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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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6 May 2009 By Dahr Jamail One of the
definitions of the word “occupation” is: the action,
state, or period of occupying or being occupied by
military force. Throughout history, areas or countries
occupied by military force have always resisted, and
this resistance has caused the occupier to devise more
suitable methods of subduing the population of the
area being occupied.
The US military has sent shock troops, which also
donned helmets and flak jackets - anthropologists,
sociologists and social psychologists, with their own
troops in both Iraq and Afghanistan. By the end of
2007, American scholars in these fields were embedding
with the military in Afghanistan and Iraq as part of a
Pentagon program called Human Terrain System (HTS),
which evolved shortly thereafter into a $40 million
program that embedded four or five person groups of
scholars in the aforementioned fields in all 26 US
combat brigades that were busily occupying Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Two years prior to this, the CIA had quietly started
recruiting social scientists by advertising in
academic journals, offering salaries of up to
$400,000. The military’s goals for the HTS was to have
them gather and disseminate information about Iraqi
and Afghani cultures. These embedded scholars,
contracted through companies like CACI International,
work in the project that is described by CACI as
“designed to improve the gathering, understanding,
operational application, and sharing of local
population knowledge” among combat teams.
This new form of psychological warfare is deeply
disturbing. Throughout my five years of reporting on
the occupation of Iraq, when I’ve asked Iraqis what
they feel the most damaging aspect of the occupation
is, I have been told that the occupation is “shredding
the fabric of Iraqi society and culture.”
Anthropology, in particular, has been referred to
through history as the “handmaiden of colonialism,”
thus putting anthropologists, at least those with a
moral conscience, on guard against anything that
smells like exploitation or oppression of their
subjects. Roberto Gonzalez, an associate professor of
anthropology at San Jose State University and leading
member of the Network of Concerned Anthropologists,
told Time magazine that the militarization of
anthropology will cause the field to become “just
another weapon … not a tool for building bridges
between peoples.” Anthropology has core professional
ethics standards that require voluntary, informed
consent from subjects, and that anthropologists do no
harm. How likely do you think these will be adhered to
by the flack-jacket-wearing, gun-toting, embedded
anthropologists working directly with regimental
combat units in Iraq and Afghanistan?
In an article titled “When Anthropologists Become
Counter-Insurgents,” published in September 2007, and
co-authored with David Price, author of the book
“Anthropological Intelligence: The Deployment and
Abuse of American Anthropology in the Second World
War,” Gonzalez and Price wrote:
“Although proponents of this form of applied
anthropology claim that culturally informed
counter-insurgency work will save lives and win
‘hearts and minds,’ they have thus far not attempted
to provide any evidence of this. Instead, there has
been a flurry of non-critical newspaper accounts in
publications including the Wall Street Journal and the
Christian Science Monitor that portray these HTS
anthropologists as heroically serving their nation
without bothering to report on the ethical
complications of this work. Missing are discussions of
anthropologists’ ethical responsibilities to disclose
who they are and what they are doing, to gain informed
consent, and to not harm those they study. Portraying
counter-insurgency operations as social work is naive
and historically inaccurate.
“In fact, David Kipp of the Foreign Military Studies
Office at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas describes HTS teams
as a ‘CORDS for the 21st Century’-a reference to the
Pentagon’s Vietnam-era Civil Operations and
Revolutionary Development Support project. The most
infamous product of the CORDS counter-insurgency
effort was the Phoenix Program, in which CIA agents
collected intelligence information used to
‘neutralize’ (read assassinate) suspected Viet Cong
members. Between 1968 and 1972, more than 26,000
suspected Viet Cong were killed as a result, including
many civilians.
“Kipp’s comparison of HTS and CORDS begs a series of
ethical questions which have gone unanswered. If
anthropologists on HTS teams interview Afghans or
Iraqis about the intimate details of their lives, what
is to prevent combat teams from using the same data to
one day ‘neutralize’ suspected insurgents? What would
impede the transfer of data collected by social
scientists to commanders planning offensive military
campaigns? Where is the line that separates the
professional anthropologist from the
counter-insurgency technician? Although the answers to
these questions are not clear, the history of
anthropology should give us pause. During World War II
and the Cold War, US military and intelligence
agencies tended to use anthropologists’ work to help
accomplish immediate goals, and discarded all other
information that was counter to their beliefs or
institutional models.”
Adding credence to the points made by Price and
Gonzalez is the fact that one of the top ten US
defense contractors, Science Applications
International Corporation, which has been operating in
Iraq since the beginning of the occupation, describes
anthropology in its job advertisements as a
“counter-insurgency related field.”
Marcus Griffin, an anthropology professor, while
preparing to deploy to Iraq at part of an HTS team,
boasted on his blog, “I cut my hair in a high and
tight style and look like a drill sergeant … I shot
very well with the M9 and M4 last week at the range …
Shooting well is important if you are a soldier
regardless of whether or not your job requires you to
carry a weapon.”
Nevertheless, proponents of the program attempt to
dismiss any ethical dilemma encountered by the
embedded scholars. Montgomery McFate, a Navy
anthropologist, described HTS as an effort to
anthropologize the military, not militarizing
anthropology, told Time, “The more unconventional the
adversary, and the further from Western cultural
norms, the more we need to understand the society and
underlying cultural dynamics.”
The program is nothing new, neither for the US empire
nor other empires throughout history. As far as the US
empire project is concerned, there were two programs
from the Vietnam era that involved anthropologists.
Project Camelot, in 1965, organized by US Army
intelligence, recruited anthropologists to assess the
cultural causes of war and violence. Despite the
misleadingly benign sounding name, the project used
Chile as a trial run while the CIA was engineering the
election of Eduardo Frei as president in 1964 to
prevent the election of Socialist leader Salvador
Allende.
The second program from that era, known as CORDS
(Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development
Support), was formed to coordinate the US civil and
military pacification programs in Vietnam. CORDS used
anthropological data to map human terrain and identify
individuals and groups that the military believed were
sympathizers of the Vietcong, who were then targeted
for assassination.
It is easy to imagine HTS teams in Iraq being used to
exploit existing fault lines between Sunni and Shia,
Kurd and Arab, and even differences within each group,
in order to invoke the classic divide-to-conquer
strategy. For example, the Sahwa (US-created and
-backed Sunni militia) clashing with the US-backed
Maliki government in Iraq is a classic example of
Iraqis being effectively turned against one another so
as not to unite against the occupier.
Another example would be the effective creation and
exploitation of the myth of sectarianism in Iraq,
which has lead to the deaths of hundreds of thousands
of Iraqis, and threatens to do so once again.
Documentary filmmaker Jason Coppola is directing and
producing a film titled “Justify My War.” In the film,
an introspective Coppola explores the question of
rationalization of the wars being waged by our
government, from Wounded Knee to Fallujah. I asked
Coppola for his perspective about the ongoing use of
anthropologists by the US military in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
“This seems to be the most powerful weapon against
indigenous cultures today. Much more powerful than
F-16s and M-1 tanks. We see how well it worked against
our own indigenous culture. You need to know a people
before you decide what can corrupt them, what can be
used to confuse, divide and conquer them. The
strongest defense against occupation is an undivided,
culturally rooted people, but empires don’t like
that.”
Commenting on experiences from his recent trip to
Iraq, Coppola adds, “A country can rebuild itself
after an invasion, but it is much more difficult to
rebuild a culture after it has been invaded. I
realized this seeing young girls walking the streets
of Sadr City, on their way to school in their
traditional hijab carrying their books in a backpack
with a blond-haired, blue-eyed Barbie design on it.
Confusion is sewn throughout the Iraq occupation,
nobody trusts anybody. And as I looked up in Baghdad
or Fallujah or Sadr City, and stared at ‘Apache’
helicopters flying overhead … I couldn’t help but to
think - mission accomplished - certainly for the
Apache people. But what about the Iraqis? We still
don’t know.”
Price and Gonzalez, along with several other scholars,
felt the problem serious enough to have formed the
Network of Concerned Anthropologists and drafted a
“Pledge of Non-Participation in Counter-Insurgency” to
boycott anthropological work in counterinsurgency and
direct combat support operations. They took their
stand against “work that is covert, work that breaches
relations of openness and trust with studied
populations, and work that enables the occupation of
one country by another.”
Similarly, in October 2007, the Executive Board of the
American Anthropological Association issued a
statement that warned its members that activities such
as involvement in the HTS program are likely to
violate the code of ethics. As it should have, for it
is impossible to imagine the lethality of a massive
conventional military coupled with unconventional
scholarship made into a weapon for use in combat, as
it is in the ongoing US occupations of Iraq and
Afghanistan. |