September
11, 2003, 9:00 a.m.
9/11 in 20/20 Hindsight
Straining to
see through the fog of war.
eptember 11 will be remembered as the worst terrorist attack America ever
suffered if we're lucky. If not, if we're not extraordinarily successful
in waging the war on terrorism, there remains this possibility: That years
from now, Osama bin Laden and 9/11 will be to terrorism what the Wright
Brothers and Kitty Hawk were to aviation just a modest beginning.
=Too many leading political figures and pundits either don't understand
this or refuse to accept it. They view what's taking place today in Iraq,
Afghanistan, Iran, Israel, India, the Philippines, and other places as separate
skirmishes engendered by a variety of grievances. They don't grasp that
a collection of extremist ideologies all pathologically anti-democratic,
anti-Western, and anti-modern are utilizing terrorism as an arrow
aimed at the Free World's vulnerable heel.
Sen. John Kerry, a Democrat running for president, has said that 9/11 is
our generation's Pearl Harbor. But like so many others, Kerry hesitates
to acknowledge what follows from that proposition. In the months and years
following Dec. 7, 1941, America embarked on a great and terrible war, not
just in the Pacific, but also in North Africa and Europe; not just against
the Japanese militarists who bombed our ships at anchor, but also against
German Nazis and Italian Fascists.
Had anyone asked President Roosevelt how much the war would cost, he would
probably have answered: "However much it takes." Had anyone asked
how long we'd be at war, he probably would have answered: "For the
duration." But it's difficult to imagine anyone having the nerve to
ask FDR such questions; difficult to imagine a 1940s version of Ted Kennedy
or Pat Buchanan demanding an "exit strategy."
The hard truth is that we don't know when we'll win the war on terrorism.
The harder truth is that we don't know if we'll win. We should at
least acknowledge that this war is more perilous than any conflict America
has ever fought. That's because terrorists, by definition, are people who
abide by no rules and who count life as cheap their own lives included.
It's conceivable that before too long terrorists may obtain weapons of mass
destruction that were unimaginable to terrorists of the past. That would
allow them to kill not just thousands but hundreds of thousands, perhaps
millions. This fact has not yet sunk in.
September 11 was not the day this conflict began. Rather, 9/11/01 was the
day when Americans first began to seriously fight back. The order to do
that was not given by any government official or military officer. It was
a decision made by ordinary citizens, passengers aboard United Airlines
Flight 93 as it flew over Shanksville, Pennsylvania. They grasped the reality
of their situation and they determined to die free and fighting rather than
allow themselves to be led meekly to slaughter.
Prior to that moment, most Americans had deluded themselves into believing
that terrorism was merely a nuisance. Ignore it it will go away.
Washington's policy was inaction and appeasement.
DECADES-LONG
WAR
This war actually began more than 20 years ago. I was a reporter in Iran
in 1979 when the Ayatollah Khomeini returned and took power. For the most
part, my fellow journalists were sympathetic toward him and his mission.
Publications of the Left, such as The Nation, put the most-flattering
possible face on the mullahs. But so, too, did publications of the center
such as The New Yorker.
Later that year, our diplomats were taken hostage in our own embassy. Americans
tied yellow ribbons around trees, and President Carter launched "Desert
One," a helicopter rescue attempt that turned into a disaster, and
which spread the perception that the use of military force was not a serious
option for the United States of America. That notion was reinforced when,
in 1980, President Carter sent former attorney general Ramsey Clark to Iran
essentially to apologize to the mullahs.
In 1983, Hezbollah, a terrorist organization backed by Iran and Syria, attacked
the U.S. embassy and the Marine barracks in Lebanon, slaughtering 241 Marines.
In response: President Reagan ordered American officials in Beirut to pack
up and leave.
Terrorists next murdered CIA Beirut station chief, William Buckley. Again,
we did nothing and, as a result, Hezbollah and Iran were emboldened to take
and kill additional American hostages.
In 1986, President Reagan did order a strike against Tripoli in reprisal
for the bombing of a Berlin disco frequented by American military personnel.
You'll recall that the French refused to let our military aircraft fly through
their air space for that purpose. (Le plus ca change, le plus c'est la
meme chose.)
But two years later, Pan Am 103 was blown up over the Scottish town of Lockerbie,
killing 270 people. Our response was a prolonged investigation that resulted
in the conviction of one low-level Libyan operative.
No group, no nation, no dictator, no terror master was ever held accountable
for any of these acts of mass murder. We were dealing, as former Pentagon
official Richard Perle has said "with people who understand strength
and have only contempt for weakness." And we were pursing a policy
of weakness. We were inviting contempt.
The 1990s was the decade when terrorism truly began to metastasize. In 1993
alone there was the first attack on the World Trade towers, the bloody battle
involving bin Laden-trained Somali guerillas and U.S. forces in Mogadishu,
and the attempt by Saddam Hussein to assassinate former President Bush in
Kuwait. In 1996, our troops in the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia were bombed.
Two years later came the bombing of our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Two years after that came the attack on the USS Cole.
During all this time, tens of thousands of terrorists were training in Afghanistan,
in the Bekaa Valley of Syrian-occupied Lebanon, at Salman Pak south of Baghdad,
and in other locations. Astonishingly, we made no attempt to shut down these
camps. We didn't seriously try to penetrate the groups running them or to
punish the regimes hosting them. Perhaps we thought these terrorists would
only be dispatched to Chechnya, Bosnia, and Israel. Perhaps we thought all
this need not concern us.
THEM
VS. US
Whatever the rationale for our failure to act, Sept. 11 is the price we
paid.
Most Americans today
though not the Left and the isolationist Right understand
that we must wage a war on terrorism. But they may not understand that
this war isn't only against terrorism. As scholar Daniel Pipes
points out, terrorism is a weapon, akin to poison gas. The question is:
Who is deploying this weapon? The answer is: The followers of several
closely related ideologies identified by such names as Jihadism, Islamism,
Militant Islam, Muslim Totalitarianism, Islamo-fascism, Baathism, Wahhabism,
and bin Ladenism.
These are all poisonous stews mixing Islamic flavors with ingredients
from Nazism, Fascism, and Communism. They all believe in Arab and/or Islamic
supremacism. They all intend to unite the Arab and/or Islamic words against
America, the Great Satan, and Israel, the Little Satan. They all want
to prevent the liberalization of the Arab and Islamic worlds. They all
seek to resurrect the Arab/Muslim empire. They all call for a jihad, a
holy war, against the infidels by which they mean Christians, Jews,
Hindus, Buddhists, and moderate Muslims. They all want to humiliate and
defeat America. They all despise those who believe in tolerance, democratic
capitalism, and modernism. It was, after all, the World Trade Center they
attacked people from more than 80 nations and of all the great
religions were in those two buildings and, yes, they were doing business.
While the terrorists would be pleased to accept concessions from us, surely
we should be able to recognize that diplomacy and appeasement will not
satisfy them. Withdraw our troops from Iraq, force India to give up Kashmir,
break off an Islamic state from the Philippines, arm-twist Israel to make
unilateral concessions it won't matter.
In their view, it's them or us there can be no peaceful coexistence.
Their vision of what Islam once was and must be again are threatened by
the very existence of a powerful and successful Free World, threatened
by the seductiveness of the lifestyles of the rich and blasphemous.
As Americans began to grasp two years ago today, this is a fight we now
have to fight, and one we must expect to continue fighting for many years
to come. The alternative is to be led meekly to slaughter.
Clifford D. May, a former New York
Times foreign correspondent, is president of the Foundation
for the Defense of Democracies, a policy institute created after 9/11
and focusing on terrorism.