Aiding Our Enemies
By Bob Herbert
The New York Times
“Fanaticism consists in redoubling your effort when you have forgotten your aim.”
— George Santayana
Here we go again.
I wonder if Americans will continue to fall for the political exploitation of their fears of terrorism, or if voters will begin to show some awareness of the fact that they have been cynically manipulated, and that our current policies have been disastrously counterproductive.
The disrupted plot to blow up as many as 10 passenger jets bound for the United States was a reminder, as if we needed a reminder, that the threat of terror remains both real and imminent. And it was a reminder that the greatest danger to Americans here at home continues to be an attack by a group affiliated with, or inspired by, Al Qaeda.
That being the case, what in the world are we doing in Iraq?
There was something pathetic about the delight with which Republicans seized upon the terror plot last week and began trying to wield it like a whip against their Democratic foes. The G.O.P. message seemed to be that the plot foiled in Britain was somehow proof that the U.S. needed to continue full speed ahead with the Bush administration’s disastrous war in Iraq, and that any Democrat who demurred was somehow soft on terrorism.
The truth, of course, is that the demolition derby policies of the Bush administration are creating enemies of the United States, not defeating them. It cannot be said often enough, for example, that the catastrophic war in Iraq, which has caused the deaths of tens of thousands, was a strategic mistake of the highest magnitude. It diverted our focus, energy and resources from the real enemy, Al Qaeda and its offshoots, and turned Iraq, a country critically important to the Muslim imagination, into a spawning ground for terrorists.
Almost three years ago, in the immediate aftermath of the bombing of the United Nations headquarters in Baghdad, Jessica Stern, who lectures on terrorism at Harvard, wrote in The New York Times that the U.S. had created in Iraq “precisely the situation the Bush administration has described as a breeding ground for terrorists: a state unable to control its borders or provide for its citizens’ rudimentary needs.”
Ms. Stern went on to say, “As bad as the situation inside Iraq may be, the effect that the war has had on terrorist recruitment around the globe may be even more worrisome.”
The situation has grown only worse since then. While Republicans are savoring the political possibilities of a foiled terror plot, the spiraling chaos in Iraq and other Bush administration policies are contributing mightily to the anger and radicalism in the Muslim world.
Ms. Stern, the author of “Terror in the Name of God: Why Religious Militants Kill,” said in an interview last week:
“We’re in a world where Islamist terrorist leaders are teaching their followers that they have been humiliated. Well, first of all, it’s true that Islamic civilization has fallen behind economically, intellectually, politically. It was once the greatest civilization. That’s true. But the terrorist leaders teach their followers that not only is this humiliating, but somebody else is to blame — and that’s us. They say that we have deliberately set out to destroy the Islamic world and humiliate Muslims.”
While it’s not true that the United States is trying to humiliate the Muslim world, said Ms. Stern, “I think that as we contemplate our policy remedies today, we also need to think about how they may ultimately be used by our terrorist enemies to recruit.”
The debacle in Iraq, and inhumane policies like torture, rendition and the incarceration of Muslims without trial at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, serve only to strengthen the appeal of militants who are single-mindedly dedicated to the destruction of American lives.
The U.S. needs to be much, much smarter in its efforts to counter this mortal threat. We should be focused like a laser on the fight against Al Qaeda-type terrorism. We need to ramp up our security efforts here at home. (Even as the terror plot in Britain was emerging, the Bush administration was trying to eliminate millions of dollars in funding for explosives-detection technology. Congress blocked that effort.) We need a new approach to foreign policy that draws on the wisest heads both here and abroad. And we need a strategy for withdrawal from Iraq.
In a world that is growing more dangerous by the hour, it’s time to try something new.
Photo credit: Bob Herbert. (The New York Times)
Technorati tags: Bob Herbert, The New York Times, Bush, Iraq, Terrorism, freedom, human rights, U.S. Defense, Politics, U.S. Government, Foreign Policy, Al Qaeda, news, commentary, op ed
3 comments:
Once again, a man considered liberal toes the party line. Mr. Herbert needs to examine the real problem; 9/11. Mr. Herbert should not be a member of any lynch mob.
Please consider this metaphore:
You hire a security company. Shortly after hiring the company, your home is robbed and a child is killed, how would you react?
You discover in your limited investigation that the security company had turned off the existing security systems that would have prevented the robbery and the murder in the first place and that senior executives of the company actually watched the breakin happen, doing nothing.
The president of the company has the evidence needed to determine how it really happened, who did it and to catch those who did it, destroyed. The president tells you you can't have the evidence because then your house would be robbed againa nd maybe more children killed. We can't have that.
The president does tell you who he claims did it, but never catches the person. On top of that, the president uses your money to try to secure a different neighbor's house rather than catch, try and punish the guy he says did it.
Would you keep that security company?
Not in a million years.
Yet you won't help your readers, your fans, demand a full, impartial investigation of 911? You join the lynch mob blaming the guys the president says did it?
Is any bad guy enough to satisfy the lust for vengeance? Worse, are innocent lives worth the quest?
Not for me! I neither want the guilty to go free nor the innocent to be condemned. I want the guys who did it to be caught and punished.
Blaming the innocent creates hatred and, yes, fanaticism. Think of the continuing fallout in our own country of the innocents murdered after the Civil War. The guilty that died free.
Neither the 911 commision, in its report, nor the FBI, in its publicly available statements, believes that OBL did it. The guy the 911 commission says did it has been in Guatanamo bay for a long time, been subjected to torture and has not confessed.
And, yeh, the facts confirm that a 757 carrying passengers and hijackers hit the pentagon (see 8/13 NYT editorial - "Our Porous Air Defenses on 9/11") and there was no missile involved...but, gosh, the frames released by the FBI (or whoever released them) clearly show two frames (before the hit and at the hit) with contrails streaming from whatever flying object is headed toward the pentagon wall.
But, no commercial flying passenger object of any kind produces contrails at 5 feet off the ground in Washington, DC; watch commercial jets taking off and landing.
Oh, but the 911 commission says it was flight 77. Yeh. Um hum, sure. We don't need no thorough investigation. We know who the bad guys are and we are going to get even - we don't need no trial! I see reconstruction Georgia in comments like that.
I believe that those of us who are victims of 911 deserve closure, especially for my brothers and sisters who have lost their lives or become permanently disabled in a war absolutely unrelated to the crime of 911. Closure means we get to see the suspects caught, tried, found guilty and, for my taste, hung.
Mr. Herbert needs to resign his deputization in the lynch mob and help find the true perps of 911.
Well said, Joe. Mind if I post your comment on Herbert's "comments" section (on the NY Times)? I'd love to see if he would respond--and how. Let me know.
Although I agree with you that Herbert should be questioning the entire 9/11 incident and the government's complicity in it, I do not condemn him for countering the BushCo spin and fear tactics. People need to understand the manipulation and lies on that level -- at least. I applaud Herbert for doing at least that much. Do I wish he would go further? You bet.
Unknown Candidate,
I would be pleased. "Joe Craine" btw is a pseudonym. I am honestly afraid of these guys (not our BOB - the bad guys!).
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