By Douglas Murray
Thursday, January 02, 2025
Let’s all give a big shout-out to the “Globalize the
intifada” crowd. You got your way! Congratulations. Hope it feels good.
For years, citizens of Israel have had maniac jihadists
driving at them and trying to mow them down on their streets. But this got only
cheers from the dolts on US college campuses and New York street protesters.
Then, just before Christmas, Germany again got a taste of
this “intifada.” That was when a Saudi immigrant decided to plow a vehicle
through a previously happy Christmas market. He killed five people and injured
almost 200.
Then, on New Year’s, it was America’s turn again.
This time, the wishes of the students at Columbia and
other college campuses
arrived on the streets of New Orleans. A man carrying an ISIS flag drove a
pickup through New Year’s revelers, killing 14 people and seriously injuring
dozens more. The FBI is looking into his network of contacts.
There are several things to say about all this.
The first is that although many people hoped the threat
of jihadist violence had diminished, it has not gone away. With jihadist groups
running Afghanistan and Syria, among other countries, they are back in control
of vast areas, as they were before 9/11.
After the 2001 attacks on this city, America vowed there
should be no safe havens for terrorists. That included ungoverned or
Islamist-governed spaces abroad where terrorists can be trained and then come
to the United States and other Western countries and carry out attacks.
Such spaces were indeed reduced by US and allied forces
in the years that followed. But they have come back. Today Afghanistan, Syria
and Yemen (to name just three countries) are places where jihadists can train
and learn battlefield tactics. Our intelligence agencies and military need to
keep a close eye on these places and strike when needed.
The second thing is that it is obvious that a
considerable campaign of recruitment inside the United States is still ongoing.
The New Orleans terrorist appears to have been radicalized while in the United
States. Whether that was online or via a network within the US will soon be
learned.
But we should hope that the full force of the law — and
law enforcement agencies — comes down on any and all such groupings.
Many in the intelligence community and the police are
indeed working hard on such cases. But there is a societal torpor about this
work.
If the New Year´s Eve attack had not been jihadist, but
had — for instance — been some far-right white supremacist, every corner of our
media and politics would be rightly lining up to demand answers. We would be
asking who the people were who had put such a person up to such an attack. Who
had helped him? Who had encouraged him? Who had said it was all right — in fact
good — to do such a thing?
Even after almost a quarter of a century, it is still
different with jihadists. There are too many people who think that there are
“cultural sensitivities” that have to be respected. People talk about making
sure that whole communities are — rightly — not smeared by association.
Yet if people are worried about guilt by association, why
not cut that out by being very clear indeed about the sort of people, including
Muslims, who do in fact encourage terrorism?
Take the most prominent Muslim group in the United States
— the Council on American Islamic Relations. As well as being an unindicted
co-conspirator in past terrorism cases, CAIR´s leadership is still full of
people who are not anti-terror, but actually pro-terror.
It is quite an achievement if you think about it. To lead
a Muslim American organization and praise terrorism, only to then complain that
too many people conflate Muslims and terrorism. Ever think you´re part of the
problem, guys?
Here is what CAIR´s current executive director, Nihad
Awad, said after October 7. Using completely untrue and offensive language,
Awad told an audience, “The people of Gaza only decided to break the siege, the
walls of the concentration camp, on October 7. And yes, I was happy to see
people breaking the siege.”
He went on to describe this “breaking of the siege” of
Gaza, as though on that day Palestinians simply walked happily through their
“ancestral” lands. He forgot to mention the more salient points — the raping,
the beheading, the burning people alive and kidnapping of children. Just as
worryingly, his large Muslim audience applauded his statements.
The fact that there isn´t more outrage about groups like
CAIR and people like Awad is because they are not as rare as we might wish. And
there is too little wider societal courage to call these people out.
It is the same here in New York. On New Year’s Day, as
the bodies were still being collected on the streets of New Orleans, there was
a pro-terrorist protest here in the heart of New York. Yes, you read that
right. On New Year’s Day, hundreds of people gathered in Times Square. The
protest was organized by the Palestinian Youth Movement, the Party for
Socialism and Liberation and the People´s Forum. As well as participants
screaming at Jews that they should “go back to Europe,” these protesters also
chanted continuously for jihad.
“There is only one solution,” they chanted, “intifada
revolution.”
How do these events even go ahead? And when will
Americans rise up against the sort of people who support terrorism on our
streets?
Again — if there was some vast rally of the KKK (hardly
the most active group these days) where people praised a white supremacist
hours after he had struck and told black Americans (for instance) to go to some
other country, there would be zero tolerance for such people. Not only would
the police step in, but I suspect incensed members of the public would do so as
well.
So why are we so craven while people on the streets and
campuses of this city actually call for terrorism while the citizens in New
Orleans have just suffered it?
It is a question that needs answering. And there should
be a vast reservoir of horror, rage and disgust aimed at Americans who
celebrate terror, even as their fellow citizens are suffering it.
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