By Cliff May
Thursday, September 11, 2014
Do not call what happened 13 years ago this week a
tragedy. It was a terrorist atrocity, an act of war and a war crime. Very
different.
The self-proclaimed jihadis responsible for hijacking
commercial jets and using them as missiles targeted the World Trade Center
because it was a Western financial capital, a place where men and women of many
ethnicities and religions worked in peace to create prosperity. Another plane
was flown into the Pentagon -- brains of the greatest liberation army the world
has even known. One more jet was meant to hit the political heart of the Free
World – the Capitol or the White House -- but Americans on that flight refused
to surrender and thereby won a battle.
September 11 was not a date chosen at random. I’m
inclined to credit the explanation offered by the late Christopher Hitchens, a
man of the left who dissented from the left’s tendency to condone savagery directed
at Americans. “It was on September 11, 1683 that the conquering armies of Islam
were met, held, and thrown back at the gates of Vienna,” he wrote in The
Guardian on Oct. 2, 2001.
That defeat of the Ottoman Empire and Islamic caliphate
was “a hinge-event in human history,” he added. From then on, “it was more
likely that Christian or western powers would dominate the Muslim world than
the other way around.”
Most Muslims do not seethe over a 17th century war any
more than most Americans nurse a grudge against the descendants of King George
III. But those whom we have come to call Islamists regard the failure of Muslim
forces to conquer Europe as “a humiliation in itself and a prelude to later
ones.” Mr. Hitchens added one more observation, particularly relevant this
summer: “The forces of the Islamic Jihad in Gaza once published a statement
saying that they could not be satisfied until all of Spanish Andalusia had been
restored to the faithful as well.”
Those who understand such matters know that 9/11 was not
about America’s chickens “coming home to roost,” as the Rev. Jeremiah Wright
unforgettably characterized the murder of 3,000 Americans. Nor was it a protest
against imperialism, colonialism and occupation -- an attempt to address
“legitimate grievances.” It was about a vision of the past and the future. It
was about power and, uncomfortably, about faith.
The actions Western leaders have taken to counter this
threat have been insufficient. Al Qaeda and its affiliates now operate in more
countries than ever. An AQ splinter, the Islamic State, has seized much of
Syria and Iraq, declaring a caliphate -- a successor to the one defeated at
Vienna.
The Muslim Brotherhood – an organization whose motto
includes the phrase “jihad is our way” – is regarded favorably by those who
lead Turkey, a NATO ally, and rule Qatar where the U.S. maintains a military
base and American universities and think tanks have established campuses.
The Islamic Republic of Iran is keeping its eye on the
ball – the ball being nuclear weapons, the great equalizer, although equality
is not at all what Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and the Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps have in mind. They are not cooperating with an International Atomic
Energy Agency investigation into “the possible military dimensions” of their
nuclear program. If they do obtain a nuclear capability, the odds increase that
a nuclear exchange will occur, and/or that nuclear weapons will fall into the
hands of terrorists. Iran and al Qaeda are rivals but they have cooperated in
the past and are likely to do so against common enemies again. By now, we get
that, right?
In New Hampshire last week, Vice President Joseph Biden
called those fighting for the Islamic State “barbarians,” melodramatically
adding that the Obama administration will “follow them to the gates of hell
until they are brought to justice, because hell is where they will
reside."
But the very same day, Secretary of State John Kerry
chose to change the subject, making the bizarre suggestion that it is America’s
religious “duty” to confront climate change -- which he has previously called
“the biggest challenge of all that we face right now -- not least because
“Muslim-majority countries are among the most vulnerable.”
Coincidently, this also was the week that Matt Ridley, a
science journalist and member of the British House of Lords, pointed out that
“the climate-research establishment has finally admitted openly what skeptic
scientists have been saying for nearly a decade: Global warming has stopped since
shortly before this century began.”
That does not imply climate change is not a concern; it
does imply it’s not our “biggest challenge.” How inconvenient for the many
politicians who would rather fight carbon emissions than jihadis, who are more
concerned about you and me driving SUVs than Iranian mullahs spinning
centrifuges.
For such politicians, required reading ought to include
Brookings senior fellow Robert Kagan’s most recent essay on the West’s
disconcerting return to “the realism of the 1930s.” The fundamental grievance
of the illiberal and atavistic forces on the march back then, he observes, was
no different from that of illiberal and atavistic forces on the march now:
“being forced to live in a world shaped by others.”
Thirteen years after 9/11, the world shaped by
Judeo-Christian values and the Enlightenment is undeniably imperfect. But are
we willing to let al Qaeda, the Islamic State, the Islamic Republic and the
Muslim Brotherhood re-structure it for our children?
The jihadis want the job. And they are more passionate
about their beliefs than most of us: more willing – even eager -- to kill and
be killed to spread them. Thirteen years after 9/11, it’s probably time to
decide whether we’re capable of a serious response.
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