Owl of Minerva's View: ISIS and Our Times
By Noam Chomsky
It is not pleasant to contemplate the thoughts that must be
passing through the mind of the Owl of Minerva as the dusk falls and she
undertakes the task of interpreting the era of human civilization, which may
now be approaching its inglorious end.
The era opened almost 10,000 years ago in the Fertile
Crescent, stretching from the lands of the Tigris and Euphrates, through
Phoenicia on the eastern coast of the Mediterranean to the Nile Valley, and
from there to Greece and beyond. What is happening in this region provides
painful lessons on the depths to which the species can descend.
The land of the Tigris and Euphrates has been the scene of
unspeakable horrors in recent years. The George W. Bush-Tony Blair aggression
in 2003, which many Iraqis compared to the Mongol invasions of the 13th
century, was yet another lethal blow. It destroyed much of what survived the
Bill Clinton-driven UN sanctions on Iraq, condemned as "genocidal" by
the distinguished diplomats Denis Halliday and Hans von Sponeck, who
administered them before resigning in protest. Halliday and von Sponeck's devastating
reports received the usual treatment accorded to unwanted facts.
One dreadful consequence of the US-UK invasion is depicted
in a New York Times "visual guide to the crisis in Iraq and Syria":
the radical change of Baghdad from mixed neighborhoods in 2003 to today's
sectarian enclaves trapped in bitter hatred. The conflicts ignited by the
invasion have spread beyond and are now tearing the entire region to shreds.
Much of the Tigris-Euphrates area is in the hands of ISIS
and its self-proclaimed Islamic State, a grim caricature of the extremist form
of radical Islam that has its home in Saudi Arabia. Patrick Cockburn, a Middle
East correspondent for The Independent and one of the best-informed analysts of
ISIS, describes it as "a very horrible, in many ways fascist organization,
very sectarian, kills anybody who doesn't believe in their particular rigorous
brand of Islam."
Cockburn also points out the contradiction in the Western
reaction to the emergence of ISIS: efforts to stem its advance in Iraq along
with others to undermine the group's major opponent in Syria, the brutal Bashar
Assad regime. Meanwhile a major barrier to the spread of the ISIS plague to
Lebanon is Hezbollah, a hated enemy of the US and its Israeli ally. And to
complicate the situation further, the US and Iran now share a justified concern
about the rise of the Islamic State, as do others in this highly conflicted
region.
Egypt has plunged into some of its darkest days under a
military dictatorship that continues to receive US support. Egypt's fate was
not written in the stars. For centuries, alternative paths have been quite
feasible, and not infrequently, a heavy imperial hand has barred the way.
After the renewed horrors of the past few weeks it should be
unnecessary to comment on what emanates from Jerusalem, in remote history
considered a moral center.
Eighty years ago, Martin Heidegger extolled Nazi Germany as
providing the best hope for rescuing the glorious civilization of the Greeks
from the barbarians of the East and West. Today, German bankers are crushing
Greece under an economic regime designed to maintain their wealth and power.
The likely end of the era of civilization is foreshadowed in
a new draft report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the
generally conservative monitor of what is happening to the physical world.
The report concludes that increasing greenhouse gas
emissions risk "severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts for people and
ecosystems" over the coming decades. The world is nearing the temperature
when loss of the vast ice sheet over Greenland will be unstoppable. Along with
melting Antarctic ice, that could raise sea levels to inundate major cities as
well as coastal plains.
The era of civilization coincides closely with the
geological epoch of the Holocene, beginning over 11,000 years ago. The previous
Pleistocene epoch lasted 2.5 million years. Scientists now suggest that a new
epoch began about 250 years ago, the Anthropocene, the period when human
activity has had a dramatic impact on the physical world. The rate of change of
geological epochs is hard to ignore.
One index of human impact is the extinction of species, now
estimated to be at about the same rate as it was 65 million years ago when an
asteroid hit the Earth. That is the presumed cause for the ending of the age of
the dinosaurs, which opened the way for small mammals to proliferate, and
ultimately modern humans. Today, it is humans who are the asteroid, condemning
much of life to extinction.
The IPCC report reaffirms that the "vast majority"
of known fuel reserves must be left in the ground to avert intolerable risks to
future generations. Meanwhile the major energy corporations make no secret of
their goal of exploiting these reserves and discovering new ones.
A day before its summary of the IPCC conclusions, The New
York Times reported that huge Midwestern grain stocks are rotting so that the
products of the North Dakota oil boom can be shipped by rail to Asia and
Europe.
One of the most feared consequences of anthropogenic global
warming is the thawing of permafrost regions. A study in Science magazine warns
that "even slightly warmer temperatures [less than anticipated in coming
years] could start melting permafrost, which in turn threatens to trigger the
release of huge amounts of greenhouse gases trapped in ice," with possible
"fatal consequences" for the global climate.
Arundhati Roy suggests that the "most appropriate
metaphor for the insanity of our times" is the Siachen Glacier, where
Indian and Pakistani soldiers have killed each other on the highest battlefield
in the world. The glacier is now melting and revealing "thousands of empty
artillery shells, empty fuel drums, ice axes, old boots, tents and every other
kind of waste that thousands of warring human beings generate" in
meaningless conflict. And as the glaciers melt, India and Pakistan face
indescribable disaster.
Sad species. Poor Owl.
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