Criticism of Noam Chomsky

Criticism of Noam Chomsky addresses both his political and linguistic writings. His political writings have created debate across the political spectrum, forming the basis for many books and articles criticizing and defending his views. This has led to a number of notable controversies.

Criticisms of linguistic writings
Linguistics professors Paul M. Postal and Robert D. Levine argue that "Much of the lavish praise heaped on his work is, we believe, driven by uncritical acceptance (often by nonlinguists) of claims and promises made during the early years of his academic activity; the claims have by now largely proved wrong or without real content, and the promises have gone unfilled."

They also claim to "document four different instances of the several types of intellectual misconduct present in [Chomsky's] writing on linguistics; intentional deception; pretending for decades that a principle already shown to be false was still a valid linguistic universal; adopting other linguistics' research proposals without credit; and falsely denigrating other sciences to make his own work seem less inadequate." They write that Chomsky in his 1957 work Syntactic Structures "knowingly published a false assertion" regarding his passive transformation rule, despite himself giving counter-examples two years earlier. They state that Chomsky continued to cite his "A-over-A principle" despite knowing that it had been falsified in 1967 by his student John R. Ross. They claim that Chomsky tends to adopt proposals that he had earlier rejected without attribution or credit, citing the Minimalist elimination of D-Structures in this connection.

President Truman
Oliver Kamm has criticised Chomsky's political writings for, among other things, distorting the facts by using quotes out of context. According to Kamm, "Chomsky goes out of his way to omit the context that allows reasoned conclusions to be drawn." Kamm gives the following example of a speech by President Harry S. Truman on which Chomsky remarked in the October 1969 edition of Commentary.

Chomsky's remark: "Truman argued that freedom of enterprise is one of those freedoms to be 'valued even more than peace'."

Truman's words: "There is one thing that Americans value even more than peace. It is freedom. Freedom of worship - freedom of speech - freedom of enterprise. It must be true that the first two of these freedoms are related to the third. For, throughout history, freedom of worship and freedom of speech have been most frequently enjoyed in those societies that have accorded a considerable measure of freedom to individual enterprise. Freedom has flourished where power has been dispersed. It has languished where power has been too highly centralized. So our devotion to freedom of enterprise, in the United States, has deeper roots than a desire to protect the profits of ownership."

In his reply to criticism, published in the February 1970 issue of Commentary, Chomsky stated that: "The remarks at issue are not theorems deduced from Truman's text; rather, they are efforts to formulate concisely the essence of his remarks. By any reasonable standards, their accuracy seems to me undeniable."

Chomsky has also responded to more of Kamm's accusations in Prospect Magazine.

Vietnam War
An example can be found in a 1970 exchange of letters, between Chomsky and Samuel P. Huntington, who accused Chomsky of misrepresenting his views on Vietnam, writing, "It would be difficult to conceive of a more blatantly dishonest instance of picking words out of context so as to give them a meaning directly opposite to that which the author stated." One accusation was that Chomsky, by selectively omitting material and putting together quotes out of context, created the impression that Huntington advocated demolishing the Vietnamese society, when in fact Huntington had stated that peace would require compromise and accommodation on both sides.

Keith Windschuttle writes in the New Criterion that "Chomsky was well aware of the degree of violence that communist regimes had routinely directed at the people of their own countries. At the 1967 New York forum he acknowledged both 'the mass slaughter of landlords in China' and 'the slaughter of landlords in North Vietnam' that had taken place once the communists came to power. His main objective, however, was to provide a rationalization for this violence, especially that of the National Liberation Front then trying to take control of South Vietnam. Chomsky revealed he was no pacifist. "I don’t accept the view that we can just condemn the NLF terror, period, because it was so horrible. I think we really have to ask questions of comparative costs, ugly as that may sound. And if we are going to take a moral position on this—and I think we should—we have to ask both what the consequences were of using terror and not using terror. If it were true that the consequences of not using terror would be that the peasantry in Vietnam would continue to live in the state of the peasantry of the Philippines, then I think the use of terror would be justified.'"

Windschuttle writes that in 2001, the average GDP per head in the Philippines was $4000. At the same time, twenty-five years of revolution in Vietnam had produced a figure of only half as much, a mere $2100. However, Chomsky has reasoned that the massive destruction wrought by U.S. bombing seriously set back social and economic development in Vietnam for years: The devastation that the United States left as its legacy has been quickly removed from consciousness here, and indeed, was little appreciated at the time. Its extent is worth recalling. In the south, 9,000 out of 15,000 hamlets were damaged or destroyed along with some 25 million acres of farmland and 12 million acres of forest: 1.5 million cattle were killed; and there are 1 million widows and some 800,000 orphans. In the north, all six industrial cities were damaged (three razed to the ground) along with 28 of 30 provincial towns (12 completely destroyed), 96 of 116 district towns, and 4,000 of some 5,800 communes; 400,000 cattle were killed and over a million acres of farmland were damaged. Much of the land is a moonscape, where people live on the edge of famine with rice rations lower than Bangladesh. In a recent study unreported here in the mainstream, the respected Swiss-based environmental group IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources). concluded that the ecology is not only refusing to heal but is worsening, so that a "catastrophe" may result unless billions of dollars are spent to "reconstruct" the land that has been destroyed, a "monumental" task that could be addressed only if the United States were to offer the reparations that it owes, a possibility that cannot be considered in a cultural climate as depraved and cowardly as ours. Forests have not recovered, fisheries remain reduced in variety and productivity, cropland productivity has not yet regained normal levels, and there is a great increase in toxin-related disease and cancer, with 4 million acres affected by the 18 million gallons of poisons dumped on cropland and forest in U.S. chemical warfare operations. Destruction of forests has increased the frequency of floods and droughts and aggravated the impact of typhoons, and war damage to dikes (some of which, in the south, were completely destroyed by U.S. bombardment) and other agricultural systems have yet to be repaired. The report notes that "humanitarian and conservationist groups, particularly in the United States, have encountered official resistance and red tape when requesting their governments' authorization to send assistance to Vietnam", naturally enough, since the United States remains committed to ensure that its victory is not threatened by recovery of the countries it has destroyed. (Noam Chomsky, "The United States and Indochina: Far from an Aberration," Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars21.2-4 (1989): 83).

Cambodia
Chomsky has been criticized for opinions voiced in a number of articles and books in which he discusses the political situation in Cambodia between 1973 and 1979 and the contemporary media response in the US during that period.

In 1977 Chomsky, with Edward Herman, used varying contradictory reports of mass atrocities committed by the Cambodian Khmer Rouge and argued that "sharply conflicting assessments" of events in Cambodia from different reputable sources were being selected from by the media in a way that created "a seriously distorted version of the evidence available, emphasizing alleged Khmer Rouge atrocities and downplaying or ignoring the crucial U.S. role, direct and indirect, in the torment that Cambodia has suffered." "But if postwar Cambodia is more similar to France after liberation, where many thousands of people were massacred within a few months under far less rigorous conditions than those left by the American war, then perhaps a rather different judgement is in order. That the latter conclusion may be more nearly correct is suggested by the analyses mentioned earlier." This argument, first presented in the article Distortions at Fourth Hand, was expanded in the pair’s 1979 book After the Cataclysm: Postwar Indochina and the Reconstruction of Imperial Ideology.

Subsequently, Chomsky was accused of "minimising the Khmer Rouge atrocities in Cambodia". According to Fred Barnes writing for the U.S. magazine The New Republic, observed Chomsky at a seminar and felt he "seemed to believe that tales of holocaust in Cambodia were [...] propaganda". Barnes speculated whether Chomsky felt the notion of genocide in Cambodia was "part of an effort to rewrite the history of the Indochinese war in a way more favorable to the U.S." . Commenting in defence of Chomsky on this incident, Christopher Hitchens noted that "since this meeting took place in the year after Chomsky and Herman had written their Nation article, and in the year when they were preparing The Political Economy of Human Rights, we can probably trust the documented record at least as much as Mr. Barnes's recollection...It is interesting, and perhaps suggestive, that Barnes uses the terms "genocide," "holocaust," and "mass murder" as if they were interchangeable. His last two sentences demonstrate just the sort of cuteness for which his magazine is becoming famous."

In the New Criterion Keith Windschuttle described Chomsky as the Pol Pot regime’s "most prestigious and most persistent Western apologist". He also noted that Chomsky has stated that "the United States and Israeli leadership should be brought to trial" for war crimes. Windschuttle wrote "Yet Chomsky’s moral perspective is completely one-sided. No matter how great the crimes of the regimes he has favored, such as China, Vietnam, and Cambodia under the communists, Chomsky has never demanded their leaders be captured and tried for war crimes. Instead, he has defended these regimes for many years to the best of his ability through the use of evidence he must have realized was selective, deceptive, and in some cases invented."

Writer Paul Bogdanor compared Chomsky’s methods to that of neo-Nazi attempts to discredit the diary of Anne Frank, further relating that After the Cataclysm: Postwar Indochina and the Reconstruction of Imperial Ideology is "not unlike the works of Holocaust denial that serve as its echo and mirror image".

Chomsky has a response to criticisms of his record on Cambodia on his blog.

East Timor
Similarly Chomsky was accused by Oliver Kamm of misrepresenting former UN Ambassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan by "omission and fabrication" in his book A New Generation Draws the Line: Kosovo, East Timor and the Standards of the West. "He manipulates a self-mocking reference in the memoirs of the then US ambassador to the UN, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, by running separate passages together as if they are sequential and attributing to Moynihan comments he did not make, to yield the conclusion that Moynihan took pride in Nazi-like policies." Kamm contends that Chomsky "doesn’t appear to have read the book he claims to be quoting from."

Kosovo
In his review of Chomsky's 1999 book The New Military Humanism: Lessons from Kosovo, Adrian Hastings wrote: "What is most striking to a Balkanist about this book is what is left out. There is no discussion of the character, aims and methods of Milosevic, no attempt whatever to place the war in Kosovo in the context of a decade of wars - in Slovenia, Croatia and Bosnia - and very little attempt even to portray what had actually happened in Kosovo in the twenty years before 1999. If anyone suffers from the disease of seeing the world as so centred in Washington that nothing else really matters, that person is Chomsky. It is a little surprising to find that the names of Sarajevo, Vukovar and the like never appear. Where he does refer to previous events in ex-Yugoslavia he often gets them wrong, uncritically accepting Serbian propaganda or using any conceivable quote to hammer the West."

From the book which Hastings criticized, Chomsky discussed Milosevic and his Serbian army including "the vicious approach that Milosevic would adopt", the "Serb atrocities in Kosovo, which are quite real and often ghastly", the "Serb terror and violence", "the Kosovo crisis", "an escalating pattern of Serbian attacks on Kosovar Albanian civilians", "the sharp escalation of Serb terror after the bombing", "a wider and more savage Serbian operation than what was first envisioned", "crimes of the nature and scale of Kosovo", etc. Chomsky wrote: "In the year before the bombing, according to NATO sources, about 2,000 people had been killed in Kosovo and several hundred thousand had become internal refugees." He also wrote about the refugee reports from Kosovo following the bombing. ". . .credible accounts of large-scale destruction of villages, brutal atrocities and a radical increase in the generation of refugees, perhaps an effort to expel the Albanian population. Similar reports, generally quite credible, were prominently featured throughout the media, in extensive and horrifying detail . . .."

Hastings claims that Chomsky ignored "the context of a decade of wars." Chomsky wrote on page 16, "many Kosovars - Albanian and Serb - had been leaving the province for years, and entering as well, sometimes as a consequence of the Balkan wars". He discussed "the year before the [NATO] bombing" and highlighted the 1993 NATO intervention "in Iraq and Bosnia". Chomsky also wrote, 'As far back as 1992, European monitors in Macedonia had "predicted a sudden, massive influx of ethnic Albanian refugees if hostilities spread into Kosovo."'

Sudan
In a January 16, 2002 interview with Suzy Hansen on the 1998 Sudan Bombing, Chomsky stated, "That one bombing, according to the estimates made by the German Embassy in Sudan and Human Rights Watch, probably led to tens of thousands of deaths." Human Rights Watch replied that "In fact, Human Rights Watch has conducted no research into civilian deaths as the result of U.S. bombing in Sudan and would not make such an assessment without a careful and thorough research mission on the ground." Chomsky's claim about the German Embassy in Sudan was also incorrect. The source in question was not the Embassy but the personal view of a former German Ambassador who had stated this in an opinion piece.

Terrorism and violence by states
Chomsky argues that any coherent definition of terrorism would include most forms of violence by the state ("state terrorism"). He argues that terrorism is, contrary to what is often said, primarily a weapon of the strong. "To the extent that they're powerful, states are violent institutions. This is roughly accurate," said Chomsky. Chomsky has been accused of arguing that since the United States is the sole superpower and the guarantor of the international system, it is a massive terrorist group.

In The End of Faith, Sam Harris criticizes the ethical propositions that lead Chomsky to direct his rhetoric towards the United States foreign policy (as opposed to the tenets of radical Islam): Nothing in Chomsky's account acknowledges the difference between intending to kill a child, because of the effect you hope to produce on its parents (we call this "terrorism"), and inadvertently killing a child in an attempt to capture or kill an avowed child murderer (we call this "collateral damage"). In both cases a child has died, and in both cases it is a tragedy. But the ethical status of the perpetrators, be they individuals or states, could not be more distinct... For [Chomsky], intentions do not seem to matter. Body count is all.

Chomsky has pointed to Nicaragua vs. United States and stated that the Court "condemned what they called the 'unlawful use of force,' which is another word for international terrorism by the United States." Critics respond that "... unlawful use of force is not another word for terrorism" and that the International Court of Justice has no authority over sovereign states unless they themselves so agree, which the US did not since the "Soviet Bloc police states" were outside its jurisdiction but they still sent judges to the court.

Another criticism is regarding Chomsky's claim that one of the causes of 9/11 was American support for repressive regimes in the Arab world such as Saudi Arabia, which suppress democracy yet uphold American economic interests. Critics find this strange considering that Al-Qaeda supported the nondemocratic Taliban regime. This however is a basic strawman argument. Al-Qaeda opposes the governments of coutries such as Saudi Arabia, not because they are undemocratic but because, in Al-Qaeda's eyes, they are un-Islamic. Thus Chomsky argues that 9/11 was a response to American support for un-Islamic governments rather than the support of undemocratic ones.

"The Threat of a Good Example"
Chomsky has argued that an important explanation for US interventions in countries is fear that otherwise these nations may become good examples as alternatives to an exploitative US hegemony.

Critics such as David Horowitz respond that there are many examples of socialist nations but none have been good examples. Instead all have failed economically and have been repressive politically. "Chomsky seems to have missed this most basic fact of twentieth-century history: socialism doesn't work, and to the extent it does work, its results are horrific."

Critics of David Horowitz contend that he confuses communism with socialism. Noam Chomsky is a self-described socialist, not a communist. While all communist economies have failed, the socialist democracies of northern and western Europe have succeeded both economically and politically.

Chomsky has used the coup in Chile on September 11th 1973 on Salvador Allende as an example of this threat of a good example policy.

Description of the motives of United States policy-makers
Some writers have criticized Chomsky's view of the motives of Western policy-makers. Professor Paul Robinson wrote in the New York Review of Books that Chomsky presents a "maddeningly simple-minded" view of the world.

In a 1969 exchange of letters, Stanley Hoffmann, a fellow opponent of the Vietnam War, criticized Chomsky "tendency to draw from an author's statements inferences that correspond neither to the author's intentions nor to the statements' meaning". Hoffmann states "Because I do not believe that our professed goals in Vietnam were obviously wicked, Professor Chomsky 'reads this as in essence an argument for the legitimacy of military intervention.' If he had not stopped his quotation of my analysis where he did, he would have had to show that my case against the war is exactly the opposite: 'worthy ends' divorced from local political realities lead to political and moral disaster" Further, "I detect in Professor Chomsky's approach, in his uncomplicated attribution of evil objectives to his foes, in his fondness for abstract principles, in his moral impatience, the mirror image of the very features that both he and I dislike in American foreign policy. To me sanity does not consist of replying to a crusade with an anti-crusade." .

In 1989, historian Carolyn Eisenberg argued that Chomsky's critical picture of US Cold War policy and officials did not agree with the documentary evidence such as secret internal documents. Chomsky in a reply denied that he stated that officials were deliberately lying about the motivations behind American policy, such as that they were lying about the Soviet danger and that they in reality did not take it seriously. Instead, "in political as in personal life, it is very easy to come to believe what it is convenient and useful to believe."

The Anti-Chomsky Reader
In 2004 David Horowitz and Peter Collier edited a book, The Anti-Chomsky Reader, containing writings which criticized some of Chomsky's more popular writing and commentary.

Criticism of views on Israel and Palestine
Chomsky's views on Israel, his criticism of its policies and his writings on the Middle East,  have been frequently criticized.

Although Chomsky is himself Jewish, he has been accused of antisemitism by people such as critic Werner Cohn. His role in the Faurisson Affair has also led to allegations of anti-Semitism. Alan Dershowitz has criticized Chomsky's endorsement of Norman Finkelstein, a political scientist whose work Dershowitz considers to be anti-Semitic. 

Chomsky has responded to the charges of antisemitism made against him many times. In 2004, Chomsky responded thus "If you identify the country, the people, the culture with the rulers, accept the totalitarian doctrine, then yeah, it's anti-Semitic to criticize the Israeli policy, and anti-American to criticize the American policy, and it was anti-Soviet when the dissidents criticized Russian policy. You have to accept deeply totalitarian assumptions not to laugh at this."

In a Komal Newspaper article on January 02, 2004, Chomsky explained why he was himself labeled a self-hating Jew.

"The charges are interesting. Those who know the Bible know their origins. The charges trace back to King Ahab, who was the epitome of evil in the Bible. King Ahab condemned the Prophet Elijah as a hater of Israel. The flatterers at King Ahab's court agreed. Elijah was a 'self-hating Jew,' to borrow the terminology of the contemporary flatterers at the court, because he was criticizing the policies of the King and calling for justice and respect for human rights. Similar charges were familiar in the old Soviet Union: dissidents were condemned for hating Russia. And there are other examples in military dictatorships and totalitarian states. Such criticisms reflect deeply held totalitarian values." "For a dedicated totalitarian, ruling powers are to be identified with the people, the culture, and the society. Israel is King Ahab. Russia is the Kremlin. For totalitarians, criticism of state policy is criticism of the country and its people. For those who have any concern for democracy and freedom, such charges are merely farcical." Dershowitz and David Mamet have also claimed that Chomsky tolerates violence against Israelis. Dershowitz claims in The Case for Israel, that Chomsky has falsely referred to Palestinians as "indigeneous people" and Jews as "immigrants", held double standards on racism by his association with Robert Faurisson and simultaneous accusations of racism against defenders of Israel, and for giving Israel the whole blame over the 1948 refugee crisis.

Chomsky has also been criticized for his alleged support for militant organizations such as Hezbollah which use antisemitic rhetoric. "Philosophically, of course, anarcho-socialist Chomsky has almost nothing in common with Hezbollah, which seeks to establish an Iranian style theocracy dominated by coercive enforcement of sharia religious law," wrote Tzvi Fleischer in The Australian in 2006, "But as Chomsky ... [has] demonstrated many times ... anti-Americanism trumps everything else.".

Chomsky's equation of the policies of Israel to Nazi Germany has been condemned. Cohn states that Chomsky's book The Fateful Triangle "...contains twelve references to Hitler. In each case some Jewish action is said to be like Hitler's or some attribute of the state of Israel or the Zionist movement reminds Chomsky of Hitler."

Criticism of Chomsky's stance on proposed Israel-Palestinian conflict solutions
Although he regularly condemns the Israeli government's actions in the Israel-Palestinian conflict, Chomsky has recently come under fire from some pro-Palestinian activists for his advocacy of the Geneva Accord, which it is argued rules out a one-state solution for Israel-Palestine and negates the Palestinian right of return. Chomsky responds to this by arguing that the right of return, while inalienable, will never be realized, and stating that proposals without significant international backing&mdash;such as a one-state solution&mdash;are unrealistic (and therefore unethical) goals:

"I will keep here to advocacy in the serious sense: accompanied by some kind of feasible program of action, free from delusions about 'acting on principle' without regard to 'realism'&mdash;that is, without regard for the fate of suffering people."

Faurisson affair
In 1979, Robert Faurisson, a French literary critic and professor of literature, published two letters in Le Monde which included claims that the gas chambers used by the Nazis to exterminate the Jews did not exist. The outrage caused by Faurisson's writings resulted in his conviction for defamation and subjection to a fine and prison sentence. Serge Thion, a French libertarian socialist scholar and Holocaust denier, asked Chomsky to lend his signature to a petition which supported Faurisson's right of academic freedom. Many French intellectuals considered this petition to be a legitimization of Faurisson's denial of the Holocaust, and a misrepresentation of Faurisson's credentials and intentions. Having signed the petition Chomsky wrote an essay   which was heavily critical of the French intellectual response. In this essay Chomsky determined that Faurisson was "a relatively apolitical liberal of some sort" but felt that this was irrelevant when defending absolute freedom of speech. Faurisson's editors subsequently used this essay as a preface to Mémoire en défense, Faurisson's book intended to defend his controversial views.

The Jewish French historian Pierre Vidal-Naquet attacked Chomsky in his essay  . His criticism focused on (1) the nature of the petition defending Faurisson, which Vidal-Naquet claimed was an attempt to legitimize Faurisson's Holocaust denial, and (2) Chomsky's essay defending Faurisson's right to free speech, which prefaced Mémoire en défense. Dismissing Chomsky's assertion that the essay was so used as a preface without his knowledge or consent, he questioned Chomsky's right to comment on Faurisson's work when he openly claimed to know very little about it. He also argued that Chomsky could have signed other petitions that defended the right to free speech without presenting Faurisson as a legitimate historian. Vidal-Naquet's essay concluded:
 * "The simple truth, Noam Chomsky, is that you were unable to abide by the ethical maxim you had imposed. You had the right to say: my worst enemy has the right to be free, on condition that he not ask for my death or that of my brothers. You did not have the right to say: my worst enemy is a comrade, or a 'relatively apolitical sort of liberal.' You did not have the right to take a falsifier of history and to recast him in the colors of truth."

Chomsky's written statement that "I see no anti-Semitic implications in denial of the existence of gas chambers or even denial of the Holocaust" has resulted in criticisms from Werner Cohn that he is "morally and intellectually blind" and potentially "sympathetic to holocaust denial". In his book Partners in Hate: Noam Chomsky and the Holocaust Deniers (ISBN 0-9645897-0-2), Cohn alleges that Chomsky co-wrote an article with Pierre Guillaume supporting Faurisson's stance and that he insisted on publishing the Political Economy of Human Rights with Vielle Taupe (Faurisson's publisher), rather than a commercial publisher, to show solidarity with Faurisson's cause. Chomsky disputed the details of Werner Cohn's allegations in a thousand-word and concluded that "Cohn is a pathological liar." Concerning his actions in the Faurisson affair, Chomsky has argued that his statements were limited to a defense of the rights of free expression of someone he disagrees with, and that critics subsequently subjected this limited defense to various misleading interpretations.

Individual Anarchist criticism of Chomsky's political views
Chomsky wrote a highly influential article on anarchism in the early 1970s and also wrote a book on the subject. Yet both the individualist anarchist Fred Woodworth and the anarcho-primitivist John Zerzan have criticized Chomsky. Zerzan has occasionally characterized Chomsky as being too reformist and failing to articulate a fully anarchist (in Zerzan's case this specifically means anti-civilization) critique of society. He states that "[t]he real answer, painfully obvious, is that he is not an anarchist at all." According to his Zerzan, "When asked point-blank, 'Are governments inherently bad?' his reply (28 January 1988) is no. He is critical of government policies, not government itself, motivated by his 'duty as a citizen.'"

However, when Evan Solomon asked Chomsky "What state does function according to what you call the minimal levels of honesty. Is there a state?" Chomsky answered: "None. States are power centers. The only thing that imposes constraints on them is either outside force or their own populations. That's exactly why the intellectuals who we're talking about are so adamant at preventing people in the United States and Britain from learning the most elementary facts about themselves. . . . At the end, I think states ought to dissolve because I think they're illegitimate structures, but that's a long time." Zerzan also states that Chomsky's "focus, almost exclusively, has been on U.S. foreign policy, a narrowness that would exert a conservative influence even for a radical thinker."

In the same interview with Evan Solomon, Chomsky explained his focus.

"A hypocrite is a person who focuses on the other fellow's crimes and refuses to look at his own. That's the definition of hypocrite by George Bush's favorite philosopher. When I repeat that I'm not taking a radical position. I'm taking a position that is just elementary morality. . . . What honest people are saying seems to be incomprehensible: that we should keep to the elementary moral level of the gospels. We should pay attention to our own crimes and stop committing them." Also, Chomsky believes that US global hegemony is threatening human survival; hence, the need to draw attention to US policy. He points out that "the United States is still unique in military force. Nobody comes close; we are the military power." In his 2003 book Hegemony or Survival, he argues that "The choice between hegemony and survival has rarely, if ever, been so starkly posed."  Quoting historian Arthur Schlesinger, Chomsky cites examples like the Cuban Missile Crisis in 'October 1962 [when] the world was "one word away" from nuclear war.'  In the same book, Chomsky continued.

"Immediately after this startling discovery, the Bush administration blocked UN efforts to ban the militarization of space, a serious threat to survival. The administration also terminated international negotiations to prevent biological warfare and moved to ensure the inevitability of an attack on Iraq, despite popular opposition that was without historical precedent." Zerzan also claims that Chomsky is "completely ignoring key areas (such as nature and women, to mention only two)". However, Chomsky has repeatedly mentioned these areas in interviews. Alongside preventing nuclear conflict, he said that protecting the environment is one of, "the most awesome problems of human history," and he has said that of all recent movements, "the one that’s had the most profound influ­ence and impact is probably the feminist movement, and I think it’s very important."

Chomsky's "reluctant endorsement" (The Guardian) for John Kerry as president in 2004 was controversial amongst some anarchists who tend to be critical of many political parties and electoral politics in general. Chomsky said "Kerry is sometimes described as 'Bush-lite', which is not inaccurate. But despite the limited differences both domestically and internationally, there are differences. In a system of immense power, small differences can translate into large outcomes." However, he later responded to this, saying that personally he and his fellow anarchist colleague Howard Zinn would both vote for Ralph Nader. “Voting for Nader in a safe state is fine. That's what I'll do. I don't see how anyone could read what I wrote and think otherwise, just from the elementary logic of it. Voting for Nader in a safe state is not a vote for Bush. The point I made had to do with (effectively) voting for Bush.”

Individual Socialists' criticism of Chomsky's political views
In his article "Capitalism's Long Hot Winter Has Begun", Socialist Worker's Party National Secretary Jack Barnes criticized Noam Chomsky: "Today, the self-avowed anarchist, Noam Chomsky, does the same thing. It's why his radicalism is no threat to the powers that be. And why there is an anti-working-class toxin in his radical medicine, especially anti-working-class in the United States" (New International #12, p. 125). What Barnes meant by Chomsky doing the "same thing" was that he often "continues for quite some time writing about, complaining about, and pointing to shortcomings and moral evils of capitalism, its industry, and its agriculture--all the while building up the case that it was pointless for the working class to try to do anything about it--anything revolutionary, that is. Anything that can lead to a workers and farmers government, to the dictatorship of the proletariat", (New International #12 p.124-125.)

This is because he's been consistently against a "dictatorship of the proletariat" based on his positive opinion of Bakunin. Chomsky has said, "Bakunin's warnings about the Red bureaucracy that would institute the worst of all despotic governments were long before Lenin, and were directed against the followers of Mr. Marx. There were, in fact, followers of many different kinds; Pannekoek, Luxembourg, Mattick and others are very far from Lenin, and their views often converge with elements of anarcho-syndicalism. Korsch and others wrote sympathetically of the anarchist revolution in Spain, in fact. There are continuities from Marx to Lenin, but there are also continuities to Marxists who were harshly critical of Lenin and Bolshevism. Teodor Shanin's work in the past years on Marx's later attitudes towards peasant revolution is also relevant here. I'm far from being a Marx scholar, and wouldn't venture any serious judgement on which of these continuities reflects the 'real Marx,' if there even can be an answer to that question."

Criticisms of Chomsky's propaganda model
See Propaganda model.

Accusations of being a "Closet Capitalist"
Peter Schweizer of the Hoover Institute, in an article called Noam Chomsky, Closet Capitalist states that Chomsky, who has criticized tax havens and concentration of wealth, has himself (with a net worth of $2,000,000) used a trust to avoid taxation. "Chomsky favors the estate tax and massive income redistribution—just not the redistribution of his income." Schweizer interprets a discussion board post of Chomsky's stating that “when property rights are granted to power and privilege, it can be expected to be harmful to most,” as constituting opposition to intellectual property, a position Schweizer maintains is hypocritical in light of the fact that much of Chomsky's own material is copyrighted and distributed for a fee.

This argument is what is known as argumentum ad hominem, attacking only Chomsky's character by claims of hypocrisy and not disputing Chomsky's statements.

Other criticisms
Chomsky is also criticized among so-called "anarcho-capitalists" for his alleged statist tendencies and for his belief that government action can solve social problems by using laws and force.

Paul Bogdanor in The Top 200 Chomsky Lies lists 200 statements by Chomsky and claims to show that they are incorrect.

Chomsky has been criticized for working at the MIT which has had research financed by and for the military. This is an argumentum ad hominem. Chomsky has responded with several arguments, "receiving financing from an institution only limits one's ability to speak out if that institution is totalitarian in nature", that "His intention was to inform the general population of what was going on so that individuals could make informed and unencumbered decisions about their actions", that "people have a responsibility for the foreseeable consequences of their actions, and therefore have the responsibility of thinking about the research they undertake and what it might lead to under existing conditions", and that "no institution should legislate what people are permitted to work on."

Chomsky has also been criticised by some on the political Left for his apparent disbelief in ‘conspiracy theories’, notably those concerning the assassination of JFK and the terrorist attacks of 9-11.