Imperial wake How did the "war on terror" provide cover for authoritarian abuses?
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⦠read about how the "war on terror" provided cover for authoritarian abuses. It is hard to capture, exactly, how much grim portent there was in George W. Bushâs Sept. 20, 2001 proclamation to the world that âyouâre either with us or youâre against us,â but the after-effect is still felt today. In a speech that turned international rallies of sympathy into a rallying cry for constant violence, Bush gave authoritarian regimes a durable moniker for the violent exclusion of enemies from governance. The "war on terror" needed terrorists, and for intractable regimes with weak human rights records, the term stuck. This is part of the lesson of Amarnath Amarasingamâs [recent post]( about âHuman Rights Abuses and the war on terror in South Asia.â He writes âin countries such as [Myanmar](, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and [India](, the specter of âterrorismâ is now used as a strategic weapon to crack down on activists who are questioning the legitimacy of government actions on human rights grounds.â The rhetoric of the "war on terror," coded into working agreements between militaries, gives unresponsive governments a way to describe the aspirations of people within their borders as illegitimate and threatening destabilizing violence. By forcing out dissent in the name of security, these governments can commit abuse without accountability. Haitiâs aftershocks, natural and American-made On Aug. 15, Haiti suffered an earthquake. The location of the earthquake is such that the direct harm from the tremors missed Port-au-Prince and the capital region, instead compounding the misery along the western edge of Haitiâs southern peninsula. Journalist Jonathan Katz, who authored a book about the harm that came in the wake of the international response to the 2010 earthquake in the country, [places the harm in context](. The aftermath of 2010âs quake brought further suffering, from an international response more concerned with keeping Haitians in Haiti than helping Haitians. Structural devastation, from centuries of plunder to recent exacerbated hardship, culminates in this: A country without âa president, a functional legislature, nor any elected local officials after over five years of canceled electionsâ must now contend with the earthquake aftermath and the oncoming hurricane season. [FORWARD TO A FRIEND]( Migratory borderlines Earlier this month, the Biden administration announced it was resuming deportation flights for migrants to Mexico. Mexico, in turn, deported those same migrants to Guatemala. As Felipe De La Hoz and Gaby Del Valle write at [Border/Lines,]( âeven nakedly anti-immigrant measures are supposed to have some tenuous legal standing,â but in this case, the US is doing so under a legally dubious public health order and with the awareness that this policy means leaving people twice deported with no hope of applying for asylum. To explain how we got here, Border/Lines revisits both recent history, and that of almost a century ago. The 1924 Immigration act, which established the Border Patrol, also curtailed almost all immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe in an effort to preserve the boundaries of whiteness in the US. With origins in directly policing the racial boundary between nations, the Border Patrol has long had discretion to do violence along the US/Mexico border. With deportation to Mexico now leading to further deportation to Guatemala, the US has condoned a new policy that punishes asylum seekers and enlists Mexico in causing the same harm. [FORWARD TO A FRIEND](
[ ] DEEP DIVE Media matters: Part I As I write this, two new images from Hamid Karzai International Airport are circulating on social media. The [first](, blurry, is of a C-17 US Air Force transport aircraft flying over Kabul, with a figure slipping off the outside and crashing below; reports suggest it was a person clinging to the wheel who fell. A [second image](, higher resolution, shows a crowd on the runway making it difficult for the C-17 to safely take off, as people cling to the outside of the plane. These are grim images, and they succeeded in a way where few others had. If the timing of the US withdrawal from Afghanistan had been designed to avoid a repeat of the Saigon image, it instead created the unique specter of the Kabul image. As an object of media focus, images like this can spur bureaucratic activity. A [February article]( in the Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory demonstrates how media attention to bureaucratic failing can spur both action and resistance. âOur findings suggest that anomalously heightened media attention has markedly different effects depending on the nature of the media attention,â write study authors Aaron Erlich, Daniel Berliner, Brian Palmer-Rubin, and Benjamin E Bagozzi. For their research, the authors looked at information requests and responses to 22 Mexican federal agencies between 2005 â 2015. By processing 150,000 news articles, the authors were able to find periods of anomalously high attention. By cross-referencing this news database with the time period of information requests and nature of attention, the authors then matched government responses to crises with media attention. The attention matters, and the kind of attention matters. Stories about corruption generated less information and fewer overt government responses, which the authors theorize as a way to limit coverage. Yet there were other instances where heightened attention brought about a real and immediate change in behavior. âNegative attention owing to government failure â for example botched responses to natural disasters â is associated with increased responsiveness, likely in an effort to salvage the agencyâs reputation.â There is more at play. How a government agency responds to information requests varies greatly on how it envisions shaping the news. If asked about a newly announced policy, being able to publish documents that support it lets the agency claim credit. If the news is bad, and the information requests flooding in are instead a reaction to crisis, the organization may slow its response as a part of blame avoidance. Yet that isnât always the case; by responding quickly, a government agency may instead be trying to bolster its reputation for competence, letting the fast media response take the place of doing the job right the first time. While not every government will have public records requests as a handy metric, understanding the way bureaucracies incentivize sharing some information and suppressing others is a crucial tool for policymakers and the public. A collapse of security that seems sudden in public may in fact have an extensive paper trail in documents for official use only, and one way to unearth that is to convince the parties responsible that publishing their right-yet-overlooked grim assessments serves them more than hiding the existence of dire predictions after dire news. [LEARN MORE]( [FORWARD TO A FRIEND]( [• • •] SHOW US THE RECEIPTS Shirin Jaafari [documented]( the tension and reality of life in Herat at the start of the week that saw the Taliban advance from contesting much of the country to the de facto power over all of it. In her report, published Aug. 9, we hear the stories of people seeking shelter from the constant fighting. Hours after an interview at a checkpoint held by Afghan security forces, the checkpoint came under fire. Salimeh, a 50-year-old woman who lives on the outskirts of Herat, collected firewood to warm the women and children of families seeking shelter in the city. Sima Fakhruddin, one of Salimehâs guests, had walked hours to find a car for hire. The last lines of Jaafariâs story go to 17-year-old Elham Mansouri, years younger than the last time the Taliban ruled the country. Mansouri promises resistance against the harms visited upon her mother. Rishma Vora [confronted]( racism in US foreign policy, highlighting not just historical harms but how limitations in the study of foreign policy perpetuate racist practices in the field. As upcoming research by political scientists Devorah Manekin and Tamar Mitts ([covered in Critical State]() shows, security forces respond differently to nonviolent action based on the ethnicity of those doing the protesting. And as Vora writes, âThe role of race and racism in shaping postcolonial global power structures should be central to [International Relations] courses, not confined to a âspecial dayâ to discuss racism.â Kenneth Brownell, Chen-Yang Lin, and Ash Maria [lamented]( the limited scope of President Bidenâs July 16 proclamation of National Atomic Veterans Day. While focused on those servicemembers harmed from exposure to nuclear tests (like the Trinity test on July 16, 1945), the holiday neglects the workers in and out of uniform who cleaned up the after-effects. Those cleanup veterans are excluded not just from holiday recognition, but because they were not directly exposed to a blast, they are left out of VA-sponsored medical care and financial compensation. The civilians who cleaned this waste fare even worse, and the authors urge greater presidential action to right the wrongs of the past. [FORWARD TO A FRIEND]( [ ] WELL PLAYED For a brief moment, President Ashraf Ghani managed to be not just the head of a collapsing real-world experiment in reconstruction theory, but [the main character on Twitter](. Ghaniâs quiet exit, mere months after promising he would remain and fight in the face of violence, drew [warranted]( [digs](, perhaps none more brutal than the [now-deleted tweet]( from Afghanistanâs Embassy in India, which read in part âHe screwed and f***ed everything up⦠His legacy will be a stain on our history.â In a summer full of intelligence failures, [tweeting the faces of some CIA agents](from the White House account certainly seems like another one. Speaking of failures, it turns out mixing a war on drugs with the war on terror was a brilliant way to [shift cash crop cultivation]( out of government-controlled provinces. Oops! On the Korean Peninsula, the Eighth Army [welcomed this weird Monday]( with all the enthusiasm of a throbbing hangover and a countdown to Friday. Speaking of weird vibes, it turns out you can get second-hand jitters from hearing that the head of STRATCOM calmly [pounds a couple energy drinks]( before briefing press. If thereâs anything I want in the part of the military tasked with executing nuclear war, itâs the jitters. Finally, itâs a week and a month for [wildly different interpretations]( of the recent past. To ease us along, weâve got some pretty great ["Simpsons" jokes](. *This week's Critical State is brought to you by guest author Kelsey Atherton. [FORWARD TO A FRIEND]( Follow The World: [fb]( [tw]( [ig]( [www]( [DONATE TO THE WORLD](
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