From owner-imap@chumbly.math.missouri.edu Wed Aug 27 08:00:06 2003
Date: Tue, 26 Aug 2003 22:53:51 -0500 (CDT)
From: Tim Murphy
<info@cinox.demon.co.uk>
Subject: Susan Hawthorne: Free Trade and War in the Creation of the New
Article: 163694
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
http://globalresearch.ca/articles/HAW308A.html
This paper looks at the way in which the US is using free trade and war in the development of it empire. I highlight the way in which John Howard and George W. Bush have locked together free trade agreements and war through the US, UK and Australian alliance in Iraq. I argue that free trade agreements are deeply rooted in the structural violence of globalisation, including the possibility of endless war. I examine the ways in which women in particular are negatively affected by free trade agreements, and suggest that fundamentalism is an integral part of the operation of globalisation and free trade. I conclude that the Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement leaves Australia as a party to aggression in an agreement that will not benefit the Australian people, especially women, Indigenous peoples and the poor.
The link between war and free trade agreements is apparent in the latest round of events occurring since the beginning of 2003. In the context of Australia this is exemplified in the connection between the proposed Australia United States Free Trade Agreement (AUSFTA) and John Howard's commitment to the war in Iraq. In the aftermath of the war in Iraq there have been pronouncements about the possibility of free trade zones in Iraq. Such occurrences are not an accident of history, but rather an integral part of the project of capitalist globalisation.
Ellen Meiksins Wood argues that The administration and enforcement
of the new imperialism by a system of multiple states ultimately
requires a single overwhelming military power, which can keep all the
others in line
.[1] This statement describes precisely the role
played by the USA in the global economy and Australia is kowtowing to
the weight of imperial will. Australia represents a middle position
between the Third World
and the western developed world. A
former colony, and considered a hot spot of biodiversity, Australia is
rich in natural resources, and provides important military
intelligence through US bases at Pine Gap and Cockburn Sound. In these
respects it resembles Third World
nations. Conversely, the
standard of living and the heavily influenced Anglo-western culture,
in spite of its geographical location, means that it resembles the
colonising countries. I argue that this unique combination of features
makes Australia an important market to shore up economically through
the establishment of a Free Trade Agreement.
The AUSFTA will create conditions in Australia rather like the results
of the Structural Adjustment Programs imposed on Third World nations
during the 1980s and 1990s. But unlike those economies, the Australian
market is culturally open to US products and, in particular,
services. According to US Special Trade Representative Bob Zoellick,
once the AUSFTA is in place Australia will be equated to America's
fourth largest export market
.[2]
A further argument of this paper is that fundamentalism is intricately linked with globalisation, control of the rules of trade and war. There are many faces of fundamentalism and I will explicate some of the many different guises in which it appears around the world.
The Origins of the AUSFTA In 1992, Bob Zoellick, now the chief negotiator of the AUSFTA, wrote a speech for George Bush senior which outlined what was called the Agenda for American Renewal, a plan for a series of bilateral free-trade agreements, Australia among them.[3] The idea did not find favour with the Australian government of the time, but in ten years the political landscape has not only changed enormously, it has shifted significantly to the right.
At the end of 2002 the Howard government through its Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade called for submissions on the proposed AUSFTA. The call was put out on 11 December 2002 with a deadline of 15 January 2003. This in itself was an indicator that the government negotiators were not really interested in receiving submissions since this is the period when most working people take annual summer holidays.
Concurrently, the USA was speaking of a pre-emptive strike against
Iraq and shoring up alliances with Tony Blair and John Howard. It
struck me at the time that Howard's support of George W. Bush was
connected to his desire for successful free trade negotiations with
the USA.[4] But not until after the war with Iraq was Howard's
stance publicly acknowledged. And in an editorial, The Australian went
so far as to declare the Labor Party irrelevant because it wanted to
have a careful look
at the agreement to ensure that it was not
a deal set to strip Australia of its assets in services, knowledge,
finance, biodiversity and agriculture.[5]
choiceswill be available to those with the resources to pay for education.[9]
recent new memberof the American-Australian Free Trade Agreement Coalition (AAFTAC).
raw materials for chemical weapons to Iraq.[14] Stricter border controls for people go hand in hand with borderlessness for capital.
primary and secondary education service opportunities d electricity and water systems d public health d local governance d and seaport and airport administration.[15]
Finally, the Australian constitution allows, under the foreign affairs power, the Commonwealth parliament to pass laws consistent with a particular treaty—in this case the AUSFTA—which over-rides state powers otherwise protected b y the Australian constitution. One impact of this would be the potential for an agreement resembling the Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI) to be brought in. Such laws could threaten many state-based public services because under the MAI companies can sue for loss of future profits in the event of a trade barrier including such socially beneficial barriers as environmental safeguards, banning of carcinogenic substances, or the non-provision of subsidies for foreign companies on an equal footing.[16]
The control of the conditions of trade is essential to the centre of empire. This maxim has never been more important than it is now in a global economy. The logic of empire is to maintain control and to wield power in whatever way maximises the life of the empire. Imperialism, from the Roman Empire to the British Empire, has incorporated the benefits of wealth frequently through trade and through control of trade routes or production or the rules of trade.
In the global economy this is exemplified in the USA's blatant
flouting of WTO rules, resistance to the International Criminal
Court[17] and the treatment of prisoners held in Guantanamo Bay. The
failed attempt to ratify the Small Arms Trade Agreement in 2001 is due
in large part to the refusal of the USA to recognise the loss of life
of women and children in war zones. Instead the US Under Secretary of
State John Bolton argued that the agreement contains measures
contrary to our [US citizens'] right to keep and bear
arms
.[18] A further, but instated result would have been that US
arms manufacturers and dealers stood to lose a great deal of trade.
Trade, especially the trade in arms, is too important to let slip just
because women and children in poor countries are losing their lives.
Violence is elitist
, observes Theresa Wolfwood.[19] Those who
are violent tend to believe that they themselves will not be subjected
to violence. Such a lack of awareness of consequences is an integral
part of domination. Militarisation is the institutional form of
domination and it too perpetuates the view that violence is the
ultimate arbiter. In the international arena, the five largest sellers
of arms are the five permanent members of the UN Security Council[20]
who sell arms to the military in mostly poor countries; countries like
Somalia, Sudan, Ethiopia. They have sold arms—chemical and
biological—to Iraq. They have provided training to Idi Amin and
to Osama bin Laden. The war against Iraq was a war against a country
whose population comprises primarily women and children. This is an
instance of violence as elitism. In the Gulu district of Uganda where
the Lord's Resistance Army is active and eighty per cent of the
population are living in camps, most of the injuries occurred in
domestic settings. One participant said of landmines, landmines are
being buried in our kitchens. Government troops do not cook in our
kitchens; they do not use our bathing shelters. Yet last year a child
was blasted in a bathing shelter
.[21] It is no surprise therefore
to find that women now make up eighty per cent of the victims of
war.[22] In the meantime, everything possible is done to prevent
American lives being lost in war. Marc Herold, for example, makes the
point that the
.[23]
cost
of a dead Afghan civilian is zero (as
long as these civilian deaths are hidden from the public) but the
benefits
of preserving US military lives is enormous, given the
US public's aversion to returning body bags
As Michel Chossudovsky writes, The application of IMF economic
medicine often breeds an atmosphere of ethnic and social strife, which
in turn favours the development of fundamentalism and communal
violence.
[24] The IMF-imposed rules resemble many of the facets
of the Australia-US Free Trade Agreement, as well as other forays the
USA has made in which trade, fundamentalism and war all
intersect. Indeed, Chossudovsky argues that US foreign policy is not
concerned with maximising social justice, but in fact has encouraged
the development of Wahabist fundamentalism and, furthermore has
sustained international terrorism.[25]
Another aspect of the violence of trade is the export trade in people, in particular of women. Women have become export commodities as trafficked brides, as domestic workers, as sex slaves, all of which enable governments to see women as cash crops and as a means of paying off foreign debt. The illegal trade in women's bodies has been estimated to be the third largest illegal trade after arms and drugs.[26] And as Andrea Dworkin points out:
The trafficking in women is the largest slave trade that the planet has ever seen. It is larger than the slave trading of the middle passage. It is larger than any race-based slave trading. I am not measuring suffering. I mean to measure the dimensions of the problem. Selling women makes more money than anything else. Prostituted women and children are the main cash crop in the Thai economy.[27]
The trafficking of women is a spin off of free trade. It is a direct result of globalisation, in a world in which profit is more important than life and dignity. The trafficking of people who are fleeing violent regimes is a spin off of the increased restrictions on immigration, tightening of border controls, and territorial excision, as in the case of Christmas Islands and Ashmore Reef. Violence is structured into these trades in people, just as they were in the slave trade. And violence is structured into the current global trading system.
Ellen Meiksins Wood (2003) outlines how it is that empire depends on
war for its existence. She returns to the theoretical underpinnings of
the modern notion of a just war elaborated by Dutchman, Hugo Grotius
(1583-1645) and notes that the origins of international law are
inextricably linked to advocating limited war, and as much to do
with profit as with justice
.[28] She spells out precisely the
implications of his theory:
Grotius was able to justify not only wars of self-defence, however broadly conceives, but even the most aggressive wars pursued for no other reason than commercial profit ... he sought to demonstrate that [the proper] authority could be vested not only in sovereign states but in private trading companies, which could legitimately engage in the most aggressive military acts to pursue their commercial advantage.[29]
Hugo Grotius's legacy was taken even further by Thomas More in his
1516 classic, Utopia. Here More outlines the justification for
appropriating the land and its resources from people living in lands
deemed worth colonising. The justification rests on
improvement
. If the land is occupied but is not
improved
by its current occupants, then it is perfectly
justifiable and reasonable in Thomas More's view to appropriate
the land or resource, make it productive, and if necessary to conquer
them for their own good. This view is eerily reminiscent of not only
the justifications for colonisation—bringing culture to the
natives—but also for the sudden rash of interest in the late
twentieth century in patenting Indigenous knowledge of medicinal
plants. Both are very much foundational to the existence of
globalisation and the interest in free trade agreements.
As globalisation has proceeded, through the lowering of tariffs and
implementation of Structural Adjustment Programs in poor countries,
with the continuation of agricultural subsidies and further
privatisation of knowledge, of services or property in the rich
countries, it also requires a new doctrine of extra-economic, and
especially military coercion
.[30] For without the possibility of
war, the empire cannot maintain its dominance. Australia—as one
the USA's most reliable allies, as an essential part in the
USA's global intelligence gathering, and as one of the earth's
biodiverse hotspots—is in a unique position to be a very useful
free trade partner
.
The last decades of the twentieth century has seen a rise in fundamentalism around the world and fundamentalist regimes can be found in many countries representing different creeds. The USA has its own home-grown Christian fundamentalism underlying the last three Republican Presidencies, while the Taliban have flourished in Afghanistan and Pakistan, Hindu fundamentalist are represented by the BJP government in India, Wahabist Islam has been exported by Saudi Arabia, Buddhist fundamentalists have ruled Burma for many years, Indigenous fundamentalism has been the source of several coups in Fiji, communist fundamentalism is taking North Korea to the brink of war, and market fundamentalism underlies the institutions of globalisation: the IMF and the World Bank.[31] This is by no means an exhaustive list but an indication of the breadth and impact of fundamentalist politics in the world today.
The common thread among all of these fundamentalist regimes is that
women fare very badly. It is, argues Teresa Brennan, Only on
questions of women and sexuality [that] the fundamentalists of either
side begin to converge
.[32] Market fundamentalists care as little
about the welfare and dignity of women as do the Buddhist
fundamentalists in Burma or the Taliban in Pakistan. Women's human
rights are not recognised and under all these regimes, women's
bodies are threatened, despised and violated. The education, social
and economic rights of women are severely limited, and exploitation
and oppression are the norm.
At the core of fundamentalism is another fundamentalism: that of
masculinist fundamentalism. As Dubravka Ugreysi%c writes: In this
male mindset woman has the fixed, unchanging status of an inferior
being
.[33] She writes of how men getting together at a bar to
drink reflects the misogyny and patriarchalism of the adventure of war
which is presented as a highly sexualised event in which War is
shooting and shagging, screwing and killing
.[34]
The wars that have been declared as part of the war against
terrorism
have been no different. As Caputi (1987), Enloe (1983)
and Morgan (2001)[35] respectively have documented that the training
of military recruits, the level of prostitution around army bases, and
the ideology of terrorists share many common elements. Those elements
include emotional disconnection combined with hatred of women, the
portrayal of women as subjected to pornography and prostitution, and
the widespread rape of women in war.
These elements appear also in those places where globalisation has had the most destructive impact, namely in poor countries and countries who for one reason or another are in thrall to the United States. It may be due to debt (Sierra Leone) or to agreements on defence (Saudi Arabia, Israel) or because the USA is keen to exploit some natural resource such as gas or oil (Afghanistan, Iraq) or to create the preconditions of US-based company investments (US agribusiness companies are keen to harvest the riches of biodiverse nations including Australia). These are the origins of free trade agreements and of the combined force of violence and economic exploitation.
Michael Klare sets out just some of the sites of conflict that are the focus of territorial disputes in areas containing oil or natural gas,[36] and it has been a common refrain of many writers that oil is a central trigger for the wars against Afghanistan[37] and against Iraq.[38]
These four elements, working together have very different impacts on women and men. I will look at each of them in turn and discuss the ways in which they intersect and amplify one another.
Fundamentalism: This is a divisive and violent style of rule. As
indicated earlier some men benefit enormously, and all men benefit in
comparison with the women of their country. Under fundamentalism it is
men who are in power and laws are made (if they are made) to uphold
that masculinist power.[39] Women by contrast are severely limited in
their movement, in their role in the political, social and economic
spheres. This was most profoundly the case under the Taliban whose
punitive use of the burqa is intended to break the possibility of
community among women, to make women invisible and therefore
worthless. Indeed, one of the dictates of the Taliban was to order
them to conceal themselves to the point of having no human
form
.[40] It is not dissimilar from the hoods used by torturers
to force fear and disconnection upon their prisoners.[41]
War: Almost all wars arm men first. In some wars, especially wars of resistance, some women are armed. But when war and fundamentalism are combined men are the ones to bear arms. Women, by contrast, make up eighty per cent of refugees and women and children make up ninety per cent of the casualties of war. But war hurts men too. It does so by encouraging them to engage in acts of violence that involve killing, torturing, maiming and raping—not just enemy combatants—but also civilians. War hurts women, not only because they get to dissociate through violence but because they are subjected to so much violence, as are those whom they are attempting to protect, children and the old or the incapacitated.
Globalisation: Men control almost all the global capital, the global wealth, global land. Women are the poor of the world. Under globalisation, men have usurped women's smallholdings, sometimes pulling out trees or ploughing it up as a cash crop monoculture, leaving women only a few small garden plots. Men have appropriated women's subsistence and sold it to the highest bidder as men have been drawn first into the global economy. Men have also consumed luxury items for themselves—including alcohol, cigarettes, cars and women. Women, by contrast have had to make do on even less, attempting to share it among children, the old and the incapacitated.
Free trade: For men free trade can have split consequences. For some
men, the future is bleak. It is rife with unemployment as they are
displaced from manual labour, sometimes because their sisters or
daughters get a job. Many of these men resort to fundamentalism or
violence. For other men, the entrepreneurs and those with resources of
land or money, their future looks considerably brighter as they profit
from the control of global capital. Men in poor countries are more
likely to fall into the first group, but among them are very wealthy
elites profiting from their unemployment, their violence or their
fundamentalism. Men in rich countries benefit by comparison with men
in poor countries, but among them are the unemployed and the
unemployable, the poor who like men in poor countries resort to
violence and to the fundamentalism of men at a bar
. By
contrast women in poor countries—even those who may get the jobs
of their brothers or their fathers—do not end up controlling the
capital, the land, the family resources. Nor do they have the
escape
of violence or of taking up arms. And if they happen to
work in one of the many export processing zones set up to maximise
free trade, chances are they will be exploited, working in conditions
without health and safety practices, without environmental safeguards
and frequently places where sexual violence is rampant. Or, the women
themselves become export commodities, sold for sex or for their
domestic labour. Women in rich countries, although they too benefit
from the exploitation of those in poor countries will rarely own the
capital, the land or the family resources. In the long run, no one
really benefits because neither the people, nor the natural
environment which is polluted by reckless profiteering, can ever
recover sufficiently to live rich and sustainable lives.
Given the intersecting and amplifying effects of fundamentalism, war and globalisation with free trade, the very fact of beginning to negotiate such a deal does not bode well for Australia. Indeed it threatens the well-being of many Australians, as well as the unique environment. Lowering borders on agricultural produce and bioprospecting biotechnology companies threatens Australia's biodiversity, while lifting border protections threatens Australia's social and cultural diversity.
As an integrated part of the US empire Australia becomes a participant in wars of aggression mounted by the USA, as well as a target of other violations.
The women of Australia have much to fear from a free trade agreement as the many public institutions are whittled back and privatised so that women—who still remain on considerably lower wages than men—have to pay more for medical, educational and social services or become the carers, the educators, the social cleaner-uppers for a system which fails all but the rich or the powerful.
The poor—which includes many women—have much to fear as water is privatised along with prisons and detention centres where the poor will be sent for crimes of poverty. The refugees are being detained, deprived and deported for the crime of being a stateless person, an exile, a person seeking asylum. If Australia cannot accept the freedom of movement of people displaced by globalisation, by fundamentalism, by war and by free trade then Australia should not be pursuing a free trade agreement that creates ecologically destructive borderlessness, that invites the largest aggressor on earth to sit with us, and that threatens so much that we hold dear, culturally and socially.
[1] Wood, Ellen Meiksins, Empire of Capital, Verso, London, 2003, p 141-2.
[2] Kelly, Paul, Our US trade deal could spur Asia too,
Australian, 30 July 2003, p 11.
[3] Hywood, Gregory, Our chance to overcome the tyranny of
size,
Age, 7 August 2003, p 13.
[4] Hawthorne, Susan, The Australia-United States Free Trade
Agreement: Free Trade or Free Access for US Companies?
Arena
Magazine, no 63, Feb-March 2003, pp 29-32.
[5] Australian, Editorial, Labor out of touch on trade,
6 May
2003, p 14.
[6] Berkelmans, Leon, Lee Davis, Warwick McKibbin and Andrew Stoekel, Economic Impacts of an Australia-United States Free Trade Area, A report prepared for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Canberra, 2001, p 96.
[7] Lokuge, K and Richard Denniss, Trading in Our Health System? The Impact of the Australia-US Free Trade Agreement on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, Australia Institute Discussion Paper no 55, May 2003.
[8] Sexton, Sarah, GATS, Privatisation and Health,
Paper
presented at Service Without Borders? Plenary at Privatisation, GATS
and the Consequences for Women International Conference, Kln, 9-11 May
2003, p 2. For a longer treatment of the issues see Sexton, Sarah,
Trading Health Care Away? GATS, Public Services and Privatisation, The
Cornerhouse, London, 2001.
[9] Moreno, Melissa, All pay, no play—and a degree of
hardship,
Sunday Age, 18 May 2003, p 8.
[10] Christie, Jean, Enclosing the Biodiversity Commons:
Bioprospecting of Biopiracy?
in Richard Hindmarsh and Geoffrey
Lawrence (eds.) Altered Genes II: The Future, Scribe, Melbourne, 2001,
pp 173-186; Hawthorne, Susan, Wild Politics: Feminism, Globalisation
and Bio/diversity, Spinifex Press, Melbourne, 2002, 333-40.
[11] Fisher, Sue, Cultural Trade Background Report, 18 December,
Australia Council, Sydney, 2002; Borghino, JosH, Mint Source,
Australian Author 35 (1) April 2003, pp 32-33; Keneally, Thomas,
The looming threat to Australian culture,
Age, 27 May 2003, p
15; Parsons, Deborah and Glenda Hambly, Why local film and TV would
not survive
Letters to the Editor, Age, 7 May
2003, p 14.
free trade
,
[12] Shiva, Vandana, Water Wars: Privatization, Pollution and Profit,
South End Press, Cambridge MA, 2002; Barlow, Maud and Tony Clarke,
Blue Gold, Earthscan, London, 2003; Marsden, William, The water
barons,
Age, 3 February 2003, p 11; Bimbauer, William, Tapping
Australia's Water,
Age, 7 May 2003.
[13] Monbiot, George, The Age of Consent: A Manifesto for a New World Order, Flamingo, London, 2003, p 136.
[14] Rintoul, Stuart, Detention company's murky origins,
Weekend Australian, 28-29 December 2002, p 6.
[15] Wallace, Christine, Corporate March on Iraq deals,
Australian, Business 25 April 2003, p 18.
[16] Legge, John M, An Australia-US Free Trade Agreement—Myth
and reality
, Dissent, no 12, Spring 2003, p 42; for a longer
discussion of the MAI see Hawthorne, Wild Politics, op. cit., 2002, pp
345-9.
[17] Hawthorne, Susan, The Logic of Unilateralism,
Arena
Magazine, Oct-Nov 2002, pp 17-18.
[18] In Romei, Stephen, World bears burden of America's rights
to arms,
Weekend Australian, 14-15 July 2001, p 13. For a
discussion of the impact of small arms trade on women, see Hawthorne,
Susan, Little Women, Little Weapons, Big Men, Big War,
Lesbiana, Issue 121, April 2003, pp 5-8.
[19] Wolfwood, Theresa, Resistance is Creative: False Options and
Real Hope,
in Susan Hawthorne and Bronwyn Winter (eds.) September
11, 2001: Feminist Perspectives, Spinifex Press, Melbourne, 2002, p
44.
[20] Bone, Pamela, The Little Weapons of Mass Destruction,
Age,
Insight, 22 Feb 2003, p 7.
[21] Kobusingye, Olive C, The Effects of SALW Proliferation and
Abuse in Gulu District, Uganda: A Public Health Approach,
Brief
24: Gender Perspectives on Small Arms and Light Weapons: Regional and
International Concerns, Bonn International Center for Conversation,
2002, p 75.
[22] Morgan, Robin, III Redefining Normal (Tuesday, 25 September
2001),
Afterword to The Demon Lover: The Roots of Terrorism,
Piatkus, London, 2001, p 415.
[23] Herold, Marc, Who Will Count the Dead? Civilian Casualties in
Afghanistan,
in Roger Burbach and Ben Clarke (eds.) September 11
and the US War: Beyond the Curtain of Smoke, City Lights, San
Francisco, 2002, pp 120-1.
[24] Chossudovsky, Michel, War and Globalisation: The Truth Behind September 11, Global Outlook, Shanty Bay, Ontario, p 33.
[25] ibid.
[26] Rosca, Ninotchka, Beyond the Sex Wars: Feminism, Sexuality and
Power in a Commodity Culture,
Paper presented at National
Women's Studies Association Conference, SUNY, Oswego, NY, 14 June
1998. Also see Raymond, Janice G, Legitimating Prostitution as Sex
Work: UN Labor Organization (ILO) Calls for Recognition of the Sex
Industry, Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, Amherst, MA, 1999;
Hughes, Donna, The Internet and the Global Prostitution
Industry,
in Susan Hawthorne and Renate Klein (eds.)
CyberFeminism: Connectivity, Critique and Creativity, Spinifex Press ,
Melbourne, 1999, pp 157-84.
[27] Dworkin, Andrea, Pornography, Prostitution, and a Beautiful
and Tragic Recent History,
in Rebecca Whisnant and Christine Stark
(eds.) Not For Sale, Spinifex Press, Melbourne, (forthcoming 2004).
[28] Wood, op. cit., p 69.
[29] ibid.
[30] Wood, op. cit., p 164.
[31] Stiglitz, Joseph, Globalization and its Discontents, Penguin Books, London, 2002.
[32] Brennan, Teresa, Globalization and its Terrors: Daily Life in the West, Routledge, London and New York, 2003, p xvi.
[33] Ugreysi%c, Dubravka, Because we're just boys,
in Ammu
Joseph and Kalpana Sharma (eds.) Terror, Counter Terror: Women Speak
Out, Kali for Women, New Delhi, 2003, p 143.
[34] Ugreysi%c, op. cit. p 145.
[35] Caputi, Jane, The Age of Sex Crime, The Women's Press, London, 1987; Enloe, Cynthia, Does Khaki Become You? The Militarisation of Women's Lives, Pluto Press, London, 1983; Morgan, op. cit.
[36] Klare, Michael T, Resource Wars: The New Landscape of Global Conflict, Henry Holt and Company, New York, 2001, pp 227-31.
[37] Talbot, Karen, Afghanistan, Central Asia, Georgia: Key to Oil
Profits,
in Susan Hawthorne and Bronwyn Winter (eds.) September
11, 2001: Feminist Perspectives, Spinifex Press, Melbourne, 2002, pp
285-96.
[38] Chomsky, Noam, Power and Terror: Post 9/11 Talks and Interviews, Seven Stories Press, New York, 2003.
[39] For a longer discussion of some of these issues see Hawthorne,
Susan, Fundamentalism, Violence and Disconnection,
in Susan
Hawthorne and Bronwyn Winter (eds.) September 11, 2001: Feminist
Perspectives, Spinifex Press, Melbourne, 2002, pp 339-59.
[40] Benard, Cheryl with Edit Schlaffler, Veiled Courage: Inside the Afghan Women's Resistance, Random House, Sydney, 2002, 205; my italics.
[41] Millett, Kate, The Politics of Cruelty: An Essay on the Literature of Political Imprisonment, W.W. Norton and Co, New York, 1994.