INTERVIEW WITH NOAM CHOMSKY This interview has been translated from the French Le Monde Libertaire. In turn it is taken from the Portuguese anarchist paper A Batahla. We are unaware of any other English version. A Batalha: You are very critical of the American media and you consider her European counterpart more democratic. What are the essential differences - in democratic terms - between the American and the European media? Noam Chomsky: I don't think the European media are any more democratic than the American, neither are they any more serious. There's a greater variety, but in any case it is impossible to make generalisations... A Batalha: The Middle East is one of your main concerns. The US and Israel have always opposed a diplomatic solution to the problem. Why the recent change in attitude? Do you think they are going to substitute military and political control of the occupied lands with economic control? Noam Chomsky: The US and Israel have always wanted a diplomatic solution in the Middle East but under their terms. These weren't accepted by the rest of the world. For nearly 20 years the US has simply rejected any Palestinian right to self-determination. They refused to accept UN resolution 242 in the terms chosen by International opinion and - incidentally - the US between 1957 and 1971. The resolution called for peace in response to a total evacuation with minimal mutual adjustments. In order to achieve this the US had to oppose Security Council decisions; vote, along with Israel, against the resolutions of the General Assembly; block all diplomatic moves after the Sadat initiative of February 1971 to reach an agreement based on 242... Because of the power of US propaganda, the main import of these facts were suppressed and the Europeans, so under US dominance at the time, forgot to defend what they had defended in the past. That situation continued until 1990. The last UN resolution (144-2) which calls once again for a diplomatic solution was blocked by the US in December 1990. After the war with Iraq, Europe handed the region over to the US and took no independent position. The non-aligned nations found themselves in a state of total confusion and Russia found itself more or less in the US camp along with Great Britain. The US went into action in the autumn of 1991, in Madrid, unilaterally imposing their plan for the region.. This was accepted in 1993-94, this time with Norway's support. The current agreement is based on the explicit presupposition that Israel will not withdraw from the occupied territories until she wishes to do so and under her own conditions.. Thus from the moment when the Declaration of Principles was signed in September 93, the colonisation and confiscation of land in the occupied area has increased with financial support from the US. At the moment Israel controls nearly 75% of the Gaza strip, nearly 35% of the territory and probably all its water.. In the Declaration of Principle not a word about Palestinian self-determination because the US have never accepted the idea... I have written about this situation which has been going on for 25 years (see my recent book World Orders, Old and New) A Batalha: What do you see as they main causes of the growth of fundamentalist Islamic groups in the Arab world for example in Algeria and Egypt? Do you think these movements have a local cause or are due to religious fanaticism? Noam Chomsky: I would be wary of the tern 'religious fanaticism' and ' fundamentalism'. I think that one of the most fundamentalist countries in the world is the US, perhaps on an even footing with Iran. The most extreme Muslim fundamentalist country in the world is Saudi Arabia, an intimate ally of the US and which is not considered a problem because it obeys orders. Also one of the most extreme of the Muslim fundamentalists is Gulbiddin Hekmatyar, who received, in the 1980s, from the US and Saudi Arabia, nearly $6 million and large quantities of arms whilst he was in the process of transforming Afghanistan into a huge drug producing centre, and who today is blowing up what is left of that devastated country. In general terms the US and its satellites have nothing against fundamentalism Islamic or other. What they fear is the possibility of people acting independently. This rule applies to the Roman Catholic Church. The US are neither for or against here. Those elements of the church who 'side with the poor' must be objectively eliminated, if necessary by means of terror and violence. Those who 'side with the rich' are fine. The reason for the development of fundamentalist movements in the Arab world is simple. The secular movements were either destroyed or self-destructed. Only the Islamic fundamentalists have anything to offer the population. When you live in the slums of Cairo and your child is dying you can take it to a clinic run by Islamic fundamentalists. The governments are too corrupt to offer anything. These people offer a certain vision which takes into account the needs of the people... That is a rather simplistic analysis given limitations of space but I think it covers the essentials... A Batalha: What do you see as the main causes of the war in the former Yugoslavia and what are the possible solutions? Noam Chomsky: The Balkan wars have many causes. The main ones are of an internal nature, but the actions of the outside powers have done little to help the situation, to put matters mildly.. The international recognition of Croatia failed to take into account the fact that there was a lot of opposition to the move coming from an important Serb minority. Bosnia was recognised despite the fact that it was made up of three distinct parts and that even if it had had strong multi-ethnic aspects this had little impact on the Serb mountain community who were fearful of Muslim domination. It is probable that all these factors added to the behaviour of the Serb government led to war. Before it would perhaps have been possible to ameliorate the problem. But it is hard know to conceive of a solution which is not unthinkable. I haven't seen any sensible solutions to the problem... A Batalha: Over the last few years we have seen the rise of fascist, nationalist and racist ideologies. Today this is not limited to the activities of small isolated groups and with the popular support of Zhironovski and Berlusconi perhaps we are seeing signs that we are faced with a problem of a large dimension. Do you think that the economic and social crisis is conducive to the development of anti-democratic movements as happened in Germany after WW1? Noam Chomsky: For the last 20 years the world has seen society dividing itself into two camps along the lines of the Third World model with islands of great richness and privilege in a sea of misery, with a growing superfluous population which has no rights and doesn't contribute to profit creation. The proportions in a rich country like the US or a poor country like Mexico are different but the structures are very similar. The reasons are quite clear: since the 70s there has been a growing move towards globalisation with the enormous accumulation of power in the hands of transnational corporations, which are incredibly totalitarian institutions. There has also been an explosion of capital and a change in its composition. In 1970, 90% of the capital on the international exchanges came from trade and investment, from the real economy, and 10% from speculation. In 1990 these figures have to be turned upside down. By 1994 speculative capital is estimated to stand at 95% and its growth rate is the highest ever recorded. Such an evolution was already apparent in the 1970s. In 1978, James Tobin, Nobel Prize for Economics Laureate, suggested a tax aimed at reducing capital speculation which would lead to a world based on low growth, low salaries and high profits. This is what has happened, with the possibility of transferring production abroad, a powerful weapon to be used against workers. The end of the cold war which means that the Eastern countries have returned to their traditional Third World status offers the western bosses class new arms to use against the national population. In such a situation it is natural that power should wish to eliminate that which threatens it: human rights, liberty and democracy which had been gained by popular struggles over the last century. This is what is happening in a sharpened fashion in the US and Great Britain. For the vast majority it is a disaster. For example in the US salaries have gone down since the Reagan era. At the same time the review Fortune speaks of spectacular profit making. All of this has been organised by propaganda barrages which are quite impressive and which have left people extremely confused, hopeless, frustrated and rebellious. The liberal intellectuals and the press and also the 'left' have contributed to all of this. It is a very dangerous situation which could explode and bring about various horrors unless we see the creation of alternatives which answer to the needs and preoccupations of the people. A Batalha: Many people used to think that with the collapse of the USSR and socialist regimes that there would be a fresh interest in anarchism. This hasn't happened. Do you think it is the anarchists fault for having failed to present themselves in a good light? Noam Chomsky: Who are the anarchists who have failed to present themselves as an alternative? It's true that there are a few. For example a lot was hoped of the CNT in Spain. But one must remember that there are nearly no anarchist intellectuals for the simple reason that anarchism does not offer intellectuals any position of power or privilege. Anarchists also are responsible, since anarchist feelings are too scattered. However, there are ways of articulating them in a constructive way, and in the tradition of the popular movements to put forward a libertarian character to make anarchists look appealing. A Batalha: What should anarchists and the anarchist press be doing right now. Noam Chomsky: Same as always: help people gain control of their lives, to understand the world in which they live and to organise themselves in order to destroy illegitimate authority... As has always been the case. Le Monde Libertaire 145, Rue Amelot, 75011, Paris.