As my old friends at The Spectator in London pointed out on Monday morning, I scooped the entire planet in breaking the news of Osama bin Laden’s death: “Osama bin Laden is dead, says Mark Steyn.” This was in The Spectator’s edition of June 29, 2002, which turned out to be a wee bit premature. I jumped the gun, much like Osama’s missus in Abbottabad, but by nine years.
Nor, to be honest, was a teensy-weensy near-decade discrepancy in the date the only problem with my scoop. Much of that Spectator piece was preoccupied with the usual assumptions about Public Enemy No. 1 — caves, dialysis, remote wild Pakistani tribal lands where Western intelligence hasn’t a hope of penetrating unless you turn a cousin of the village headman, etc. All these assumptions prevailed until a few days ago, when it emerged that Osama, three wives, and 13 children had been living in town in a purpose-built pad round the corner from the Pakistani military academy for over half a decade. Brunch every Sunday with a couple of generals at his usual corner table at the Abbottabad Hilton? Eggs Benedict, hold the ham?
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The belated dispatch of Osama testifies to what the United States does well — elite warriors, superbly trained, equipped to a level of technological sophistication no other nation can match. Everything else surrounding the event (including White House news management so club-footed one starts to wonder darkly whether its incompetence is somehow intentional) embodies what the United States does badly. Pakistan, our “ally,” hides and protects not only Osama but also Mullah Omar and Zawahiri, and does so secure in the knowledge that it will pay no price for its treachery — indeed, confident that its duplicitous military will continue to be funded by U.S. taxpayers.
If this were a movie, the crowds cheering “USA! USA!” outside the White House would be right: The bad guy is dead! We win! The End. But the big picture is bigger than Hollywood convention. In the great sweeping narrative, the death of Osama bin Laden is barely a ripple, while the courtesies afforded to him by the Pakistani establishment tell us something profound about the superpower’s weakness and inability to shift the storyline. Bin Laden famously said that when people see a strong horse and a weak horse they naturally prefer the strong horse. Putting a bullet through his eye is a good way of letting him know which role he’s consigned to. But the strong horse/weak horse routine is a matter of perception as much as anything else. On September 12, 2001, General Musharraf was in a meeting “when my military secretary told me that the U.S. secretary of state, Gen. Colin Powell, was on the phone. I said I would call back later.” The milquetoasts of the State Department were in no mood for Musharraf’s I’m-washing-my-hair routine, and, when he’d been dragged to the phone, he was informed that the Bush administration would bomb Pakistan “back to the Stone Age” if they didn’t get everything they wanted. Musharraf concluded that America meant it.
A decade later, we’re back to September 10. Were Washington to call Islamabad as it did a decade ago, the Pakistanis would thank them politely and say they’d think it over and get back in six weeks, give or take. They think they’ve got the superpower all figured out — that America is happy to spend bazillions of dollars on technologically advanced systems that can reach across the planet, but it doesn’t really have the stomach for changing the facts of the ground. That means that once in a while your big-time jihadist will be having a quiet night in watching Dancing With The Stars when all of a sudden Robocop descends from the heavens, kicks the door open, and it’s time to get ready for your virgins. But other than that, in the bigger picture, day by day, all but unnoticed, things will go their way.
In the fall of 2001, discussing the collapse of the Taliban, Thomas Friedman, the in-house thinker at the New York Times, offered this bit of cartoon analysis:“For all the talk about the vaunted Afghan fighters, this was a war between the Jetsons and the Flintstones — and the Jetsons won and the Flintstones know it.”
But they didn’t, did they? The Flintstones retreated to their caves, bided their time, and a decade later the Jetsons are desperate to negotiate their way out.
When it comes to instructive analogies, I prefer Khartoum to cartoons. If it took America a decade to avenge the dead of 9/11, it took Britain 13 years to avenge their defeat in Sudan in 1884. But, after Kitchener slaughtered the jihadists of the day at the Battle of Omdurman in 1897, he made a point of digging up their leader, the Mahdi, chopping off his head and keeping it as a souvenir. The Sudanese got the message. The British had nary a peep out of the joint until they gave it independence six decades later — and, indeed, the locals fought for king and (distant imperial) country as brave British troops during World War II. Even more amazingly, generations of English schoolchildren were taught about the Mahdi’s skull winding up as Lord Kitchener’s novelty paperweight as an inspiring tale of national greatness.
Not a lot of that today. It’s hard to imagine Osama’s noggin as an attractive centerpiece at next year’s White House Community Organizer of the Year banquet, and entirely impossible to imagine America’s “educators” teaching the tale approvingly. So instead, even as we explain that our difficulties with this bin Laden fellow are nothing to do with Islam, no sir, perish the thought, we simultaneously rush to assure the Muslim world that, not to worry, we accorded him a 45-minute Islamic funeral as befits an observant Muslim.
That’s why Pakistani bigshots harbored America’s mortal enemy and knew they could do so with impunity. Bin Laden was a Saudi with money, and there are a lot of those about, funding this and that from South Asia to the Balkans to Dearborn, Mich. They’ve walked their petrodollars round the Western world buying up everything they need to, from minor mosques to major university Middle Eastern Studies departments. By comparison with his compatriots, Osama squandered his dough. In that long-ago Spectator piece, I wrote, “Junior’s just a peculiarly advanced model of the useless idiot son — a criticism routinely made of Bush but actually far more applicable to Osama, who took his dad’s fortune and literally threw it down a hole in the ground.”
A lot of American policy followed it. A decade on, our troops are running around Afghanistan “winning hearts and minds” and getting gunned down by the very policemen and soldiers they’ve spent years training. Back on the home front, every small-town airport has at least a dozen crack TSA operatives sniffing round the panties of grade-schoolers. Meanwhile, at the U.N., the EU, the Organization of the Islamic Conference, and in the “Facebook revolutions” of “the Arab spring,” the Islamization of the world proceeds: Millions of Muslims support bin Laden’s goal — the submission of the Western world to Islam — but, unlike him, understand that flying planes into buildings is entirely unnecessary to achieving it. Will being high-flying Jetsons with state-of-the-art gizmos prove sufficient in a Flintstonizing world? The Pakistanis are pretty sure they know the answer to that.
We don't have the courage to speak truthfully on matters of significance such as worldwide Islamism. As long as our political leaders continue to publicly obfuscate, it will take another "event" to get our attention....frustrating!! I should add here that the Muslim Brotherhood is definitely not Flintstonian in their approach, them boys get it....Stealth Jihad via Facebook and Twitter! Now that's an adversary you have to respect. I wonder if the political leaders in the West get that? Never mind don't answer that!!
Just another excellent Saturday morning read, Mr. Steyn!
Pertaining to your remarks about winning hearts and minds, Nat Geo ran "Inside the Green Berets" last night where the film crew follows a unit inside Afghanistan. Frankly, while watching this program, I was reminded of a question posed by Louis L'Amour comparing the mark a man leaves on the world with the surface of a glass of water when one dips his finger in and removes it.
Once again, nobody says it better or with more wit than Mark Steyn.
Our politically correct refusal to properly identify the enemy by name, choosing instead to refer to it as "terror" (a tactic, not an opponent) foretold a defeat which is now, unfortunately, unavoidable.
We have not the will (or stomach) for this fight, something our enemies know too well.
Sadly, the ailment afflicts both political parties and many conservatives as well. Radical Islam is not going away and democracy is not a cure for a twisted ideology/religion.
A culture's belief structure ultimately defines everything about it. As the West abandons it's own moral root structure, it is no match for Islam.
Powell told Musharaf we would bomb Pakistan back into the stone age?
But that would set them back decades. Instead, we've thrown about $20 billion at them since 2001. We even co-funded a new hydroelectric dam for them. If they want to huff about us coming in and quietly stomping 4 cockroaches, I suggest they reconsider.
I don't know as I agree that the heightened security hassles we subject ourselves to mean the Flintstones won or achieved anything worthwhile. I wouldn't have argued that "Meatless Mondays" and gas ration stickers were banner achievements of the Wehrmacht.
I rememeber years ago when Japanese businessmen came to America to study the car industry. we gladly trained them, and now they beat us with our blessing.
I thought about that when I saw our troops training the Iraqi's and the Afgans.
Suppose the Pakistanis were complicit with US in all this. Suppose the Pakistanis told us a couple of years ago exactly where OBL was living and what he was doing. Then suppose the current US administration decided that it would be more useful to capture OBL during the 2012 election cycle and so the Pakistani authorities are working under instructions from us to simply keep an eye on OBL.
Then suppose that earlier this year, the Pakistani authorities learned that OBL was getting ready to move and shared that information with us. The result was a hastily-accelerated but smoothly executed operation that we witnessed last week.
I'm ready to pull troops out of Afghanistan. They've made enough money from us and proved there is no amout of time or training that will win them to our side.
As for Pakistan, I say we use their haboring of bin Laden to leverage intellegence about other terrorists within their boarders. We can always threaten to shift their aid to India, Pakistan's mortal enemy.
Kitchener went on to further ignominy in South Africa with his concentration camp innovations. He is not remembered fondly there or in the land of his birth.
It's a bit of a stretch to believe UBL was being protected by the Pakistani government. What did they have to gain by it? In any case, he's dead so now it's time to leave Pakistan and Afghanistan to the dogs.
It sounds like Mr. Steyn is all upset that the Great Warrior G.W. Bush who escaped from serving in Viet Nam could not get Bin Laden. It took a Community Organizer to get the job done. No Mr. Steyn, capturing or killing Bin Laden was not and is not a ripple. It was the reason Mr. Bush went to war in Afghanistan. To refresh your memory, Mr. Bush’s ultimatum to Mulla Omar of Afghanistan was give us Bin Laden or we bomb you to stone ages. He wanted to get Bin Laden and after 8 years could not do so. Why, because he was joined at the hip with Mr. Musharaf of Pakistan. Mr. Bush relied too much on Pakistan's military and ISI to get the job done. He kept sending billions of dollars borrowed from Chinese to Musharef hoping that Pakistani military would do what Mr. Bush was elected to do, protect and defend America.
It took the Community Organizer to put Pakistani leaders in their place and sending the real men to do the job. He had the brass to make the decision. At no time during Bush presidency U.S. military carried out any raids against terrorists inside Pakistan. At no time did Mr. Bush’s Secretary of State or Defense dared to criticize Pakistani leaderships. They were all too eager to be the apologists for Mr. Musharef trying to justify his actions or actually lack of it.
Good thing the Community Organizer came along, otherwise we might have still been waiting for Musharef to catch Bin Laden for us.
I know Mr. Steyn, it is hard for you to swallow the fact that the Community Organizer In Chief got the job done. But such is life and you have to learn to live with it no matter how much you try to spin it.
@Atom
Actually, the Pakistani government is the weakest link in Pakistan. So they were totally in the dark. The military and ISI run Pakistan, and protect the terrorists as they intend to use them in retaking power in Afghanistan once the allies leave. Pakistan put the Taliban in charge there, and also use them and other terrorist groups in Kashmir and against India. This allows the Pakistan government to remain clueless, and powerless.
Iran does the same thing in many countries, such as Syria.
A factually and analytically inaccurate article. Powell didn't make that threat; it was Armitage. Al Qaeda is making no headway in the Arab world; they're sidelined in the pro-democracy movements. You're however right on Pakistan.
"In any case, he's dead so now it's time to leave Pakistan and Afghanistan to the dogs."
Indeed. Why do we have Islamic Pakistan as an ally as opposed to modern India. Let the Chines take over Afghanistan and Pakistan, see how long they're willing to put up with their double dealing BS.
Mark Steyn, you nailed it. And the sad thing is, you nailed it ten years ago and nobody listened. And Thomas Friedman . . . what an idiot. You could put a million men in Afghanistan for a hundred years and MAYBE you could win hearts and minds. Or maybe not.
There are some factual problems in this article. Kitchener did not kill the Mahdi, he killed one of his successors, Abdallahi ibn Muhammad, the Khalifa. The Mahdi died in 1885, within months of his troops' beheading of Charles Gordon at Khartoum. His tomb was destroyed after the defeat of the Khalifa in 1897 and, to prevent him from continuing as a martyr symbol of mahdi-ism, his skeleton was thrown into the Nile, but his skull was taken by Kitchener.
Nevertheless, Steyn's general theme, that the power of the United States and the Western world is hamstrung by the morass of our left wing-inspired and cultivated political correctness is correct. This is what Islam and other enemies use adeptly against us. Too bad we're fools enough to let them. We could have used a more Kitchener-like response to the killing of bin Laden. Decapitation is a Koranic directive adhered to enthusiastically by terrorists. In fact, just as the mahdists did with Gordon, bin Laden's severed head on a pole would have sent an unambiguous message to Islam and its terrorist proxies that would not be misundertood.
Either this article was re-written, or Bob42 and tyhmaplanet have poor reading comprehension skills. Steyn does not assert that Powell made the follow-up phone call, nor that Kitchener killed the Mahdi. Just wanted to clear that up.
Great article by one of my favorite pundits.