In his reply to Christopher Hitchens on the subject of theSeptember 11 mass murders, Noam Chomsky rushes to accuse his adversary of"racist contempt" for African victims of terrorism, of a callousrefusal to acknowledge their very existence. This accusation is based onHitchens refusal to accept Chomsky's claim, in the immediate aftermath ofSeptember 11, that the 1998 U.S. bombing of a pharmaceutical factory in theSudan, which was undertaken at a time and in a way designed to minimize the lossof human life and resulted in the death of one night watchman, was a greatercrime than the murder of thousands of innocents in New York and Washington DC, agreater crime than actions designed to maximize the loss of human life and toeliminate a great deal more than the current calculations of over 6000 dead menand women from every race, religion and corner of the globe.