Seumas milne responded to 9/11 by attacking america – no wonder he works for jeremy corbyn | thearticle

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Seumas milne responded to 9/11 by attacking america – no wonder he works for jeremy corbyn | thearticle"


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You can tell a lot about a person from their reaction to tragedy. Eighteen years ago this week, 19 al-Qaeda fanatics hijacked four airlines and crashed them into the two towers of the World


Trade Centre, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania. Around 3,000 people were killed. While rescue workers struggled to retrieve corpses from the smouldering ruins, journalists around the


world penned their responses. Seumas Milne, who worked as Comment Editor at the_ Guardian_ between 2001 and 2007, before going on to become Jeremy Corbyn’s communications chief, was no


different. But his reaction certainly did stand out, both for its heartlessness and its promotion of what we would now term “fake news” conspiracy theories.  Milne’s initial response to the


attack on the American people, titled “They can’t see why they are hated”, was published by the _Guardian_ just two days after the attack. It was a ferocious assault aimed, not at the


theocratic terrorists who carried out the massacre, nor the nilhistic ideology that inspired them, but at the reply of American civil society. Addressing the US reaction, Milne wrote “it is


painfully clear that most Americans simply don’t get it”. He continued “any glimmer of recognition of why people might have been driven to carry out such atrocities, sacrificing their own


lives in the process – or why the United States is hated with such bitterness…seems almost entirely absent”. The use of the term “sacrificing their own lives” to describe terrorists who flew


airliners into buildings packed with civilians was both curious and revealing; it is a term usually reserved for peace activists who starve themselves to death, or soldiers who fall


fighting an armed enemy.  The essential argument of Milne’s piece was that the 9/11 attack, though unacceptable, was a logical and perhaps even inevitable reaction to the excesses of


American foreign and economic policy. It was worthy of condemnation to be sure, but by God, the Yanks had it coming. Milne went on to make the comparison between the al-Qaeda atrocity and US


Government behaviour explicit, suggesting Americans “might make the connection between what has been visited upon them and what their government has visited upon large parts of the world”.


  This was an argument that, in various forms, dogged the western left for at least a decade. Terrorists, in particular Islamist fundamentalists, were stripped of agency, with their


behaviour seen as entirely reactive to western actions. They were angered by US or British foreign policy, in particular the Iraq war and support for Israel. Or perhaps it was socio-economic


deprivation, or a response to Islamophobia. Anything in fact, than the logical outcome of the ideology held by a small group of theocratic fundamentalists who killed far more followers of


their own faith than any other.  Leftists, perhaps until the emergence of ISIS, struggled to appreciate that there really are people who desire to live under, and impose on others, a


political system based on an ultra-reactionary reading of a seventh century religious text. As a result, the Islamist far-right, unlike the western far-right, was afforded a certain


respectability in some leftist circles. Jeremy Corbyn could describe members of Hamas, a ferociously bigoted group whose founding charter calls for the murder of Jews worldwide, as his


friends. In 2004, Milne could publish an article reportedly from Osama Bin Laden, based on the audio recordings the terrorist leader periodically produced, in the_ Guardian_’s comment


section. It is very hard to imagine the _Guardian_, quite rightly, reproducing the propaganda of a white supremacist terrorist in the same way.  Alas, moral indecency wasn’t the only fault


in Milne’s article. It also contained staggering factual inaccuracies, to the point that I struggle to understand how nobody at the _Guardian_ intervened before publication. Milne claimed,


entirely without proof, that “Bin Laden and his mujahidin were armed and trained by the CIA and MI6”. This is inexcusable nonsense.  It is, of course, true that the Americans provided


significant assistance, rightly or wrongly, to various mujahidin factions that fought the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Many, perhaps most, of these subscribed to an ultra-conservative


Islamist ideology. But there is no evidence it ever backed al-Qaeda, a tiny and virtually insignificant faction in the conflict, despite the propaganda it published later. There are some on


the far-left, as on the far-right, who will term any religiously conservative Muslim as a member of al-Qaeda when it’s politically convenient. We are seeing this again with the Syrian


conflict, where some leftist Assad apologists endeavour to prove the Free Syrian Army and ‘White Helmet’ rescue workers bear little distinction from ISIS and Al-Qaeda. It is now, as it was


then, bigoted nonsense.  If you want to understand the ideological origins of Corbynism, a fusion of statist economic policy and inherent sympathy for just about any group or state that vows


to oppose the liberal-democratic west, the comment pages of the _Guardian_ under Seumas Milne is a good place to start. Milne’s response, beyond its obvious tastelessness, revealed one of


the chief deficits of the western left. An assumption that hostile actors, be it Putin or ISIS, act predominantly in response to western excesses. Deprived of their agency, their violence


becomes understandable, their butchers transformed into men with whom we should empathise. This belief system has already dragged the British Labour Party towards moral insanity. I very much


hope the country as a whole won’t follow the same path.  


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