By Philip Klein on 12.1.06 @ 12:09AM
If the Iraq War proves anything, it's that Islamists are a formidable adversary.
When confronted with an overwhelming body of evidence suggesting
that insurgents are gaining power and self-sufficiency in Iraq,
there are a number of ways to react. An increasingly popular
reaction is to determine that the Iraq War is unwinnable, and
conclude that America must disengage from the conflict. But there
is another conclusion to be drawn: Islamic terrorists are most
pernicious foes.
Such a declaration may come across as stating the obvious, but
as we move further from Sept. 11 without an attack, and as the
price of war in blood and treasure grows, more Americans will
conclude that fighting terrorism is not worth the cost. In a new
book, Overblown: How Politicians and the Terrorism Industry
Inflate National Security Threats, and Why We Believe Them,
John Mueller argues that Americans have an exaggerated view of the
terrorist threat. "The capacity of al-Qaeda or of any similar group
to do damage in the United States pales in comparison to the
capacity other dedicated enemies, particularly international
communism, have possessed in the past," Mueller writes.
This idea -- that Islamists have limited military capacity so
therefore the threat they pose to us is being exaggerated -- is not
restricted to Mueller. In an October cover story for the American Conservative
entitled "Size Matters," Gregory Cochran wrote of al-Qaeda:
We're talking about a group with at most thousands of
active members worldwide, with little money and no industrial base,
an organization that doesn't possess a single tank or fighter plane
or long-range missile. Countries that nobody has even heard of --
does Burkina Faso ring a bell? -- have more raw military power than
al-Qaeda.
In September,
Newsweek's Fareed Zakaria
dismissed comparisons between Nazi Germany and
contemporary Iran by contrasting their relative military strength.
"At the time, Germany had the world's second largest industrial
base and its mightiest army....Iran does not even rank among the
top 20 economies in the world...America's annual defense outlay is
more than 100 times Iran's."
The points made by these authors would be valid if the threat
posed by radical Islam were a conventional one, but because the
threat is asymmetric, economic and military advantages become less
important. Yes, al-Qaeda may have limited resources, but it still
managed to kill 3,000 civilians on American soil -- something
neither Nazi Germany, nor the Soviet Union, managed to do. Yes,
Iran may be our economic and military inferior, but it has still
tremendously complicated our efforts in Iraq and financed terrorist
groups such as Hezbollah and Hamas to gain a foothold in Lebanon
and the Palestinian territories. Should Americans leave Iraq,
Iran's influence will extend in a direct line from Tehran to Beirut
-- and that's before its nuclear program produces a bomb (despite
our tremendous economic and military superiority, it's a program
whose advancement we have been unable to prevent).
Meanwhile, the news reports on Iraq have been getting
increasingly grim. The New York Times on Sunday disclosed a U.S. government report that
determined that the Iraqi insurgency has become self-sufficient,
raising $70 million to $200 million a year from illegal activities
such as kidnapping, oil smuggling and counterfeiting. "If the $200
million a year estimate is close to the mark," according to the
Times, "it amounts to less than what it costs the
Pentagon, with an $8 billion monthly budget for Iraq, to sustain
the American war effort here for a single day." Tuesday's
Washington Post reported on a classified Marine Corps
intelligence report concluding that "U.S. and Iraqi troops 'are no
longer capable of defeating the insurgency in al-Anbar.'"
It's an unfortunate sign of our times that the debate over the
last few years has been about when to withdraw from Iraq rather
than how we can adapt our tactics to more effectively fight an
asymmetric threat. Critics of the Iraq invasion may respond that
not only has the war been a distraction from fighting terrorism,
but it has created terrorists. However, this does not change the
reality that in the long run, America will have to figure out a way
to effectively fight an offensive war against terrorist groups.
Those who argue that the threat is overblown may respond that
the difficulty of fighting insurgents in Iraq has nothing to do
with whether terrorists are able to carry out attacks within the
United States. However, if Americans conclude from our experiences
in Iraq (and Afghanistan) that fighting an offensive war against
terrorism is futile, we will be forced to return to the old
defensive strategy of fighting terrorism. By treating terrorism as
a manageable threat, America sat back for decades as terrorists
pulled off attacks with increasing frequency, boldness, and
sophistication.
Islamists may not have the economy of Nazi Germany, or the
military capacity of the Soviet Union, but given America's recent
experiences, it would be dangerous for us to underestimate them
once again.
Philip Klein is a reporter for The American
Spectator.
topics:
Islam, Military, Iraq, Iran, Communism, Oil