[comp.ai] an important linguistic analysis of the MidEast situation

walker@FLASH.BELLCORE.COM (Don Walker) (01/10/91)

BBoards or digests that cannot include the entire message may
find it useful to include the introductory statement by Lakoff
and then the following notice:

The file can be gotten by sending a message to listserv@uniwa.uwa.oz.au
containing as its first and only line the following message:

help lakoff


  Date: Sun, 30 Dec 90 20:44:20 -0800
  From: lakoff@cogsci.berkeley.edu (George Lakoff)
  Message-Id: <9012310444.AA18590@cogsci.berkeley.edu>
  To: LINGUIST@UNIWA.UWA.OZ.AU
  Status: RO

  December 30, 1990

  To Friends and Colleagues on the Net:

  From George Lakoff,
  Professor of Linguistics,
  University of California at Berkeley
  (lakoff@cogsci.berkeley.edu)


  January 15 is getting very close. As things now stand, President
  Bush seems to have convinced most of the country that war in the
  gulf is morally justified, and that it makes sense to think of
  ``winning'' such a war.

  I have just completed a study of the way the war has been justified.
  I have found that the justification is based very largely on a
  metaphorical system of thought in general use for understanding
  foreign policy.  I have analyzed the system, checked it to see
  what the metaphors hide, and have checked to the best of my
  ability to see whether the metaphors fit the situation in the
  gulf, even if one accepts them.  So far as I can see, the
  justification for war, point by point, is anything but clear.

  The paper I have written is relatively short -- 7,000 words.
  Yet it is far too long for the op-ed pages, and January 15 is
  too close for journal or magazine publication.  The only alternative
  I have for getting these ideas out is via the various computer
  networks.

  While there is still time, it is vital that debate over the
  justification for war be seriously revived.  I am therefore asking
  your help.  Please look over the enclosed paper.  If you find it
  of value, please send it on to members of your newsgroup, to
  friends, and to other newsgroups.  Feel free to distribute it to
  anyone interested.

  More importantly, if you feel strongly about this issue, start
  talking and writing about it yourself.

  Computer networks have never before played an important role in
  a matter of vital public importance. The time has come.  The
  media have failed to question what should be questioned.  It is
  up to us to do so. There are a lot of us connected by these
  networks, and together we have enormous influence.  Just imagine
  the media value of a major computerized debate over the impending
  war!

  We have a chance to participate in the greatest experiment ever
  conducted in vital, widespread, instantaneous democratic
  communication.  Tens of thousands of lives are at stake.  During
  the next two weeks there is nothing more important that we can
  send over these networks than a fully open and informed exchange
  of views about the war.

  Here is the first contribution. Pass it on!

  George Lakoff


  [This paper is formatted for unix. It can be printed
  out in troff using -ms macros.]

  .nr PO 1.37i
  .nr LL 5.5i
  .nr PS 12
  .nr VS 14
  .nr HM 1.5i
  .nr FM 1.5i
  .LP
  .DS C
  Metaphor and War

  The Metaphor System Used to Justify War in the Gulf

  George Lakoff
  Linguistics Department
  University of California at Berkeley
  (lakoff@cogsci.berkeley.edu)
  .DE 

  .PP
  Metaphors can kill.  The discourse over whether we should go to
  war in the gulf is a panorama of metaphor.  Secretary of State
  Baker sees Saddam as ``sitting on our economic lifeline.''
  President Bush sees him as having a ``stranglehold'' on our
  economy.  General Schwartzkopf characterizes the occupation of
  Kuwait as a ``rape'' that is ongoing. The President says that
  the US is in the gulf to ``protect freedom, protect our future,
  and protect the innocent'', and that we must ``push Saddam Hussein
  back.'' Saddam is seen as Hitler.  It is vital, literally vital,
  to understand just what role metaphorical thought is playing in
  bringing us to the brink of war.
  .PP
  Metaphorical thought, in itself, is neither good nor bad; it is
  simply commonplace and inescapable. Abstractions and enormously
  complex situations are routinely understood via metaphor.  Indeed,
  there is an extensive, and mostly unconscious, system of metaphor
  that we use automatically and unreflectively to understand
  complexities and abstractions.  Part of this system is devoted
  to understanding international relations and war. We now know
  enough about this system to have an idea of how it functions.
  .PP
  The metaphorical understanding of a situation functions in two
  parts.  First, there is a widespread, relatively fixed set of
  metaphors that structure how we think.  For example, a decision
  to go to war might be seen as a form of cost-benefit analysis,
  where war is justified when the costs of going to war are less
  than the costs of not going to war. Second, there is a set of
  metaphorical definitions that that allow one to apply such a
  metaphor to a particular situation.  In this case, there must be
  a definition of ``cost'', including a means of comparing relative
  ``costs''.  The use of a metaphor with a set of definitions
  becomes pernicious when it hides realities in a harmful way.
  .PP
  It is important to distinguish what is metaphorical from what is
  not.  Pain, dismemberment, death, starvation, and the death and
  injury of loved ones are not metaphorical.  They are real and in
  a war, they could afflict tens, perhaps hundreds of thousands,
  of real human beings, whether Iraqi, Kuwaiti, or American.

  .ce
  War as Politics; Politics as Business

  .PP
  Military and international relations strategists do use a
  cost-benefit analysis metaphor. It comes about through a metaphor
  that is taken as definitional by most strategic thinkers in the
  area of international politics.
  .QP
  Clausewitz's Metaphor: \s-2WAR IS POLITICS PURSUED BY OTHER
  MEANS\s0.
  .LP
  Karl von Clausewitz was a Prussian general who perceived war in
  terms of political cost-benefit analysis.  Each nation-state has
  political objectives, and war may best serve those objectives.
  The political ``gains'' are to to be weighed against acceptable
  ``costs.'' When the costs of war exceed the political gains, the
  war should cease.
  .PP
  There is another metaphor implicit here:
  .QP
  \s-2POLITICS IS BUSINESS\s0
  .LP
  where efficient political management is seen as akin to efficient
  business management. As in a well-run business, a well-run
  government should keep a careful tally of costs and gains.  This
  metaphor for characterizing politics, together with Clausewitz's
  metaphor, makes war a matter of cost-benefit analysis: defining
  beneficial ``objectives'', tallying the ``costs'', and deciding
  whether achieving the objectives is ``worth'' the costs.
  .PP
  The New York Times, on November 12, 1990, ran a front-page story
  announcing that ``a national debate has begun as to whether the
  United States should go to war in the Persian Gulf.'' The Times
  described the debate as defined by what I have called Clausewitz's
  metaphor (though it described the metaphor as literal), and then
  raised the question, ``What then is the nation's political object
  in the gulf and what level of sacrifice is it worth?'' The
  ``debate'' was not over whether Clausewitz's metaphor was
  appropriate, but only over how various analysts calculated the
  relative gains and losses. The same has been true of the hearings
  of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, where Clausewitz's
  metaphor provides the framework within which most discussion has
  taken place.
  .PP
  The broad acceptance of Clausewitz's metaphor raises vital
  questions:  What, exactly, makes it a metaphor rather than a
  literal truth? Why does it seem so natural to foreign policy
  experts? How does it fit into the overall metaphor system for
  understanding foreign relations and war? And, most importantly,
  what realities does it hide?
  .PP
  To answer these questions, let us turn to the system of metaphorical
  thought most commonly used by the general public in comprehending
  international politics.
  .PP
  What follows is a two-part discussion of the role of metaphorical
  reasoning about the gulf crisis. The first part lays out the
  central metaphor systems used in reasoning about the crisis:
  both the system used by foreign policy experts and the system
  used by the public at large. The second part discusses how the
  system has been applied to the crisis in the gulf.

  .ce
  Part 1: The Systems

  .ce
  The State-as-Person System

  .QP
  A state is conceptualized as a person, engaging in social relations
  within a world community. Its land-mass is its home.  It lives
  in a neighborhood, and has neighbors, friends and enemies.  States
  are seen as having inherent dispositions: they can be peaceful
  or aggressive, responsible or irresponsible, industrious or lazy.

  Well-being is wealth. The general well-being of a state is
  understood in economic terms: its economic health.  A serious
  threat to economic health can thus be seen as a death threat.
  To the extent that a nation's economy depends on foreign oil,
  that oil supply becomes a `lifeline' (reinforced by the image of
  an oil pipeline).

  Strength for a state is military strength.

  Maturity for the person-state is industrialization.  Unindustrialized
  nations are `underdeveloped', with industrialization as a natural
  state to be reached.  Third-world nations are thus immature
  children, to be taught how to develop properly or disciplined if
  they get out of line.  Nations that fail to industrialize at a
  rate considered normal are seen as akin to retarded children and
  judged as ``backward'' nations.

  Rationality is the maximization of self-interest.

  .LP
  There is an implicit logic to the use of these metaphors:
  .PP
  Since it is in the interest of every person to be as strong and
  healthy as possible, a rational state seeks to maximize wealth
  and military might.
  .PP
  Violence can further self-interest. It can be stopped in three
  ways: Either a balance of power, so that no one in a neighborhood
  is strong enough to threaten anyone else.  Or the use of collective
  persuasion by the community to make violence counter to self-interest.
  Or a cop strong enough to deter violence or punish it.  The cop
  should act morally, in the community's interest, and with the
  sanction of the community as a whole.
  .PP
  Morality is a matter of accounting, of keeping the moral books
  balanced. A wrongdoer incurs a debt, and he must be made to pay.
  The moral books can be balanced by a return to the situation
  prior to the wrongdoing, by giving back what has been taken, by
  recompense, or by punishment.  Justice is the balancing of the
  moral books.
  .PP
  War in this metaphor is a fight between two people, a form of
  hand-to-hand combat.  Thus, the US might seek to ``push Iraq back
  out of Kuwait'' or ``deal the enemy a heavy blow,'' or ``deliver
  a knockout punch.'' A just war is thus a form of combat for the
  purpose of settling moral accounts.
  .PP
  The most common discourse form in the West where there is combat
  to settle moral accounts is the classic fairy tale.  When people
  are replaced by states in such a fairy tale, what results is a
  scenario for a just war.

  .ce
  The Fairy Tale of the Just War

  .LP
  Cast of characters: A villain, a victim, and a hero.  The victim
  and the hero may be the same person.
  .LP
  The scenario: A crime is committed by the villain against an
  innocent victim (typically an assault, theft, or kidnapping).
  The offense occurs due to an imbalance of power and creates a
  moral imbalance.  The hero either gathers helpers or decides to
  go it alone.  The hero makes sacrifices; he undergoes difficulties,
  typically making an arduous heroic journey, sometimes across the
  sea to a treacherous terrain. The villain is inherently evil,
  perhaps even a monster, and thus reasoning with him is out of
  the question.  The hero is left with no choice but to engage the
  villain in battle. The hero defeats the villain and rescues the
  victim. The moral balance is restored.  Victory is achieved. The
  hero, who always acts honorably, has proved his manhood and
  achieved glory.  The sacrifice was worthwhile.  The hero receives
  acclaim, along with the gratitude of the victim and the community.

  .PP
  The fairy tale has an asymmetry built into it. The hero is moral
  and courageous, while the villain is amoral and vicious. The hero
  is rational, but though the villain may be cunning and calculating,
  he cannot be reasoned with. Heroes thus cannot negotiate with
  villains; they must defeat them. The enemy-as-demon metaphor
  arises as a consequence of the fact that we understand what a
  just war is in terms of this fairy tale.
  .PP
  The most natural way to justify a war on moral grounds is to fit
  this fairy tale structure to a given situation. This is done by
  metaphorical definition, that is, by answering the questions:
  Who is the victim? Who is the villain? Who is the hero? What is
  the crime? What counts as victory? Each set of answers provides
  a different filled-out scenario.
  .PP
  As the gulf crisis developed, President Bush tried to justify
  going to war by the use of such a scenario.  At first, he couldn't
  get his story straight.  What happened was that he was using two
  different sets of metaphorical definitions, which resulted in
  two different scenarios:
  .LP
  The Rescue Scenario: Iraq is villain, the US is hero, Kuwait is
  victim, the crime is kidnap and rape.
  .LP
  The Self-Defense Scenario: Iraq is villain, the US is hero, the
  US and other industrialized nations are victims, the crime is a
  death threat, that is, a threat to economic health.
  .LP
  The American people could not accept the second scenario, since
  it amounted to trading lives for oil.  The administration has
  settled on the first, and that seems to have been accepted by
  the public, the media, and Congress as providing moral justification
  for going to war.

  .ce
  The Ruler-for-State Metonymy

  .PP
  There is a metonymy that goes hand-in-hand with the State-as-Person
  metaphor:

  .ce
  \s-2THE RULER STANDS FOR THE STATE\s0

  Thus, we can refer to Iraq by referring to Saddam Hussein, and
  so have a single person, not just an amorphous state, to play
  the villain in the just war scenario. It is this metonymy that
  is invoked when the President says ``We have to get Saddam out
  of Kuwait.''
  .PP
  Incidentally, the metonymy only applies to those leaders perceived
  as rulers. Thus, it would be strange for us, but not for the
  Iraqis, to describe an American invasion of Kuwait by saying,
  ``George Bush marched into Kuwait.''

  .ce
  The Experts' Metaphors

  .PP
  Experts in international relations have an additional system of
  metaphors that are taken as defining a ``rational'' approach.
  The principal ones are the Rational Actor metaphor and Clausewitz's
  metaphor, which are commonly taught as truths in courses on
  international relations.  We are now in a position to show
  precisely what is metaphorical about Clausewitz's metaphor. To
  do so, we need to look at a system of metaphors that is presupposed
  by Clausewitz's metaphor.  We will begin with an everyday system
  of metaphors for understanding causation:

  .ce
  The Causal Commerce System

  .PP
  The Causal Commerce system is a way to comprehend actions intended
  to achieve positive effects, but which may also have negative
  effects.  The system is composed of three metaphors:

  .PP
  The Causal Commerce system is a way to comprehend actions intended
  to achieve positive effects, but which may also have negative
  effects.  The system is composed of three metaphors:
  .PP
  The Causal Commerce system is a way to comprehend actions intended
  to achieve positive effects, but which may also have negative
  effects.  The system is composed of three metaphors:
  .QP
  Causal Transfer: An effect is an object transferred from a cause
  to an affected party.
  .LP
  For example, sanctions are seen as ``giving'' Iraq economic
  difficulties. Correspondingly, economic difficulties for Iraq
  are seen as ``coming from'' the sanctions.  This metaphor turns
  purposeful actions into transfers of objects.
  .QP
  The Exchange Metaphor for Value: The value of something is what
  you are willing to exchange for it.
  .LP
  Whenever we ask whether it is ``worth'' going to war to get Iraq
  out of Kuwait, we are using the Exchange Metaphor for Value plus
  the Causal Transfer metaphor.
  .QP
  Well-being is Wealth: Things of value constitute wealth.  Increases
  in well-being are ``gains''; decreases in well-being are ``costs.''
  .LP
  The metaphor of Well-being-as-Wealth has the effect of making
  qualitiative effects quantitative. It not only makes qualitatively
  different things comparable, it even provides a kind of arithmetic
  calculus for adding up costs and gains.
  .PP
  Taken together, these three metaphors portray actions as commercial
  transactions with costs and gains.  Seeing actions as transactions
  is crucial to applying ideas from economics to actions in general.

  .ce
  Risks

  .PP
  A risk is an action taken to achieve a positive effect, where
  the outcome is uncertain and where there is also a significant
  probability of a negative effect.  Since Causal Commerce allows
  one to see positive effects of actions as ``gains'' and negative
  effects as ``costs'', it becomes natural to see a risky action
  metaphorically as a financial risk of a certain type, namely, a
  gamble.

  .ce
  Risks are Gambles

  .PP
  In gambling to achieve certain ``gains'', there are ``stakes''
  that one can ``lose''. When one asks what is ``at stake'' in
  going to war, one is using the metaphors of Causal Commerce and
  Risks-as-Gambles. These are also the metaphors that President
  Bush uses when he refers to strategic moves in the gulf as a
  ``poker game'' where it would be foolish for him to ``show his
  cards'', that is, to make strategic knowledge public.

  .ce
  The Mathematicization of Metaphor

  .PP
  The Causal Commerce and Risks-as-Gambles metaphors lie behind
  our everyday way of understanding risky actions as gambles. At
  this point, mathematics enters the picture, since there is
  mathematics of gambling, namely, probability theory, decision
  theory, and game theory.  Since the metaphors of Causal Commerce
  and Risks-as-Gambles are so common in our everyday thought, their
  metaphorical nature often goes unnoticed.  As a result, it is
  not uncommon for social scientists to think that the mathematics
  of gambling literally applies to all forms of risky action, and
  that it can provide a general basis for the scientific study of
  risky action, so that risk can be minimized.

  .ce
  Rational Action

  .PP
  Within the social sciences, especially in economics, it is common
  to see a rational person as someone who acts in his own self-interest,
  that is, to maximize his own well-being. Hard-core advocates of
  this view may even see altruistic action as being ones self-interest
  if there is a value in feeling righteous about altruism and in
  deriving gratitude from others.
  .PP
  In the Causal Commerce system, where well-being is wealth, this
  view of Rational Action translates metaphorically into maximizing
  gains and minimizing losses. In other words:

  .ce
  Rationality is Profit Maximization

  .LP
  This metaphor presupposes Causal Commerce plus Risks-as-Gambles,
  and brings with it the mathematics of gambling as applied to
  risky action. It has the effect of turning specialists in
  mathematical economics into ``scientific'' specialists in acting
  rationally so as to minimize risk and cost while maximizing gains.
  .PP
  Suppose we now add the State-as-Person metaphor to the
  Rationality-as-Profit-Maximization metaphor.  The result is:

  .ce
  International Politics is Business

  .LP
  Here the state is a Rational Actor, whose actions are transactions
  and who is engaged in maximizing gains and minimizing costs. This
  metaphor brings with it the mathematics of cost-benefit calculation
  and game theory, which is commonly taught in graduate programs
  in international relations.
  .PP
  Clausewitz's metaphor, the major metaphor preferred by international
  relations strategists, presupposes this system.
  .DS C
  Clausewitz's Metaphor:  War is Politics, pursued by other means.
  .DE
  .LP
  Since politics is business, war becomes a matter of maximizing
  political gains and minimizing losses. In Clausewitzian terms,
  war is justified when there is more to be gained by going to war
  than by not going to war. Morality is absent from the Clausewitzian
  equation, except when there a political cost to acting immorally
  or a political gain from acting morally.
  .PP
  Clausewitz's metaphor only allows war to be justified on pragmatic,
  not moral, grounds.  To justify war on both moral and pragmatic
  grounds, the Fairy Tale of the Just War and Clausewitz's metaphor
  must mesh:  The ``worthwhile sacrifices'' of the fairy tale must
  equal the Clausewitzian ``costs'' and the ``victory'' in the
  fairy tale must equal the Clausewitzian ``gains.''
  .PP
  Clausewitz's metaphor is the perfect expert's metaphor, since it
  requires specialists in political cost-benefit calculation.  It
  sanctions the use of the mathematics of economics, probability
  theory, decision theory, and game theory in the name of making
  foreign policy rational and scientific.
  .PP
  Clausewitz's metaphor is commonly seen as literally true.  We
  are now in a position to see exactly what makes it metaphorical.
  First, it uses the State-as-Person metaphor. Second, it turns
  qualitative effects on human beings into quantifiable costs and
  gains, thus seeing political action as economics. Third, it sees
  rationality as profit-making. Fourth, it sees war in terms of
  only one dimension of war, that of political expediency, which
  is in turn conceptualized as business.

  .KS
  .ce
  War as Violent Crime

  .PP
  To bear in mind what is hidden by Clausewitz's metaphor, we should
  consider an alternative metaphor that is \fInot\fR used by
  professional strategists nor by the general public to understand
  war as we engage in it.
  .KE
  .IP
  \s-2WAR IS VIOLENT CRIME: MURDER, ASSAULT, KIDNAPPING, ARSON,
  RAPE, AND THEFT\s0.
  .LP
  Here, war is understood only in terms of its moral dimension,
  and not, say, its political or economic dimension.  The metaphor
  highlights those aspects of war that would otherwise be seen as
  major crimes.
  .PP
  There is an Us-Them asymmetry between the public use of Clausewitz's
  metaphor and the War-as-Crime metaphor.  The Iraqi invasion of
  Kuwait is reported on in terms of murder, theft and rape. The
  planned American invasion is never discussed in terms of murder,
  assault, and arson.  Moreover, the US plans for war are seen, in
  Clausewitzian terms, as rational calculation. But the Iraqi
  invasion is discussed not as a rational move by Saddam, but as
  the work of a madman.  We see US as rational, moral, and courageous
  and Them as criminal and insane.

  .ce
  War as a Competitive Game

  .PP
  It has long been noted that we understand war as a competitive
  game like chess, or as a sport, like football or boxing.  It is
  a metaphor in which there is a clear winner and loser, and a
  clear end to the game.  The metaphor highlights strategic thinking,
  team work, preparedness, the spectators in the world arena, the
  glory of winning and the shame of defeat.
  .PP
  This metaphor is taken very seriously.  There is a long tradition
  in the West of training military officers in team sports and
  chess. The military is trained to win.  This can lead to a metaphor
  conflict, as it did in Vietnam, since Clausewitz's metaphor seeks
  to maximize geopolitical gains, which may or may not be consistent
  with absolute military victory.
  .PP
  The situation at present is that the public has accepted the
  rescue scenario of the just war fairy tale as providing moral
  justification. The president, for internal political reasons,
  has accepted the competitive game metaphor as taking precedence
  over Clausewitz's metaphor: If he must choose, he will go for
  the military win over maximizing geopolitical gains.  The testimony
  of the experts before Congress falls largely within Clausewitz's
  metaphor. Much of it is testimony about what will maximize gains
  and minimize losses.
  .PP
  For all that been questioned in the Congressional hearings, these
  metaphors have not. It important to see what they hide.

  .ce
  Is Saddam Irrational?

  .PP
  The villain in the Fairy Tale of the Just War may be cunning,
  but he cannot be rational. You just do not reason with a demon,
  nor do you enter into negotiations with him. The logic of the
  metaphor demands that Saddam be irrational. But is he?
  .PP
  Administration policy is confused on the issue. Clausewitz's
  metaphor, as used by strategists, assumes that the enemy is
  rational: He too is maximizing gains and minimizing costs.  Our
  strategy from the outset has been to ``increase the cost'' to
  Saddam. That assumes he is rational and is maximizing his
  self-interest.
  .PP
  At the same time, he is being called irrational. The nuclear
  weapons argument depends on it. If he is rational, he should
  follow the logic of deterrence. We have thousands of hydrogen
  bombs in warheads. Israel is estimated to have between 100 and
  200 deliverable atomic bombs.  It would take Saddam at least
  eight months and possibly five years before he had a crude,
  untested atomic bomb on a truck.  The most popular estimate for
  even a few deliverable nuclear warheads is ten years.  The argument
  that he would not be deterred by our nuclear arsenal and by
  Israel's assumes irrationality.
  .PP
  The Hitler analogy also assumes that Saddam is a villainous
  madman.  The analogy presupposes a Hitler myth, in which Hitler
  too was an irrational demon, rather than a rational self-serving
  brutal politician. In the myth, Munich was a mistake and Hitler
  could have been stopped early on had England entered the war
  then. Military historians disagree as to whether the myth is
  true. Be that as it may, the analogy does not hold.  Whether or
  not Saddam is Hitler, Iraq isn't Germany.  It has 17 million
  people, not 70 million. It is economically weak, not strong.  It
  simply is not a threat to the world.
  .PP
  Saddam is certainly immoral, ruthless, and brutal, but there is
  no evidence that he is anything but rational.  Everything he has
  done, from assassinating political opponents, to using poison
  gas against his political enemies, the Kurds, to invading Kuwait
  can be see as furthering his own self-interest.

  .KS
  .ce
  Kuwait as Victim

  .PP
  The classical victim is innocent. To the Iraquis, Kuwait was
  anything but an innocent ingenue.  The war with Iran virtually
  bankrupted Iraq. Iraq saw itself as having fought that war partly
  for the benefit of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, where Shiite citizens
  supported Khomeini's Islamic Revolution. Kuwait had agreed to
  help finance the war, but after the war, the Kuwaitis insisted
  on repayment of the ``loan.'' Kuwaitis had invested hundreds of
  billions in Europe, America and Japan, but would not invest in
  Iraq after the war to help it rebuild.  On the contrary, it began
  what amounted to economic warfare against Iraq by overproducing
  its oil quota to hold oil prices down.
  .KE
  .PP
  In addition, Kuwait had drilled laterally into Iraqi territory
  in the Rumailah oil field and had extracted oil from Iraqi
  territory.  Kuwait further took advantage of Iraq by buying its
  currency, but only at extremely low exchange rates.  Subsequently,
  wealthy Kuwaitis used that Iraqi currency on trips to Iraq, where
  they bought Iraqi goods at bargain rates. Among the things they
  bought most flamboyantly were liquor and prostitutes\(emwidows
  and orphans of men killed in the war, who, because of the state
  of the economy, had no other means of support.  All this did not
  endear Kuwaitis to Iraqis, who were suffering from over 70%
  inflation.
  .PP
  Moreover, Kuwaitis had long been resented for good reason by
  Iraqis and moslems from other nations.  Capital rich, but labor
  poor, Kuwait imported cheap labor from other moslem countries to
  do its least pleasant work. At the time of the invasion, there
  were 400,000 Kuwaiti citizens and 2.2 millions foreign laborers
  who were denied rights of citizenry and treated by the Kuwaitis
  as lesser beings.  In short, to the Iraqis and to labor-exporting
  Arab countries, Kuwait is badly miscast as a purely innocent
  victim.
  .PP
  This does not in any way justify the horrors perpetrated on the
  Kuwaitis by the Iraqi army. But it is part of what is hidden when
  Kuwait is cast as an innocent victim.  The ``legitimate government''
  that we seek to reinstall is an oppressive monarchy.

  .ce
  What is Victory?

  .PP
  In a fairy tale or a game, victory is well-defined. Once it is
  achieved, the story or game is over. Neither is the case in the
  gulf crisis. History continues, and ``victory'' makes sense only
  in terms of continuing history.
  .PP
  The president's stated objectives are total Iraqi withdrawal and
  restoration of the Kuwaiti monarchy. But no one believes the
  matter will end there, since Saddam would still be in power with
  all of his forces intact.  General Powell said in his Senate
  testimony that if Saddam withdrew, the US would have to ``strengthen
  the indigenous countries of the region'' to achieve a balance of
  power. Presumably that means arming Assad, who is every bit as
  dangerous as Saddam. Would arming another villain count as victory?
  .PP
  If we go to war, what will constitute ``victory''? Suppose we
  conquer Iraq, wiping out its military capability.  How would Iraq
  be governed? No puppet government that we set up could govern
  effectively since it would be hated by the entire populace. Since
  Saddam has wiped out all opposition, the only remaining effective
  government for the country would be his Ba'ath party. Would it
  count as a victory if Saddam's friends wound up in power? If not,
  what other choice is there? And if Iraq has no remaining military
  force, how could it defend itself against Syria and Iran? It
  would certainly not be a ``victory'' for us if either of them
  took over Iraq. If Syria did, then Assad's Arab nationalism would
  become a threat.  If Iran did, then Islamic fundamentalism would
  become even more powerful and threatening.
  .PP
  It would seem that the closest thing to a ``victory'' for the US
  in case of war would be to drive the Iraqis out of Kuwait; destroy
  just enough of Iraq's military to leave it capable of defending
  itself against Syria and Iran; somehow get Saddam out of power,
  but let his Ba'ath party remain in control of a country just
  strong enough to defend itself, but not strong enough to be a
  threat; and keep the price of oil at a reasonably low level.
  .PP
  The problems: It is not obvious that we could get Saddam out of
  power without wiping out most of Iraq's military capability.  We
  would have invaded an Arab country, which would create vast hatred
  for us throughout the Arab world, and would no doubt result in
  decades of increased terrorism and lack of cooperation by Arab
  states.  We would, by defeating an Arab nationalist state,
  strengthen Islamic fundamentalism.  Iraq would remain a cruel
  dictatorship run by cronies of Saddam. By reinstating the government
  of Kuwait, we would inflame the hatred of the poor toward the
  rich throughout the Arab world, and thus increase instability.
  And the price of oil would go through the roof. Even the closest
  thing to a victory doesn't look very victorious.
  .PP
  In the debate over whether to go to war, very little time has
  been spent clarifying what a victory would be.  And if ``victory''
  cannot be defined, neither can ``worthwhile sacrifice.''

  .ce
  The Arab Viewpoint

  .PP
  The metaphors used to conceptualize the gulf crisis hide the most
  powerful political ideas in the Arab world:  Arab nationalism
  and Islamic fundamentalism.  The first seeks to form a racially-based
  all-Arab nation, the second, a theocratic all-Islamic state.
  Though bitterly opposed to one another, they share a great deal.
  Both are conceptualized in family terms, an Arab brotherhood and
  an Islamic brotherhood. Both see brotherhoods as more legitimate
  than existing states.  Both are at odds with the state-as-person
  metaphor, which sees currently existing states as distinct entities
  with a right to exist in perpetuity.
  .PP
  Also hidden by our metaphors is perhaps the most important daily
  concern throughout the Arab world: Arab dignity.  Both political
  movements are seen as ways to achieve dignity through unity. The
  current national boundaries are widely perceived as working
  against Arab dignity in two ways: one internal and one external.
  .PP
  The internal issue is the division between rich and poor in the
  Arab world.  Poor Arabs see rich Arabs as rich by accident, by
  where the British happened to draw the lines that created the
  contemporary nations of the Middle East. To see Arabs metaphorically
  as one big family is to suggest that oil wealth should belong to
  all Arabs. To many Arabs, the national boundaries drawn by colonial
  powers are illegitimate, violating the conception of Arabs as a
  single ``brotherhood'' and impoverishing millions.
  .PP
  To those impoverished millions, the positive side of Saddam's
  invasion of Kuwait was that it challenged national borders and
  brought to the fore the divisions between rich and poor that
  result from those lines in the sand.  If there is to be peace in
  the region, these divisions must be addressed, say, by having
  rich Arab countries make extensive investments in development
  that will help poor Arabs.  As long as the huge gulf between rich
  and poor exists in the Arab world, a large number of poor Arabs
  will continue to see one of the superstate solutions, either Arab
  nationalism or Islamic fundamentalism, as being in their
  self-interest, and the region will continue to be unstable.
  .PP
  The external issue is the weakness.  The current national boundaries
  keep Arab nations squabbling among themselves and therefore weak
  relative to Western nations.  To unity advocates, what we call
  ``stability'' means continued weakness.
  .PP
  Weakness is a major theme in the Arab world, and is often
  conceptualized in sexual terms, even more than in the West.
  American officials, in speaking of the ``rape'' of Kuwait, are
  conceptualizing a weak, defenseless country as female and a strong
  militarily powerful country as male.  Similarly, it is common
  for Arabs to conceptualize the colonization and subsequent
  domination of the Arab world by the West, especially the US, as
  emasculation.
  .PP
  An Arab proverb that is reported to be popular in Iraq these days
  is that ``It is better to be a cock for a day than a chicken for
  a year.'' The message is clear:  It is better to be male, that
  is, strong and dominant for a short period of time than to be
  female, that is, weak and defenseless for a long time. Much of
  the support for Saddam among Arabs is due to the fact that he is
  seen as standing up to the US, even if only for a while, and that
  there is a dignity in this.  If upholding dignity is an essential
  part of what defines Saddam's ``rational self-interest'', it is
  vitally important for our government to know this, since he may
  be willing to go to war to ``be a cock for a day.''
  .PP
  The US does not have anything like a proper understanding of the
  issue of Arab dignity.  Take the question of whether Iraq will
  come out of this with part of the Rumailah oil fields and two
  islands giving it a port on the gulf. From Iraq's point of view
  these are seen as economic necessities if Iraq is to rebuild.
  President Bush has spoken of this as ``rewarding aggression'',
  using the Third-World-Countries-As-Children metaphor, where the
  great powers are grown-ups who have the obligation to reward or
  punish children so as to make them behave properly.  This is
  exactly the attitude that grates on Arabs who want to be treated
  with dignity.  Instead of seeing Iraq as a sovereign nation that
  has taken military action for economic purposes, the president
  treats Iraq as if it were a child gone bad, who has become the
  neighborhood bully and should be properly disciplined by the
  grown-ups.
  .PP
  The issue of the Rumailah oil fields and the two islands has
  alternatively been discussed in the media in terms of ``saving
  face.'' Saving face is a very different concept than upholding
  Arab dignity and insisting on being treated as an equal, not an
  inferior.

  .ce
  What is Hidden By Seeing the State as a Person?

  .PP
  The State-as-Person metaphor highlights the ways in which states
  act as units, and hides the internal structure of the state.
  Class structure is hidden by this metaphor, as is ethnic composition,
  religious rivalry, political parties, the ecology, the influence
  of the military and of corporations (especially multi-national
  corporations).
  .PP
  Consider ``national interest.'' It is in a person's interest to
  be healthy and strong. The State-as-Person metaphor translates
  this into a ``national interest'' of economic health and military
  strength.  But what is in the ``national interest'' may or may
  not be in the interest of many ordinary citizens, groups, or
  institutions, who may become poorer as the GNP rises and weaker
  as the military gets stronger.
  .PP
  The ``national interest'' is a metaphorical concept, and it is
  defined in America by politicians and policy makers.  For the
  most part, they are influenced more by the rich than by the poor,
  more by large corporations than by small business, and more by
  developers than ecological activists.
  .PP
  When President Bush argues that going to war would ``serve our
  vital national interests'', he is using a metaphor that hides
  exactly whose interests would be served and whose would not.
  For example, poor people, especially blacks and Hispanics, are
  represented in the military in disproportionately large numbers,
  and in a war the lower classes and those ethnic groups will suffer
  proportionally more casualties. Thus war is less in the interest
  of ethnic minorities and the lower classes than the white upper
  classes.
  .PP
  Also hidden are the interests of the military itself, which are
  served when war is justified. Hopes that, after the cold war,
  the military might play a smaller role have been dashed by the
  president's decision to prepare for war.  He was advised, as he
  should be, by the national security council, which consists
  primarily of military men.  War is so awful a prospect that one
  would not like to think that military self-interest itself could
  help tilt the balance to a decision for war. But in a democratic
  society, the question must be asked, since the justifications
  for war also justify continued military funding and an undiminished
  national political role for the military.

  .ce
  Energy Policy

  .PP
  The State-as-Person metaphor defines health for the state in
  economic terms, with our current understanding of economic health
  taken as a given, including our dependence on foreign oil.  Many
  commentators have argued that a change in energy policy to make
  us less dependent on foreign oil would be more rational than
  going to war to preserve our supply of cheap oil from the gulf.
  This argument may have a real force, but it has no metaphorical
  force when the definition of economic health is taken as fixed.
  After all, you don't deal with an attack on your health by changing
  the definition of health.  Metaphorical logic pushes a change in
  energy policy out of the spotlight in the current crisis.
  .PP
  I do not want to give the impression that all that is involved
  here is metaphor. Obviously there are powerful corporate interests
  lined up against a fundamental restructuring of our national
  energy policy. What is sad is that they have a very compelling
  system of metaphorical thought on their side.  If the debate is
  framed in terms of an attack on our economic health, one cannot
  argue for redefining what economic health is without changing
  the grounds for the debate.  And if the debate is framed in terms
  of rescuing a victim, then changes in energy policy seem utterly
  beside the point.

  .ce
  The ``Costs'' of War

  .PP
  Clausewitz's metaphor requires a calculation of the ``costs''
  and the ``gains'' of going to war. What, exactly, goes into that
  calculation and what does not? Certainly American casualties,
  loss of equipment, and dollars spent on the operation count as
  costs.  But Vietnam taught us that there are social costs:  trauma
  to families and communities, disruption of lives, psychological
  effects on veterans, long-term health problems, in addition to
  the cost of spending our money on war instead of on vital social
  needs at home.
  .PP
  Also hidden are political costs: the enmity of Arabs for many
  years, and the cost of increased terrorism.  And barely discussed
  is the moral cost that comes from killing and maiming as a way
  to settle disputes.  And there is the moral cost of using a
  ``cost'' metaphor at all. When we do so, we quantify the effects
  of war and thus hide from ourselves the qualitative reality of
  pain and death.
  .PP
  But those are costs to us.  What is most ghoulish about the
  cost-benefit calculation is that ``costs'' to the other side
  count as ``gains'' for us. In Vietnam, the body counts of killed
  Viet Cong were taken as evidence of what was being ``gained'' in
  the war. Dead human beings went on the profit side of our ledger.
  .PP
  There is a lot of talk of American deaths as ``costs'', but Iraqi
  deaths aren't mentioned.  The metaphors of cost-benefit accounting
  and the fairy tale villain lead us to devalue of the lives of
  Iraqis, even when most of those actually killed will not be
  villains at all, but simply innocent draftees or reservists or
  civilians.

  .ce
  America as Hero

  .PP
  The classic fairy tale defines what constitutes a hero: it is a
  person who rescues an innocent victim and who defeats and punishes
  a guilty and inherently evil villain, and who does so for moral
  rather than venal reasons. If America starts a war, will it be
  functioning as a hero?
  .PP
  It will certainly not fit the profile very well. First, one of
  its main goals will be to reinstate ``the legitimate government
  of Kuwait.'' That means reinstating an absolute monarchy, where
  women are not accorded anything resembling reasonable rights,
  and where 80% of the people living in the country are foreign
  workers who do the dirtiest jobs and are not accorded the
  opportunity to become citizens. This is not an innocent victim
  whose rescue makes us heroic.
  .PP
  Second, the actual human beings who will suffer from an all-out
  attack will, for the most part, be innocent people who did not
  take part in the atrocities in Kuwait. Killing and maiming a lot
  of innocent bystanders in the process of nabbing a much smaller
  number of villains does not make one much of a hero.
  .PP
  Third, in the self-defense scenario, where oil is at issue,
  America is acting in its self-interest.  But, in order to qualify
  as a legitimate hero in the rescue scenario, it must be acting
  selflessly. Thus, there is a contradiction between the self-interested
  hero of the self-defense scenario and the purely selfless hero
  of the rescue scenario.
  .PP
  Fourth, America may be a hero to the royal families of Kuwait
  and Saudi Arabia, but it will not be a hero to most Arabs.  Most
  Arabs do not think in terms of our metaphors.  A great many Arabs
  will see us as a kind of colonial power using illegitimate force
  against an Arab brother.  To them, we will be villains, not
  heroes.
  .PP
  America appears as classic hero only if you don't look carefully
  at how the metaphor is applied to the situation. It is here that
  the State-as-Person metaphor functions in a way that hides vital
  truths. The State-as-Person metaphor hides the internal structure
  of states and allows us to think of Kuwait as a unitary entity,
  the defenseless maiden to be rescued in the fairy tale.  The
  metaphor hides the monarchical character of Kuwait, and the way
  Kuwaitis treat women and the vast majority of the people who live
  in their country.  The State-as-Person metaphor also hides the
  internal structures of Iraq, and thus hides the actual people
  who will mostly be killed, maimed, or otherwise harmed in a war.
  The same metaphor also hides the internal structure of the US,
  and therefore hides the fact that is the poor and minorities who
  will make the most sacrifices while not getting any significant
  benefit. And it hides the main ideas that drive Middle Eastern
  politics.

  .ce
  Things to Do

  .PP
  War would create much more suffering than it would alleviate,
  and should be renounced in this case on humanitarian grounds.
  There is no shortage of alternatives to war.  Troops can be
  rotated out and brought to the minimum level to deter an invasion
  of Saudi Arabia.  Economic sanctions can be continued. A serious
  system of international inspections can be instituted to prevent
  the development of Iraq's nuclear capacity.  A certain amount of
  ``face-saving'' for Saddam is better than war: As part of a
  compromise, the Kuwaiti monarchy can be sacrificed and elections
  held in Kuwait.  The problems of rich and poor Arabs must be
  addressed, with pressures placed on the Kuwaitis and others to
  invest significantly in development to help poor Arabs.  Balance
  of power solutions within the region should always be seen as
  moves toward reducing, not increasing armaments; positive economic
  incentives can used, together with the threat of refusal by us
  and the Soviets to supply spare parts needed to keep hi-tech
  military weaponry functional.
  .PP
  If there is a moral to come out of the Congressional hearings,
  it is that there are a lot of very knowledgeable people in this
  country who have thought about alternatives to war.  They should
  be taken seriously.