The United
States is the “world's leading terrorist state,” based on its deadly, CIA-run
operations in the likes of Nicaragua and Cuba, according to new op-ed by
historian and social philosopher Noam Chomsky.
In a new
piece posted at Truthout.org, Chomsky pointed to the Central Intelligence
Agency’s classified review of its own efforts to arm insurgencies across the
globe in its 67-year history. As RT previously reported, the CIA conducted the
effectiveness analyses while the Obama administration contemplated arming
rebels fighting against President Bashar Assad’s forces in Syria.
The New York
Times was the first to uncover the story and Chomsky opened by suggesting the
Times’ own headline for it should have been titled, "It's official: The
U.S. is the world's leading terrorist state, and proud of it,” rather than
"CIA Study of Covert Aid Fueled Skepticism About Helping Syrian
Rebels."
(A rebel
fighter from the Free Syrian Army holds a position with a Belgium made FAL
rifle at a front line in the Salah al-Din neighbourhood of the northern Syrian
city of Aleppo (AFP Photo)
The longtime
MIT professor went on to detail some of the instances assessed in the CIA’s
review and why they amount to an American regime - “the world champion in
generating terror” - bent on antagonizing its opposition around the world.
“The first
paragraph of the Times article cites three major examples of ‘covert aid’:
Angola, Nicaragua and Cuba. In fact, each case was a major terrorist operation
conducted by the US,” Chomsky wrote.
He added that
it was the US, in the 1980s, that supported Apartheid-era South Africa as it
invaded Angola to protect itself “from one of the world's ‘more notorious
terrorist groups,” according to Washington: “Nelson Mandela's African National
Congress.”
“Washington
joined South Africa in providing crucial support for Jonas Savimbi's terrorist
Unita army in Angola,” wrote Chomsky.
(Unita army (AFP Photo)
“The
consequences were horrendous. A 1989 U.N. inquiry estimated that South African
depredations led to 1.5 million deaths in neighboring countries, let alone what
was happening within South Africa itself.”
Chomsky also
mentioned the decades-long “murderous and destructive campaign” the US aimed at
Cuba, including the failed Bay of Pigs invasion and a harsh embargo that
continues to this day.
“The toll of
the long terrorist war was amplified by a crushing embargo, which continues
even today in defiance of the world. On Oct. 28, the UN, for the 23rd time,
endorsed ‘the necessity of ending the economic, commercial, financial blockade
imposed by the United States against Cuba,’” he wrote.
Chomsky
mentioned the dirty wars the US brought to opposition in Central America in the
1980s and current airstrikes in Syria and Iraq aimed at Islamic State, a
jihadist group, like others, compiled and strengthened through American
interventions in the Middle East, namely the recent Iraq war, he wrote.
(AFP
Photo/U.S. Air Force)
He ended with
a note on President Barack Obama’s unmanned drone regime patrolling the skies
in the likes of Pakistan and Yemen.
“To this we
may add the world's greatest terrorist campaign: Obama's global project of
assassination of ‘terrorists.’ The ‘resentment-generating impact’ of those
drone and special-forces strikes should be too well known to require further
comment,” he wrote.
“This is a
record to be contemplated with some awe.”
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