Suicide Bombers as Freedom Fighters?
by Jude
Wanniski by
Jude Wanniski
Memo To: Website
Fans, Browsers, Clients
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: Secular Suicides
From the dawn
of civilization, the man of the house has been the protector of
hearth and home from outside enemies; women were responsible for
maintaining the household. Donald Rumsfeld, on the Sunday talk shows
yesterday, clearly indicated he does not understand that the "insurgents"
in Iraq are fighting and dieing, even willing to commit suicide
if need be to protect hearth and home from the American invaders
and occupiers. Rumsfeld still insists the suicide bombers are outside
religious fanatics from Syria or Saudi Arabia and that Iraqis themselves
wouldn't blow themselves up.
Rumsfeld has
been wrong about a great many things as Defense Secretary and he
is so again. Several months before the "war" began in 2003, I'd
been advised by Iraqi dissidents in exile in London that young men
were being trained as suicide bombers. This week's chilling
cover story in Time magazine, an interview with a young
Iraqi who is preparing for his own suicidal attack on "the Americans,"
makes it clear there is much more going that our troops are facing.
But to complete the picture I'm also appending an article that ran
in Antiwar.com on June 10 by
Michael Scheuer. It's a review of a book by an academic who has
studied "suicide terrorism" and has concluded that it is secular
in origin, not religious. And it goes to my point about the role
of the male in defending the "home," or the "homeland" in this case.
Of the many thousands of young men who died in the army of the American
Revolution behind George Washington's leadership, how many knew
their attacks against the British to expel them from our
homeland were suicidal? In this light, Rumsfeld may finally
be right on something when he says it may take a dozen years to
subdue the insurgents. If not more?
June 10,
2005
Throwing America a Life Preserver
by Michael
Scheuer
Professor
Robert Pape's brilliant new book Dying
to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism gives Americans
an urgently needed basis for devising a strategy to defeat Osama
bin Laden and other Islamist militants. In scholarly and low-key
prose, Pape delivers the results of his own extensive research and
that done by the University of Chicago's Project on Suicide Terrorism.
In so doing, Pape demolishes the relentlessly repeated assertion
of the neoconservatives and Israeli politicians that Islamist suicide
attacks against America and other counties are launched by undereducated,
unemployed, alienated, apocalyptic fanatics who are eager to kill
themselves because Americans vote, have civil liberties, and allow
women to drive cars. This assertion always has been transparently
false, and I have argued so in my own work on al-Qaeda. It has been,
however, an assertion that is easy to protect because its authors
simply dismiss their critics by calling them anti-Semites, thereby
foreclosing debate. But Pape avoids contentious rhetoric and employs
facts to kill the assertion, and he does so coolly and with the
precision of a Marine sniper.
The basis
of Dying to Win is Pape's study of the 315 known suicide
terrorist attacks that occurred in the world between 1980 and 2003,
attacks carried out by Muslims, Tamils, Sikhs, and Kurds. Pape concludes
that "the data show there is little connection between suicide terrorism
and Islamic fundamentalism, or any of the world's religions."
"Rather, what
nearly all suicide terrorist attacks have in common is a specific
secular and strategic goal: to compel modern democracies to withdraw
military forces from the territory that the terrorists consider
to be their homeland. Religion is rarely the root cause, although
it is often used as a tool by terrorist organizations in recruiting
and in other efforts in service of the broader strategic objective."
Yes, Pape
has documented both the valid logic behind the use of suicide attacks
– they are an effective weapon for an inferior force fighting a
great power, especially a pain-averse, democratic great power –
and the reality that groups using such attacks are playing for strategic
stakes: Their goal is victory, not mere destruction. The suicide
attacks by each of the groups studied in Dying to Win, Pape
concludes, were "mainly a response to foreign occupation rather
than the product of Islamic fundamentalism." In sum, America faces
a logical, patient, and deliberate enemy, one with clear strategic
goals. This enemy is attacking because he perceives his country,
culture, and/or religion are under attack. In addition, Pape shows
conclusively that suicide attackers are usually respected and even
revered in their own societies because they are defending those
societies against a foreign threat. Simply put, Pape suggests there
is no sound reason to believe the pool of potential suicide attackers
can be dried up as long as their societies perceive an existential
threat to their existence.
Pape's conclusions
flow into a set of recommendations that cannot be too highly commended
to American leaders and citizens, whatever their political persuasion:
For near-term self-defense, America must kill as many of this generation
of terrorists as possible while simultaneously beginning to terminate
the interventionist policies and presence that motivate our present
enemies and, if continued, will motivate greater numbers in the
next generation. Pape warns that the hands-on, Wilsonian crusaders
who today control both U.S. political parties have already vastly
increased the likelihood of another 9/11 attack via their efforts
to use military force to spread democracy abroad; this he calls
the "taproot" of the suicide attackers' motivation. Pape argues
that the "most important" concept for Americans – the leaders and
the led – is that
"[A]n attempt
to transform Muslim societies through regime change is likely to
dramatically increase the threat we face. The root cause of suicide
terrorism is foreign occupation and the threat that foreign military
presence poses to the local community's way of life. Hence, any
policy that seeks to conquer Muslim societies in order, deliberately,
to transform their culture is folly. Even if our intentions are
good, anti-American terrorism would likely grow, and grow rapidly."
This reality,
Pape recognizes, will require changes in America's relations with
the Persian Gulf states, getting our military out of Iraq and the
Arabian Peninsula, and the implementation of an energy policy that
makes Arab oil production substantially less important to our economy.
In other words, America must heed John Quincy Adam's advice that
disaster lurks for America in every effort it undertakes to destroy
monsters abroad in order to install democracy in their place. What
Adams knew based on historical study and intuition, Pape has splendidly
documented with cold, hard facts. All honor and praise to Professor
Robert Pape and his colleagues at the University of Chicago Project
on Suicide Terrorism not only for solid and penetrating research,
but for leaving the neoconservatives, the Israelis, and the world's
other Wilsonian democracy-installers with the formidable task of
finding a way to attribute "anti-Semitism" to the mass of data painstakingly
accumulated and evenhandedly presented in the invaluable book, Dying
to Win.
June
28, 2005
Jude
Wanniski [send him mail] runs
the financial/political advisory service Wanniski.com. Copyright
© 2005 Jude Wanniski Jude
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