By Andrew C. McCarthy
Saturday, February 28, 2015
What should be our strategy against ISIS? We ask the
question without ever considering Iran.
What concessions about centrifuges and spent fuel should
we demand to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear power? We ask the question
never linking the mullahs’ weapons ambitions with its sponsorship of the global
jihad . . . the only reason we dread a nuclear Iran.
What should be the national-defense strategy of the
United States against radical Islam, the most immediate and thoroughgoing
security and cultural threat we face today?
I had the good fortune to be asked to participate in a
CPAC panel Friday on defending America against rogue states. With 2016 hopefuls
crowding the halls, it got me to thinking: What should we hope to hear from
Republicans who want to be the party’s standard-bearer?
It is often said that we lack a strategy for defeating
our enemies. Actually, we have had a strategy for 14 years, ever since the
fleeting moment of clarity right after the 9/11 attacks.
That strategy is called the Bush Doctrine, and it remains
the only one that has any chance of working . . . at least if we add a small
but crucial addendum — one that should have been obvious enough back in 2001,
and that hard lessons of history have now made inescapable.
The Bush Doctrine has become the source of copious
rebuke. On the left, that’s because of that four-letter word (hint: It’s not
“Doctrine”). On the right, there have been plenty of catcalls, too. The
reaction, however, has been against what the Bush Doctrine evolved into, not
against the Bush Doctrine as it was first announced.
The unadorned Bush Doctrine had two straightforward
parts. First, because violent jihadists launch attacks against the United
States when they have safe havens from which to plot and train, we must hunt
down those terrorists wherever on earth they operate. Second, the nations of
the world must be put to a choice: You are with us or you are with the
terrorists. Period — no middle ground. If you are with the terrorists, you will
be regarded, as they are regarded, as an enemy of the United States.
Before we get to that aforementioned addendum, it is
important to remember why the Bush Doctrine was so necessary. For the nine
years before it, we were living with the Clinton Doctrine.
That is the doctrine President Obama came to office
promising to move us back to — and has he ever. It is the doctrine under which
the enemy strikes us with bombs and weaponized jumbo jets, and we respond with
subpoenas and indictments. It is the doctrine under which our enemies say,
“allahu akbar! Death to America!” and we respond, “Gee, you know America has
been arrogant. We can see why you’re so upset.”
The Clinton Doctrine — the one the Democrats will be
running on in 2016, perhaps with its namesake leading the way — is the one that
gave us a series of ever more audacious attacks through the 1990s: the 1993
World Trade Center bombing; a plot to bomb New York City landmarks such as the
Lincoln and Holland Tunnels; a plot to blow American airliners out of the sky
over the Pacific; the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing, in which Iran and al-Qaeda
teamed up to kill 19 American airmen; the 1998 bombings of our embassies in
Kenya and Tanzania that killed over 200 innocent people; detonating a bomb next
to our destroyer, the U.S.S. Cole, in October 2000, killing 17 members of the
U.S. Navy; and finally, the 9/11 atrocities, killing nearly 3,000 of our
citizens.
And what has gradually restoring the Clinton Doctrine
gotten us? While President Obama pleads for a deal that will inevitably make
Iran a nuclear power, the mullahs continue to back anti-American terrorists and
conduct military exercises in which they practice blowing up American ships.
The Iraq so many Americans gave their lives for is now an extension of Iran.
Afghanistan is being returned to the Taliban, which the president empowers by
releasing its commanders. Libya is now a failed state where jihadists murder
Americans with impunity and frolic in the former American embassy. Al-Qaeda is
expanding through northern Africa, now a bigger, more potent threat than it was
on the eve of 9/11. And yet it may pale compared with its breakaway faction,
the Islamic State, which now controls more territory than Great Britain, as it
decapitates, incinerates, and rapes its way to a global caliphate.
But Obama tells us there’s good news: Yemen is a success
. . . or at least it was until it was recently overrun by an Iran-backed
militia — oops. Well, we have indicted exactly one of the scores of terrorists
who attacked our embassy at Benghazi. He got his Miranda warnings, of course,
and he’ll be getting his civilian trial any month now. Hopefully, we’ll do
better than Obama’s civilian trial of Ahmed Ghailani, the bomber of our
embassies who was acquitted on 284 out of 285 counts.
Is it any wonder we’re losing?
Largely, it is because we’re worried about the wrong
things — like whether we can sweep the enemy off its feet with enough
Islamophilic, blame-America-first rhetoric. In reality, our enemies could not
care less whether we — the infidel West — think their literalist, scripturally
based belief system is a “perversion” of Islam. Radical Islam hears only one
message from America: strength or weakness. The Clinton Doctrine is weakness
cubed.
The Bush Doctrine, by contrast, is the path to victory —
if we get that one addendum right.
It is this: Our enemies are not driven by American
foreign policy, our friendship with Israel, our detention of jihadists at
Gitmo, or the supposed “arrogance” our current president likes to apologize
for. Those are all pretexts for aggression.
Our enemies are driven by an ideology, Islamic
supremacism, that is rooted in a classical interpretation of sharia — Islamic
law. Islamic supremacism is rabidly anti-American, anti-Western, and
anti-Semitic. It rejects the fundamental premise of our liberty: that people are
free to govern themselves, rather than be ruled by a totalitarian legal code
that suffocates liberty and brutally discriminates against non-Muslims and
apostates. And sharia is an actual war on women — denying them equal rights
under the law, subjecting them to unthinkable abuse, and reducing them in many
ways to chattel.
In the “you are with us or you are with the terrorists”
view of national security, any Muslim nation, organization, or individual that
adheres to Islamic supremacism is on the wrong side. Failing to come to terms
with that brute fact is where the Bush Doctrine went awry.
Sharia and Western democracy cannot coexist. They are
antithetical to each other. So insists Sheikh Yussuf Qaradawi, the Muslim
Brotherhood jurist who is the world’s most influential Islamic scholar. It may
be the only thing we should agree with him about.
The Bush Doctrine was allowed to evolve from an American
national-security strategy to an illusion that our national security would be
strengthened by promoting a chimera — sharia democracy. We put the lives of our
best young men and women in harm’s way in the service of a dubious experiment:
that we could build stable Islamic democracies that would be reliable American
allies against jihadist terror.
Perhaps the worst thing about this experiment is not its
inevitable failure. It is the sapping of America’s will that it has caused.
Defeating our jihadist enemies is going to require a will to win, because the
enemy’s will is strong — the jihadists truly believe Allah has already helped
them vanquish the Soviet empire, and that we are next.
The American people vigorously support military
operations that are essential to our defense. They support a vigorous war to
defeat violent jihadists and their support networks. They understand that we
cannot cede our enemies safe havens and nuclear weapons.
They do not support the notion that promoting our
national security obliges us to move into hostile Islamic countries for a
decade or three to civilize them. That’s not our job. Worse, when Americans
become convinced that Washington — ever more remote from the public — thinks it
is our job, they will not support military action, even action that is vital to
protecting our nation. They will not trust the government to defeat our enemies
without becoming entangled in Islam’s endless internal strife.
Understanding Islamic supremacism so we can distinguish
allies from those hostile to us will restore the Bush Doctrine. And let’s not
be cowed by the critics: Nothing I’ve said means endless war, or that we have
to invade or occupy every country. But it does mean we should be using all our
assets — not just military but intelligence, law-enforcement, financial, and
diplomatic — to undermine regimes that support sharia supremacism. Cutting off
that jihadist life-line is the path to victory — just as maintaining a strong
military that is allowed to show it means business, that is not hamstrung by
irresponsible rules of engagement, is the best way to ensure we won’t have to
use it too often.
In Iran, where sharia is the law of the land, they
persecute non-Muslims and apostates just like ISIS does. In Saudi Arabia, where
sharia is the law of the land, they behead their prisoners just like ISIS does.
A candidate who cannot tell liberty’s friends from
liberty’s enemies is not fit to be commander-in-chief.
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