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Comunidad / Ciudadanos
9 de Marzo de 2005
Plenario: Democracia y Terrorismo
“Es difícil proteger a las sociedades democráticas del terrorismo actual porque es difícil de comprender; resulta muy complicado asignarle una dimensión concreta, dada la repentina extensión de su campo de acción. Pero sigue siendo por definición una herramienta para imponer una determinada ideología política o religiosa”. Con esta reflexión abrió Madeleine Albright, ex secretaria de Estado norteamericana, la sesión plenaria sobre Democracia y Terrorismo.Robert L. Hutchings, antiguo presidente del Consejo Nacional de Inteligencia estadounidense, añadió a la definición de Albright el hecho de que los actuales terroristas “parecen haber sufrido una mutación respecto a los de épocas anteriores”. Hutchings también insistió en que el camino de la contienda armada tomada por la Administración Bush, con la guerra de Irak como referente, sólo puede ser efectivo si va acompañado de una batalla por la equidad y la educación en los países exportadores de terrorismo, en la estela de lo que se conoce como “poder blando”. Por su parte, Albright insistió en rechazar los métodos del actual gobierno norteamericano, sentenciando que “la guerra de Irak sólo ha generado más terrorismo”. “Si se empieza una guerra”, señaló la ex ministra, “hay que llevarla hasta la victoria final, lo cual es casi imposible y puede generar efectos desastrosos como Guantánamo y Abu Garib”.
Otro de los ponentes, el eurodiputado verde Daniel Cohn-Bendit, quiso centrar el debate en el contexto de las sociedades democráticas y expresó su inquietud ante la paradoja de que “la obligación de los políticos es proteger al ciudadano, pero, a la vez, ello puede suponer una erosión de las libertades individuales”.
Seguidamente la mesa fue contestada desde el público por Amre Moussa, secretario general de la Liga de Estados Árabes, que matizó lo que en su opinión era una “actuación de doble rasero” al considerar que el choque de civilizaciones no se debía dar necesariamente entre cristianismo, o judaísmo, e islam: “la lucha de civilizaciones se da en cada cultura”, opinó; “en la suya entre los neocon y los progresistas y en la nuestra (islam) con los integristas, y le pedimos a occidente que nos ayude a vencer nuestra lucha, no que favorezca a nuestros radicales”. Esta última petición fue, en opinión de Madeleine Albright, “una alusión velada al conflicto palestino-israelí”.
Por su parte, el filósofo español y activista contra el terrorismo de ETA Fernando Savater, dijo que él no creía en el concepto de choque de civilizaciones, puesto que concebía “una única en la que coexisten diferentes culturas con una idea distinta de cómo administrar dicha civilización”. Savater también explicó que tragedias como el 11-S “han servido para que el mundo comprenda por fin el drama de los españoles que viven bajo el terror de ETA”. Cohn-Bendit contestó a Moussa pidiéndole al mundo árabe que se encargara de frenar a sus radicales “igual que yo, blanco y occidental de izquierdas, debo enfrentarme a los separatistas violentos vascos de izquierdas”.
El dato económico lo aportó Lars Thunell, director ejecutivo de la empresa sueca SEB. Thunell aseguró que los atentados del 11-S le han costado hasta la fecha a la economía americana 150.000 millones de dólares, tanto en pérdidas materiales como en recesión económica.
El plenario se cerró con un emotivo discurso del alcalde de Madrid, Alberto Ruiz Gallardón, quien puso como ejemplo de recuperación emocional al pueblo madrileño, que optó por seguir adelante sin rencores.
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Archivo de Audio (original, inglés) [92 min., 21 MB, MP3]
Transcripción completa / Full Transcript (English, Spanish)
Moderator: Jonathan Dimbleby
Presenter
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), United Kingdom
Ladies and Gentleman, good afternoon, good evening. This plenary session is, as you know, about Terrorism and Democracy. Given the speed with which you managed to get here for a session that started at six o'clock, perhaps we ought to have the relationship discussed between Democracy and Anarchy — but that's by the bye. I work in radio, television, politics and the rest, I write books occasionally and make films when I can about the kind of issues that we're discussing. I want briefly to introduce my panel and then suggest to you some of the headlines on our agenda that we're going to discuss between now and around 7.30. You will know most of them, if not all:
Madeleine Albright was at the National Security Council, she was the US representative at the United Nations, from 1997 to 2001 she was the US Secretary of State — the first, although as we now know not the last, woman to hold this high office. On her watch there were terrorist attacks against United States targets, especially, you'll remember, in 1998 in East Africa and in 2000 against the USS Cole.
Daniel Cohn-Bendit, who is one of the leaders of the almost successful but actually unsuccessful so-called May Revolution in Paris in 1968. He was expelled from France and ended up in Germany, where he led the revolutionary struggle with another young German, now the Foreign Minister, Joschka Fischer. He joined then the Green Party and is now the Co-President of the Green Party and the Free European Alliance in the European Parliament.
Robert Hutchings, from February 2003 until January 2005 was Chairman of the American National Intelligence Council (NIC) and he was therefore at the heart of the intelligence community during the Iraq conflict and, indeed, its aftermath. He's now safely back in the groves of academe at Princeton University.
Fernando Savater chairs the Philosophy Department at the University Complutense in Madrid. He's the author of forty-five books and plays and I guess he's probably lost count —there are probably more than that. He's a columnist. As a native of the Basque Country, he's an outspoken critic of ETA. He's indeed the winner of the Sakharov Prize for Human Rights from the European Parliament in 2001 and he is — it is said — high on ETA's target list.
Lars Thunell is President and CEO of the CEB bank in Stockholm, which is Sweden's largest. With a PhD on the Impact of Instability on Global Business, political risk in the international marketplace is his speciality.
Now we've got two broad aspects to discuss here: the way in which the threat from terrorism, especially since 9/11, has challenged or changed the way in which democracy is practised, both internally and externally; and the extent to which democracy and/or democratic values offer a long-term strategy against terrorism. Of course, this unpacks into a host of related questions, many of which have been raised by some five thousand contributors to the summit website and the further one thousand contributors to the web magazine at opendemocracy.net. And I'll just give you one or two of them, because they frame the backdrop to what we're talking about:
ÔDoes it make sense to wage a war on terror? Has it really paid off so far?' — that's from Spain. From India: ÔThe rise in Islamic terrorism has nothing to do with Western values or democracy; it's a response to the United States' support for Israel and its oppressive treatment of the Palestinians'. From Malta: ÔSince 9/11 and the war on terror, we've seen two international wars; does the panel think these wars have made us more secure or have they increased our vulnerability to terrorism by creating yet more resentment against the West?' And from Portugal: ÔDoes the panel believe we can simply transfer our ideas of democracy to countries which are totally different in tradition and culture?' And from Germany: ÔEurope has not been successful at integrating immigrants and in particular Muslim communities who live in ghettos and suburbs who are not being given equal economic and social opportunities; would the panel recommend any change in policy'. And just two more: ÔIs terrorism really the most important issue we're confronted with today, or shouldn't we care rather more about global warming, poverty and hunger, which are threatening to kill far more people than have ever been killed by terrorist acts all taken together?'
And one more, from America: ÔIn almost every Western country, civil liberties have been restricted in the name of fighting terrorism; does the panel believe this is helping our effort to curb terrorism or is it undermining our democratic way of life and alienating those who are affected?' So how should and do democracies deal with the issue, the threat, both at home and abroad? I've sort of put this into broad topical headings for our use and rather than having a formulaic set of statements from the panel and then coming to the audience, in the spirit of democratic accountability and a democratic encounter, I'm going to invite one or two or three to address some of the topics and then come to you in the audience with your response, if you would be kind enough, to what they have said, rather than moving forward into future areas for discussion.
Just on a show of hands, who, if I asked you, would like to stand up and hold the floor for five or ten minutes now if I give you a hand? Would you be kind enough to put your hands up? Come on — I don't believe it. You've all got egos as large as your professions! Yes, I can see some coming up. Good. Now that said, I would be grateful if you would be brief with any contribution you make. There is a microphone; when it comes round just say your name and your organisation if you have one and you wish to. Make your contribution brief, in the form of a direct statement or question to any member of the panel, and we'll get as much dialogue to and fro as we can in the time. We're going to start with the scale and character of the threat of terrorism. Briefly, before we go on to look at the impact and wisdom of the approach that is currently adopted at least in counterterrorism and military means. Robert Hutchings, would you kick off for us? The scale of the threat.
Robert Hutchings
I think some things can be said with some confidence, speaking of the terrorist threat posed by organisations associated with Islamic extremist groups. Since 9/11, the al-Qaeda organisation has mutated into a much more diffuse, eclectic, dispersed set of actors. Official spokesmen in the United States like to point to the fact that some two-thirds of the known al-Qaeda top leadership has been either killed or put in custody. So we can say some things about the nature of this challenge having evolved quite a bit since 9/11. I think the template may be wrong and the war metaphor may have caused at least some in my country to think about this challenge in a too-narrow way. If you think of the challenge as one of a global jihad — to which I regret to say the Iraq occupation has probably contributed — of which terrorism is a part but not the totality, you think about this challenge in a somewhat broader way than simply a military one.
Moderator
Madeleine Albright, your thought of the scale or character of the challenge as you read it, and with your experience, of course.
Madeleine Albright
Well, I think that we do not fully understand either the scale or character of it and a great deal goes to the problem that we aren't even able to come up with a common definition. It is clearly a tool of those who have massive disagreements with whatever policy is being carried out and the definition is normally one where innocent people are killed in order to prove a political point. I was recently at an economic conference in Jedda, where I tried to define various kinds of terrorism, obviously including the suicide bombers, what happened at our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, hitting refugee camps as terrorism, and a whole series that was much wider, I think, than the normally accepted definition of terrorism. I actually think that we are not dealing with it particularly well because we can't define it and because we are attributing terrorist acts sometimes where they don't exist and missing those where they are. And for me the most complicated problem is what Bob said, this mutation of various groups, where in fact — there are various definitions — it's a little bit like if you hit mercury, it actually spreads into a lot of different places. I'm an American, but I'm not here to defend the Administration. It's difficult always in a foreign setting, but I do think that the ways we're dealing with terrorists are, actually, maybe creating more of them.
Moderator
Does the very controversial term Ôwar on terror' have any content for you beyond that of a slogan, if you can look at that in as non-partisan a way as possible, given what you've just said?
Madeleine Albright
I agree also. I don't think it's a useful term, because it is a term that demands total victory, that often you think will have a real termination, and I think that is not where we're going and I think that it kind of was seen as a motivating factor to get everybody energised, but it's not a useful term. But just one point, if I could make it now, is that I don't think it is possible, even in the setting of Madrid, to explain how psychologically damaging or basically traumatising to the American people 9/11 was. And it has affected them in a way that makes people accept terminology like Ôwar on terrorism' or a very broad definition or an exclusion of people that we like from being part of it.
Daniel Cohn-Bendit
I would say that it's definitely right that it is an immense challenge, because it's a threat, because it kills people and, of course, politicians have to organise life so people are not killed. I mean, this is our task. We can't let people say they have the right to kill in Madrid or New York or wherever it is. And at the second level of challenges, this terror challenges the strength of our democratic identity. And there the war on terror is dangerous, because with the war on terror you put entre parenthè


