Violence All Around
Edited by John
Sifton
A human rights lawyer travels to hot zones around
the globe, before and after the September 11 attacks, to document abuses
committed by warlords, terrorist groups, and government counterterrorism
forces. Whether reporting on al Qaeda safe houses, the mechanics of the
Pentagon’s smartest bombs, his interviews with politicians and ordinary
civilians, or his own brush with death outside Kabul, John Sifton wants to help
us understand violence―what it is, and how we think and speak about it.
For the human rights community, the global war on
terror brought unprecedented challenges. Of special concern were the secret
detention centers operated by the CIA as it expanded into a paramilitary force,
and the harsh treatment of prisoners throughout Iraq and Afghanistan. In
drafting legal memoranda that made domestic prosecution for these crimes
impossible, Sifton argues, the United States possessed not only the detainees
but the law itself. Sifton recounts his efforts to locate secret prisons and
reflects on the historical development of sanctioned military or police
violence―from hand-to-hand combat to the use of drones―and the likelihood that
technology will soon enable completely automated killing.
Sifton is equally concerned to examine what
people have meant by nonviolent social change, and he asks whether pure
nonviolence is ever possible. To invoke rights is to invoke the force to uphold
them, he reminds us. Ultimately, advocates for human rights can only shame the
world into better behavior, and their work may involve advocating the very
violence they deplore.