Ever since September 11, there has been an alternative narrative about this
war embraced by the Left. In this mythology, the attack on September 11 had in
some vague way something to do with American culpability.
Either we were unfairly tilting toward Israel, or had been unkind to Muslims.
Perhaps, as Sen. Patty Murray intoned, we needed to match the good works of bin
Laden to capture the hearts and minds of Muslim peoples.
The fable continues that the United States itself was united after the attack
even during its preparations to retaliate in Afghanistan. But then George Bush
took his eye off the ball. He let bin Laden escape, and worst of all,
unilaterally and preemptively, went into secular Iraq — an unnecessary war for
oil, hegemony, Israel, or Halliburton, something in Ted Kennedy’s words “cooked
up in Texas.”
In any case, there was no connection between al Qaeda and Saddam, and thus
terrorists only arrived in Iraq after we did.
That tale goes on. The Iraqi fiasco is now a hopeless quagmire. The
terrorists are paying us back for it in places like London and Madrid.
Still worse, here at home we have lost many of our civil liberties to the
Patriot Act and forsaken our values at Guantanamo Bay under the pretext of war.
Nancy Pelosi could not understand the continued detentions in Guantanamo since
the war in Afghanistan is in her eyes completely finished.
In this fable, we are not safer as a nation. George Bush’s policies have
increased the terror threat as we saw recently in the London bombing. We have
now been at war longer than World War II. We still have no plan to defeat our
enemies, and thus must set a timetable to withdraw from Iraq.
Islamic terrorism cannot be defeated militarily nor can democracy be
“implanted by force.” So it is time to return to seeing the terrorist killing as
a criminal justice matter — a tolerable nuisance addressed by writs and
indictments, while we give more money to the Middle East and begin paying
attention to the “root causes” of terror.
That is the dominant narrative of the Western Left and at times it finds its
way into mainstream Democratic-party thinking. Yet every element of it is false.
Prior to 9/11, the United States had given an aggregate of over $50 billion
to Egypt, and had allotted about the same amount of aid to Israel as to its
frontline enemies. We had helped to save Muslims in Bosnia, Kosovo, Somalia,
Kuwait, and Afghanistan, and received little if any thanks for bombing Christian
Europeans to finish in a matter of weeks what all the crack-pot jihadists had
not done by flocking to the Balkans in a decade.
Long before Afghanistan and
Iraq, bin Laden declared war on America in 1998, citing the U.N. embargo of Iraq
and troops in Saudi Arabia; when those were no longer issues, he did not cease,
but continued his murdering. He harbored a deep-seated contempt for Western
values, even though he was eaten within by uncontrolled envy and felt empowered
by years of appeasement after a series of attacks on our embassies, bases,
ships, and buildings, both here and abroad.
Iraqi intelligence was involved
with the first World Trade Center bombing, and its operatives met on occasion
with those who were involved in al Qaeda operations. Every terrorist from Abu
Abbas and Abu Nidal to Abdul Yasin and Abu al-Zarqawi found Baghdad the most
hospitable place in the Middle East, which explains why a plan to assassinate
George Bush Sr. was hatched from such a miasma.
Neither bin Laden nor his lieutenants are poor, but like the Hamas suicide
bombers, Mohammed Atta, or the murderer of Daniel Pearl they are usually middle
class and educated — and are more likely to hate the West, it seems, the more
they wanted to be part of it. The profile of the London bombers, when known,
will prove the same.
The poor in South America or Africa are not murdering civilians in North
America or Europe. The jihadists are not bombing Chinese for either their
godless secularism or suppression of Muslim minorities. Indeed, bin Laden
harbored more hatred for an America that stopped the Balkan holocaust of Muslims
than for Slobodan Milosevic who started it.
There was only unity in this
country between September 11 and October 6, when a large minority of Americans
felt our victim status gave us for a golden moment the high ground. We forget
now the furor over hitting back in Afghanistan — a quagmire in the words of New
York Times columnists R. W. Apple and Maureen Dowd; a “terrorist campaign”
against Muslims according to Representative Cynthia McKinney; “a silent
genocide” in Noam Chomsky’s ranting.
Two thirds of al Qaeda’s command is now
captured or dead; bases in Afghanistan are lost. Saddam’s intelligence will not
be lending expertise to anyone and the Baghdad government won’t welcome in
terrorist masterminds.
In fact, thousands of brave Iraqi Muslims are now in
a shooting war with wahhabi jihadists who, despite their carnage, are dying in
droves as they flock to Iraq.
A constitution is in place in Iraq; reform is spreading to Lebanon, the Gulf,
and Egypt; and autocracies in Saudi Arabia, Libya, and Pakistan are apprehensive
over a strange new American democratic zeal. Petroleum was returned to control
of the Iraqi people, and the price has skyrocketed to the chagrin of American
corporations.
There has been no repeat of September 11 so far. Killing
jihadists abroad while arresting their sympathizers here at home has made it
hard to replicate another 9/11-like attack.
The Patriot Act was far less
intrusive than what Abraham Lincoln (suspension of habeas corpus), Woodrow
Wilson (cf. the Espionage and Sedition Acts), or Franklin Roosevelt (forced
internment) resorted to during past wars. So far America has suffered in Iraq
.006 percent of the combat dead it lost in World War II, while not facing a
conventional enemy against which it might turn its traditional technological and
logistical advantages.
Unlike Gulf War I and the decade-long Iraqi cold war
of embargos, stand-off bombing, and no-fly-zones, the United States has a
comprehensive strategy both in the war against terror and to end a decade and a
half of Iraqi strife: Kill terrorists abroad, depose theocratic and autocratic
regimes that have either warred with the United States or harbored terrorists,
and promote democracy to take away grievances that can be manipulated and turned
against us.
Why does this false narrative, then, persist — other than that
it had a certain political utility in the 2002 and 2004 elections?
In a
word, this version of events brings spiritual calm for millions of troubled
though affluent and blessed Westerners. There are three sacraments to their
postmodern thinking, besides the primordial fear that so often leads to
appeasement.
Our first hindrance is moral equivalence. For the hard Left there is no
absolute right and wrong since amorality is defined arbitrarily and only by
those in power.
Taking back Fallujah from beheaders and terrorists is no different from
bombing the London subway since civilians may die in either case. The deliberate
rather than accidental targeting of noncombatants makes little difference,
especially since the underdog in Fallujah is not to be judged by the same
standard as the overdogs in London and New York. A half-dozen roughed up
prisoners in Guantanamo are the same as the Nazi death camps or the Gulag.
Our second shackle is utopian pacifism — ‘war never solved anything’ and
‘violence only begets violence.’ Thus it makes no sense to resort to violence,
since reason and conflict resolution can convince even a bin Laden to come to
the table. That most evil has ended tragically and most good has resumed through
armed struggle — whether in Germany, Japan, and Italy or Panama, Belgrade, and
Kabul — is irrelevant. Apparently on some past day, sophisticated Westerners, in
their infinite wisdom and morality, transcended age-old human nature, and as a
reward were given a pass from the smelly, dirty old world of the past six
millennia.
The third restraint is multiculturalism, or the idea that all
social practices are of equal merit. Who are we to generalize that the regimes
and fundamentalist sects of the Middle East result in economic backwardness,
intolerance of religious and ethnic minorities, gender apartheid, racism,
homophobia, and patriarchy? Being different from the West is never being worse.
These tenets in various forms are not merely found in the womb of the
universities, but filter down into our popular culture, grade schools, and
national political discourse — and make it hard to fight a war against stealthy
enemies who proclaim constant and shifting grievances. If at times these
doctrines are proven bankrupt by the evidence it matters little, because such
beliefs are near religious in nature — a secular creed that will brook no
empirical challenge.
These articles of faith apparently fill a deep psychological need for
millions of Westerners, guilty over their privilege, free to do anything without
constraints or repercussions, and convinced that their own culture has made them
spectacularly rich and leisured only at the expense of others.
So it is not true to say that Western civilization is at war against Dark Age
Islamism. Properly speaking, only about half of the West is involved, the
shrinking segment that still sees human nature as unchanging and history as
therefore replete with a rich heritage of tragic lessons.
This is nothing new.
The spectacular inroads of the Ottomans in the16th century to the gates of
Vienna and the shores of the Adriatic were not explainable according to
Istanbul’s vibrant economy, impressive universities, or widespread scientific
dynamism and literacy, or even a technologically superior and richly equipped
military. Instead, a beleaguered Europe was trisected by squabbling Protestants,
Catholics, and Orthodox Christians — as a wealthy northwest, with Atlantic
seaports, ignored the besieged Mediterranean and Balkans and turned its
attention to getting rich in the New World.
So too we are divided over two antithetical views of the evolving West —
Europe at odds with America, red and blue states in intellectual and spiritual
divergence, the tragic view resisting the creeping therapeutic mindset.
These interior splits largely explain why creepy killers from the Dark Ages,
parasitic on the West from their weapons to communications, are still plaguing
us four years after their initial surprise attack.
"The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars/But in ourselves, that we are
underlings.
http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/
July 15, 2005, 8:04 a.m.
Russian version