What
better way to draw 2014 to a close than an international news story that positively
bristles with hypocrisy and propagandising on an incendiary scale? I refer to the decision taken by Sony
Pictures to withdraw the distribution of a new comedy film ‘The Interview’
(starring Seth Rogan and James Franco) in the wake of a cyberattack by forces
attributed by the FBI to come from North Korea, that hacked into Hollywood
emails and threatened terrorist action were the film to be released.
In
the wake of this story, the tone has been almost unilaterally apoplectic on the
part of the US, with President Obama himself castigating Sony for their
spineless backing-down under the threats from terrorists, and the likes of George
Clooney extemporising over the very serious threat to freedom of speech that
such a terrible precedent has enshrined.
Far
from being a dire and doom-laden constitutional threat, with just a modicum of
deeper investigation and contextualising, it is possible to expose the
hysterical chest-beating on the part of America’s liberal elite to be little
more than arrogant short-sightedness, and a wilful ignorance of America’s
culpability when it comes to North Korea’s status in the world.
Shortly
after the Sony decision to withdraw their support for ‘The Interview’ (a film
in which two journalists are sent by the CIA to assassinate Kim-Jong Un), Obama
trotted out his trademark rhetoric about how “we can’t have a society in which
some dictator someplace can start imposing censorship here in the United States”. He also offered vague yet suitably ominous
noises about how “they caused a lot of damage and we will respond
proportionately and in a place and time we choose”.
For America to pour scorn on North Korea for its attempts to impose censorship on an American film, is it not the most striking hypocrisy that this story emerged barely a week after the US released a heavily censored report damning the CIA for its collusion with the US military-industrial complex in instigating depraved and illegal acts of torture, rendition and incarceration without due process? The report had taken years to emerge, with Obama trying to suppress its release on woolly grounds of ‘national security’, and in the end only around 400 pages surfaced out of approximately 6000.
Not
only this, but the climate change talks in Lima were concluded with
little-to-no positive action having been agreed, negligible (and in some
respects, backwards) steps having been made, and a resounding shrug from the
international news media. Why were these
far more important developments largely swept aside in favour of ramping up the
hyperbole around ‘The Interview’ story?
Quite simple; because it concerned Hollywood – a key constituency
amongst America’s elite – and allowed America to play the victim slighted by ‘some
dictator someplace’.
It
is interesting to note that only a couple of days earlier, in response to the
UN Security Council getting set to issue a fresh batch of sanctions targeting North
Korea’s ‘human rights abuses’, their UN ambassador Ja Song-Nam had formerly
objected to such an inclusion and urged the Council to instead focus on the ‘CIA
torture crimes committed by the US, which have been conducted worldwide in the most
brutal medieval forms, [and] are the gravest human rights violations in the
world.’ America, who utilised simulated
drowning and improvised enemas amongst their many procedures, hold the ‘power
of veto’ which means that such discussion is most unlikely to materialise.
Freedom of speech and Satire
It is also important to view this story in terms of its implications for freedom of speech and satire as a credible art form. Those in the film industry have already raised grave concerns about what Sony’s precedent means for future film projects that may now struggle for studio backing. (The development of a Hollywood thriller ‘Pyongyang’ has indeed been scrapped in recent days.)
If you take satire, which is a very healthy arbiter in a functioning society, it can be said to truly be effective only if the intended ‘butt of the joke’ holds the higher position. Jokes at the expense of weaker parties are more often than not distasteful and offensive, and seldom make for good satirical comedy. If you take ‘Team America’, the reason the film is such a successful satire is because the overriding butt of the joke is America’s hubristic hegemonic ambitions as a ‘world police force’, depicted as a blundering military complex that smashes its way around the world with scant concern for anyone else.
I
cannot comment on the intended satirical target in the case of ‘The Interview’,
but if the nature of the film is the implied or explicit ridiculing of North
Korea as a country, then such a threatening riposte must surely have been
anticipated. And if the film is a more sensitive
and astute stab at satire, aimed at poking fun at America, then still the
studio should have anticipated an inflammatory response and have formulated a
plan to counteract it.
Indeed, back in
early-July North Korea had lodged a formal protest at the UN against the mooted
release of the film, stating that it ‘constitutes the most undisguised
sponsoring of terrorism as well as a war action’. From what can be deduced, this legitimate
concern was laughed of and/or ignored, yet the fact of it being made means that
Sony should been well aware of the adverse reaction that was to come.
Free
speech and the ability to ridicule power figures are absolutely integral tenets
of the creative industries, and yet sensitivities must be appreciated and
accounted for. For instance, Salman
Rushdie’s right to release ‘The Satanic Verses’ must rightly be defended, and
yet when it involves highly provocative material likely to inflame religious or
cultural sensitivities, there is a duty to fully expect a reaction, however
unjustified or overblown it may be.
Many
in recent days have drawn the comparison with Charlie Chaplin’s classic satire
on Nazi Germany ‘The Great Dictator’.
And yet, the comparison and legacy of this film is not quite so
straight-forward.
It is worth noting
that during the production of the film, the British government stated their
intention to censor its release, since at the time they were still avidly
appeasing Hitler’s regime. By the time
of the film’s release war had been declared and the film was gleefully promoted
as propaganda against the tyrannical despot that the Allies were mobilising
against. After the war had ended and the
full horrors of the Holocaust became known, Chaplin himself said that had he
known of such atrocities, he would never have made the film. Similarly, with Monty Python’s ‘Life of Brian’,
a highly controversial film that was released to great opposition from those it
purported to satirise; in this case the hierarchical forms of organised
religion, a powerful and influential establishment body, and therefore a legitimate
target.
America's legacy in North Korea
I
would contend that given the 20th-century’s history of American
atrocities and continued provocation towards North Korea, the country (i.e. its
innocent civilians), should be handled with sensitivity and empathy, rather
than treated as a legitimate target for ridicule and demonization. Because when you examine America’s record in
North Korea with some objectivity, you begin to understand why a film like ‘The
Interview’ might justifiably have been seen as profoundly insulting.
The
Korean War of the early-1950s was intended by the US to ‘roll back Communism’
in the region, just as they would go on to attempt in South-east Asia and
throughout the Cold War. As the Korean
War unfolded, the US officially adopted the policy of ‘destruction’ of North Korea,
with atrocities that are as staggering as they are now largely forgotten. Despite adopting policies of tacit support
for despotic tyrants throughout the world, the US adopted an aggressive stance
towards North Korea because it had overthrown capitalist rule and adopted a
warped Stalinist socialism based on an extreme ‘personality cult’ in the form
of their Dear Leader.
After
WWII, the US-backed South Korean forces embarked on a brutal programme of
communist repression, with several hundred-thousand suspects summarily tortured
and executed whilst America stood by.
But this was only the beginning of the horrors meted out on the country
by the US military, that set about carpet-bombing virtually every North Korean
city under the aegis of ‘freedom’ and ‘democracy’. The capital Pyongyang was almost completely
levelled by US bombing. By dropping tons
of napalm, executing thousands of refugees (in massacres like No Gun Ri), and
deliberately targeting civilian hubs, the US exterminated one-fifth of the
entire North Korean population (approximately 1.5 million people), something
the Pentagon went about suppressing and denying for decades thereafter.
Not
only this, but when there were no targets left for the US Air Force in their ‘object
lesson in air power to Communists worldwide’, they were sent to destroy irrigation
dams that wiped out 75% of the controlled rice production supply of North
Korea; a heinous crime that consigned many more to years of poverty,
malnutrition and starvation.
But
even these events pale in comparison when you consider the plans of US
Commander General McArthur who oversaw the war.
In 1950, he made a formal request to President Truman for 38 atomic
bombs which he proposed should be employed to render North Korea completely
uninhabitable, a wasteland of contamination that would emphasise American
strength and dominance to the Soviet Union and communism in general. In light of this planned genocide, suddenly
the indignant American response to ‘The Interview’ looks decidedly vulgar.
After
the 1953 armistice, however, the tangible American threat did not
dissipate. Thousands of US troops have
been stationed in South Korea ever since, and during the Nixon administration
nuclear warheads were regularly primed on a '15-minute warning’ aimed straight
at North Korea as an explicit threat of action.
Indeed, over recent decades North Korea has made several credible
attempts to integrate with the international community; attempts that have been
vetoed and spoiled by the US who have preferred to maintain a policy of
provocation and propaganda.
For
instance, in 1993 Israel was poised to strike a deal with North Korea to end
missile exports to the Middle East in return for diplomatic recognition. Lo and behold, America leaned heavily on
Israel to call off the deal and dutifully they adhered to their paymasters’
demands. In retaliation, North Korea carried
out its first test of a medium-range missile.
Post-9/11,
President Bush began touting his war against the ‘axis of evil’, in which he
had firmly placed North Korea. Due to
the fact that North Korea offered little in the way of natural resources, Iraq
was the nation prioritised for invasion.
As Noam Chomsky wrote about the imminent 2003 invasion - ‘right now,
Washington is teaching the world a very ugly and dangerous lesson: if you want
to defend yourself from us, you had better mimic North Korea and pose a
credible military threat. Otherwise we
will demolish you.’
Subsequent efforts
at installing non-aggression pacts and removing economic sanctions on the part
of America were all routinely scuppered by the Bush administration, whilst (as
it did in China and Russia) provoking North Korea into renewed development of
their nuclear arsenal as a defensive measure against facing Iraq-style
invasion.
Still
this response persists. Upon his accession
to power, Kim-Jong Un called for an end to confrontation between the North and
South, inspiring hopes that frosty relations between the two nations may be
beginning to thaw. Yet in response to
the launch of a satellite into orbit earlier that year, the UN Security Council
issued more sanctions about North Korea, to which the predictably riled
response was to threaten further missile tests and attacks on America. All of this makes North Korea an increasingly
difficult dilemma for America, who cannot abide the prospect of them forging
closer ties with the rest of Asia and in the process becoming an increasingly powerful
player in the global economy over which the US fear they will have little
influence.
I
am making no attempts to apologise for the regime in North Korea, which is
undeniably a tyrannical force that seeks to brainwash civilians and suppress
their rights as citizens. And yet,
reports document slowly improving conditions in the country, and a gradual
awareness on the part of citizens of how to influence and shape their own lives. I
n 2013, The Economist wrote of civilians increasingly
relying on word-of-mouth and imported Western media, as well as a burgeoning ‘private
market’ in which goods proliferate without regulation, helping to satiate
growing materialism amongst the populace.
There are reports of a growing ‘nouveau riche’ who openly flaunt their
wealth and who may prove to be a threat to the stability of the status quo, as
inequalities become evermore visible.
With
all of this in mind, it would seem that the most respectful attitude that America
(and the West in general) could adopt when it comes to North Korea is to leave
it alone. In time, the civilian
population will grow strong and engaged enough to call for significant regime
change, in the guise of revolution or gradual modernisation away from the
deranged contortion of socialism that holds sway there. All America can do is try and encourage the
leaders in from the cold, attempt a benign form of engagement and cooperation,
acknowledging the dreadful wrongs inflicted on them in the past, and offering
to help expand their country in positive ways, rather than inciting the
build-up of arms defences.
Taking
all this into consideration, suddenly it is difficult to have much sympathy
with those ‘victims of censorship’ in their gilded towers nestled in the
Hollywood Hills. Because of course, free
speech and satire are vitally important; but, as with any joke, there is a duty
of sensitivity and compassion that must be exercised on the part of those
telling the joke towards their intended target.
When it comes to American aggression, continual ridicule, the rhetoric
of Obama and the ominous threats of a ‘response’, quite reasonably on the part
of North Korea, that joke isn’t funny anymore.
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