By Lawrence Henry on 2.24.03 @ 12:05AM
After 9/11 everyone but the intellectual preeners knew what the U.S. was fighting and why. Nothing's changed, except that the preeners think they can now save themselves from irrelevance.
I recently spent five days in a hospital, cut off from most news
by post-surgical procedures and pain relievers (a valuable
experience in humility for a journalist; it makes you aware how
little you matter). When I came out of the fog, on a Sunday, I
turned on the TV to find Wolf Blitzer asking Condoleezza Rice,
"Shouldn't we give the inspections more time to work?"
Ah, yes.
One of the wonderful things about immediate post-9/11 America
was the broad realization that the media commentators, university
professors, post-modernist wiseguys, Hollywooders, and intellectual
fashion mavens who ordinarily dominate popular discourse simply had
nothing to say. We have forgotten that in the 18 months since. The
intellectual preeners have reasserted their sway, with their
propaganda phrases ("has not made the case," "rush to war"), their
reflexive anti-Americanism, their unfunny in-crowd put-downs, their
insistence that "dissent" is being "muzzled," with their sheer
pugnacious stupidity.
Back to basics:
President Bush almost immediately declared that the United
States was at war, not only with terrorists but with nations that
harbor terrorists. Virtually all Arab nations harbor or fund
terrorists. Egypt created the Palestine Liberation Organization in
the mid-sixties. Egypt savagely represses Islamic fundamentalist
terrorists inside its own border, but looks the other way as those
organizations pursue anti-U.S. tactics. Arafat took over the PLO by
rousing opposition to what he called "stooges of Nasser." The PLO
itself spun off Black September after Syria's expulsion of
Palestinian refugees in that eponymous month. Iran directly created
and sponsors Hezbollah and Hamas. Syria provides safe havens for
both organizations on Israel's northern border. Iraq pays the
families of suicide bombers $25,000, working through Arafat's
Palestinian Authority. Through government sanctioned "charities,"
Saudi Arabia does the same thing.
Contrary to the chatter of the leftists, the connection between
Iraq and Al Qaeda has been established firmly, by, among other
reports, Jeffrey Goldberg's lengthy articles in The New
Yorker and Monsoor Ijaz's recent report in the Daily
Standard. The Bush administration knows far more than it can
tell about this connection, because -- if it were to explicitly
"make the case" publicly -- they would reveal intelligence sources
and methods. The only proper response to this criticism is to ask
(say) Noam Chomsky, "Oh? Do you have an intelligence agency? Do you
have spy satellites? Do you get a morning briefing that summarizes
secret reports from around the globe?"
The terrorist cat's paw strategy characterizes the entire region
of variously thuggish dictatorships. They heard President Bush's
declaration about "nations that harbor terrorists" loud and clear.
Their response? Create and disseminate a blizzard of highly skilled
propaganda, some of it public (the Saudi "peace" plan) and much of
it undetected by lazy reporters, who recycle these disguised press
releases as gospel.
One example: The too-neat story about how Osama bin Ladin
escaped U.S. capture or killing by lateraling his satellite phone
to an aide, sending U.S. forces in the wrong direction. Did any
editor say, "Hmm…Seems to me I remember something about how
we had an intelligence leak in the nineties about our ability to
track satellite phones (Sen. Patrick Leahy), and didn't we learn at
that time that Al Qaeda stopped using satellite phones for that
reason? Maybe better look into that…"
Terrorist organizations may fling their networks world-wide, but
they are, by nature, only an inch deep. They require four things:
Stashes of money, stashes of arms, expert trainer-motivators, and
the ability to travel between countries. Those four elements can be
destroyed or disrupted with comparative ease. To support them,
terrorists need help from nation-states: false ID papers and a
place to live, train, and stash money in relative tranquillity. And
at the simplest level, weapons can only come from nation-states:
the plastic explosive C4, the Kalashnikov rifle, ammunition,
grenades, detonators, and so forth. For anything more powerful, the
nation-state is critical.
So why attack Iraq? Because it supports terrorists in all
possible ways. Because it is the most thuggish of thuggish regimes.
Because it demands a military solution, unlike other countries in
the region. Pakistan's Pervez Musharraf responded to an ultimatum;
Iran will fall from within, and Saudi Arabia may as well; Syria
will go craven and cozy up to America when it sees where the muscle
really comes from, and Egypt will slink along behind. (And the
administration aims to withdraw from Korea, and force Japan and
China to take regional responsibility. It cannot say that, of
course.) Because it is the next logical step. Because it will
seriously disable Al Qaeda.
Because, if the U.S. does not conquer Iraq, Saddam Hussein will
give chemical or biological weapons to a terrorist group, which
will use those weapons on us. (Incidentally, how does Noam Chomsky
maintain simultaneously that Iraq is "no threat" to the West, and
that going to war with Iraq will cause terrorist attacks on the
West?)
Finally, contrary to the chatterlings, it is not the United
States that threatens to split the Western alliance and destroy the
UN and NATO. France and Germany are doing a fine job of that by
playing petty power politics with a mortally dangerous world
situation.
The Iraq war will take three days; we've got the targets painted
already, and we've already suborned the Iraqi military. The country
will go up in one big bang, and U.S. forces will round up stunned,
staggering Baathists. The most common casualties will be ruptured
eardrums After that triumph, George W. Bush and the United States
will move from height to height, and all the natterers will go down
to dust before us.
That's what they're really afraid of. Not of "destabilizing the
region," not of "millions of casualties," not of "blood for oil."
They're afraid we'll win.
topics:
Islam, Hollywood, Military, Iraq, Iran, Israel, Pakistan, NATO, Oil