One more bit of fallout from Chomsky’s victory in the recent Prospect magazine poll. Oliver Kamm muses here on Emma Brockes’s laudably tough-minded interview with Chomsky in today’s Guardian.

It’s not news that Chomsky, like some others on the far left, is a Bosnia revisionist, supporting dubious claims that the 1995 Srebrenica massacre was exaggerated. But in this particular interview, Chomsky reveals his shabby intellectual and journalistic standards with heightened shamelessness:

[Chomsky] is asked to lend his name to all sorts of crackpot causes and [his wife] tries to intervene to keep his schedule under control. As some see it, one ill-judged choice of cause was the accusation made by Living Marxism magazine that during the Bosnian war, shots used by ITN of a Serb-run detention camp were faked. The magazine folded after ITN sued, but the controversy flared up again in 2003 when a journalist called Diane Johnstone made similar allegations in a Swedish magazine, Ordfront, taking issue with the official number of victims of the Srebrenica massacre. (She said they were exaggerated.) In the ensuing outcry, Chomsky lent his name to a letter praising Johnstone’s “outstanding work”. Does he regret signing it?

“No,” he says indignantly. “It is outstanding. My only regret is that I didn’t do it strongly enough. It may be wrong; but it is very careful and outstanding work.”

How, I wonder, can journalism be wrong and still outstanding?

“Look,” says Chomsky, “there was a hysterical fanaticism about Bosnia in western culture which was very much like a passionate religious conviction. It was like old-fashioned Stalinism: if you depart a couple of millimetres from the party line, you’re a traitor, you’re destroyed. It’s totally irrational. And Diane Johnstone, whether you like it or not, has done serious, honest work. And in the case of Living Marxism, for a big corporation to put a small newspaper out of business because they think something they reported was false, is outrageous.”

They didn’t “think” it was false; it was proven to be so in a court of law.

But Chomsky insists that “LM was probably correct” and that, in any case, it is irrelevant. “It had nothing to do with whether LM or Diane Johnstone were right or wrong.” It is a question, he says, of freedom of speech.

In reality, it is a question of trying to delegitimize, by any tawdry means necessary, the West’s subsequent use of force in the Balkans. Here is Chomsky, champion of justice, trifling with the deaths of nearly 8000 innocent people—Muslims at that.

**Update: Welcome WW4 readers, friends and foes.

**Update II: One of the commenters at WW4 cites an interview alleging that Clinton and Bosnian prez Izetbegovic made a deal to allow the Srebrenica massacre, in exchange for future NATO bombardment. Uh-huh. Someone named Nick Thompson weighed in with a post titled “Srebrenica a Legitimate Military Target.” You can’t make this stuff up.

**Update III: Chomsky responded to the Brockes story in a letter to the Guardian: “Even when the words attributed to me have some resemblance to accuracy, I take no responsibility for them, because of the invented contexts in which they appear.” Uh-huh. Oliver Kamm has some fun with this here.

**Update IV: Go here for Update IV.

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