Death of a true controversialist
Alexander Cockburn, the California based columnist whose hard nosed, controversial articles have won the praise or raised the ire of Newsroom readers, for two years, has died of cancer.
His last column published here two weeks ago dealt with sacked General McChrystal’s call for the return of the draft in the United States.
Instead of his expected article, we offer his obituary, published in The Week.
THE DEATH of Alexander Cockburn at 71 robs political journalism of one of its most radical and honest voices. In his columns for The Village Voice, The Nation and The First Post (latterly The Week), and his articles for CounterPunch, he shared his controversial views on US foreign policy, global warming and the sins of corporate America.
In one memorable article for The Week , he argued that Tillikum the orca whale, who drowned his trainer in a Florida aquatic park in 2010, was a victim of corporate enslavement. Like Spartacus, Tillikum chose to fight back.
“No one could skewer the banksters, the robber barons and the crony capitalists of this broken era quite so ably as Alex,” John Nichols, a fellow columnist on The Nation, wrote yesterday.
What turned out to be his final two columns, written about ten days before he died on Friday night July 20 from complications with cancer, were classic Cockburn.
In his last piece for The Nation, , his subject was the Libor scandal and the “culture of rabid criminality” in international banking. “Is it possible to reform the banking system?” Cockburn wrote. “There are the usual nostrums — tighter regulations, savage penalties for misbehavior, a ban from financial markets for life. But I have to say I’m doubtful. I think the system will collapse, but not through our agency.”
His last article for The Week, posted on 13 July, was devoted to General McChrystal’s call for a return to conscription. “A draft is never going to happen,” Cockburn wrote. Obama planned to spend more money on defence in the coming four years and the new era of robot/drone wars meant there was “no need for suicidal soldiers or politically awkward draftee casualties. The money all goes to Lockheed and the other big aerospace companies.”
Cockburn’s approach to Obama’s presidency was typically hard-nosed. While many of us were still celebrating America’s readiness to hand the White House keys to a black man, Cockburn saw through the charm to the Chicago politician beneath.
He allowed Obama no honeymoon: in Cockburn’s view, the new president was quick to show his subservience to Wall Street bankers and to renege on his promise to close Guantanamo.
By last autumn, he was calling Obama’s America a banana republica banana republic after the administration employed a drone to “incinerate” two US citizens in Yemen suspected of terrorism – Anwar al-Awlaki and Samir Khan – rather than bring them to justice.
When the White House claimed it had canvassed legal opinion before assassinating the pair, but then refused to disclose what that opinion was, Cockburn wrote for The Week: “If presidential death warrants beyond the reach of scrutiny and review by courts or juries are the mark of a banana republic, then we were all waving the flag of just such an entity.”
His unapologetic stance against operators of all political colors, and the too-often timid Fourth Estate, cost him friends along the way. As John Nichols wrote, “Alex's radicalism was genuine, and he could offend not just foes on the right but friends on the left. He parted company with mainstream liberals on issues ranging from gun control to global warming.”
He fell out with Christopher Hitchens when the English writer backed George Bush’s post-9/11 intervention in Afghanistan. And when Hitchens died last December after his own long battle with cancer, Cockburn wrote on CounterPunch: “He [Hitchens] courted the label ‘contrarian,’ but if the word is to have any muscle, it surely must imply the expression of dangerous opinions.
“Hitchens never wrote anything truly discommoding to respectable opinion and if he had he would never have enjoyed so long a billet at Vanity Fair.”
This lack of sentimentality extended to the circumstances of his own death on Friday at a clinic in Bad Salzhausen, Germany, far from his home in Petrolia, northern California.
Cockburn had managed to keep his cancer treatment a secret from all but his closest friends and family for nearly two years. As Jeffrey St. Clair, his co-editor at CounterPunch, wrote following his colleague’s death: “He didn’t want the disease to define him. He didn’t want his friends and readers to shower him with sympathy. He didn’t want to blog his own death as Christopher Hitchens had done.
“Alex wanted to keep living his life right to the end. He wanted to live on his terms. And he wanted to continue writing through it all, just as his brilliant father, the novelist and journalist Claud Cockburn had done. And so he did. His body was deteriorating, but his prose remained as sharp, lucid and deadly as ever.”
We’ll drink to that at The Week, where Cockburn’s regular columns from America will be much missed. They were consistently among the site’s best-read articles.
· Alexander Cockburn was born in Scotland on 6 June 1941 and brought up in County Cork. He became a permanent US resident in 1973. He is survived by his daughter Daisy and his younger brothers Andrew and Patrick, both journalists.