ncomprehensible
horror sparks a frantic search for comprehension. Among the bookish,
this search often takes the form of a hunt for literary parallels.
Accordingly, in the aftermath of September 11, one found many invocations
of Dostoevsky and Zola, Henry James and Joseph Conrad.
Dostoevsky's
great novel Demons
(1871) was inspired partly by the brutal murder of a student by
an anarchist-terrorist called Sergei Nechaev. In Zola's novel Germinal
(1885), an exiled Russian nihilist called Souvarine sets off a bomb
that floods a mine, killing many. In The
Princess Casamassima (1886), James presents Hyacinth Robinson,
an impoverished aesthete, who is seduced by radicals working for
a German terrorist. Conrad portrayed anarchist terrorism in both
The
Secret Agent (1907), which features a plot to blow up the
Greenwich Observatory, and Under
Western Eyes (1911), whose character Peter Ivanovitch offers
a chilling portrait of evil incarnate. (Conrad called him and another
character "apes of a sinister jungle.")
What do these
books have to tell us about terrorism today? Well, evil is all of
a piece, and with characters like "the incorruptible professor,"
who walks around London with a bomb strapped to his body, Conrad
gives us a portrait of a murderous, megalomaniacal fanatic who is
at home in any century. The Secret Agent ends with the professor
walking about town
averting
his eyes from the odious multitude of mankind. He had no future.
He disdained it. He was a force. His thoughts caressed the images
of ruin and destruction. He walked frail, insignificant, shabby,
miserable and terrible in the simplicity of his idea calling
madness and despair to the regeneration of the world.
Nevertheless,
the world of the Russian nihilist or of the French or German anarchist
was very different from our own world. Conrad speaks of one character,
"the perfect flower of the terrorist wilderness," whose
"banality" is as notable as his "monstrosity."
"Banality" is too pedestrian a quality to apply to unvarnished
evil such as that unleashed on New York and Washington. Indeed,
Hannah Arendt was memorable but wrong when she spoke of "the
banality of evil." Evil is horrifying, not banal, however petty,
small, and inconsiderable its perpetrators may be.
My own view
is that the venerable literary productions of the 19th and early
20th centuries are not particularly relevant to contemporary terrorism.
There are, to be sure, local insights, psychological resonances,
striking coincidences of theme or imagery. But in the end, such
great works of literature are too refined artistically too
good, if you will to explain the gutter phenomenon of contemporary
terrorism. To understand that, one does not require so sophisticated
an instrument as Henry James or Fyodor Dostoevsky. One requires
something blunter, less delicate, more malevolent.
If one wants
a literary parallel that sheds light on the operation of Osama bin
Laden, one should look not to classic novels but to another sort
of literary enterprise altogether. I mean that enormous bestseller,
published in two volumes in 1925 and 1926, Mein Kampf.
Few people
today take the trouble to look into this compendium of evil. But
for anyone who has, the murderous evolution of National Socialism
is not surprising. Hitler was nothing if not candid about his ambitions,
his aversions, his pathologies. His virulent hatred of the Jews
is patent on every page, as is his narcissistic egotism, his sense
of himself as a destiny, his cold-blooded lucidity. Mein Kampf
is the testament of a man bent on war and slaughter. But who in
the 1920s and '30s took that seriously?
Osama bin Laden
has been similarly candid. In a 1999 interview published in Esquire,
bin Laden was perfectly clear that his first ambition was to remove
the American military from Saudi Arabia, a country that has cities
sacred to Islam that, he believes, are polluted by the presence
of Westerners. "Every day the Americans delay their departure,"
he said, "they will receive a new corpse."
It does not
require much hermeneutical ingenuity to understand that sentence.
Nor was bin Laden ambiguous about his willingness to attack civilians:
"We do not differentiate between those dressed in military
uniforms and civilians; they are all targets in this fatwa."
So we tell
the Americans as people and we tell the mothers of soldiers and
American mothers in general that if they value their lives and the
lives of their children, to find a nationalistic government that
will look after their interests and not the interests of the Jews.
The continuation of tyranny will bring the fight to America, as
Ramzi Yousef [a bomber of the World Trade Center in 1993] and others
did.
When the U.S.
Marines landed in Somalia at the end of 1992 as part of a U.N. humanitarian
effort, bin Laden's troops were there, shooting down our helicopters
and dragging the bodies of our men naked through the streets. Reflecting
on that event, bin Laden said that his followers were "surprised
at the low morale of the American soldiers and realized more than
before that the American soldier was a paper tiger and after a few
blows ran in defeat."
No action ever
taken by Bill Clinton, who assumed office in the immediate aftermath
of the Somalian debacle, did anything to dissuade bin Laden of this
conviction. What lessons should we learn from this? The same lessons
the world ought to have learned in the late 1930s when Hitler occupied
the Rhineland, remilitarized, and set about gobbling up his neighbors
and attempting to make the Third Reich Judenfrei. The first
lesson is that weakness is provocative. Power without the exercise
of authority breeds contempt, and contempt elicits insurrection.
The world learned this the hard way in the late Thirties when efforts
to mollify, to ignore, to reason with totalitarian evil had the
effect of enflaming it.
The second
lesson also involves power. The possession of power carries with
it responsibility. This is something the British understood throughout
the 19th century and up until at least 1914. "Imperialism"
has a bad reputation today, thanks in part to anti-Western agitators
like Edward Said. It is time to rehabilitate the word "imperialism,"
to understand that there are many states and half-states and pseudo-states
that cannot yet govern themselves. To abandon those entities to
"self-determination" is to abandon them to chaos and anarchy:
horrible enough for them and intolerable to the civilized world
if exported. In itself, imperialism is neither good nor bad. It
is a political and social arrangement that can be exercised in a
humane and enlightened fashion or in a brutal fashion.
The West has
become afraid of its power and negligent about its responsibilities.
As the military historian John Keegan noted some months ago, "The
great work of disarming tribes, sects, warlords and criminals
a principal achievement of monarchs of the 17th century and empires
in the 19th threatens to need doing all over again."
No nation except the United States has the resources to undertake
the task today. As of this writing, it looks as if President Bush
has mustered the necessary resolve. The outstanding question is
whether the spineless forces of anti-Americanism the Barbara
Lee contingent, the coddled academic pacifists, the left-leaning
media culture will sap that resolve and open the way for
an even greater carnival of murder. Dostoevsky saw it all clearly
when, in a famous passage of Demons, the half-mad anarchist
Pyotr Verkhovensky outlines the malignant if unwitting forces that
he can call upon:
Do you know
that we are tremendously powerful al ready? . . . Listen. I've
reckoned them all up: a teacher who laughs with children at their
God and at their cradle is on our side. The lawyer who defends
an educated murderer because he is more cultured than his victims
. . . is one of us. . . . The juries who acquit every criminal
are ours. The prosecutor who trembles at a trial for fear he should
not seem advanced enough is ours, ours. Among officials and literary
men we have lots, lots. . . . Do you know how many we shall catch
by little, ready-made ideas? When I left Russia, Littré's
doctrine that crime is insanity was all the rage; I came back
to find that crime is no longer insanity, but simply common sense,
almost a duty; anyway, a gallant protest.
There has been
a lot of talk about terrorist "sleepers" in the United
States and elsewhere: followers of bin Laden who may have integrated
themselves into society and are waiting for marching orders. That
is a possibility very much worth worrying about. Yet at the moment
even more worrisome, because more certain, are the forces of capitulation:
those who, not "sleepers" themselves, induce slumber in
others by means of sentimentality (masquerading as progressiveness),
moral blindness, and culpable lack of courage.
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