Pouring
Gasoline on the Fire
by
David Dieteman
Around
9:15 yesterday morning (i.e., September 11), I got an email from
my sister-in-law telling me that a plane had crashed into the World
Trade Center. Terrible accident, I figured. Not long after, she
let me know that another plane had hit. My God, I wondered, where
would this all end. It was, by that point, beyond dispute that a
hideous and coordinated act of terror had taken place. Later, I
learned of the planes which hit the Pentagon and rural Somerset
County, Pennsylvania.
My
mind raced to consider who I knew in the World Trade Center, who
I knew at the Pentagon. My cousin is a New York City cop. As far
as we know, he is alive, not having been scheduled to work until
11 a.m. yesterday. He was called in to respond to the emergency
well before 11 a.m. On the other hand, my wife's cousin works at
the Pentagon, and we have no idea of her whereabouts. It's possible
she was at home on maternity leave.
Last
night, Fox News was simply depressing. Politicians and pundits called
to "unleash the dogs of war," to wage all-out war on those responsible.
The major difficulty, of course, is that we are not yet certain
who is responsible (besides those who blew themselves to
oblivion) or what is an effective way of fighting back.
There
were dim and bright spots in the commentary. George Will, again
showing me why I am no longer a conservative, wrote that
There
can be no immunity from these vulnerabilities, but that is not
a reason for fatalism. A proactive policy begins with anticipation.
Therefore the first U.S. policy response must be to reevaluate
and strengthen the national intelligence assets, particularly
the CIA and FBI, which are the sine qua non of counterterrorism.
Americans
are slow to anger but mighty when angry, and their proper anger
now should be alloyed with pride. They are targets because of
their virtues principally democracy, and loyalty to those
nations that, like Israel, are embattled salients of our virtues
in a still-dangerous world.
Will
simply ignores the fact that the
Vatican has condemned the actions of Israel toward the Palestinians.
While Palestinian youths throw rocks, Israeli troops fire rockets
and bullets. The overwhelming majority of those who have died since
the collapse of the "peace process" have been Palestinians. Israel
is far from an "embattled salient of virtue." Instead, the Israeli
land-grab policies and assassination campaign against Palestinian
leaders has thrown gasoline on a fire.
The
Vatican has also condemned the American bombing of Iraq. Inconvenient
to think about that, so ignore it as if it didn't happen.
With
respect to the CIA and FBI, they have let us down - again. Oklahoma
City? Embassies overseas? The USS Cole? As someone who has written
in defense of Kimmel and Short, I am not calling for scapegoats
to be sacrificed on the altar of public opinion.
On
the other hand, the various federal agencies, with their billions
upon billions of dollars, failed to prevent yesterday's destruction.
If they were private companies, they would be fired, if not sued
as well. I would not, in the words of Newt Gingrich, sanction a
"witch hunt" of the intelligence agencies, but there are hard questions
which must be asked. If yesterday's attack was not prevented, what
reason is there to believe that attacks on less visible (and less
well-guarded) targets can be prevented?
Conveniently,
Will also ignores the fact that the CIA
helped to make Osama bin Laden, the key suspect, into a powerful
man by funding his operations against the Soviets in Afghanistan.
Although
I really should know better by now, this is a bit distressing to
me. The Washington
Post
reports that 90% of those polled are "ready to risk war." In
that case, 90% of those polled would appear to be tragically short-sighted.
Check back with them when their husbands and sons come home in metal
boxes in the luggage compartment of an Air Force jet.
Worse,
66% responded that they would be "willing to give up some liberties"
in order to combat terrorism. Talk about the tail wagging the dog.
In order to "save" the Land of the Free, we will make it unfree.
This is a Pyrrhic victory, plain and simple. It is not victory,
but the end of America.
The
bright spots in the commentary came today, and, perhaps predictably,
right here. Lew Rockwell, Joseph Sobran, Gene Callahan, Bob Murphy,
Ryan McMaken, John Keller and Harry Browne (via Antiwar.com)
applied the timeless
words of Ludwig von Mises from Liberalism,
published in 1919: "everlasting peace can be achieved only
by putting the liberal program into effect generally and holding
to it constantly and consistently."
What
is "the liberal program?" Liberty and property. Peace and free trade.
Rather than have the American government supply money and armaments
to the Israeli government, so that yet more Palestinian civilians
can be killed, we can work for peace by supplying money and armaments
to no governments. Rather than bully the people of the world into
behaving as desired by those in Washington, DC, we
can allow peaceful cooperation through trade by ceasing to interfere
in trade.
It
is one thing to bring to justice those responsible for yesterday's
actions. Attempting to wage war on an unknown, unseen enemy, however,
is a different matter. It was a colossal failure in Vietnam. If
the United States attempts to wage such a war again, it will be
worse. Vietnamese monks set themselves on fire in the streets to
protest the war. They did not set fire to American streets in an
effort to bring the war home to complacent Americans.
Simon
Jenkins, writing in the London Times,
has it right:
The
message of yesterday's incident is that, for all its horror,
it does not and must not be allowed to matter. It is a human
disaster, an outrage, an atrocity, an unleashing of the madness
of which the world will never be rid. But it is not politically
significant. It does not tilt the balance of world power one
inch. It is not an act of war. America's leadership of the West
is not diminished by it. The cause of democracy is not damaged,
unless we choose to let it be damaged.
Terrorists
may blow up buildings, but they cannot suspend the Bill of Rights.
Only we can suspend the Bill of Rights, and the rule of law enshrined
in the Constitution, by overreacting to yesterday's events. This
is not the time to restrict our liberties yet further, nor is it
the time to kill even more foreigners with American money, guns,
and bombs.
Pride
is not sufficient justification to sign the death sentence of perhaps
millions of innocents. Prudence dictates that we proceed with great
caution.
September
13,
2001
Mr.
Dieteman [send him mail]
is an attorney in Erie, Pennsylvania, and a PhD candidate in philosophy
at The Catholic University of America.
©
2001 David Dieteman
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