Canada's Almost 9/11?
by
Eric Margolis
by Eric Margolis
Canadians got
a taste of the real world this week.
The arrest
Friday of 17 suspected terrorists is stark evidence Canadians can
no longer expect to escape the private enterprise violence by small
groups that we call "terrorism."
Three weeks
ago, this writer warned a conference of DND and police officers
that the greatest security threat to Canada would come not from
the shadowy al-Qaida organization, but from angry young Canadian
Muslims opposed to Canada’s presence in Afghanistan and its tacit
support of US policy in Iraq and Palestine.
The recent
bombing attacks in Madrid and London were not conducted by al-Qaida,
but by young British-born Muslims men and Spanish residents opposed
to their nation’s intervention in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Is Canada now
facing its own home-grown violence? The 17 arrested men were all
apparently Muslims, with the possible exception of one Indian. The
RCMP suggests the arrested suspects planned to use three tons of
fertilizer to build truck bombs for use against targets in southern
Ontario.
This scenario
is plausible. Canadian Muslims, like their brethren across the Muslim
world, see Western intervention in Iraq and Afghanistan as crimes
against the Islamic World, and part of a new anti-Muslim crusade
directed from Washington
A small number
of extremists may have decided to punish Canada for sending troops
to fight in Afghanistan. But before we rush to judgment, it’s worth
remembering the score of Pakistanis arrested in 2003 allegedly for
plotting to blow up the nuclear reactors at Pickering. After a huge
media uproar and lurid claims the charges were dropped and the accused
deported on minor visa irregularities.
The Bush Administration
has been putting enormous pressure on Canada to "get tough"
with a wide assortment of Muslim groups and individuals protesting
US policy in the Muslim World.
The raid by
hundreds of Canadian security officers on a small number of young
Muslim suspects in Mississauga and Kingston suggests the high-profile
operation was designed as much for public relations and diplomatic
reasons as national security. No doubt, Washington will be very
pleased with PM Harper.
If RCMP and
CSIS have in fact uncovered a major terrorist plot, kudos to them
for a job well done. They will have performed far more effectively
and professionally than the FBI and CIA.
But caution
is advised until all the facts are known. It is also very possible
Canadian security organizations have rounded up a bunch of loud-mouthed
teenagers who may have been encouraged to sedition by government
"agents provocateurs."
We won’t know
what really happened until the accused go to court. It seems an
FBI investigation last month of a group of American Muslims from
Atlanta who went to Toronto and met co-religionists there led to
the current arrests. FBI and Canadian authorities believe they have
uncovered an important terrorist cell plotting major attacks in
Canada and the US.
But the FBI’s
evidence so far appears fairly slim and may not amount to much.
Recall that of the more than 2,000 Muslims arrested in the US since
2001 for suspicion of terrorism, less than 15 were convicted, and
those mostly for minor visa offenses.
Canadian
authorities may face the same results. Their track record so far
has been unimpressive. That, of course, may be because there are
no terrorist cells plotting outrages, but just a lot of angry young
men.
By
sending combat troops to Afghanistan, Canada has declared itself
an active participant in the US-led war against Islamic militancy.
As a result, Canadians must now expect what CIA veterans call "blow-back."
Once admired by everyone, and hated by no one, Canada has now made
itself a target. It’s only a matter of time before a major attack
occurs. If not this week, then soon.
June
12, 2006
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail], contributing foreign editor for Sun National Media
Canada, is the author of War
at the Top of the World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2006 Eric Margolis
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