutual.

  13. Aaron
    September 13, 2021 at 05:27

    The media ignoring the jumpers is like the Pat Tillman story. His demise didn’t dovetail with the narrative that the government was creating to garner support for their wars and therefore they lied to suppress the truth. That was really a sick, ignoble and hurtful thing to do to his family and anybody who volunteered in those days. And also goes to show the extent those forces will go to, to fuel the war machine. Surely all of the lies and deception and just b.s. that a lot of the soldiers were fed all those years is a reason the veteran suicide rate is so high. It’s soul-crushing to feel that betrayed. If they lie to us, they don’t respect us.

    • val
      September 13, 2021 at 13:31

      tks for remembering and telling his story. We need to hear more about Pat Tillman

  14. Hide Behind
    September 13, 2021 at 04:09

    I have been an avid follower of Hedges for many years as I found within so many of his writings papers and talks he can introduce how mans minds work. And cause yself to take stock to meet his criteria of finding truths elsewhere and applying them.
    In ways his views remind me of old classical philosopher, views he can bring relativity into today’s way of thinkers.
    Great article but one that willing be well read by Americans, two of my old aquaintences got up b and left calling article just anti American propaganda.
    I can see old facts who began and lived in a different America than today, but damn 5his 15-45 age. Group are thick skilled kinds completely filled with raw raw American nationalism b replacing Patriotism as a fixationhof Ideals, frankly scares the hell out of me.
    The only scarier group are seperated and retired military who will go to Graves believing they were doing God’s will and were his instruments that made Uas great.

    • Sikuvit
      September 13, 2021 at 16:15

      I’m a former Marine and I say that Hedges is right on here. Your acquaintances are blockheads.

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