Chomsky and His Critics
By Noam Chomsky
Source: Jacobin Magazine
November 30, 2015
Noam Chomsky, to rehearse a cliché, is among the worlds greatest living radical intellectuals. It is no less trite or true to add that he is also a broadly controversial figure:
accused from various corners of a variety of failings ranging from
genocide denial to rigid,
amoral quietism in the face of mass atrocities. Most recently, critics of dissimilar political hues claim to have identified a
range of
follies in his statements on Syria.
In the following interview, freelance journalist
Emanuel Stoakes puts some of these criticisms to Chomsky.
While reasserting his opposition to full-scale military intervention, Chomsky says he does not in principle oppose the idea of a no-fly zone established alongside a humanitarian corridor (though Putins recent interventions have all but killed the possibility of the former option). Chomsky also clarifies his positions on the 1995 Srebrenica massacre and NATOs 1999 intervention in Kosovo.
In addition to answering his critics, Chomsky gives his thoughts on a wide range of other topics: what should be done to combat ISIS, the significance of popular struggles in South America, and the future of socialism.
As always, his underlying belief in our capacity to build a better society shines through.
Full article:
https://zcomm.org/znetarticle/chomsky-and-his-critics/