‘A Technological Power of Inferior Culture and Values’
| Monday May 12, 2003
Mohammed Alkhereiji, Arab
News Staff In explaining his refusal, he wrote: “I will not at this point
correspond with any American institution. Some of us have lived through
1939.” What followed was an exchange between Dr. Amit and the editor in
chief of the American Physical Society, which dealt with everything from
the second Gulf War to the merits of scientific research for the good of
mankind. “What we are watching today, I believe, is a culmination of 10 to
15 years of mounting barbarism of the American culture the world
over,” he wrote. “It is crowned by the achievements of science and
technology as a major weapon of mass destruction.” “We are witnessing a manhunt and wanton killing of a type and scale
not seen since the raids on American-Indian populations by a superior
technological power of inferior culture and values. We see no corrective
force to restore the insanity, the self-righteousness and the lack of
respect for human life — civilian and military — of another race,”
he added, in reference to the US-led war on Iraq. In the end both parties agreed to disagree, and the exchange was
posted online. Arab News interviewed Dr. Amit by e-mail about his exchange with the
American Physical Society. ARAB NEWS: Why did you refuse to review a paper for the American
Physical Society? DR. AMIT: The reason I took this step is that, with the beginning of
the invasion of Iraq, all hope against hope that this pure aggression
could be avoided were dashed. I felt that the basic values of
enlightened culture were destroyed in a most blatant way, in a world
where such values are increasingly needed. One of the central problems
of modern global society is that the culture that publicizes itself as
the example of democracy, enlightenment, modernity, culture, and
freedom, is the one that puts global survival in danger. It does that by
robbing the environment, and the war indicates that it can put such
destruction into open military practice, with no internal (American)
corrective forces. Q: Please elaborate on your refusal to correspond with any American
institutions. A: I felt, and since then have felt ever more, that the myth must be
shattered and that it can be uncovered by symbolic acts, because culture
and civilization are about symbols. We must confront the dominant idea
that American culture is the source of all good and wisdom, in all
fields of culture. I chose the field of science for this particular
personal revolt because the American domination in this field is
especially apparent and effective (both materially and spiritually);
because the war has exposed, in a double way, the horror in which
science participates on both sides of the aggression: First, to expose
and destroy Iraqi weapons (inspections), and then to develop technology
which renders an entire people a hunting ground for raving technological
cowboys (in the style they hunted the Native American Indians); because
my colleagues in the scientific universe must open their eyes to the
implications of their “pure” activity, which produces such weapons,
allows the development of biological weapons, bigger and more
devastating bombs (and this is done in universities). Moreover, while all major Christian churches have taken a principled
stand against the war, academic and scientific institutions were
essentially absent. Yes, I will continue. The crime is not over: Iraq is occupied and its
people and its resources are treated like the Wild West, with total
impunity. What is going on in Iraq (and in Afghanistan and Palestine for
that matter) is against every international convention, and exceeds the
horrors imagined when such conventions were formulated. My wish and hope is to serve as an example for others, especially the
young. Though in the hundreds of responses I receive I notice the
awaking conscience of many who (like myself) are no longer young. Q: Do you see a link between scientific progression, and the
development of weapons of mass destruction? A: There can be absolutely no doubt that science has been directly
linked to weapons of mass destruction for at least two centuries. But
the responsibility has become much more acute since the development of
nuclear weapons in the 1940s. Today this problem is particularly grave
because every aspect of existence has become a weapon, not only physics. Chemists are working on ever more powerful bombs; biologists on
mutated species and weapon viruses; engineers and physicists on guided
systems and space control; information science and mathematics on
controlling international communication systems; the social sciences on
providing ideological cover etc. etc.. This globalization of scientific application is pushed and sold the
world over, by the US. By now even the most abstract and naive line of
research is required to be described, in the grant proposals, as
potential application-oriented. Q: The argument was that Iraq was a threat to its neighbors,
including Israel. How did you feel about that as a Jew? A: I think the idea of the threat was ridiculous from the start. Only
the Americans could believe this type of crude propaganda, aimed at
getting their sheepish consent for a horrible aggression. As a physicist
friend of mine (an American, also of Jewish origin) wrote: A country
that could not launch even one bomb on massive concentrations of an
invading army was considered a threat by a power that claims to dominate
the entire information space of Iraq, from satellites to overflying
planes. It is really a crude joke, had it not implied such a human and
institutional disaster. Q: Your exchange with the American Physical Society was displayed on
the web. What kind of a response did you get from America and the Middle
East? A: I got several hundred responses, about 95 percent of them
supportive. The only hostile ones came from the US. But also, much
sincere support came from there. The majority of response comes from
women. The most touching debate seems to have taken place in India. But
the reactions covered the Philippines, Turkey, Australia, New Zealand,
Bangladesh, Europe, Latin America. A few — too few — from the Middle
East. None from Japan or China. It could serve as a basis for an interesting study. Q: Do you think any good came out of the war with Iraq? A: No, absolutely not. If we consider the situation in the former
Yugoslavia or in Afghanistan, we cannot but admire the foresight of
Gandhi, who said that the benefits from violence are short lived. The
damage persists. The war in Iraq, like the other American wars of the last half a
century, do not even have a short- term benefit. On the other hand, the
damages are all apparent, with the human suffering, before and during
the war; the destruction of the UN; the theft of oil and other resources
and the pillage of Iraq, by who knows who. Q: Are you optimistic about the road map for Middle East peace? A: Unfortunately, not at all. After 36 years of occupation it should
be totally clear that the Middle East needs a just peace, or there will
be no peace. The combination of the people in power in Israel (my
country) and the US have no such values to contribute. The requirement that cessation of violence must be a precondition for
political progress is a sure formula for no progress. So many of us,
including hundreds of military officers and expert journalists, have
come to the conclusion that it is an intended policy of the Israeli
government to provoke Palestinian violence, whenever it senses a
political process that may threaten the continuation of the occupation
and the settlements. |
Copyright 2014 Q Madp www.OurWarHeroes.org