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Some
left-wing viewers of
Fahrenheit 9/11 -- perhaps out of wishful thinking? -- believe that
the film makes an argument that Riyadh and Washington "have collaborated for
decades in a violent project of repression" (Doug Henwood, LBO-talk,
July 9, 2004) based only on well-checked facts provided by credible
experts (Dennis Redmond, LBO-talk,
July 9, 2004). I wish that Fahrenheit 9/11 made such an
argument, but it doesn't, even though, if only Michael Moore had wanted to
do so, he had mountains of indisputable facts readily available to all that
he could have used to provide historical analysis, which, with his talent
for sharp satire, he could have also made as entertaining as the film he did
make: e.g.,
As Saudi Arabia's longtime chief of
intelligence, Prince Turki al Faisal helped nurture the Afghan resistance
movement that begot the country's Taliban leadership. . . .
Saudis trace their policy to the early days of
the anti-Soviet resistance in Afghanistan after the 1979 invasion. The call
to fight with the Afghan mujaheddin rang loud here in the 1980s, echoing
from mosques, government offices and local charities, through upper-class
homes and rural villages, and prompting an estimated 15,000 Saudis to join
the resistance against Soviet occupation of Muslim Afghanistan. Among them
was bin Laden, who joined fundraising activities in Pakistan and later
fought in Afghanistan.
Money flowed from the coffers of the oil-rich
kingdom -- by some accounts, as much as $1 billion -- to supply and arm
fighters gathering under the tutelage of U.S. and Pakistani intelligence
services. Volunteers simply signed up for "relief work," one Saudi recalled,
and flew off on deeply discounted air tickets, courtesy of Saudi Arabian
Airlines. National guard members could even take paid leave to join the
fight.
"We helped them with everything," said a
high-ranking Saudi intelligence official. "They thought it was Islamic war,
and Muslims wanted to help." (Howard Schneider, "Saudi Missteps Helped Bin
Laden Gain Power: Kingdom Funded Taliban, Predecessors," Washington Post,
October 15, 2001, p. A1)
That, by the way, is a fact
that Prince Bandar does not hide (because he doesn't need to, as there is no
American consensus about the evil of having teamed up with Riyadh,
Islamabad, etc. to fight against the Soviets), frankly discussing it on
Larry King Live:
KING: What was the circumstance under which
you met him?
PRINCE BANDAR: This is ironic. In the
mid-'80s, if you remember, we and the United -- Saudi Arabia and the United
States were supporting the Mujahideen to liberate Afghanistan from the
Soviets. He came to thank me for my efforts to bring the Americans, our
friends, to help us against the atheists, he said the communists.
Isn't it ironic?
KING: How ironic. In other words, he came to
thank you for helping bring America to help him.
PRINCE BANDAR: Right.
KING: And now he may be responsible for
bombing Americans.
PRINCE BANDAR: Absolutely. ("America's New
War: Responding to Terrorism," Larry King Live,
October 1, 2001)
Moore includes this clip in
Fahrenheit 9/11, but he doesn't follow it up, because he cannot
afford to. In order to analyze the problem of decades of collaboration
between Washington and Riyadh as well as other unsavory allies, fighting
against the Communists, nationalists, and other official enemies of
Washington during and after the Cold War, he would have to go beyond the
crimes of the George W. Bush administration, but doing so would implicate
Jimmy Carter and
Bill Clinton (as well as all presidents of the United States, especially
the ones who came into power after the US decidedly replaced Britain and
France as the hegemonic imperial power) in the violent project of repression
inside and outside Saudi Arabia.
Instead, Michael Moore turns to conspiracy theory based upon the weakest
contentions made by
Dan Briody, Jack Cloonan (a former senior agent on the joint FBI-CIA
Al-Qaeda task force), Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-North Dakota),
James Moore, and
Craig Unger,
making suggestions and insinuations that lead the audience to suspect that
George W. Bush is guilty of protecting -- because of his business ties --
the other bin Ladens and Saudi royals who are implicated in aiding Osama bin
Laden's terrorism, including the 9/11 terrorist attacks. If it may be said
that there is an "argument" in the part of the film that concerns Riyadh and
Washington at all, it goes something like this:
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Many if not all of the
bin Ladens are probably guilty of aiding Osama bin Laden financially and
otherwise, at least all the way up to the masterminding of the 9/11
terrorist attacks. Why, some of them attended the wedding of one of Osama
bin Laden's sons in Afghanistan: "In the summer of 2001 just before 9/11,
one of Osama's sons got married in Afghanistan and several family members
showed up at the wedding" (Craig Unger, Fahrenheit 9/11)!
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Riyadh and Washington
know that at least some -- perhaps many -- of the bin Ladens are guilty,
in league with Osama bin Laden, so they went out of their way to protect
them after the 9/11 attacks, facilitating their safe departure from the
United States after only cursory questionings by the FBI.
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Since Saudi investors
have invested in the US economy to the tune of $860 billion (in total,
according to Unger in the film) and maybe even $1 trillion (in the US
banks alone, according to what Moore says he heard from an unnamed
source), and some of the bin Ladens, through James R. Bath and the Carlyle
Group, have had business ties with the Bushes, the Bush administration
cannot afford to get tough on the Saudi financiers of Osama bin Laden.
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The best way to combat Al
Qaida and other extreme Islamist cells and groups is to cut off the Saudi
financing of them.
-
Since Bush is incapable
of biting the Saudi hands that have fed him, we must "re-unelect" him and
elect John Kerry, who, unlike the Bushes, will go medieval on the fat
Saudi asses and stop Saudi-financed international terrorism.
Now, the Bushes have had
business ties with some of the bin Ladens and political ties with the Saudi
royals, but the "experts" to whom Moore turns don't have the goods, so to
speak, to make a solid case that any of the bin Ladens other than Osama was
implicated in the 9/11 terrorist attacks and that Bush nevertheless
protected them, knowing that they were really guilty.
In short, Moore refuses to build his case on the known facts about the long
historical relation between Riyadh and Washington to which Prince Bandar
admits publicly and instead goes after speculations about Bush's secret
conspiracy to protect the guilty bin Ladens and Saudi royals -- and perhaps
also himself -- from the FBI's scrutiny concerning the 9/11 terrorist
attacks, in the process indulging feverish imaginations of 9/11 conspiracy
theorists among the audience. Why? Because Moore of Fahrenheit 9/11,
in contrast to Moore of Roger and Me and Bowling for Columbine,
is interested in protecting the Democratic Party from responsibility --
especially its responsibility for the consequences of decades of
collaboration between Riyadh and Washington in particular and US foreign
policy in general: the decline of secular left-wing movements and
governments, the rise of extreme Islamist organizations, and increased
dangers of lethal terrorist attacks everywhere.
That said, let's suppose, for the sake of argument, that all the allegations
mentioned in Fahrenheit 9/11 concerning the ties among the Bushes,
the Saudi royals, the other bin Ladens, and Osama bin Laden are 100% true,
and that John Kerry will indeed take a much tougher stance on the rich and
powerful in Saudi Arabia than Bush would. Still, I don't think that Kerry
can solve the problem of terrorism at all, as terrorists do not need big
money to commit mass murders, as Timothy McVeigh's bombing of the federal
building in Oklahoma proved to us. All they need is brains and discipline.
Besides, for the reasons that Ashraf Fahim mentions in his article "John
Kerry's Sucker Saudi Punch" (Asia Times,
June 10, 2004), I believe that Kerry's anti-Saudi posturing will remain
just that -- posturing in an election year. As long as Washington, be it
under the Republican or Democratic White House, is committed to keeping its
status as empire, running on deficits to police the capitalist world order
fueled by oil, it cannot countenance democracy in the Middle East, least of
all in Saudi Arabia, as there is no guarantee that democracy will bring
about even more pro-American allies than the existing pro-American regimes
in the predominantly Arab states. More likely than not, more democracy in
Saudi Arabia and the rest of the Middle East would create new governments
less cooperative with Washington. Moreover, destabilization of the existing
regimes -- especially the one in Saudi Arabia -- may even endanger not only
the US but also the world economy, which Washington under any administration
can ill afford.
To conclude,
Fahrenheit 9/11, a fascinating populist work of art, at times falls
for conspiracy theory, not because Moore doesn't know any better, but
because he has skeletons in the closet -- not his own skeletons, but the
Democratic Party's.
Yoshie Furuhashi is an activist in Columbus, Ohio. She is a
steering committee member of United for Peace and Justice. Her blog
"Critical Montages" is available at:
http://montages.blogspot.com/.
Other
Articles by Yoshie Furuhashi
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Winning
the Culture War, Losing the Class Struggle
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