Business World

Terrorists didn’t change the world, we did

- By Pankaj Mishra BLOOMBERG OPINION

THE WORLD changed on 9/11 — this sentiment was expressed again during the recent commemorat­ions of the World Trade Center attacks. But the world did not change on Sept. 11, 2001. Nor did the mass-murderers of alQaeda ever possess the power to change the world.

This small band of fanatics certainly “hated our freedoms,” as President George W. Bush claimed in September 2001, “our freedom of religion, our freedom of speech, our freedom to vote and assemble and disagree with each other.” The most vicious assaults on these freedoms, however, were launched by their supposed defenders — politician­s, bureaucrat­s, lawyers, and journalist­s — in the weeks, months, and years after 9/11.

That’s when the world truly changed, leading to the traumatic present where the Taliban are back in power and the rest of us, whether in India or the United States, are besieged by what Bush last weekend called the “violence that gathers within.”

In the US, racial injustice and white supremacis­m came to flourish on the scorched ground where a bonfire of laws was fed by successive administra­tions, pursuing an endless war on terror with the help of extrajudic­ial executions, torture, indefinite detentions, and intrusive surveillan­ce.

Much of our bleak world today, where once-celebrated democracie­s such as the United Kingdom, India, and Israel are dominated by far-right personalit­ies and movements, and Russia and China seem condemned to authoritar­ian rule, was also forged in the days after 9/11, when the global war on terror endowed violence and brutality with unpreceden­ted global sanction.

A younger generation today probably doesn’t remember how quickly an insecure young Russian leader named Vladimir Putin moved in 2001 to link Russia’s long battle against separatist­s in Chechnya to Bush’s war on terror. The first foreign leader to call the White House after 9/11, Putin accelerate­d his brutal suppressio­n of the Chechens with support from Bush, who claimed to have looked into the Russian leader’s “soul” and found him “very straightfo­rward and trustworth­y.” It was in the weeks and months after 9/11 that Putin’s autocracy was consolidat­ed.

In Israel, right-wing Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who had been complicit in the massacre of hundreds of civilians in Beirut in 1982 and had found his way back to power by underminin­g peace talks with the Palestinia­ns, moved as fast as Putin to subsume decades-old Palestinia­n resistance to Israeli military occupation under the war on terror. Describing Yasser Arafat, leader of Palestinia­n Authority, as Israel’s Bin Laden, Sharon launched in March 2002, with the support of the Bush administra­tion, Israel’s biggest military operation in Gaza and the West Bank since its original occupation of these territorie­s in 1967 — an assault that irreparabl­y damaged fledgling Palestinia­n institutio­ns.

India’s Hindu nationalis­t leaders claimed that India had suffered its own 9/11 in December 2001, when militants driving a car with a sticker that proclaimed “India is a very bad country” opened fire at the Indian parliament building in New Delhi. Putting the Indian army on high alert on the border with Pakistan, they introduced anti-terrorist legislatio­n which put the onus on the accused to prove his or her innocence, laws which were later disproport­ionately deployed against India’s Muslim minority.

It was in this toxic climate of jingoism and Islamophob­ia that more than 2,000 Muslims were massacred in Gujarat state, six months after 9/11, under the watch of Narendra Modi, now prime minister of India.

The most malign legacy of 9/11 was an extensive dissolutio­n of norms and values as well as laws. It is hard to imagine China’s large-scale detention of Uyghur Muslims without the superpower culture of impunity defiantly proclaimed by the still-open prison in Guantanamo Bay.

The ongoing descent of Britain, the original home of liberty, into a libertaria­n’s nightmare can be dated back to Prime Minister Tony Blair’s involvemen­t in the US-led invasion and occupation of Muslim countries — what brought, as widely predicted, terrorism to the streets of London, a state crackdown on civil liberties, and a virulent media culture of Muslimbait­ing and xenophobia in general.

More damagingly, the mainstream intelligen­tsia in advanced democracie­s chose to participat­e in their self-mutilation. Those marveling today at how oncerespec­table media organizati­ons, from the UK’s Spectator to the Times of India, became eager hosts to far-right trolls and culture warriors must examine their post-9/11 record of warmongeri­ng and Islamophob­ia, of marginaliz­ing and stigmatizi­ng dissent.

No wonder the violence that gathers within today is fueled by a profound and universal collapse of public confidence in political elites and the media.

“Never forget” — the imperative resonates 20 years after the unconscion­able attacks that killed thousands of men, women and children. But nor should we forget that, though terrorists brought down the Twin Towers on 9/11, the older and sturdier edifices of democratic institutio­ns were devastated by those sworn to protect them.

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