Threat
Of Terrorism
by
Charley
Reese
You
know, I'm sure, that the Bush administration has greatly exaggerated
the threat of terrorism. Those who employ the tactic of terrorism
do so because they are weak. They have no army. They have no great
popular following.
Osama
bin Laden was a crank living in the mountains of Afghanistan with
only a small following in the Islamic world until George
W. Bush elevated him to world celebrity status.
It's
true that bin Laden knocked down the World Trade Center towers and
struck the Pentagon or at least we're pretty sure he was
behind those attacks. He was able to do that because his 19 people
were lucky and because our immigration screening, our intelligence,
the FBI and the airport security system were all sloppy.
To
the extent that these attacks roused the federal government from
its previous apathy and sloppiness, he did us a favor, though at
the terrible cost of about 3,000 lives. But that attack was not
justification for a "war on terrorism." A war on bin Laden,
yes; a war on terrorism in general, no.
In
the first place, there aren't that many terrorists in the world.
You can check with the State Department's annual report on terrorism
if you doubt me. In the second place, most of the world's terrorists
are local guys with local beefs against local folks. All the time
the Irish terrorists were bombing and shooting the British, Great
Britain never felt the necessity of declaring a worldwide war on
terrorism. It went after the Irish terrorists.
When
bombs were going off in Paris some years ago, the French didn't
say everyone must fight terrorism. They went after the guys who
were planting the bombs.
It
pleases George Bush to call Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorist organizations,
but they are not, as far as the United States is concerned. Their
target is Israel. The Israelis are right to call them terrorists,
but we, as a sovereign country, should never go about adopting other
people's enemies as our own. Neither Hamas nor Islamic Jihad has
ever attacked the United States or expressed any desire to do so.
And the same is true of most so-called terrorists in most parts
of the world.
Our
problem is with bin Laden and his al-Qaida organization. We should
have concentrated on that instead of declaring a global jihad against
terrorists everywhere in the world.
The
problem with doing this is that it commits us to an unending war.
It is a war in which there is no way to define victory. When you
go to war against a country, when you occupy it and its government
surrenders or collapses, you know you have won the war. But terrorists
don't have a country. They don't have a government. They don't have
an infrastructure.
Terrorists,
in fact, operate like criminal gangs. You kill some of their "soldiers,"
and they recruit more. You kill a gang leader, and another guy takes
his place. Israelis, who are far more ruthless than we are, have
been killing terrorists for more than 50 years. Have they solved
their terrorism problem? No.
The
great German philosopher of war Karl von Clausewitz said that war
is the pursuit of political objectives by other means. That's true
of terrorism. All terrorists have political objectives to
get the British out of Northern Ireland, to end the Israeli occupation,
to get the French out of Algiers and so on. Since the motivation
of terrorists is political, the solution to terrorism is likewise
political.
There
are some people in this country who will try to convince you that
we are in a "war of civilizations." Don't buy it. It's
false. There are specific aspects of our foreign policy that some
people, like bin Laden, object to. He has no desire to occupy the
United States, nor does he wish to convert the West to Islam.
In
the meantime, go about your life and realize that there is a 1 out
of 300 million chance that you will get killed by a terrorist. You
have much more to fear from the flu and other natural hazards.
January
19, 2004
Charley
Reese has been a journalist for 49 years, reporting on everything
from sports to politics. From 196971, he worked as a campaign
staffer for gubernatorial, senatorial and congressional races in
several states. He was an editor, assistant to the publisher, and
columnist for the Orlando Sentinel from 1971 to 2001. He
now writes a syndicated column which is carried on LewRockwell.com.
Reese served two years active duty in the U.S. Army as a tank gunner.
©
2004 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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