Al Qaedism, Again - Another
straw on the back of the proverbial American camel
Since 05-13-07
May 11, 2007
By Victor Davis Hanson
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=N2UxMTFmMDc2NGEwMzllZjgwOGUwOWVkMGU3OGFkZDM
Why would Albanian-speaking Muslim refugees from the Balkans try to murder
American soldiers? After all, the United States — not bin Laden’s rag-tag
jihadists — saved Bosnia and Kosovo? And we did that by bombing the capital of a
Christian European nation.
But then, why did a mixed-up Albanian Muslim in Salt Lake City, one Sulejman
Talovic, go on a shopping-mall shooting spree? Five innocents were killed in the
attack before the murderer himself was shot and killed.
And why, after pouring billions of dollars into Afghanistan, did poor, mixed-up
Omeed Aziz Popal, an Afghan Muslim, try to run over several innocents in San
Francisco near a Jewish center in September 2006?
Or, for that matter, why did an angry Muslim Pakistani gun down Jews in Seattle?
Or, again, why earlier last year, did a 22-year-old Iranian-American Muslim
drive his sport utility vehicle into a crowded pedestrian zone at the University
of North Carolina?
The Phenomenon of al Qaedism
About a year after 9/11, I made use of a word “al Qaedism” in a National Review
Online essay to describe such seemingly isolated terrorists, both amateurs and
the more organized, both the deranged and the more focused. At that time we were
all discussing the careers of those like John Williams, John Walker Lindh, Jose
Padilla, or Richard Reid (or rather John Mohammed, Abdul Hamid, Abdullah al-Muhajir,
or Abdel Rahim).
Yet, both then and now, we waste our time wondering whether such terrorists are
al Qaeda-controlled or not. The question is academic. It matters little whether
they were explicitly ordered to kill by central terrorist command (they probably
were not) or were inspired by CDs, the Internet, or the local mullah.
The point is simply that, for purposes of harming America, lone-wolf jihadists
need only to feel the same rage and perceived grievances — al Andalus, Israel,
Iraq, Chechnya, Kashmir, etc. — as their pin-up heroes like bin Laden or
Zawahiri.
But, again, why do these residents in our midst, who have voluntarily come to
America, and some of whom have had America itself spend billions abroad on their
brethren, wish to kill us?
Such questions are nonsensical. The aggrieved Islamist, whether born here or
abroad, lives in a world of emotion, never reason, in which pride, envy, and a
sense of inferiority always trump logic.
When, as an individual or collectively, he constructs someone or something
culpable for his own — or his people’s — sense of failure, then a primordial
urge to lash out follows. His mind returns to the seventh-century never-never
land of scimitars and sharia law mixed in with rote chanting of “Allah Akbar!”
while his body and material appetites are stranded in our cosmos of Baywatch
reruns and professors on the BBC and CNN whining on about the dangers of
Islamaphobia. What, then, are the catalysts for the al Qaedist that turn him
from hothouse anti-Americanism to deadly violence?
The Creation of an Al Qaedist
The first is the goad of radical Islamic indoctrination through globalized
communications. A nut in New Jersey can feel as close to a Wahhabi megaphone in
Jeddah as a Bedouin just a desert away. Fiery sermons of hate-filled imams on
the West Bank (now they employ Mickey Mouse as a prop), or videos of Americans
losing limbs in Iraq, or sit-coms from Iran depicting Satanic Americans and
Jews, are as cheaply disseminated as they are cheaply produced.
To the degree that capital for such Goebbels-like hatred is required — opening
radical mosques, printing propaganda, funding madrassas — we should remember
that, with recent oil-price spikes, there are annually another $500 billion
floating around the Middle East from Shiite Iran to the Sunni Gulf monarchies.
Second is the nature of the assumed grievance that goes unexamined and
unchallenged by Westerners. Instead, we seek with the logic and reason of the
21st century to sort out why they hate us — a phenomenon well known to crybaby
Islamists who can produce new complaints as fast as the old ones are shot down.
So sympathetic Western observers must damn Israel for not giving up all of the
West Bank (never asking why Cyprus, the Kuriles, or Tibet have not fostered
suicide bombers).
Or is it our presence in Iraq (as if it predated 9/11)? Or is it that we have
demonized poor Muslims (as if we have not saved the starving, enslaved, and
targeted in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Kosovo, Kuwait, and Somalia, or subsidized the
failed in Egypt, Jordan, and Palestine; or as if the Chechen-killing Russians or
Muslim-burning Hindus are as targeted as we are).
Always we forget that the jihadist mind is of the 7th century, nursed on
illusions of ancient grandeur lost to purported Zionism, capitalism,
imperialism, and colonialism. And why not such writs when they are far easier to
manufacture than the necessary introspective self-criticism that might — in
search of answers for the miasma that is now the Middle East — focus on warped
schools, massive illiteracy, statism, authoritarianism, gender apartheid,
religious intolerance, or polygamy?
It is not easy, after all, for a region to turn twenty million $65-barrels of
oil sold each day — found, developed, and handed over by someone else — into a
recipe for utter catastrophe.
Worse still, not only does the jihadist place the blame on those who are more
successful, he learns much of his strategy of victimization from our own
postmodern Western Left. We saw that clearly enough in the videos of the
clownish Zawahiri and bin Laden that cite by title and author leftwing attacks
on the United States by kooky Chomskyites. Nothing is more absurd than a
bearded, robed imam dryly reciting from his mud-brick hideout why America needs
to implode — due to our sins of global warming, environmental desecration, and
our lack of campaign-finance reform.
The third impetus for the idiosyncratic jiahdist is the lack of any
consequences. Or rather, he shares a general perception — never mind whether it
is a misconception — that the European and American criminal-justice systems
will not promptly find, arrest, indict, try, convict, and sentence wannabe
jihadists. Our popular culture instead emphasizes more the injustice of
Guantanamo Bay, our shame over the sexual grotesqueries of Abu Ghraib, and the
worry over the excesses of the Patriot Act than the need to show no mercy to the
radical Islamist on our shores.
Indeed, the jihadist believes the West in general cares little about its own
sense of citizenship. He knows that we ask of the legal immigrant little
familiarity with our language, history, or culture, and even less of the illegal
immigrant.
With 12 million here illegally from Mexico, why would any visitor think we could
or should enforce the law? A jihadist must think it an ideal spot a country
where it was deemed more illiberal to turn in an illegal alien than to be one.
A Three-Tiered War
There are many theaters in this global war. The nation-states of Afghanistan and
Iraq are now foci. Eventually hearts and minds inside Iran, Syria, and Saudi
Arabia must be persuaded — by varying means — that it makes no moral, and still
less practical, sense to subsidize the hatred and killing of Americans. All that
is an impossible task unless we can stabilize Iraq and restore the sense of
American prowess and unpredictability.
At the second tier, organized terrorist cells, whether al Qaeda, Hezbollah,
Hamas, or the various other appendages, have to be cut off from their
sanctuaries and cash through counterinsurgency, better intelligence, and
constant pressure on their state sponsors. The sooner we get over the fact that
a Hamas or Hezbollah differs from al Qaeda only in method and capability, but
not in venom or desire, the better off we will be.
But there is also a third war that we saw at Fort Dix, at this more insidious al
Qaedistic level. Thousands of seething Muslims in Europe and America — fill in
the blanks for the reasons for their anger — must come to learn that shooting up
a mall, or driving an SUV into students, or killing soldiers, is going to ensure
long incarceration for the guilty.
More importantly, such serial provocations are also creating a larger culture of
anger and, with it, zero tolerance for any activity deemed a precursor to Muslim
extremism — whether flying imams flaunting airline protocols or demands for
special dispensations deemed at odds with traditional American custom and
practice.
A Tested Patience
So, in the end, what are we to make of Fort Dix — yet another post-9/11 straw on
an increasingly tired camel’s back?
We know that CAIR will neither seriously admonish Muslims charged with terrorist
crimes nor introspectively examine the larger Islamic culture that seems to so
incite the jihadist.
Such organizations will not do so as long as they can far more easily play on
the self-doubt and guilt of the affluent and leisured citizen, who is supposed
to believe that the dangers of radical Islam, both at the state and individual
level, are mostly fictions inspired by our own prejudices. The sermonizing here
in the United States by an Ayatollah Khatami, readily received by complaint
listeners, and the satellite-beamed sophistry of Tariq Ramadan prove that well
enough.
Most Americans will not remember Fort Dix in a week — just as they have
forgotten Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Seattle, Lodi, Portland, and all the
rest; just as they want out of Fallujah now and probably Kandahar tomorrow.
Yet, at some point, the jihadists will go too far. Many of us, erroneously as it
turned out, thought that, after twenty years of serial provocations, radical
Islam had done precisely that on 9/11.
Apparently not. But such forbearance, even at this late hour in the post-West,
is still not limitless.
The more a Palestinian imam promises us our death, the more the Iranian
president promises a world without America, the more these al Qaedists, like the
most recent keystone clowns at Fort Dix, do their small part in trying to reify
such mad rhetoric, and the more the sophisticated apologists assure us that we,
not they, are the real threat, the more likely the sofa-sitting, channel-surfing
American will some day very soon blow up, rather than be blown up.