Alexander Claud Cockburn (/ˈkoʊbərn/ KOH-bərn; 6 June
1941 -- 21 July
2012) was an
Irish American political journalist and writer. Cockburn was brought up in
Ireland but had lived and worked in the
United States since
1972.
Together with
Jeffrey St. Clair, he edited the political newsletter CounterPunch. Cockburn also wrote the "
Beat the Devil" column for
The Nation as well as one for The
Week in
London, syndicated by
Creators Syndicate.
There were a number of consistent themes in Cockburn's political writing, among them:
Outspoken criticism of
U.S. foreign policy, from its policies in
Central America in the
1980s, including the Iran--Contra affair, to the
First Gulf War in
1991, the
Kosovo War in
1999, and the U.S. invasion of
Afghanistan in
2001 and
2003 invasion of Iraq.
Criticism of the government of
Israel based on its treatment of the
Palestinians.
Calls for political reform in the United States, mostly focused on criticizing the
Democratic Party for failing to provide a progressive alternative to the
Republican Party, as well as strong support for
Ralph Nader's presidential candidacies in the
2000 and
2004 elections.
Contempt for the mainstream establishment, in particular for public figures who, in his view, gain mainstream respectability by criticizing those to their left; targets have included
The New York Times,
President Barack Obama,
Senator Bernie Sanders, the late academic
Irving Howe, and some of his colleagues at The Nation, including
Marc Cooper,
David Corn[7] and
Eric Alterman. Cockburn was also highly critical of his former friend and colleague,
Christopher Hitchens.[8]
Criticism of
9/11 conspiracy theories[9][10]
Regarding prior knowledge of
Pearl Harbor, Cockburn maintains that "there is strong evidence that
FDR did have knowledge that a
Japanese naval force in the north
Pacific was going to launch an attack on Pearl Harbor.
It's quite possible
Roosevelt thought it would be a relatively mild assault and thought it would be the final green light to get the US into the war."[9]
Cockburn criticized the
German government for passing restrictive laws against the
Church of Scientology, invoking several comparisons with
Nazi Germany. Although he stated that
Scientology deserved scrutiny, he also maintained that the demonization of any particular unpopular group — even one officials consider a cult — presented a far more imminent danger than the activities of Scientologists, or the organization they belong to.[11]
Cockburn denounced the economic and political sanctions imposed on the
Iraqi government by the
United Nations, but Cockburn was more aggressive than most in his criticisms of
American and
British actions during the 12 years between the formal resolution of the
Persian Gulf War and the
2003 invasion. In a column published in 2000, Cockburn averred that the economic embargo imposed upon
Iraq was "demonically designed to prompt gnawing, endless suffering throughout Iraq's social economy"
. In the same column, Cockburn concluded that every major
Republican or
Democratic nominee running in the
2000 presidential election was supportive of
Iraq sanctions, and was therefore complicit in mass murder.[12]
Cockburn also joined the widespread criticism of the subsequent occupation of Iraq by
American, British and other national military forces (the self-described "
Coalition of the Willing"). In the wake of the capture of
Saddam Hussein, Cockburn penned a column entitled "How to kill
Saddam", in which he argued that the ensuing trial of
Hussein would be a mock tribunal, conducted by a "kangaroo court", and that Hussein's conviction and ultimate execution were foregone conclusions.[12]
In contrast, Cockburn's position on global warming was consistent with views usually held by the right. He believed the phenomenon has not been proven to be caused by humans,[13] citing the statements of
Martin Hertzberg that rising
CO2 levels are a symptom, not a cause, of global warming, which Hertzberg asserts is the result of natural, predictable changes in the
Earth's elliptic orbit.[14] In fact, Hertzberg is a semi-retired explosives expert who does not claim to be a climatologist.[15] Cockburn was also critical of the "greenhouse" explanation for warming by positing that it is incongruous with the laws of physics, specifically the second law of thermodynamics. He cited the research of
Gerhard Gerlich and
Ralf Tscheuschner's Falsification of the
Atmospheric CO2 Greenhouse Effects Within the
Frame of Physics.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Cockburn
- published: 22 Aug 2013
- views: 5922