Journal
of American Studies of Turkey
14 (2001) : 7-14
THE HIDDEN SMART BOMB: Terrorism Discourse and War Semantics (Towards a
Global-American Grounding)
"It's
clearly a tragic day for America. In a long, hard war, we’re going to have
tragic days. But they're necessary. They're part of a war that's difficult and
complicated."
Donald H. Rumsfeld, the secretary of defense, after guerrillas
shot down an American helicopter in Iraq, killing 16 soldiers. NY Times.com, Nov. 3, 2003
“…to think differently – this thought must
enter deeply into our intentions, actions, and so on – our whole being.”
David Bohm, “The Implicate order: a new
approach to reality”
This is a non-academic essay of civil disobedience to challenge the US
ideology of vanity and pride. Please do not read if you are jingoistically
patriotic, self-centered and bigotedly support patriarchal, sexist, dualistic,
manicheistic fundamentalists (Christian and Islamic or whatever), who start
drooling when they hear the word Armageddon, and especially if you are Mr.
Simple-ton Hunting.
Losing Ground?
I would like to start by claiming that Mr. Rumsfeld’s
discourse openly reveals that the American discourse of innocence, and the
belief that war is indispensable in the US’s self-imposed role of world’s
saviour, is losing ground. Rumsfeld should, and truly sensible Americans will,
I am sure, ask themselves why the same discourse of a long war has been
repeatedly used in all of the many invasions of America’s history. Has it got
to do with the Calvinistic belief in the elect? Do American politicians believe
that they are ‘elect’ enough to ‘sivilize’ (Ref. to Huck) the so-called
uncivilized nations of the earth? How has
the US developed this vanity? And perhaps even more important a question, why
has the US developed it, or out of which need? Is this role of the world’s
gendarme or saviour a mask veiling the true intention of prevailing on earth
only by possessing, or at least controlling, the natural resources of the
earth? Who will be drinking the last drop of water on earth? Surely it must be
an American. (Michael Haneke says that all questions imply their answers).
The
New York Times.com page also
highlighted on November 3, 2003, Richard W. Stevenson’s article titled “As
Casualties in Iraq Mount, Will Resolve Falter?” But before the article, there
is the sad picture of the Chinook helicopter crash ‘after being hit by a guerilla missile’. The memory, or the
history of the word guerilla is
hidden in Webster’s definition of the word: a guerilla is
Someone engaged in harassing, raiding or sabotage operations carried out by small bands of irregulars acting independently. The term was first used of the Spaniards who harassed Napoleon’s army during the Peninsular War. This method of warfare hasoften been used against enemy occupation, esp. where the terrain allows the guerillas to hide and live off the country. Tito’s partisans in Yugoslavia were an outstanding example in the 2nd World War (1995:427).
This definition clearly
includes guerillas like Mustafa Kemal, like Commandante Castro or Che Guevara,
like Lorca (with his poetry, and you might even have heard of a For Whom the Bells Toll by Ernest
Hemingway, who was a journalist siding with the guerillas fighting against the
fascists, who shot Lorca dead, and Hemingway was American, right?). Since the
word is a variant of guerra (war), guerilla also implies that there is an
enemy to ‘war’ against. In this sense, the use of the word guerilla implicity
invalidates US troops presence in Iraq, because all US-causes to attack Iraq
have been proved to be virtual, and hence is in fact the loss of the viewers’
interest in the Matrix or Lord of the Rings trilogies. Reality is
not what we see on TV; it is what the parents, and the other loved ones of the
dead soldiers truly experience. It is the mother in Saving Private Ryan who elegantly collapses on her porch when she
understands that bad news is at her door. From that scene, a sensible human
being should arrive at a conclusion that war should be no more, and that saving
a private is a big lie, just as was expressed in Wilfred Owen’s ‘cult’ poem
“Dulce es Decorum Est Pro Patria Mori”. I also remember Luigi Pirandello’s
story “War” at the end of which the father stops boasting that his son fought
for the emperor and died for his country, bursting into tears when the woman in
the same compartment with him asks: “Is your son really dead?” Stevenson in his
above mentioned NY Times article
reminds the readers of Bush’s former so-called intention, and wonders if he
will abandon “his quest to bring a
stable democracy to that country”. It is impossible for many people to
agree with this rhetoric of the vain and make-believe saviour, whereas from
first-hand knowledge, I know that the soldiers who are in Iraq only wish to be
lying on their couches enjoying their beer in front of their TV at home. What a
pity for the Americans who are challenging the wrong boundaries, and supporting
a so-called Mr. President who by no means fits in my memory of the picaresque
rogue, who enjoys his rite-of-passage as a hero on the quest to bring (mind you,
the writer does not say take, which
underlies the expected and welcomed angelic saviour) a stable democracy (I wonder how a country of no stable democracy
indoors can take it elsewhere) to that
country (feel the sense of superiority). The world is made up of the United
States of America, and those countries, ie., the others, which are entitled to
benefit from US opinions, US ways, US this, US that.
But if authority overdoes
the truth that he is ruling, I start to believe that the authority has started
to have doubts about his/her power, that the collapse is at hand. Stevenson’s
‘murky enemy’ in Iraq, is attacking the enemy who has invaded his country.
Hence, the enemy whose nature is murky is the US.
(And I do not have space and
patience enough to analyze why he is called President Bush, and not American
President Bush? Why do Turkish newscasters also call him the President Bush, as
if the American President is the President of the whole world? Is globalization
already established, and of all people, Bush is the leader of us all, our
saviour to save us from ourselves?)
Remember The
Horse, the Hungarian playwright Gyula Hay’s play, in which everyone turns
into horses to underline allegorically the fact that one becomes a replica of
the tyrant (here it is Caligula) if he is too blind. Hence, the riot of the
animals in Orwell’s Animal Farm. It
is high time that Americans established a stable democracy in the United States
of America.
However, in order to challenge some boundaries for
economic or symbiotic reasons, the Challenger (also the name of a NASA
missile?) needs blind individuals, as well as blind masses. The title of the
PALA conference was: “Challenging
Boundaries”, which reminds me of the sine
qua non existence of a horizon to go to, the “ask for more” doctrine, or
the ubiquitous frontier ideology, which was subtly criticized in The Truman Show.
The panel I attended at the PALA conference was entitled
“Rhetoric and/as Terrorism: Before and After September 11.” Being a man, as the
Turkish saying goes, who always seeks a calf under the ox, i.e., a sceptic, I
sense in this title the need to show, even to promote September 11, 2001 a date
as important as the birth of Christ, which is the turning point of history,
which I never understand why. Why is it not the birth of any other man but
Jesus? Why should the world history change after 9/11? Because 3000 people were
killed? If so, why is any other tragedy not as important for Americans? Have
the Americans forgotten that if they had not joined the WW2 so late, at least 6
million people could have been saved? Then I ask, why does “La Vita est Bella?”
end so hypocritically with the American tank as a gift to the Jewish boy? If
the planes hitting the WTC and the Pentagon mean to the public that “They are in the house now,” (Mel Gibson
in The Signs), do I have to approve
of anything and everything the superpower extravagantly does after the attacks,
like attacking Afganistan, like invading Iraq under the veil of a Holy
Coalition. (I wonder what Hawthorne’s Young Goodman Brown would have to say if
he met this Holy Coalition in the forest.)
“Ground” means:
1. “Solid surface
of the earth, firm or dry land”: Out of the ashes and on that solid surface
will rise a new tower, and other smaller towers forming a supporting circle
around it. The solidity of the ground brings to mind Tom Cruise’s falling off
the top of the highest building in NY, supposedly one of the twin towers, also
alluding to the Fall, and the natural depravity of man. But, this long war,
this long journey of man, this purgative way towards spiritual regeneration can
only be justified by tragedies like the 9/11 attacks, which is, to me, just one
of the millions of other tragedies in the world which make me shed tears. But
the American way of self-pity - that they have become so vulnerable now that
they are the super power - also underlines that they are suffering from a
self-centered foreign policy, that they are so “elect” that everyone wants to
attack them, which is nothing but paranoia. (Hence the replication myths of the
other, evil, and all sorts of apocalyptic products);
2. “Land having an
indicated character”: From now on, the
unfortunately empty space, and later the new towers built on Ground Zero, will
be like the altar of the Acropolis of the globalized world. Wishful thinking or
not, this is in the hearts of many Americans, as New York is like a wounded
woman, who has gained tragic grandeur, and Ground Zero is like the scar on her
face, as a proof of the ordeals she has had to go through to reach her target.
This land has an indicated character, the land of the chosen, the land of the
righteous, the point that deservedly legalizes our past, present and what we
shall do in return (symbolized in the feather in Forrest Gump);
b.
The foundation or basis on which a theory or action
rests; reason: That is why I
consider 9/11 itself as grounds to my statement;
4. Subject for
discussion; topic: Eg. “Careful,
you’re treading on delicate ground.” This also implies how delicate the nature
of rhetoric, the word, the discourse of any kind is, as it gives away the
intention of its user;
5. Rational or factual
support for one’s position or attitude:
I.e., the ground we fall to, September 11, 2001, the attacks the US was
subjected to, are to be rational, factual grounds for retaliation, for any US
or “coalitioned” measure taken afterwards;
During the US&UK coalition attacks on Iraq there was a protest
slogan on the internet: “Bombing for peace is like fucking for virginity.” Loss
of virginity, in morality-ridden brains makes a girl ordinary, but for the US
forces to bomb ‘that’ country is to take revenge on a virtual offense, the
enemy’s penetration, committing sin by touching the untouchable cult city;
hence her tragic grandeur. New York is now like Maria Magdalena, the sacred whore,
and in all of us there is one. The moment the horn of the unicorn is broken
(and remember it only approaches virgins), the horse, the sanctity is gone. New
York is no longer the unreacheable, we can all touch it. I.e., it is no longer
too exclusive to touch. I can easily be a part or a member of the cult in its
aura. Now that it has been penetrated I can much more easily empathize with
America, having gone through catharsis, having been purged of my feelings of
pity and fear. Hence, the approval of the retaliation by many Americans
immediately after the attacks. (I hear that nowadays the majority in America is
no longer supporting the foreign policy of the Bush administration, I hope
Americans give up enjoying the title “happy slaves”);
Zero, a number found by El-Harizmi, means:
1.
The figure or symbol 0, which stands for the absence
of quantity in the Arabic notation for numbers (remember the vertical fall/flow of numbers in the Matrix: the message sent by the falling
numbers off the tower of Babel is that they died to save us, similar to Jesus’s
crucifixion. The fall of the twin towers is therefore like cutting off Ada’s
(in Jane Campion’s The Piano) finger
‘thanks to’ which she is washed of her sins, also reminding the viewer of the
almost archetypal American heroine Hester Prynne’s adultery. The sixth time I
watched The Piano was only to see
which finger was cut off, because it was the same finger she touches her piano
with, when she starts a new life with her new metal-coated finger; and the
finger she was making a new start with was the finger that creates the musical
note So, which is considered the beginning note in the simplest musical
measure. In other words, similar to Katherine Anne Porter’s “In my end is my
beginning” the circular nature of history is replicated in images, in rhetoric,
in signs, in legends and myths, hence the formation, the re-vitalization and
appropriation of the Western collective memory as global memory;
2.
Naught, nothing: It is nothing but it still is there;
3.
The origin of any kind of measurement; the line or
point from which all divisions of a scale, as a thermometer, are measured in
either a positive or a negative direction: Hence the title of the panel: “Before and After September 11”. The
media subtly monitored the world’s welcoming 9/11 as the zero point, which is
the end and also the beginning of all scales;
4.
The mathematical value between + (plus) and – (minus)
: Therefore, although it seems to be
naught or nothing, it has a value, as something new will start from this point;
5.
The lowest point or degree: This recalls its antithetical connotations, the
highest point or degree, that NY is martyred, by falling to the lowest degree;
in fact the WTC has reached the highest point in God’s eyes. One has to
experience Inferno before
appreciating Purgatorio, and Paradiso. But before Dante, we must
remember some Greek and Roman mythology upon which the signification and
approval of Western civilization is established: Remember Icarus falling into
the depths of the Aegean, remember Prometheus, hence the Bellonaic
justification of warfare;
6.
The absence of a linguistic element, as a phoneme or
morpheme in a position in which one previously existed or might by analogy be
expected to exist: This explains some
of my comments made so far;
7.
In linguistics, it notes a hypothetical morphological
element that is posited as existing by analogy with a regular pattern of
inflection or derivation in a language, but which is not represented by any
sequence of phonological elements: Eg., “ ‘Deer’ has a zero plural.” The twin towers, if not the World Trade Center, will exist in our memory
by analogy, and I am sure it will find its metonymical usages in the English
language very soon. Eg., “The 9/11 effect” or “The 9/11 syndrome” (remember the
metonymy the ‘Chinese Syndrome’);
b.
root (function of a complex variable has the value
zero); therefore, the US action
taken after 9/11 is an addition to the country’s identity, a new life will
spring from those roots…etc.;
9.
(In military jargon): A sight setting for both
elevation and windage on any particular range causing a projectile to strike the center of the target on a normal day
[emphasis mine], under favorable light conditions, with no wind blowing: Well, I
could not better describe that ominous day, September 11, 2001. The
psychoanalytical connotations of the center of capitalism (New York City), and
the center-of-that-center (World Trade Center, which I called the Khabe of
Western Capitalism) was hit at the very beginning of a new day. I
am suggesting again, the assumed circular structure of time, and that the end
might be a beginning;
10.
A single-engine Japanese fighter plane used in WW II: The planes ‘entering’ the WTC were not single-engined,
but the word Zero definitely reminds many Americans of the Japanese attack on
the Pearl Harbor, as a result of which the US joined the war. I do not know why
history keeps repeating itself. Perhaps it has no imagination;
11.
“Zero Hour”:
In addition to so many connotations,
suggestions and associations the words Ground
and Zero bring with them separately,
or independent of each other, the term “Ground
Zero” all by itself is “the point on
the surface of the earth or water directly below, directly above, or at which
an atomic or hydrogen bomb explodes.” Therefore, the attacks on the WTC,
the towers collapsing with images similar to the mushroom images of the atomic
bombs the US forces (please note, I refrain from saying ‘Americans’) on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki (I still wonder why the death at Ground Zero of hundreds
of thousands of Japanese, and the destruction of future generations on those
two spots only, never had the same value as the birth of Jesus Christ. Maybe it
is so for the Japanese, as it happened to them and not to us, so it is their
tragedy, for which we can only feel sympathy. Is this how human beings are
taught to relieve their guilty consciences?)
Therefore, the tragically opened space
of the World Trade Center, this “Ground Zero”, has become the epitome of the
embodiment of all meanings, connotations put in the words ground and zero on the
way to establishing a foundation for what will come after 9/11. American
history aspires to have an expression like “Before 9/11 and After 9/11”,
which will in time be a term to stand for the turning point of a universally
accepted American-based global history.
To conclude, there are boundaries that are challenging US
aspirations, longings, hunger. Therefore, the US memory should be shaped so
that Americans should approve of the US powers challenging these boundaries.
(Hence, the power that lies in the pun). In both interpretations boundaries
exist. In other words, boundaries are
taken for granted, accepted as living entities, as the other. These
boundaries may be challenging because they are supposedly evil and thus
dangerous, hence the approval of their destruction; or they may be different or
not ‘sivilized’ like the native-Americans, so they have the right to be changed
by the vain generals of the frontier history; or these boundaries have all the
natural resources I must use to exercise my power (like oil) or to survive
first and then to prevail (like water and other natural resources). The US has (not have; in this sense it is one,
and like the ‘deer’ it is both singular and plural, but since I am referring to
govermental policies, and not the people of many different states, by using has I put the blame on one big State,
which has unfortunately come to symbolize for many tempest tost the capitalistic, imperialistic ideology still fed by
a sick memory, the psychic residue created by primordial images, archetypal
metaphors, patterns of legends and myths, fears, aspirations etc., which should
be destroyed or kept inactive, like the delusions of the protagonist in A Beautiful Mind, for the hope of
healthy future generations) been challenging the geographical boundaries of
others and also their tolerance, as the US has turned out to be the devil
incarnate, for some, at the presence of which many believe in God (fear of the
devil is essential to establish the love of God, remember?); but even if not
so, it is definitely a country ruled by an ideology diabolically using the
discourse of terrorism as a weapon against whoever is a threat to his will, his power, his order, his democracy, his very being. “We are the people” is misunderstood by the present
ideology; now it means yes “We are the people” and “You are threats to my
existence, the others” hence the rain of “patriots, cruises, tomahawks”.
These days we are watching Matrix Revolutions, the attacks on Zion.
Neo (the new Jesus Christ), with all the images, metaphors around him, is
aiming at structuring a new conceptual universe. Hence, the sine qua non nature of the discourse of
terrorism, the searching and destroying smart bomb. If only Rumi, then Emerson
and Thoreau could rise, seeing how wildly misused their ideas are, they would,
I am sure, say: “This is not what I meant, this is not what I meant at all.”