According to Peter Sloterdijk,
the twentieth century started on a specific day and place
— on April 22, 1915, at Ypres in Northern France. That
day, for the first time in the history of humanity, the German
army used against the Franco-Canadian forces a chlorine gas
meant to indiscriminately exterminate the enemy. Until then,
the war described by Clausewitz and practiced by Napoleon
involved attacking the adversary’s vital function first.
Using poison gas jumped a paradigm. It signaled the passage
“from classical war to terrorism, ending the old duel
between adversaries of comparable grade and birth.”
Terrorism revealed what the “essence” of war is
in its pure form: whenever international law fails to contain
it, hostility turns into a mere technical problem whose only
purpose is to annihilate the enemy. Already opening the second
millennium into the first, this terror from the air inaugurated
“an era in which the main idea wasn't to target the
body of enemies, but destroy their environment.” From
then on, what would be attacked in wartime as well as in peacetime
would be the very conditions necessary for life — the
air, climate, atmosphere, and environment in which the human
body is wrapped as if in a shell, .
The beginning of terror wasn’t an
isolated act committed by one side, but a decision made by
both adversaries to extend the conflict to an enlarged combat
zone in which the “other” becomes a mere object
in an environment. This kind of terrorism became the matrix
of modern and postmodern war, from WWI toxic gas to the Nazi
Zyklon B used in Auschwitz, from the bombing of Dresden to
the attack on the World Trade Center. But Sloterdijk doesn’t
stop there, but goes on to evoke a cultural counter-offensive:
“the offensive of modern aesthetics, from the Surrealists
to Dalí, and Malevich to André Breton in their
relation to the double emersion of the idea of the environment
and of this terror “from the air.”
This book was originally published in German
by Suhrkamp Verlag, Frankfurt am Main, in 2002.
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