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McVeigh and US government both
committed terrorism
By Howard Zinn
Now that Timothy McVeigh has been put to death,
and some people’s need for revenge or punishment may be satisfied,
we can begin to think calmly of how he learned his twisted sense
of right and wrong from the government that executed him.
No one with an ounce of moral understanding can
justify the bombing of a building that resulted in the deaths
of 168 people. But McVeigh didn’t have to look far to find that
the United States government had done just that, but on a larger
scale.
In the war against Iraq, of which McVeigh was
a decorated veteran, on Feb. 15, 1991, the US Air Force dropped
a bomb on an air raid shelter in Bagdad, killing more than 600
people, many of them women and children. There had been many
bombings, of buses, trains, highways, hospitals, neighborhoods,
in which civilians were killed, and where the government described
them as accidents.
Of course, they were not quite accidents, because
if you drop huge numbers of bombs on a city, it is inevitable
that innocent people will die.
However, in the case of the air raid shelter,
the United States conceded that the bombing was deliberate and
justified this by the claim that the air raid shelter was a
communications site.
Reporters going into the rubble immediately after
the bombing found not the slightest evidence of that. And even
if it were, would that justify a massacre (there’s no other
name for it) of hundreds of men, women and children? If McVeigh
had not been in the infantry but in the Air Force, and had dropped
that bomb, killing more than twice the number he killed in Oklahoma,
he would be alive and perhaps have another medal pinned to his
chest.
In defending his bombing of the federal building,
with all those dead and wounded, McVeigh used the term “collateral
damage,’’ exactly the words used by our government to describe
the deaths of civilians in our bombing of various countries,
whether Iraq or Panama or Yugoslavia. My Webster’s Collegiate
Dictionary defines collateral as accompanying or related, but
secondary or subordinate. Both McVeigh and the leaders of the
United States government considered the toll of human life secondary
to whatever else was destroyed, and therefore acceptable.
McVeigh is no longer able to let his demented
notion of morality lead to any more deaths. The United States
government, on the other hand, is very much alive, and capable
of more and more bombings - like the ones taking place almost
every day in Iraq - and the civilian deaths will be justified
once more as “collateral damage.’’
The day after Timothy McVeigh’s execution, the
Boston Herald ran a banner headline on its front page: IT’S
OVER!
But it is not over. Terrorism is the killing of
innocent people in order to send a message (those are McVeigh’s
words and also the words of government spokesmen when our planes
have bombed some foreign city). So long as our government engages
in terrorism, claiming always that it is done for democracy
or freedom or to send a message to some other government, there
will be more Timothy McVeighs, following the example.
No, it is not over. Individual acts of terrorism
will continue, and that will be called - rightly - fanaticism.
Government terrorism, on a much larger scale, will continue,
and will be called ‘’foreign policy.’’ That is the perverted
sense of morality which now rules and will go on ruling, until
Americans decide that all terrorism is wrong and will not be
tolerated.
Howard Zinn is author of ‘’A People’s History
of the United States.’’
Source: Boston Globe
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