p16
 political scientist Michael Stohl
"We must recognize that by convention-and it must be emphasized only by convention-great power use and the threat of the use of force is normally described as coercive diplomacy and not as a form of terrorism," though it commonly involves "the threat and often the use of violence for what would be described as terroristic purposes were it not great powers who were pursuing the very same tactic,"
 p16
 "[An] act of terrorism, means any activity that (A) involves a violent  act or an act dangerous to human life that is a violation of the  criminal laws of the United States or any State, or that would be a  criminal violation if committed within the jurisdiction of the United  States or of any State; and (B) appears to be intended (i) to  intimidate or coerce a civilian population, (ii) to influence the  policy of a government by intimidation or coercion or (iii) to affect  the conduct of a government by assassination or kidnapping." (United  States Code Congressional and Administrative News, 98th Congress,  Second Session, 1984, Oct. 19, volume 2; par 3077, 98 STAT 2707 [West  Publishing Co., 1984].
 p21
 The U.S. is one of the most extreme religious fundamentalist cultures  in the world; not the state, but the popular culture. In the Islamic  world, the most extreme fundamentalist state, apart from the Taliban,  is Saudi Arabia, a U.S. client state since its origins …
 p23
 In much of the world the U.S. is regarded as a leading terrorist  state, and with good reason. We might bear in mind, for example, that  in 1986 the U.S. was condemned by the World Court for "unlawful use of  force" (international terrorism) and then vetoed a Security Council  resolution calling on all states (meaning the U.S.) to adhere to  international law.
 p24
 Nicaragua in the 1980s was subjected to violent assault by the U.S.  Tens of thousands of people died. The country was substantially  destroyed; it may never recover. The international terrorist attack  was accompanied by a devastating economic war, which a small country  isolated by a vengeful and cruel superpower could scarcely sustain …  The effects on the country are much more severe even than the  tragedies in New York the other day. They didn’t respond by setting  off bombs in Washington. They went to the World Court, which ruled in  their favor, ordering the U.S. to desist and pay substantial  reparations. The U.S. dismissed the court judgment with contempt,  responding with an immediate escalation of the attack. So Nicaragua  then went to the Security Council, which considered a resolution  calling on states to observe international law. The U.S. alone vetoed  it. They went to the General Assembly, where they got a similar  resolution that passed with the U.S. and Israel opposed two years in a  row (joined once by El Salvador). That’s the way a state should  proceed. If Nicaragua had been powerful enough, it could have set up  another criminal court. Those are the measures the U.S. could pursue  …
 p30
 It is entirely typical for the major media, and the intellectual  classes generally, to line up in support of power at a time of crisis  and try to mobilize the population for the same cause.
 p31
 New York Times, September 16, 2001
 "The perpetrators acted out of hatred for the … values cherished in  the West as freedom, tolerance, prosperity, religious pluralism and  universal suffrage."
[The quote] has all the merits of self-adulation and uncritical support for power. And it has the flaw that adopting it contributes significantly to the likelihood of further atrocities, including atrocities directed against us …
 p33
 The United States government, like others, primarily responds to  centers of concentrated domestic power.
… the U.S. government is now trying to exploit the opportunity to ram through its own agenda: militarization, including "missile defense," code words for the militarization of space; undermining social democratic programs; also undermining concerns over the harsh effects of corporate "globalization," or environmental issues, or health insurance, and so on; instituting measures that will intensify the transfer of wealth to the very few (for example, eliminating corporate taxes) and regimenting the society, so as to eliminate public debate and protest.
… there are hawkish elements who want to use the occasion to strike out at their enemies, with extreme violence, no matter how many innocent people suffer, including people here and in Europe who will be victims of the escalating cycle of violence.
 p35
 … we can think of the United States as an "innocent victim" only if  we adopt the convenient path of ignoring the record of its actions and  those of its allies, which are, after all, hardly a secret.
 p44
 The U.S. is the only country that was condemned for international  terrorism by the World Court and that rejected a Security Council  resolution calling on states to observe international law.
 p57
 The U.S. is officially committed to what is called "low-intensity  warfare." That’s the official doctrine. If you read the standard  definitions of low-intensity conflict and compare them with official  definitions of "terrorism" in army manuals, or the U.S. Code you find  they’re almost the same. Terrorism is the use of coercive means aimed  at civilian populations in an effort to achieve political, religious,  or other aims. That’s what the World Trade Center attack was, a  particularly horrifying terrorist crime.
Terrorism, according to the official definitions, is simply part of state action, official doctrine …
 p67
 A U.S.-backed army took control in Indonesia in 1965, organizing the  slaughter of hundreds of thousands of people, mostly landless  peasants, in a massacre that the CIA compared to the crimes of Hitler,  Stalin, and Mao. The massacre, accurately reported, elicited  uncontrolled euphoria in the West, in the national media and  elsewhere. Indonesian peasants had not harmed us in any way. When  Nicaragua finally succumbed to the U.S. assault, the mainstream press  lauded the success of the methods adopted to "wreck the economy and  prosecute a long and deadly proxy war until the exhausted natives  overthrow the unwanted government themselves," with a cost to us that  is "minimal," leaving the victims "with wrecked bridges, sabotaged  power stations, and ruined farms," and thus providing the U.S.  candidate with "a winning issue": ending the "impoverishment of the  people of Nicaragua" (Time). We are "United in Joy" at this outcome,  the New York Times proclaimed.
 p69
 We should not underestimate the capacity of well-run propaganda  systems to drive people to irrational, murderous, and suicidal  behavior. Take an example … World War I … on both sides, the  soldiers marched off to mutual slaughter with enormous exuberance,  fortified by the cheers of the intellectual classes and those who they  helped mobilize across the political spectrum, from left to right  including the most powerful left political force in the world, in  Germany. Exceptions are so few that we can practically list them, and  some of the most prominent among them ended up in jail for questioning  the nobility of the enterprise: among them Rosa Luxemburg, Bertrand  Russell, and Eugene Debs. With the help of Wilson’s propaganda  agencies and the enthusiastic support of liberal intellectuals, a  pacifist country was turned in a few months into raving anti-German  hysterics, ready to take revenge on those who had perpetrated savage  crimes, many of them invented by the British Ministry of Information.  But that’s by no means inevitable, and we should not underestimate the  civilizing effects of the popular struggles of recent years. We need  not stride resolutely towards catastrophe merely because those are the  marching orders.
 p76
 Wanton killing of innocent civilians is terrorism, not a war against  terrorism.
 p79
 In the 1980s the U.S. fought a major war in Central America, leaving  some 200,000 tortured and mutilated corpses, millions of orphans and  refugees, and four countries devastated. A prime target of the U.S.  attack was the Catholic Church, which had committed the grievous sin  of adopting "the preferential option for the poor."
 p84
 The U.S. is … the only country condemned by the World Court for  international terrorism-for "the unlawful use of force" for political  ends, as the Court put it-ordering the U.S. to terminate these crimes  and pay substantial reparations. The U.S. of course dismissed the  Court’s judgment with contempt, reacting by escalating the terrorist  war against Nicaragua and vetoing a Security Council resolution  calling on all states to observe international law land voting alone,  with Israel and in one case El Salvador, against similar General  Assembly resolutions.
 p86
 In the l990s, the U.S. provided 80 percent of the arms for Turkey’s  counterinsurgency campaign against Kurds in its southeast region,  killing tens of thousands, driving 2-3 million out of their homes,  leaving 3,500 villages destroyed (7 times Kosovo under NATO bombs),  and with every imaginable atrocity. The arms flow had increased  sharply in 1984 as Turkey launched its terrorist attack and began to  decline to previous levels only in 1999, when the atrocities had  achieved their goal. In 1999, Turkey fell from its position as the  leading recipient of U.S. arms (Israel-Egypt aside), replaced by  Colombia, the worst human rights violator in the hemisphere in the  l990s and by far the leading recipient of U.S. arms and training  following a consistent pattern.
 p89
 Terrorism – as defined in official U.S. documents: "the calculated use  of violence or threat of violence to attain goals that are political,  religious, or ideological in nature. This is done through  intimidation, coercion, or instilling fear."
 p103
 Arundhati Roy
 "The Taliban’s response to U.S. demands for the extradition of bin  Laden has been uncharacteristically reasonable: produce the evidence,  then we’ll hand him over. President Bush’s response is that the demand  is non-negotiable." She also adds one of the many reasons why this  framework is unacceptable to Washington: "While talks are on for the  extradition of CEOs, can India put in a side request for the  extradition of Warren Anderson of the U.S.? He was the chairman of  Union Carbide, responsible for the Bhopal gas leak that killed 16,000  people in 1984. We have collated the necessary evidence. It’s all in  the files. Could we have him, please?"
 p111
 The U.S. explicitly reserves to itself the right to act as it chooses,  and is carefully avoiding any meaningful recourse to international  institutions, as required by law.
 p113
 The Arab world has had one free and open news source, the satellite TV  news channel Al-Jazeera in Qatar, modeled on BBC, with an enormous  audience throughout the Arab-speaking world. It is the sole uncensored  source, carrying a great deal of important news and also live debates  and a wide range of opinion …
Al-Jazeera is, naturally, despised and feared by the dictatorships of the region, particularly because of its frank exposures of their human rights records. The U.S. has joined their ranks. BBC reports that "The U.S. is not the first to feel aggrieved by Al-Jazeera coverage, which has in the past provoked anger from Algeria, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Egypt for giving airtime to political dissidents."
 p114
 [The Wall Street] Journal … "many Arab analysts argued that it is,  after all, Washington’s perceived disregard for human rights in  officially pro-American countries such as Saudi Arabia that fuels the  rampant anti-Americanism."