By Kevin D. Williamson
Sunday, November 15, 2015
The Sunday after the shootings at Emanuel African
Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, I attended Mass at a Catholic church
in a very conservative suburb in a Western state where gun rights are in the
main unquestioned. As he spoke about the massacre in Charleston, the priest,
who showed no sign of indulging himself in ecclesiastical theatrics, grew
genuinely angry — that such a thing had been done at all, and that it had been
done in a sanctuary among Christians at prayer. Later I asked him what he would
have done if it had been his church. “This congregation?” he asked with a
little smile that was meaner than you want a priest’s to be. “Probably
administer his last rites.”
I thought about that good pastor as reports of the
horrors in Paris came in. There was the usual sentimental outpouring on social
media, the tricolors and the invocations of the Marquis de Lafayette and the
Empire State Building lit in honorary blue, white, and red. Professor Ebony
Elizabeth Thomas of the University of Pennsylvania chidingly reminded no one in
particular to report anybody who was engaging in anti-Muslim rhetoric on
Twitter. All of that is useless, of course, but one feels the need to do
something. But the only thing one can really do is the one thing that Parisians
cannot do: shoot back.
It is better to be at war with al-Qaeda than with the
Islamic State and its confederates. Al-Qaeda’s specialty is terrorist
spectaculars such as the atrocities it committed on September 11, 2001. Though
we failed to do so, attacks of that kind can be stopped: They require the
acquisition of particular kinds of skills, transportation, logistics, and
financial support, and a fair amount of communication to make all that happen,
and these can be detected so that the plot may be disrupted. The attack in
Paris on Friday — and the attacks in other European capitals preceding it — has
more the character of an intifada: All you need is a crowd and the will to do
evil. Guns, knives, gasoline, improvised explosives, motor vehicles — the
weapons are commonplace, and they are incidental.
What an intifada needs is either easy passage across
borders or a suitable domestic environment in which to hide. Paris offered both
in the form of Europe’s open borders and the large population of immigrant
Muslims in French cities.
The United States should see to it that we offer neither.
Securing the borders — there’s an “s” on the end of that
word, remember — isn’t just about getting control of territory contiguous with
Mexico to make sure that Mr. Santiago from Ixmiquilpan picks no lettuce.
Workplace enforcement (i.e., marching a couple dozen food-processing executives
off to prison) would take care of economically oriented illegal immigration,
and most of our illegals now arrive here the same way the 9/11 hijackers did:
at the airport with U.S. visas on their passports. Not fake ones, but real
ones.
That is something that we can, in fact, do something
about.
The United States should apply an extraordinary level of
scrutiny to visitors from countries whose main exports are jihad — before,
during, and possibly even after their stays. And we should place severe limits
on immigration to the United States from those countries. Europe’s ambulatory
Syrian invasion has a number of Europe’s peoples, such as the Poles, asking
themselves why a country that doesn’t already have a large unassimilated Muslim
minority in its midst would want one, and there aren’t any convincing answers
coming out of Paris or Stockholm or London or Frankfurt or . . .
Yes, that would constitute an act of terrible callousness
to millions of people seeking a better life away from base primitivism in Dar
al-Islam, but the responsibility of the United States government is to United
States citizens, not to the poor suffering people of Yemen and Syria. The good
and the guilty will suffer together, in no small part because the good
unwittingly provide the fertile soil in which the guilty cultivate jihad. That
suffering will be inflicted in the interest of the citizens of the United
States, including its Muslim citizens, many of whom came here precisely to
escape the backwardness that thrives in Muslim immigrant communities in France
and the United Kingdom. As Turkey’s President Erdogan put it, there is no such
thing as moderate Islam; Islam is Islam and that’s that. Where there is Islam,
there will be Islamic extremism, Islamic supremacism, and murder.
The United States should not disengage from the Islamic
world, by any means — the lack of American leadership only encourages the
graybeards in Tehran and elsewhere and contributes to the very instability that
enables the emergence of forces such as the Islamic State. But the United
States need not make the same decisions Europe has made in the belief that
there will be different results once Khalid al-Mihdhar feels the San Diego
sunshine on his face. We cannot solve all the problems of the Islamic world,
but we can do a great deal to ensure that they are not the immediate problems
of Milwaukee.
That’s Plan A, and, before you write it off, give a
little thought to what Plan B is going to be. That priest knew, and so do the
rest of us, if we’re being honest about it.
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