Is Terrorism a Mortal Threat?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
It may have
been politically incorrect to publish the thoughts on the sixth
anniversary of 9-11, but what Colin Powell had to say to GQ
magazine needs to be heard.
Terrorism,
said Powell, is not a mortal threat to America.
"What is
the greatest threat facing us now?" Powell asked. "People will say
it's terrorism. But are there any terrorists in the world who can
change the American way of life or our political system? No. Can
they knock down a building? Yes. Can they kill somebody? Yes. But
can they change us? No. Only we can change ourselves. So what is
the great threat we are facing?"
History
and common sense teach that Powell speaks truth.
Since 9-11,
100,000 Americans have been murdered as many as we lost in Vietnam,
Korea and Iraq combined. Yet, not one of these murders was the work
of an Islamic terrorist, and all of them, terrible as they are,
did not imperil the survival of our republic.
Terrorists
can blow up our buildings, assassinate our leaders, and bomb our
malls and stadiums. They cannot destroy us. Assume the worst. Terrorists
smuggle an atom bomb into New York harbor or into Washington, D.C.,
and detonate it.
Horrible
and horrifying as that would be perhaps 100,000 dead and wounded
it would not mean the end of the United States. It would more
likely mean the end of Iran, or whatever nation at which the United
States chose to direct its rage and retribution.
Consider.
Between 1942 and 1945, Germany and Japan, nations not one-tenth
the size of the United States, saw their cities firebombed, and
their soldiers and civilians slaughtered in the millions. Japan
lost an empire. Germany lost a third of its territory. Both were
put under military occupation. Yet, 15 years later, Germany and
Japan were the second and third most prosperous nations on Earth,
the dynamos of their respective continents, Europe and Asia.
Powell's
point is not that terrorism is not a threat. It is that the terror
threat must be seen in perspective, that we ought not frighten ourselves
to death with our own propaganda, that we cannot allow fear of terror
to monopolize our every waking hour or cause us to give up our freedom.
For all
the blather of a restored caliphate, the "Islamofascists," as the
neocons call them, cannot create or run a modern state, or pose
a mortal threat to America. The GNP of the entire Arab world is
not equal to Spain's. Oil aside, its exports are equal to Finland's.
Afghanistan
and Sudan, under Islamist regimes, were basket cases. Despite the
comparisons with Nazi Germany, Iran is unable to build modern fighters
or warships and has an economy one-twentieth that of the United
States, at best. While we lack the troops to invade Iran, three
times the size of Iraq, the U.S. Air Force and Navy could, in weeks,
smash Iran's capacity to make war, blockade it and reduce its population
to destitution. Should Iran develop a nuclear weapon and use it
on us or on Israel, it would invite annihilation.
As a threat,
Iran is not remotely in the same league with the Soviet Union of
Stalin, Khrushchev and Brezhnev, or Mao's China, or Nazi Germany,
or Imperial Japan, or even Mussolini's Italy.
And why
would Tehran, which has not launched a war since the revolution
in 1979, start a war with an America with 10,000 nuclear weapons?
If the Iranians are so suicidal, why have they not committed suicide
in 30 years by attacking us or Israel?
What makes
war with Iran folly is that an all-out war could lead to a break-up
of that country, with Persians, Azeris, Kurds, Arabs and Baluchis
going their separate ways, creating fertile enclaves for al-Qaida
recruitment and training.
Yet,
while talking common sense, Gen. Powell himself reverted to cliché.
"America could not survive without immigration."
But this
is nonsense. From 1789 to 1845, we had almost no immigration, before
the Irish came. Did we not survive? From 1925 to 1965, we had almost
no immigration. Yet, we conquered the Great Depression, won World
World II, became the greatest power on earth and ended those four
decades with an Era of Good Feeling under Ike and JFK unlike any
we had known before.
Was
the America of the 1940s and 1950s in which Colin Powell grew up
in danger of not surviving for lack of immigration?
In our
time, Pakistan, Ethiopia and Czechoslovakia have split apart. The
Soviet Union and Yugoslavia have broken up into two dozen nations.
Terrorism had nothing to do with it. Tribalism had everything to
do with it.
Race, ethnicity
and religion are the fault lines along which nations like Iraq are
coming apart. If America ends, it will not be the work of an Osama
bin Laden. As Abraham Lincoln said, it will be by our own hand,
it will be by suicide.
September
22, 2007
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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