Beck - The Terrorist Threat
Beck - The Terrorist Threat
Beck - The Terrorist Threat
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Culture & Society
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Ulrich Beck
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mean by global risk society more convincingly than something that took
place in the USA just a few years ago (Benford, 2000). The US Congress
appointed a commission with the assignment of developing a system of
symbols that could properly express the dangers posed by American nuclear
waste-disposal sites. The problem to be solved was: how can we communicate with the future about the dangers we have created? What concepts can
we form, and what symbols can we invent to convey a message to people
living 10,000 years from now?
The commission was composed of nuclear physicists, anthropologists,
linguists, brain researchers, psychologists, molecular biologists, sociologists, artists and others. The immediate question, the unavoidable question
was: will there still be a United States of America in 10,000 years time? As
far as the government commission was concerned, the answer to that
question was obvious: USA forever! But the key problem of how to conduct
a conversation with the future turned out to be well nigh insoluble. The
commission looked for precedents in the most ancient symbols of
humankind. They studied Stonehenge and the pyramids; they studied the
history of the diffusion of Homers epics and the Bible. They had specialists
explain to them the life-cycle of documents. But at most these only went
back 2000 or 3000 years, never 10,000.
Anthropologists recommended using the symbol of the skull and crossbones. But then a historian remembered that, for alchemists, the skull and
bones stood for resurrection. So a psychologist conducted experiments with
3-year-olds to study their reactions. It turns out that if you stick a skull and
crossbones on a bottle, children see it and immediately say Poison in a
fearful voice. But if you put it on a poster on a wall, they scream Pirates!
And they want to go exploring.
Other scientists suggested plastering the disposal sites with plaques
made out of ceramic, metal and stone containing many different warnings
in a great variety of languages. But the verdict of the linguists was uniformly
the same: at best, the longest any of these languages would be understood
was 2000 years.
What is remarkable about this commission is not only its research
question, that is, how to communicate across 10,000 years, but the scientific
precision with which it answered it: it is not possible. This is exactly what
world risk society is all about. The speeding up of modernization has
produced a gulf between the world of quantifiable risk in which we think and
act, and the world of non-quantifiable insecurities that we are creating. Past
decisions about nuclear energy and present decisions about the use of gene
technology, human genetics, nanotechnology, etc. are unleashing unpredictable, uncontrollable and ultimately incommunicable consequences
that might ultimately endanger all life on earth (Adam, 1998, 2002).
Risk inherently contains the concept of control. Pre-modern dangers
were attributed to nature, gods and demons. Risk is a modern concept. It
presumes decision-making. As soon as we speak in terms of risk, we are
talking about calculating the incalculable, colonizing the future.
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in the areas of ecology, economy and power. On the contrary, global risks
are per se unequally distributed. They unfold in different ways in every
concrete formation, mediated by different historical backgrounds, cultural
and political patterns. In the so-called periphery, world risk society appears
not as an endogenous process, which can be fought by means of autonomous
national decision-making, but rather as an exogenous process that is
propelled by decisions made in other countries, especially in the so-called
centre. People feel like the helpless hostages of this process insofar as
corrections are virtually impossible at the national level. One area in which
the difference is especially marked is in the experience of global financial
crises, whereby entire regions on the periphery can be plunged into depressions that citizens of the centre do not even register as crises. Moreover,
ecological and terrorist-network threats also flourish with particular virulence under the weak states that define the periphery.
There is a dialectical relation between the unequal experience of being
victimized by global risks and the transborder nature of the problems. But
it is the transnational aspect, which makes cooperation indispensable to
their solution, that truly gives them their global nature. The collapse of
global financial markets or climatic change affect regions quite differently.
But that doesnt change the principle that everyone is affected, and everyone
can potentially be affected in a much worse manner. Thus, in a way, these
problems endow each country with a common global interest, which means
that, to a certain extent, we can already talk about the basis of a global
community of fate. Furthermore, it is also intellectually obvious that global
problems only have global solutions, and demand global cooperation. So in
that sense, we can say the principle of globality (Albrow, 1996; Robertson,
1992), which is a growing consciousness of global interconnections, is
gaining ground. But between the potential of global cooperation and its realization lie a host of risk conflicts.
Some of these conflicts arise precisely because of the uneven way in
which global risks are experienced. For example, global warming is
certainly something that encourages a perception of the earths inhabitants,
both of this and future generations, as a community of fate (Held et al.,
1999). But the path to its solution also creates conflicts, as when industrial
countries seek to protect the rainforest in developing countries, while at the
same time appropriating the lions share of the worlds energy resources for
themselves. And yet these conflicts still serve an integrative function,
because they make it increasingly clear that global solutions must be found,
and that these cannot be found through war, but only through negotiation
and contract. In the 1970s the slogan was: Make love, not war. What then
is the slogan at the beginning of the new century? It certainly sounds more
like Make law, not war (Mary Kaldor).
The quest for global solutions will in all probability lead to further
global institutions and regulations. And it will no doubt achieve its aims
through a host of conflicts. The long-term anticipations of unknown, transnational risks call transnational risk communities into existence. But in the
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recognition of their power. Bush has encouraged the terrorists to believe that
the United States really can be badly hurt by terrorist actions like these. So
there is a hidden mutual enforcement between Bushs empowerment and the
empowerment of the terrorists.
US intelligence agencies are increasingly concerned that future
attempts by terrorists to attack the United States may involve Asian or
African al-Qaida members, a tactic intended to elude the racial profiles
developed by US security personnel. Thus the internal law enforcement and
the external counter-threat of US intervention not only focus on Arab faces,
but possibly on Indonesian, Filipino, Malaysian or African faces. In order
to broaden terrorist enemy images, which, to a large extent, are a one-sided
construction of the powerful US state, expanded parameters are being developed so as to include networks and individuals who may be connected to
Asian and African terrorist organizations. This way, Washington constructs
the threat as immense. Bush insists that permanent mobilization of the
American nation is required, that the military budget be vastly increased,
that civil liberties be restricted and that critics be chided as unpatriotic.
So there is another difference: the pluralization of experts and expert
rationalities, which characterizes ecological and financial risks, is then
replaced by the gross simplification of enemy images, constructed by governments and intelligence agencies without and beyond public discourse and
democratic participation.
So there are huge differences between the external risks of ecological
conflicts, the internal risks of financial conflicts and the intentional terrorist threat. Another big difference is the speed of acknowledgement. Global
environmental and financial risks are still not truly recognized. But with the
horrific images of New York and Washington, terrorist groups instantly
established themselves as new global players competing with nations, the
economy and civil society in the eyes of the world. The terrorist threat, of
course, is reproduced by the global media.
To summarize the specific characteristics of terrorist threat: (bad)
intention replaces accident, active trust becomes active mistrust, the context
of individual risk is replaced by the context of systemic risks, private insurance is (partly) replaced by state insurance, the power of definition of
experts has been replaced by that of states and intelligence agencies; and
the pluralization of expert rationalities has turned into the simplification of
enemy images.1
Having outlined their differences, it should be no surprise that the
three kinds of global risk, that is ecological, financial and terrorist threat,
also interact. And terrorism again is the focal point. On the one hand, the
dangers from terrorism increase exponentially with technical progress.
Advances in financial and communication technology are what made global
terrorism possible in the first place. And the same innovations that have
individualized financial risks have also individualized war.
But the most horrifying connection is that all the risk conflicts that are
stored away as potential could now be intentionally unleashed. Every
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of the modern state the borders that divide domestic from international,
the police from the military, crime from war and war from peace have been
overthrown. It was precisely those distinctions that defined the nation state.
Without them, it is a zombie idea. It still looks alive, but it is dead.3
Foreign and domestic policy, national security and international
cooperation are now all interlocked. The only way to deal with global terror
is also the only way to deal with global warming, immigration, poison in the
food chain, financial risks and organized crime. In all these cases, national
security is transnational cooperation. Since September 11th, terrorist
sleepers have been identified in Hamburg, Germany, and many other
places. Thus, German domestic policy is now an important part of US
domestic and foreign policy. So are the domestic as well as foreign, security
and defence policies of France, Pakistan, Great Britain, Russia and so on.
In the aftermath of the terrorist attack, the state is back, and for the
old Hobbesian reason the provision of security. Around the world we see
governments becoming more powerful, and supranational institutions like
NATO becoming less powerful. But at the same time, the two most dominant
ideas about the state the idea of the national state, and the idea of the
neoliberal state have both lost their reality and their necessity. When
asked whether the $40 billion that the US government requested from
Congress for the war against terrorism didnt contradict the neoliberal creed
to which the Bush administration subscribes, its spokesman replied laconically: Security comes first.
Here is the third lesson: September 11th exposed neoliberalisms
shortcomings as a solution to the worlds conflicts. The terrorist attacks on
America were the Chernobyl of globalization. Just as the Russian disaster
undermined our faith in nuclear energy, so September 11th exposed the
false promise of neoliberalism.
The suicide bombers not only exposed the vulnerability of western
civilization but also gave a foretaste of the conflicts that globalization can
bring about. Suddenly, the seemingly irrefutable tenets of neoliberalism
that economics will supersede politics, that the role of the state will diminish
lose their force in a world of global risks.
The privatization of aviation security in the US provides just one
example, albeit a highly symbolic one. Americas vulnerability is indeed
very much related to its political philosophy. It was long suspected that the
US could be a possible target for terrorist attacks. But, unlike in Europe,
aviation security was privatized and entrusted to highly flexible part-time
workers who were paid even less than employees in fast-food restaurants.
It is Americas political philosophy and self-image that creates its
vulnerability. The horrible pictures of New York contain a message: a state
can neoliberalize itself to death. Surprisingly, this has been recognized by
the US itself: aviation has been transformed into a federal state service.
Neoliberalism has always been a fair-weather philosophy, one that
works only when there are no serious conflicts and crises. It asserts that
only globalized markets, freed from regulation and bureaucracy, can remedy
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the worlds ills unemployment, poverty, economic breakdown and the rest.
Today, the capitalist fundamentalists unswerving faith in the redeeming
power of the market has proved to be a dangerous illusion.
This demonstrates that, in times of crises, neoliberalism has no
solutions to offer. Fundamental truths that were pushed aside return to the
fore. Without taxation, there can be no state. Without a public sphere,
democracy and civil society, there can be no legitimacy. And without legitimacy, no security. From these premises, it follows that, without legitimate
forums for settling national and global conflicts, there will be no world
economy in any form whatsoever.
Neoliberalism insisted that economics should break free from national
models and instead impose transnational rules of business conduct. But, at
the same time, it assumed that governments would stick to national boundaries and the old way of doing things. Since September 11th, governments
have rediscovered the possibilities and power of international cooperation
for example, in maintaining internal security. Suddenly, the necessity of
statehood, the counter-principle of neoliberalism, is omnipresent. A
European arrest warrant that supersedes national sovereignty in judicial and
legal enforcement unthinkable until recently has suddenly become a
possibility. We may soon see a similar convergence towards shared rules
and frameworks in economics.
We need to combine economic integration with cosmopolitan politics.
Human dignity, cultural identity and otherness must be taken more seriously in the future (Beck, 2002a, 2002b). Since September 11th, the gulf
between the world of those who profit from globalization and the world of
those who feel threatened by it has been closed. Helping those who have
been excluded is no longer a humanitarian task. It is in the Wests own
interest: the key to its security. The West can no longer ignore the black
holes of collapsed states and situations of despair.
To draw the fourth lesson I pick up my statement again that no nation,
not even the most powerful, can ensure its national security by itself. World
risk society is forcing the nation-state to admit that it cannot live up to its
constitutional promise to protect its citizens most precious asset, their
security. The only solution to the problem of global terror but also to the
problems of financial risk, climate catastrophe and organized crime is
transnational cooperation. This leads to the paradoxical maxim that, in order
to pursue their national interest, countries need to denationalize and
transnationalize themselves. In other words, they need to surrender parts of
their autonomy in order to cope with national problems in a globalized
world. The zero-sum logic of mutual deterrence, which held true for both
nation-states and empires, is losing its coherence.
In this context, then, a new central distinction emerges between sovereignty and autonomy. The nation-state is built on equating the two. So from
the nation-state perspective, economic interdependence, cultural diversification and military, judicial and technological cooperation all lead to a loss
of autonomy and thus sovereignty. But if sovereignty is measured in terms
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National
Cosmopolitan
perspective
perspective
Political
science
Methodological
nationalism
The cosmopolitan
society and its
enemies: what do a
cosmopolitan
society, state and
regime mean?
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