Susan Sontag has published an important
essay on Abu Ghraib in today's Guardian. For forty years, ever since her
famous "Notes on Camp" were published in Partisan Review in 1964, she has
been recognized as one of the most astute and incisive American commentators on
new trends in art and culture, earning innumerable national and international
honors. -- Susan Sontag has thought long and hard about photography. She won the
National Book Critics Circle Award with On Photography (1976), writing
about photography as a communicative medium that inserts itself between
experience and reality, and last year published Regarding the Pain of Others (Farrar, Strauss
& Giroux, 2003), which now takes on a new relevance. -- In her essay on Abu
Ghraib in today's Guardian, she refers to a recent volume of photographs
of lynchings, Without Sanctuary, which was passed around last week at PLU
at a Peace Studies Working Group session organized to discuss Abu Ghraib by
history prof Beth Kraig, and which takes on a terrible relevance not just for
the suffering of the victims, but for the unholy glee with which others are all
too inclined to regard their suffering. -- One conclusion is clear: the United
States is familiar enough with such horrors to have a government that knows
better than to create situations that produce them. Moreover, the United States
military employs more psychologists than any other organization in the world.
American policymakers possessed all the knowledge needed to keep these crimes
from taking place. It was their responsibility to do so. They cannot deny
responsibility for creating the situations that produced these crimes. They must
be held accountable....
WHAT HAVE WE DONE? By Susan Sontag
** The horrific images from Abu Ghraib have come to define the ill-starred
occupation of Iraq, but what do they really tell us about America? Are they
simply the work of a few rogue soldiers, or the result of the new foreign and
domestic policies of the Bush administration, which find ready approval in an
increasingly brutalised society? Susan Sontag on the ugly face of the war on
terror **
The Guardian May 24, 2004
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1223273,00.html
For a long time -- at least six decades -- photographs have laid down the
tracks of how important conflicts are judged and remembered. The memory museum
is now mostly a visual one. Photographs have an insuperable power to determine
what people recall of events, and it now seems likely that the defining
association of people everywhere with the rotten war that the Americans launched
preemptively in Iraq last year will be photographs of the torture of Iraqi
prisoners in the most infamous of Saddam Hussein's prisons, Abu Ghraib.
The slogans and phrases fielded by the Bush administration and its defenders
have been chiefly aimed at limiting a public relations disaster -- the
dissemination of the photographs -- rather than dealing with the complex crimes
of leadership, policies and authority revealed by the pictures. There was, first
of all, the displacement of the reality onto the photographs themselves. The
administration's initial response was to say that the president was shocked and
disgusted by the photographs -- as if the fault or horror lay in the images, not
in what they depict. There was also the avoidance of the word torture. The
prisoners had possibly been the objects of "abuse," eventually of "humiliation"
-- that was the most to be admitted. "My impression is that what has been
charged thus far is abuse, which I believe technically is different from
torture," secretary of defence Donald Rumsfeld said at a press conference. "And
therefore I'm not going to address the torture word." Words alter, words add,
words subtract. It was the strenuous avoidance of the word "genocide" while the
genocide of the Tutsis in Rwanda was being carried out 10 years ago that meant
the American government had no intention of doing anything. To call what took
place in Abu Ghraib -- and, almost certainly, in other prisons in Iraq and in
Afghanistan, and in Guantanamo -- by its true name, torture, would likely entail
a public investigation, trials, court martials, dishonourable discharges,
resignation of senior military figures and responsible cabinet officials, and
substantial reparations to the victims. Such a response to our misrule in Iraq
would contradict everything this administration has invited the American public
to believe about the virtue of American intentions and America's right to
unilateral action on the world stage in defence of its interests and its
security.
Even when the president was finally compelled, as the damage to America's
reputation everywhere in the world widened and deepened, to use the "sorry"
word, the focus of regret still seemed the damage to America's claim to moral
superiority, to its hegemonic goal of bringing "freedom and democracy" to the
benighted Middle East. Yes, Mr Bush said in Washington on May 6, standing
alongside King Abdullah II of Jordan, he was "sorry for the humiliation suffered
by the Iraqi prisoners and the humiliation suffered by their families." But, he
went on, he was "as equally sorry that people seeing these pictures didn't
understand the true nature and heart of America."
To have the American effort in Iraq summed up by these images must seem, to
those who saw some justification in a war that did overthrow one of the monster
tyrants of modern times, "unfair." A war, an occupation, is inevitably a huge
tapestry of actions. What makes some actions representative and others not? The
issue is not whether they are done by individuals (i.e., not by "everybody").
All acts are done by individuals. The question is not whether the torture was
the work of a few individuals but whether it was systematic. Authorized.
Condoned. Covered up. It was -- all of the above. The issue is not whether a
majority or a minority of Americans performs such acts but whether the nature of
the policies prosecuted by this administration and the hierarchies deployed to
carry them out makes such acts likely.
Considered in this light, the photographs are us. That is, they are
representative of distinctive policies and of the fundamental corruptions of
colonial rule. The Belgians in the Congo, the French in Algeria, committed
identical atrocities and practised torture and sexual humiliation on despised,
recalcitrant natives. Add to this corruption, the mystifying, near-total
unpreparedness of the American rulers of Iraq to deal with the complex realities
of an Iraq after its "liberation" -- that is, conquest. And add to that the
overarching, distinctive doctrines of the Bush administration, namely that the
United States has embarked on an endless war (against a protean enemy called
"terrorism"), and that those detained in this war are "unlawful combatants" -- a
policy enunciated by Rumsfeld as early as January 2002 -- and therefore "do not
have any rights" under the Geneva convention, and you have a perfect recipe for
the cruelties and crimes committed against the thousands incarcerated without
charges and access to lawyers in American-run prisons that have been set up as
part of the response to the attack of September 11 2001. Endless war produces
the option of endless detention, which is subject to no judicial review.
So, then, the real issue is not the photographs but what the photographs
reveal to have happened to "suspects" in American custody? No: the horror of
what is shown in the photographs cannot be separated from the horror that the
photographs were taken -- with the perpetrators posing, gloating, over their
helpless captives. German soldiers in the second world war took photographs of
the atrocities they were committing in Poland and Russia, but snapshots in which
the executioners placed themselves among their victims are exceedingly rare.
(See a book just published, *Photographing the Holocaust* by Janina Struk.) If
there is something comparable to what these pictures show it would be some of
the photographs -- collected in a book entitled *Without Sanctuary* -- of black
victims of lynching taken between the 1880s and 1930s, which show smalltown
Americans, no doubt most of them church-going, respectable citizens, grinning,
beneath the naked mutilated body of a black man or woman hanging behind them
from a tree. The lynching photographs were souvenirs of a collective action
whose participants felt perfectly justified in what they had done. So are the
pictures from Abu Ghraib.
If there is a difference, it is a difference created by the increasing
ubiquity of photographic actions. The lynching pictures were in the nature of
photographs as trophies -- taken by a photographer, in order to be collected,
stored in albums; displayed. The pictures taken by American soldiers in Abu
Ghraib reflect a shift in the use made of pictures -- less objects to be saved
than evanescent messages to be disseminated, circulated. A digital camera is a
common possession of most soldiers. Where once photographing war was the
province of photojournalists, now the soldiers themselves are all photographers
-- recording their war, their fun, their observations of what they find
picturesque, their atrocities -- and swapping images among themselves, and
emailing them around the globe.
There is more and more recording of what people do, by themselves. Andy
Warhol's ideal of filming real events in real time -- life isn't edited, why
should its record be edited? -- has become a norm for millions of webcasts, in
which people record their day, each in his or her own reality show. Here I am --
waking and yawning and stretching, brushing my teeth, making breakfast, getting
the kids off to school. People record all aspects of their lives, store them in
computer files, and send the files around. Family life goes with the recording
of family life -- even when, or especially when, the family is in the throes of
crisis and disgrace. (Surely the dedicated, incessant home-videoing of one
another, in conversation and monologue, over many years was the most astonishing
material in the recent documentary about a Long Island family embroiled in
paedophilia charges, Andrew Jarecki's *Capturing the Friedmans* [2003].) An
erotic life is, for more and more people, what can be captured on video.
To live is to be photographed, to have a record of one's life, and therefore,
to go on with one's life, oblivious, or claiming to be oblivious, to the
camera's non-stop attentions. But it is also to pose. To act is to share in the
community of actions recorded as images. The expression of satisfaction at the
acts of torture one is inflicting on helpless, trussed, naked victims is only
part of the story. There is the primal satisfaction of being photographed, to
which one is more inclined to respond not with a stiff, direct gaze (as in
former times) but with glee. The events are in part designed to be photographed.
The grin is a grin for the camera. There would be something missing if, after
stacking the naked men, you couldn't take a picture of them.
You ask yourself how someone can grin at the sufferings and humiliation of
another human being -- drag a naked Iraqi man along the floor with a leash? set
guard dogs at the genitals and legs of cowering, naked prisoners? rape and
sodomise prisoners? force shackled hooded prisoners to masturbate or commit
sexual acts with each other? beat prisoners to death? -- and feel naive in
asking the questions, since the answer is, self-evidently: people do these
things to other people. Not just in Nazi concentration camps and in Abu Ghraib
when it was run by Saddam Hussein. Americans, too, do them when they have
permission. When they are told or made to feel that those over whom they have
absolute power deserve to be mistreated, humiliated, tormented. They do them
when they are led to believe that the people they are torturing belong to an
inferior, despicable race or religion. For the meaning of these pictures is not
just that these acts were performed, but that their perpetrators had no sense
that there was anything wrong in what the pictures show. Even more appalling,
since the pictures were meant to be circulated and seen by many people, it was
all fun. And this idea of fun is, alas, more and more -- contrary to what Mr
Bush is telling the world -- part of "the true nature and heart of America."
It is hard to measure the increasing acceptance of brutality in American
life, but its evidence is everywhere, starting with the games of killing that
are the principal entertainment of young males to the violence that has become
endemic in the group rites of youth on an exuberant kick. From the harsh
torments inflicted on incoming students in many American suburban high schools
-- depicted in Richard Linklater's film "Dazed and Confused" (1993) -- to the
rituals of physical brutality and sexual humiliation to be found in
working-class bar culture, and institutionalized in our colleges and
universities as hazing -- America has become a country in which the fantasies
and the practice of violence are, increasingly, seen as good entertainment, fun.
What formerly was segregated as pornography, as the exercise of extreme
sado-masochistic longings -- such as Pasolini's last, near-unwatchable film,
"Salo" (1975), depicting orgies of torture in the fascist redoubt in northern
Italy at the end of the Mussolini era -- is now being normalised, by the
apostles of the new, bellicose, imperial America, as high-spirited prankishness
or venting. To "stack naked men" is like a college fraternity prank, said a
caller to Rush Limbaugh and the many millions of Americans who listen to his
radio show. Had the caller, one wonders, seen the photographs? No matter. The
observation, or is it the fantasy, was on the mark. What may still be capable of
shocking some Americans was Limbaugh's response: "Exactly!" exclaimed Limbaugh.
"Exactly my point. This is no different than what happens at the Skull and Bones
initiation and we're going to ruin people's lives over it and we're going to
hamper our military effort, and then we are going to really hammer them because
they had a good time." "They" are the American soldiers, the torturers. And
Limbaugh went on. "You know, these people are being fired at every day. I'm
talking about people having a good time, these people. You ever heard of
emotional release?"
It's likely that quite a large number of Americans would rather think that it
is all right to torture and humiliate other human beings -- who, as our putative
or suspected enemies, have forfeited all their rights -- than to acknowledge the
folly and ineptitude and fraud of the American venture in Iraq. As for torture
and sexual humiliation as fun, there seems little to oppose this tendency while
America continues to turn itself into a garrison state, in which patriots are
defined as those with unconditional respect for armed might and for the
necessity of maximal domestic surveillance. Shock and awe was what our military
promised the Iraqis who resisted their American liberators. And shock and the
awful are what these photographs announce to the world that the Americans have
delivered: a pattern of criminal behavior in open defiance and contempt of
international humanitarian conventions. But there seems no reversing for the
moment America's commitment to self-justification, and the condoning of its
increasingly out-of-control culture of violence. Soldiers now pose, thumbs up,
before the atrocities they commit, and send off the pictures to their buddies
and family. What is revealed by these photographs is as much the culture of
shamelessness as the reigning admiration for unapologetic brutality. Ours is a
society in which secrets of private life that, formerly, you would have given
nearly anything to conceal, you now clamor to get on a television show to
reveal.
The notion that "apologies" or professions of "disgust" and "abhorrence" by
the president and the secretary of defence are a sufficient response to the
systematic torture and murder of prisoners revealed at Abu Ghraib is an insult
to one's historical and moral sense. The torture of prisoners is not an
aberration. It is a direct consequence of the doctrines of world struggle with
which the Bush administration has sought to fundamentally change the domestic
and foreign policy of the U.S. The Bush administration has committed the country
to a new, pseudo-religious doctrine of war, endless war -- for "the war on
terror" is nothing less than that. What has happened in the new, international
carceral empire run by the U.S. military goes beyond even the notorious
procedures enshrined in France's Devil's Island and Soviet Russia's Gulag
system, which in the case of the French penal island had, first, both trials and
sentences, and in the case of the Russian prison empire a charge of some kind
and a sentence for a specific number of years. Endless war permits the option of
endless incarceration -- without charges, without the release of prisoners'
names or any access to family members and lawyers, without trials, without
sentences. Those held in the extra-legal American penal empire are "detainees,"
"prisoners," a newly obsolete word, might suggest that they have the rights
accorded by international law and the laws of all civilised countries. This
endless "war on terror" inevitably leads to the demonising and dehumanising of
anyone declared by the Bush administration to be a possible terrorist: a
definition that is not up for debate. An interminable war inevitably suggests
the appropriateness of interminable detention.
The charges against most of the people detained in the prisons in Iraq and
Afghanistan being non-existent -- the Red Cross estimates that 70% to 90% of
those being held have apparently committed no crime other than simply being in
the wrong place at the wrong time, caught up in some sweep of "suspects" -- the
principal justification for holding them is "interrogation." Interrogation about
what? About anything. Whatever the detainee might know. If interrogation is the
point of detaining prisoners indefinitely, then physical coercion, humiliation
and torture become inevitable.
Remember: we are not talking about that rarest of situations, the "ticking
bomb" scenario, which is sometimes used as a limiting case that justifies
torture of prisoners. This is information-gathering authorised by American
military and civilian administrators to learn more of a shadowy empire of
evildoers about which Americans know virtually nothing, in countries about which
they are singularly ignorant -- so that any "information" might be useful. An
interrogation which produced no information (whatever the information might
consist of) would count as a failure. All the more justification for preparing
prisoners to talk. Softening them up, stressing them out -- these were the usual
euphemisms for the bestial practices that have become rampant in American
prisons where "suspected terrorists" are being held. Unfortunately, it seems,
more than a few got "too stressed out" and died.
The pictures will not go away. That is the nature of the digital world in
which we live. Indeed, it seems they were necessary to get our leaders to
acknowledge that they had a problem on their hands. After all, the report
submitted by the International Committee of the Red Cross, and other, sketchier
reports by journalists and protests by humanitarian organisations about the
atrocious punishments inflicted on "detainees" and "suspected terrorists" in
prisons run by the American military, have been circulating for more than a
year. It seems doubtful that any of these reports were read by Mr. Bush or Mr.
Cheney or Ms. Rice or Mr. Rumsfeld. Apparently it took the photographs to get
their attention, when it became clear they could not be suppressed; it was the
photographs that made all this "real" to Mr. Bush and his associates. Up to
then, there had been only words, which are a lot easier to cover up in our age
of infinite digital self-reproduction and self-dissemination.
So now the pictures will continue to "assault" us -- as many Americans are
bound to feel. Will people get used to them? Some Americans are already saying
that they have seen "enough." Not, however, the rest of the world. Endless war:
endless stream of photographs. Will American newspaper, magazine and television
editors now debate whether showing more of them, or showing them uncropped
(which, with some of the best-known images, gives a different and in some
instances more appalling view of the atrocities committed at Abu Ghraib), would
be in "bad taste" or too implicitly political? By "political," read: critical of
the Bush administration. For there can be no doubt that the photographs damage,
as Mr. Rumsfeld testified, the reputation of "the honorable men and women of the
armed forces who are courageously and responsibly and professionally protecting
our freedoms across the globe." This damage -- to our reputation, our image, our
success as an imperial power -- is what the Bush administration principally
deplores. How the protection of "our freedoms" -- and he is talking here about
the freedom of Americans only, 6% of the population of the planet -- came to
require having American soldiers in any country where it chooses to be ("across
the globe") is not up for debate either. America is under attack. America sees
itself as the victim of potential or future terror. America is only defending
itself, against implacable, furtive enemies.
Already the backlash has begun. Americans are being warned against indulging
in an orgy of self-condemnation. The continuing publication of the pictures is
being taken by many Americans as suggesting that we do not have the right to
defend ourselves. After all, they (the terrorists, the fanatics) started it.
They -- Osama bin Laden? Saddam Hussein? what's the difference? -- attacked us
first. James Inhofe, a Republican member, from Oklahoma, of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, before which secretary Rumsfeld testified, avowed that he
was sure he was not the only member of the committee "more outraged by the
outrage" over what the photographs show. "These prisoners," Sen Inhofe
explained, "you know they're not there for traffic violations. If they're in
cellblock 1-A or 1-B, these prisoners, they're murderers, they're terrorists,
they're insurgents. Many of them probably have American blood on their hands and
here we're so concerned about the treatment of those individuals." It's the
fault of "the media" -- usually called "the liberal media" -- which is
provoking, and will continue to provoke, further violence against Americans
around the world. More Americans will die. Because of these photos.
There is an answer to this charge, of course. It is not because of the
photographs but of what the photographs reveal to be happening, happening at the
behest of and with the complicity of a chain of command that reaches up to the
highest level of the Bush administration. But the distinction -- between
photograph and reality, between policy and spin -- easily evaporates in most
people's minds. And that is what the administration wishes to happen.
"There are a lot more photographs and videos that exist," Mr. Rumsfeld
acknowledged in his testimony. "If these are released to the public, obviously,
it is going to make matters worse." Worse for the US and its programmes,
presumably. Not for those who are the actual victims of torture. The media may
self-censor, as is its wont. But, as Mr. Rumsfeld acknowledged, it's hard to
censor soldiers overseas who don't write letters home, as in the old days, that
can be opened by military censors who ink out unacceptable lines, but, instead,
function like tourists, "running around with digital cameras and taking these
unbelievable photographs and then passing them off, against the law, to the
media, to our surprise." The administration's effort to withhold pictures will
continue, however -- the argument is taking a more legalistic turn: now the
photographs are "evidence" in future criminal cases, whose outcome may be
prejudiced if the photographs are made public. But the real push to limit the
accessibility of the photographs will come from the ongoing effort to protect
the Bush administration and its policies -- to identify "outrage" over the
photographs with a campaign to undermine the American military might and the
purposes it currently serves. Just as it was regarded by many as an implicit
criticism of the war to show on television photographs of American soldiers who
were killed in the course of the invasion and occupation of Iraq, it will
increasingly be thought unpatriotic to disseminate the aberrant photographs and
tarnish and besmirch the reputation -- that is, the image -- of America.
After all, we're at war. Endless war. And war is hell. The only good Indian
is a dead Indian. Hey, we were only having fun. In our digital hall of mirrors,
the pictures aren't going to go away. Yes, it seems that one picture is worth a
thousand words. And there will be thousands more snapshots and videos.
Unstoppable. Can the video game, "Hazing at Abu Ghraib" or "Interrogating the
Terrorists," be far behind? |