May 10, 2011

Tere Bin Laden....

Disclaimer: People incapable of impartially reading something without getting their opinions in the way are encouraged to NOT READ the following. Any angered/impassioned lambasting of my existence shall be met with the rudest retorts that my meandering mind can generate. Whether or not it coincides with yours, you can NOT boo me for having an opinion!
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For the last few days since Osama Bin Laden was killed, I have been debating with myself whether I really want to write and publish this blogpost. I was not sure if my own thoughts were clear enough and whether such blatant opinions need to be made public at all. Today, I read something that convinced me I should. So here goes..


THE CONFESSION

I have never really hated Osama Bin Laden. Since I saw the live footage of the WTC twin towers and Pentagon burning, to this very moment, I have never felt that surge of anger that a lot of people feel or have felt against him at some point of time. I could never see 'evil' on his face. I could never bring myself to blindly believe all the labels and adjectives that were attributed to him. If anything, I almost admired Osama Bin Laden. I always thought that born under better circumstances, he would have made such a great scientist, sociologist or philosopher. There's good reason why I say so. While my opinion about his motives and the means of accomplishing them has wavered over time, there was and is no denying the tremendous genius of the man who stood right in the face of 'the greatest nation on earth'. The ten years gone by during which the US relentlessly pursued him and yet ended up with just dead ends have only served to prove this. I have often wondered how he managed to walk with titanium balls that big.

The above sentiments apart, unlike so many people in so many parts of the world, I am still in no mood to celebrate Osama Bin Laden's death, for multiple reasons:

THE ARGUMENT

1) What's glorious about the willful killing of a fellow human being, no matter who they are and what they did?

2) Its all a big game of perception management. In the media, we are mostly fed only one side of the story, which follows the golden rule: 'He who has the gold makes the rules!'. But sitting in the cozy safety of our homes, its genuinely difficult to appreciate what the people in some other part of the world are really facing on a daily basis. Try listening to this:


Makes 'One man's terrorist is another man's martyr' make some sense, doesn't it?

3) As the real happenings of 'Operation Geronimo' emerge as the White House 'revises' several key details, it is becoming increasingly clear that this was a planned political assassination. No attempt was made to capture the target alive. Keep in mind that there was no 'firefight', as Osama Bin Laden was unarmed, and also that he did not use any woman as a human shield. Obama's speech was just perception management eyewash.

4) The entire operation also stands in multiple breach of elementary norms of international law. Whats there to celebrate about the blatant breach of the sovereignty of any country by another? And who's to say that this will not happen to mine in the future? The US will undoubtedly get away with it too, simply because there IS no one to stand up to them. The disbalance of power only makes me worried, not gleeful.

The following assume the Osama was 'evil':

5) The vengeful repercussions of Osama's killing are bound to show up sooner or later, and your guess is just as good as mine as to what form they will show up in. Given the brilliant mind that he was, I'm willing to bet that he'd already chalked out a plan of action to be followed post his death.

6) Osama managed to pull the US into a dead-end ground war on multiple fronts, which cost thousands of lives and trillions of dollars. The hits taken by the US economy ever since George W. Bush declared a 'war on terrorism' show that it is a pyrrhic victory for the US, if at all a victory. Now with the death of Osama, the americans feel a sense of closure, and the war between the most powerful country in the world and a handful of terrorists, after ten years, can only truthfully be said to have ended on a draw. Really seems like a victory for Osama, if you ask me.

7) For a while now, Osama was being seen as more and more of a symbolic figurehead representing the multi-pronged extremism across the globe, with minimal direct operational command of Al Qaida. The world's most wanted and most dangerous terrorist, captured alive and kept rotting in a jail would have been symbolic victory to the US. The US could not have gifted a more 'glorious' and 'inspirational' end to Osama by killing him and making him a martyr dying for his cause.


And in closing, a quote from Noam Chomsky: "If this world believes in the Nuremberg Principles on which the Nazis were taken to trial for its crime against humanity through their tyranny post-world war II, all American presidents should be taken to trial  following the same principles."

Tell me what you think.

Luv-n-luck,
Av

7 comments:

spiro-de-noxious said...

Too good !

simran said...

Something to ponder over . Good one !

Nisarg Shah said...

I do not rather agree or disagree with what you have said here.. Thus, I am not very sure whether I sympathize with him, or feel its rather good for the man-kind for him to be killed... However, just a few points to ponder...

1. Whats glorious of the willful killing of a few thousand people who were rather very normal people, never known so much to the world (a bit in the Twin Towers may be), but embraced dearly by their families, much after they were taken away from them?

2. I kind of agree that someone a murderer here might be a martyr somewhere else, but again, that would be true if you were talking of level playing fields on both sides... Moreover, if you talk about perception management, I would rather say that Obama is one big puppet who knows delivering great speeches only when he has his tele-prompter on. Do you not think that the whole world is but managing perception?

3. Yes. This was just a political gimmick. I hope you know that control of oil is a big agenda behind US's attempts at controlling the Jihadi World.

4. So? Both World Wars, Wikileaks, and a host of other activities are a BIG breach of a lot of international "laws". According to your point two, we are not or rather should not even be governed by any set of laws?? Probably that is why you do not justify his death??

5. You contradict your own statement here by saying that "his death" would result in something tragic as repercussions, because you begin by saying that he was smart enough to develop a plan in place before his death anyways. Thus, his death would not have mattered. I feel the latter is the case.

6. AV, I am sure you are not so naive to think that it would take TEN years for CIA to figure out where he was hiding. This is probably the perfect timing for Obama to get back into the game of a second four year term. He is bashing Donald Trump, and a lot of smart Alex want him for a second term. He has to off-load his stress regarding healthcare bills, unemployment, a lot of debt, etc with trying to explain people that he has done an amazing job by eradicating Osama (who according to your own definition might have churned a path of vengeance long ago). Oh did I say, gas here is $4 a gallon already?

7. Do you feel for Osama just because he got a "glorious" death that will be remembered for a long time in the terror regimes?

To conclude, I just want to say, I do not even have an opinion on this topic. Not because I do not know of it, but rather because if I think rationally, this is all a money game after-all.

My two cents...

BTW I really like this article of yours; for a change you are not in your poetic mood. Not that I do not like your poems; you are great at that. Its just that I have had this crazy perception :P where you (try to?) steal someone very close to my heart by your words, and I am too lazy to pen.. ;)

PS: I think Obama is still a great Prez, but as with all political agendas around the World, everyone so high in the ladder has fallacies / restrictions...

Averee said...

re-read.. re-loved.. re-laughed at titanium balls... re-nodded.. re-agrred with many points! :))

Sankalp said...

I also wrote something about the Obama side of the issue ... It's a Go:

AJAY said...

lol.. I liked the disclaimer.. :))..
But I didnt understand the phrase 'better circumstances'.. if its in financial sense then I must add that he was born in a family with $ 300 million fortune.. I think there are very few circumstances better than that.. :))..! also he was a civil engineer academically..!

Also, breach of sovereignity doesn't happen only when one country attacks the other without its knowledge.. giving shelter to a man accused of killing 3000, even after taking $19 billion in aid, is a breach of sovereignity of the other nation.. I think so.. they never had an option of informing pakistan.. else we would have glorified his escape not for 10 but may be 20 years..

and what if osama had weapons in his clothes..? he would have been captured alive if he didnt wear anything.. so said a press release.. may be this is an excuse.. But may be this is policy of a special force.. which one cant mess up in such an operation..!

I hope u dont ask me to read the disclaimer again.. :)))..! have a great day ahead..!

devika shetty said...

Brilliantly written!
Continuing on what you have written-
What seems to me a - in a sense - very terrifying aspect of our society, and of other societies, is the equanimity and the detachment with which sane, reasonable, sensible people can observe such events. I think that's more terrifying than the occasional Hitler or LeMay or other that crops up. These people would not be able to operate were it not for this apathy and equanimity. And therefore I think that it's in some sense the sane and reasonable and tolerant people who share a very serious burden of guilt, which they very easily throw on the shoulders of others who seem more extreme or more violent.
- Noam Chomsky