After years spent documenting state terror, I know it when I see it. And I see it now in the US and Israel
In Syria, where I worked during the years of Bashar al-Assads terror, people were often taken away to torture cells before dawn by masked men. The timing was deliberate. It disoriented them at their most vulnerable, ensuring the torture to come would be even more agonising. The testimonies I recorded from survivors almost always contained the same phrase: The morning they came for me. One young woman, shattered by rape and violence, later told me that her life had split in two before and after the masked men came for her.
In Iraq, those who spoke against Saddam Hussein even abroad, even casually were punished in cruel ways by a vengeful leader determined to crush any hint of dissent. In Egypt in 2016, Giulio Regeni, a 28-year-old Italian academic researching labour unions, was abducted, beaten and tortured to death, it is thought, by president Abdel Fatah al-Sisis security services. His own mother had difficulty recognising his mutilated body. During the second Chechen war, I met the journalist Anna Politkovskaya in Chechnya. She repeatedly attacked Vladimir Putins policies, documenting human rights abuses during Russias military campaigns. To punish her, a bullet was put in her brain on Putins birthday a warning to other truth-seekers. Stay silent or die.
In the West Bank and Gaza, Israeli soldiers, masked and unmasked, kill, torture and imprison Palestinian doctors, journalists, teachers, activists and scholars not for what they have done but because of who they are. After decades of documenting state terror, I know how it starts. Governments begin to use words like security, order, deterrence. Every excuse for Benjamin Netanyahus conduct in Gaza is framed as security. ICE agents are trained in a language of order in which violence becomes procedure.
What happens when democratic states adopt the methods of the regimes they once condemned? Terror is not only masked men and arbitrary detention. It also operates through fear. Policies are designed to make people more compliant, more submissive. As the historian Timothy Snyder warned in his 2017 book, On Tyranny, this is how societies slide into danger: people obey in advance. In Donald Trumps US, I have watched CEOs, academics, journalists and government officials allow fear to override decency and moral authority. I have seen this pattern before. It begins with claims that certain people are dangerous. That ordinary legal safeguards should not apply to them. It ends with a society diminished more compliant, more cynical, more brutal. State terror is rarely announced. In my experience, it becomes normalised. It seeps quietly into the machinery of government. Authoritarian regimes make no serious claim to moral legitimacy.
more... https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/feb/08/state-terror-us-israel-donald-trump-benjamin-netanyahu
markodochartaigh
(5,243 posts)Other "coincidences" have happened on Putin's birthday. I wonder what October 7th will bring this year.
Lonestarblue
(13,344 posts)Instead we get a lot of fluff on Melania whose photo has been placed prominently in the NYT for several days now. Or we get opinions by Trump defenders justifying his insane economic and immigration policies.
democrank
(12,407 posts)Brings an apt metaphor to mind .frog in boiling water.
LymphocyteLover
(9,563 posts)FakeNoose
(40,759 posts)
EuterpeThelo
(261 posts)Seems like I get more of my news from them than almost anywhere else these days.
