Noam Chomsky: “My Reaction to Osama bin Laden’s Death”

In case you’ve been lying awake at night, won­der­ing “What Would Noam Chom­sky Have to Say about the Whole Osama bin Laden Affair?,” you now have your answer. He writes in Guer­ni­ca:

We might ask our­selves how we would be react­ing if Iraqi com­man­dos land­ed at George W. Bush’s com­pound, assas­si­nat­ed him, and dumped his body in the Atlantic. Uncon­tro­ver­sial­ly, his crimes vast­ly exceed bin Laden’s, and he is not a “sus­pect” but uncon­tro­ver­sial­ly the “decider” who gave the orders to com­mit the “supreme inter­na­tion­al crime dif­fer­ing only from oth­er war crimes in that it con­tains with­in itself the accu­mu­lat­ed evil of the whole” (quot­ing the Nurem­berg Tri­bunal) for which Nazi crim­i­nals were hanged: the hun­dreds of thou­sands of deaths, mil­lions of refugees, destruc­tion of much of the coun­try, the bit­ter sec­tar­i­an con­flict that has now spread to the rest of the region.

Find the full piece here. And don’t miss Christo­pher Hitchens’ retort in Salon: Chom­sky’s Fol­lies: The pro­fes­sor’s pro­nounce­ments about Osama Bin Laden are stu­pid and igno­rant.

PS: we’ve added for good mea­sure Oba­ma’s lengthy inter­view that aired last night on 60 Min­utes. The last sec­onds offer, we guess, Oba­ma’s implic­it response to Chom­sky:


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Comments (29)
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  • Guest says:

    I would like to request a name change for this web­site. I’ve been an RSS sub­scriber for mul­ti­ple years and it seems to me that Open Cul­ture is no longer “open”. Chang­ing the name to “Far Left-Wing Athe­ist Cul­ture” would be less deceiv­ing.

  • Jon T says:

    What non­sense. With­out action we would have been liv­ing in world full of jiha­di action. So get real, face some respon­si­bil­i­ty for your fate peo­ple.

  • Sinjin Smythe says:

    That Mr. Chom­sky would pin his remarks to ex-Pres­i­dent Bush and ignore cur­rent Pres­i­dent Oba­ma speaks vol­umes about his char­ac­ter and cred­i­bil­i­ty.

    That Open Cul­ture would advance Mr. Chom­sky’s view in this forum as it has, like­wise speaks to Open Cul­ture’s cred­i­bil­i­ty and char­ac­ter.

    Both Mr. Chom­sky and Open Cul­ture have impor­tant things to say, but lets not kid any­one grotesque left lean­ing bias is just as repul­sive as grotesque right learn­ing bias. At the end of the day all bias is grotesque and has no place in hon­est debate.

    • Anonymous says:

      That Chom­sky is a left-lean­er is uni­ver­sal­ly known. This has no bear­ing on the truth of what he says about Bush. He may selec­tive­ly omit crit­i­cism of Oba­ma because of his “bias” (though else­where Chom­sky is extremem­ly crit­i­cal of Oba­ma, fyi), but when he makes fac­tu­al claims about Bush, we peo­ple of high char­ac­ter should first look to see whether those claims are true. In this case, they cer­tain­ly seem to be. The facts don’t switch from being “true” to being “false” because Chom­sky’s left-lean­ing speaks vol­umes about his “cred­i­bil­i­ty”. Above all, cred­i­bil­i­ty is deter­mined by how fac­tu­al the state­ments he makes are. If the claims are fac­tu­al­ly true, Chom­sky (here at least) is being quite cred­i­ble. What a fine and dreamy world it would be if we could know that every­one who has a dif­fer­ent political/social phi­los­o­phy than we do always spoke false­ly just by that fact alone! Sad­ly for you, it’s not the real world.

  • I’ve often won­dered if there was a place in your ‘Open­Cul­ture’ for my views. Appar­ent­ly not.

  • Open Culture says:

    For the record, we’re not par­tic­u­lar­ly par­tial to Chom­sky’s remarks. Or at least they don’t sit well with me per­son­al­ly. And that seemed a bit implic­it in the lead sen­tence. But, regard­less, Chom­sky is an impor­tant pub­lic intel­lec­tu­al com­ment­ing on a major world event. And so his com­ments seem worth a men­tion.

    We try to keep pol­i­tics out of the con­ver­sa­tion. But some­times cul­ture and pol­i­tics inevitably col­lide. And, when that hap­pens, we deal with it. It’s prob­a­bly a 100% cer­tain­ty that we will again post some­thing you don’t like. That’s bound to hap­pen. So, if you need to leave, we under­stand. But if you can deal with the occa­sion­al idea you dis­agree with (heck, I dis­agreed with this par­tic­u­lar opin­ion), then we’re always hap­py to have you along for the ride. Obvi­ous­ly the choice is yours…

    Dan

    • Sinjin Smythe says:

      Mr Chom­sky is a dif­fi­cult char­ac­ter. Much of what he says I am inter­st­ed in. I just get put off when he resorts to crude anti-repub­li­can char­ac­ter attacks.

      Not that every­one’s reac­tion to Bin Laden’s death has to pass some test it does­n’t.

      It isn’t, or should­n’t be easy, to react to Bin Laden’s death. It is absurd to use a per­son­’s death to make a cal­lous polit­i­cal attack.

      Bin Laden’s death had to hap­pen for a vare­ity of rea­sons non of which bring joy and hap­pines to the ratio­nal, intel­li­gent, and civ­il mind­ed per­son.

      Pres­i­dent Bush or Pres­i­dent Oba­ma had to do what they did and I’m fair­ly sure both would have. I’m thank­ful to have had both Pres­i­dents when it comes to a dis­cus­sion of Bin Laden.

  • asgerd says:

    Well I for one can cope with and (with­in rea­son) do want to see & hear seri­ous views that might or might not chime with mine (obvi­ous­ly — how else do we learn?) so thanks for this.

    • Sinjin Smythe says:

      @asgerd So you learn main­ly from the rad­i­cal biased fringe? The sharply polar­ized are your pri­ma­ry sources of infor­ma­tion? Those views that don’t “chime” with yours have to be extreme in order for you to learn? Sor­ry, I find that pecu­liar. I don’t find that Mr. Chom­sky’s vul­gar accu­sa­tions about Pres­i­dent Bush being a Nazi has any­thing to do with Bin Laden’s assasination.@c31b7117a027e9cef6e46cd9067b47c3:disqus

      • asgerd says:

        “Main­ly”? “Pri­ma­ry”? Where did I say that? I don’t only learn from extreme views but if those views are out there and held by any rel­e­vant group*, I want to read them. A bit at least.

        Also Chom­sky does­n’t say Bush is a Nazi.

        *Feel free to argue that he is nei­ther rel­e­vant nor a group, but he’s not the only per­son on the plan­et to think this way.

        • Sinjin Smythe says:

          @asgerd You have me dead to rights, I was para­phras­ing your post back at you. Mr. Chom­sky’s view, as you have chose to call it, isn’t actu­al­ly a “view” of Bin Laden’s death. It is a vul­gar polit­i­cal com­ment about Pres­i­dent Bush.
          @c31b7117a027e9cef6e46cd9067b47c3:disqus
          The “view” as you have described it is laced with pathet­ic ref­er­ence to the “Nurem­berg Tri­bunal” and makes men­tion of hanged “Nazi crim­i­nals”.
          And yes you are cor­rect Mr Chom­sky isn’t they only per­son to think this way. Unfor­tu­nate­ly for the progress of human­i­ty the world is lit­tered with peo­ple that stuff in a snide com­ment, an ad hominum attack, when­ev­er they have the oppor­tu­ni­ty.

  • asgerd says:

    Well I for one can cope with and (with­in rea­son) do want to see & hear seri­ous views that might or might not chime with mine (obvi­ous­ly — how else do we learn?) so thanks for this.

  • Benjamin Lobato says:

    Ouch. I’m usu­al­ly fair­ly sup­port­ive of Mr. Chom­sky, and take what he has to say more seri­ous­ly than most peo­ple, but in this case.. I’m gonna have to say that he is full of it. ”
    Uncon­tro­ver­sial­ly, [Bush’s] crimes vast­ly exceed bin Laden’,
    ” does he seri­ous­ly think that such a state­ment is uncon­tro­ver­sial?

    • Open Culture says:

      Chom­sky is a com­pli­cat­ed fig­ure. At times (and per­haps we haven’t seen those days for a while), he can be an impor­tant oppo­si­tion­al fig­ure that helps keep the gov­ern­ment hon­est. At oth­er times, I find him stretch­ing creduli­ty with his argu­ments and sim­ply crit­i­ciz­ing because, after 82 years, it’s what he’s appar­ent­ly con­di­tioned to do. In this case, I’m in the lat­ter camp. Not ter­ri­bly impressed with his approach.

  • Anonymous says:

    One thing I find insid­i­ous: when­ev­er a “left­ist” view is offered (here, on tv, the radio, the print media), mem­bers of the right scream “BIAS” faster than Pavlov’s dogs ever drib­bled. They go on to either claim that the media out­let is, gen­er­al­ly, biased to the left, or else they demand “equal time” to “rebut” the view expressed. Or both.

    The upshot of this nev­erend­ing tac­tic is that grad­u­al­ly the mes­sages are over­whelm­ing­ly anti-left­ist as hun­dreds of right­ist views are espoused unchal­lenged, but when a left­ist view aris­es, it’s attacked as being unfair.

    These are the tac­tics of peo­ple who favor total­i­tar­i­an regimes IMO

  • Anonymous says:

    One thing I find insid­i­ous: when­ev­er a “left­ist” view is offered (here, on tv, the radio, the print media), mem­bers of the right scream “BIAS” faster than Pavlov’s dogs ever drib­bled. They go on to either claim that the media out­let is, gen­er­al­ly, biased to the left, or else they demand “equal time” to “rebut” the view expressed. Or both.

    The upshot of this nev­erend­ing tac­tic is that grad­u­al­ly the mes­sages are over­whelm­ing­ly anti-left­ist as hun­dreds of right­ist views are espoused unchal­lenged, but when a left­ist view aris­es, it’s attacked as being unfair.

    These are the tac­tics of peo­ple who favor total­i­tar­i­an regimes IMO

  • Hanoch says:

    Pos­si­bly the most impor­tant les­son one can draw from read­ing Chom­sky’s com­ments is that intel­li­gence does not nec­es­sar­i­ly lead to either wis­dom or cogency.

  • Dvoss41 says:

    I nev­er thought that I would ever .…..ah hem, defend W. Bush but com­par­ing his war crimes to Bin Laden is noth­ing short of douch­bag­gery.

    I have a lot of respect for Mr. Chom­sky, and usu­al­ly agree with him, but not this time.

    Christo­pher Hitchens’ response is more than worth check­ing out by the way.

    • Luke Stefanowicz says:

      Very astute and enlil­ght­en­ing, say­ing “doucbe­bag­gery,” mis­spelling it, and assum­ing that any­one oth­er than some­one who already shares your pre­cise feel­ings on the top­ic even knows what you mean.

      Sec­ond­ly, as some­one “hap­py” that bin­Ladin is dead but upset that he was­n’t brought to jus­tice and impris­oned but instead got what he wanted–a mar­tyr’s death through an extra-judi­cial killing, I am still objec­tive enough to state two things.

      One: bin­Ladin caused only a frac­tion of the human suf­fer­ing that George W. Bush is respon­si­ble for.

      Two: bin­Ladin attempt­ed to seri­ous­ly harm Amer­i­ca. George W. Bush suc­ceed­ed at just that quite extra­or­dian­ril
      y.

  • Anonymous says:

    Since so many are appalled at the idea of even remote­ly and indi­rect­ly com­par­ing Bin Laden’s crimes to Bush’s, and I agree they are incomparable…let’s at least dis­cuss intel­li­gent­ly the scope of what Bush’s crimes actu­al­ly were. I sus­pect that, leav­ing com­par­isons to Hitler, Stal­in, Bin Laden, etc etc, out of it, Mr Bush would not do well in a court of law with a charge of crimes against human­i­ty. I know, it’s not impeach­able like lying about sex, but it ain’t inno­cence. Ask a few mil­lion Iraqis…

  • “It is absurd to use a per­son­’s death to make a cal­lous polit­i­cal attack.”
    Fun­ny, ’cause a lot of peo­ple think that tim­ing for this oper­a­tion fits very well in Oba­ma’s polit­i­cal agen­da…

  • A black hawk down, By Ben Laden’s wife who attacked with a cass­rol after tak­ing a Via­gra Pill ! :D what a mess!

  • A black hawk down, By Ben Laden’s wife who attacked with a cass­rol after tak­ing a Via­gra Pill ! :D what a mess!

  • “Christo­pher Hitchens is a colum­nist for Van­i­ty Fair”: That explains every­thing!

  • Twaikuer says:

    Since it was so clear that Bin Laden deserved the death penal­ty, then why not deter­mine that in a court of Law? Why not show the world that we real­ly are what we claim to be? Why keep rein­forc­ing the image of the USA as auto­crat­ic vio­lent bul­ly that is the real recruit­ment tool for ter­ror­ists?
    Ter­ror­ism is not only evil, but an idi­ot­ic coun­ter­pro­duc­tive tac­tic. Bin Laden was the worst thing that could have hap­pened to those who felt Colo­nial (and now Cor­po­rate) oppres­sion and manip­u­la­tion of the Mid­dle East must end. This killing has giv­en clo­sure and now writ­ten in stone the stu­pid idea that “they hate us because we’re free”. And it has fur­ther blind­ed the apa­thet­ic Amer­i­can pub­lic to: the fact most ter­ror­ist sus­pects are killed by bomb­ing vil­lages, would it be OK to kill a bad guy with scores of inno­cent “col­lat­er­al dam­age” in your town by drop­ping bombs on it? And most of the detainees in Guan­tanamo are now thought to be inno­cent, yet are still denied any of the legal rights can­di­date Oba­ma vowed to rein­state, along with his con­tin­u­ing Extra­or­di­nary Ren­di­tion.

    All of these hyp­o­crit­i­cal acts will con­tin­ue to recruit more ter­ror­ists than they destroy. We should be ask­ing why that has been such an appeal­ing “strat­e­gy” to both Bush and Oba­ma? It seems to me the Cold War need­ed to be replaced with the For­ev­er War Against Ter­ror­ism, to keep the dol­lars flow­ing to the same peo­ple.

  • Sinjin Smythe says:

    @
    Leonar­doWe­ber
    C
    @bd6c7adbf1a919cf210ae7dadf7a88e4:disqus
    omsky Fac­tu­al? Real­ly? Why that is remark­able. I’d always thought his lack of wide­spread accep­tance was pre­cise­ly due to his fast and loose han­dling of facts. Well I’ve been schooled?

    With all of the evi­dence spilling all over the place with regard to Bin Laden’s guilt and the shear lack of evi­dence, none suf­fi­cient to even bring a sin­gle charge against Pres­i­dent Bush, I find he isn’t exact­ly” turn­ing to the facts”.

    Of course you may also be part of the anti-war left whose

    Touret­te’s syn­drome has you ner­vous­ly repeat­ing “Bush Lied”. You know the type, strange para­noid con­spir­a­cy the­o­rists. No mat­ter what rea­son you bring to these folks you can not con­vince them against their will.

    I think you know that it does­n’t mat­ter how well Bush might do in a court of law regard­ing the crimes against human­i­ty. Sure you will blath­er some sil­ly ad hominem, I know your kind. But if “turn­ing to the facts” mat­ters they, the facts, just aren’t avail­able in the form of evi­dence for use in your court of law.

    • Anonymous says:

      Sin­jin, please read your own post and look for evi­dence of ad homin­ims. Count them. Now look for state­ments of fact. Count them. Thanks. I know. It’s bor­ing.

  • Leisha says:

    This inter­view was imme­di­ate­ly fol­lowed with a Via­gra com­mer­cial aimed at macho guys with erec­tile dys­func­tion, so I guess that’s the intend­ed audi­ence of 60 Min­utes. No won­der I don’t watch it.

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