Why they hate us look to history for answers

by Sheldon Richman

by Sheldon Richman

Whats more obnoxious than a person who constantly whines about the injustices committed against him while ignoring his own injustices against others?
A country that does the same thing.
We often hear American politicians and commentators reciting a list of terrorist acts committed against the United States. It typically includes the 1982 bombing of the Marine barracks in Beirut, the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, the 1996 bombing of U.S. Air Force housing in Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia, the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Tanzania and Kenya, and the 2000 bombing of the U.S.S. Cole in the port of Aden in Yemen. Reciting this string of attacks supposedly demonstrates, without further argument, that the United States has been the major victim of violence on the world stage unprovoked violence perpetrated by Islamofascists because we are free. Indeed, it is widely believed that the attacks on September 11, 2001, were in part the result of our failure to retaliate for the earlier attacks.
But this is sheer balderdash. The attacks, while often criminally misdirected, were hardly unprovoked.
The last century-plus of U.S. foreign policy has largely been a story of aggression and empire building. American presidents have intervened and interfered in every region of the world, not in self-defense, but in the name of U.S. national interest, which in reality means the interest of well-connected corporations and their ambitious political agents who felt appointed to bring order to the world. As a whole, the American people havent gained by this in fact, they have paid dearly in money and lives. But not as dearly as those on the receiving end of that policy. For all the pious moralizing about democracy and human rights, American foreign policy has treated foreign populations like garbage, beginning with the brutal repression of the Filipino uprising against American colonial rule from 1899 to 1902. That war and its related hardships killed 250,000 to a million Filipino civilians and 20,000 Filipino rebels.
How many Americans know that?
Since that time American presidents have intervened, directly or by proxy, in countless places, including Cuba, Haiti, Colombia (Panama), Chile, Mexico, Nicaragua, the Soviet Union, Iran, Iraq, Guatemala, Lebanon, the Dominican Republic, Korea, Vietnam and Afghanistan. On many occasions American administrations have engineered regime changes (sometimes with assassinations) to install leaders friendly to American interests. Rarely has intervention occurred without the murder of innocent civilians, degrading hardship for survivors, and arms and (taxpayer) money for repressive leaders. The paradigm is the 1953 intervention in Iran, when the CIA helped drive an elected, secular prime minister from office so the autocratic shah could be restored to power. His brutal U.S.-sponsored repression of the Iranian people finally provoked a religious revolution in 1979, creating an anti-American theocracy that has been a thorn in the side of U.S. presidents ever since.
Coincidence? Of course not. Americans may be ignorant or forgetful; the victims seldom are.
Iran was neither the first nor last case of blowback, the CIAs term for what happens when a foreign operation explodes in ones own face.
How many Americans have any inkling of the crimes yes, crimes their government has committed against foreign peoples in their name over the last century? Most people dont know and dont care and thats fine with their rulers because when vengeful foreigners assault American civilians (unjustifiably) or military occupiers, U.S. leaders and jingoist supporters can say America was the victim of another unprovoked attack. Why do they hate us? they will wonder.
Anyone the least bit familiar with history will know the answer. The CIA is about to release hundreds of documents about earlier interventions (and domestic spying), so theres no more excuse for ignorance. Lets stop whining and get curious. As Walt Kellys Pogo put it, We have met the enemy and he is us.

Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation (www.fff.org) and editor of The Freeman magazine.