By Jed Babbin on 7.11.05 @ 12:08AM
Zarqawi's love note to the Deanocrats and the lessons of London.
Two features dominate our thinking about terrorism at home. We
are, first, complacent. Nothing has happened since 9-11, and we
have begun to believe that nothing ever will. Grimly tolerant of
what passes for security at airports and train stations, we are --
second -- annoyed at the thought that more and different security
measures may be needed. The London bombings last Thursday, the
Brits' reaction to them, and the revelations of how the problem has
been building there are highly instructive. Or will be if we look
at the unvarnished facts.
What happened in London last week could happen here today, and
will -- in one form or another -- all too soon. We can, and must,
do more to control our borders, but the sad fact is that -- like
Britain -- the people who are intent on conducting such attacks are
here already, and are allowed too much support from too many
quarters in America, as well as abroad. Just like those who struck
London, and apparently are still at large to strike again.
The Brit reaction was, on one hand, all stiff upper lip and, on
the other, unrestrained irresponsibility. Those whose voices count
-- such as Tory MP John Redwood and historian Paul Johnson -- were
adamant in condemning the terrorists and compassionate in mourning
the dead. Johnson, in particular, almost scoffed at the idea that
such small attacks were going to change British policy. Those who
have to call the TV bookers to get attention, such as former
Labourite Tony Benn, were unrestrained in moral equivalence and
"give peace a chance" cant. It was too much for even his BBC
interviewer. Benn went so far as to equate the people killed in
London with those "innocents" we'd killed in Fallujah. Tell it to
the Marines, Mr. Benn.
The surprising element in this was Redwood's reflexive hope that
there would be no backlash against the Muslim community. Redwood,
who is one of the best thinkers on the Tory side, said it almost in
passing. His sentiment is rightly placed. But it masks a real
problem that we and Britain face. No one should want to oppress any
minority. No one -- here or in Britain -- wants to say that all
Muslims are responsible for the acts of the terrorists. That's
fine, as far as it goes. But we have to go much farther.
It matters not whether the terrorists are Muslim, Christian,
Jewish, Buddhist, or American Indian snake dancers. It is
sufficient that they are an identifiable group dedicated to the
destruction of our freedom. Religion is a factor in this war only
to the extent that it helps us identify and defeat the enemy.
IT'S PROPER TO BE CONCERNED about oppression of minorities, but
this concern has so governed British self-defense over the past
decade or more that London is now the hottest of terrorist hotbeds
in Europe. Tolerance is one hallmark of democracy. But when it is
given importance beyond its proper measure, it becomes a recipe for
national suicide.
According to a newly leaked Brit intelligence dossier, al
Qaeda's recruitment of terrorists is well organized and successful
on British campuses. The al-Q recruiters are focused on the
affluent Muslims who should be among the best assimilated in
British society. But, according to the report, entitled "Young
Muslims and Extremism," up to 1% -- some 16,000 British Muslims --
are actively engaged in terrorist activity in Britain and abroad.
Couple that with the statement of Lord Stevens, the former London
police chief, who said that up to 3,000 British-born or
British-based people have passed through bin Laden's terrorist
training camps, and you get some idea of how Britain has allowed
itself -- by lax immigration policies, political sensitivity, and
all the rest in the name of "tolerance" -- to become a terrorist
haven.
It's probably not that bad in the United States, but if the al-Q
recruiters, the radical imams in mosques and the other terrorist
sympathizers here aren't watched and -- when they break the law
arrested and imprisoned -- we will have the same problem Britain
has. Is this a condemnation of Islam? No. It's only a recognition
of reality that should be characteristic of American political
speech. Instead, we have the Durbin-Kennedy Deanocrats hammering
our soldiers and aiding the enemy.
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the al Qaeda chief in Iraq, sent a thank
you note to the Dick Durbins and Ted Kennedys of Congress in a
message to his followers and sympathizers on July 5. According to
an unreleased translation read to me by a Defense Department
source, Zarqawi's message exhorted his terrorists to greater
effort, because, Zarqawi said, it is very clear that America was
being defeated in Iraq. Zarqawi's proof? His message said that the
proof that America is losing is that some American congressmen are
saying just that.
IT IS ESSENTIAL TO THE war that our enemy has no reason to doubt
our resolve. Winston Churchill knew that. His ringing speeches,
throughout the war, and especially in its darkest hours, were
literally the fuel that propelled British courage when everyone,
including many of his closest advisers, thought all was lost. When
Dick Durbin compared our people at Gitmo to Nazis, Gulag guards,
and Pol Pot's mass murderers, there was a short burst of outrage,
quelled by his phony apology. Senate Republicans never demanded --
or got -- a clear and unequivocal apology from Durbin. By their
failure to do so they give credence to Zarqawi's message.
Republicans in the Senate and House are failing in one of their
key wartime tasks: to take on the political opposition in the
debate. Not to shout people down, but to take them to task. On the
floor, we should be hearing one speech after another critical of
the irresponsible rhetoric of the left. Why don't we? Because they
want comity, to pass laws we don't need, spend money we should
save, and give themselves pay raises without voting for them. What
they should be doing, instead, is taking on the tough problems they
were elected to tackle. Like what do we do about the terrorists who
are within our borders, and those who preach violence and hatred to
young Muslims here. They should read carefully the newly leaked
dossier on recruitment of terrorists in the U.K. And they should
not allow those who apologize for terrorists scare them out of
it.
TAS contributing editor Jed Babbin is the author
of Inside the Asylum: Why the UN and Old Europe Are
Worse Than You Think (Regnery, 2004).
topics:
Religion, Islam, Books, Law, Iraq, Immigration