What
Were Not Fighting For
The list includes short skirts,
dancing, and secularism.
By Ramesh Ponnuru
There
is a danger that in the course of arguing for the war, liberals
will settle on an interpretation of it that is both wrong and dangerous.
According to this interpretation, what we are fighting against is
"fundamentalism." What we are fighting for is "tolerance,"
"pluralism," "modernity," and "the open
society" - and these terms are, with varying degrees of explicitness,
to be understood as liberals understand them. Many liberals tend
to regard what Alan Wolfe calls "moral freedom" as the
essence of freedom and the highest achievement of our civilization.
Ayatollah
Attitude
Irans
place in the new war.
By Ray Takeyh
For
an entire generation of Iran's clerics, relations with the U.S.
have been mired in visceral emotion. From Tehran's perspective,
the U.S. is more than another great power with which Iran must deal;
it embodies a whole range of political and cultural grievances.
Iran's clerics take only limited comfort in America's destruction
of their Afghan foes - because it implies a further projection of
U.S. power. And this is where the apparent convergence of U.S. and
Iranian perspectives falters; because while Tehran can live, however
uneasily, with a Taliban-led Afghanistan, it dreads the prospect
of a pro-Western regime in Afghanistan and further U.S. inroads
into Central Asia.
Security Blanket
Will it smother the nations
capital?
By Byron York
Given
the sheer scope and deadliness of the attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon, it's hard for city officials to claim that
the new emphasis on security is excessive. Still, local leaders
worry that today's new security, much of which is arguably necessary,
will set off a creeping closure of parts of the city. After all,
it is one of the characteristics of a bureaucracy to measure its
importance by the security measures it can command. With Congress
and the White House tightly locked up, what is to keep the Transportation
Department from arguing that it, too, might become a target for
terrorism and therefore needs the authority to shut down streets
nearby? Or the IRS? Or the Labor Department? Or dozens of other
agencies?
Your
Papers, Please
Against a national ID card.
By John Derbyshire
In
this, as in so many other things, Ronald Reagan set the example.
He did not waver in his support for Second Amendment rights even
when he himself was shot by a lunatic, regarding such an occurrence
as part of the price for living in a free society. In the same spirit,
when the subject of a national ID card, as an aid to controlling
illegal immigration, was raised during a cabinet meeting, Reagan
dismissed it with the sardonic remark: "Maybe we should just
brand all babies." In the present climate, one hesitates to
tell that story, for fear the idea might be taken up in all seriousness
and appear a few days later as a New York Times editorial.
Playing Nice?
That old devil bipartisanship.
By Kate OBeirne
An
obituary for bipartisanship that ran on the New York Times's
editorial page points up the fundamental problem - for Republicans
- with the call for putting allegedly partisan concerns aside: When
partisanship is shelved, the media play referee - and blow the whistle
only on the Republican team. Prosecuting America's new war on terrorism
is properly the administration's first priority, and the White House
is right to want to avoid the kind of gratuitous partisan bickering
that could sour congressional unity on the war front. But there
is little reason for fruitless foraging for bipartisan consensus
on crucial initiatives to improve the country's economy and security.
Kofis
Hour
The absurd Nobel Peace Prize.
By Theodore Dalrymple
Some
people might say that to award Mr. Annan the Peace Prize at such
a moment is a little like the award of the Victoria Cross to Neville
Chamberlain would have been on his return from Munich. In a sense,
though, it is pointless to hold poor Mr. Annan responsible for disaster
in Yugoslavia, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Somalia, and so forth. His
job, as he puts it, is from hell. No one could do it and satisfy
everyone. But the need, or even the desire, to satisfy everyone
is what is so profoundly corrupting about the job. It is a job from
hell only for a certain kind of person: a person, that is, with
a degree of moral integrity, intellectual honesty, and self-respect.
For the time-serving apparatchik, for the inveterate trimmer, for
the sailor before the wind, and above all for the social climber
with a lust for an eternal pension in Swiss francs, no billet in
the world could be closer to paradise.
Canines to the Rescue
Best friends, and examples.
By Jonah Goldberg
It's
been widely remarked that the only allies we can count on from "the
first . . . to the last" (Tony Blair's words) are the British.
In a sense, this is true: The loyalty of our friends across the
pond is peerless. But as the images of September 11's aftermath
remind us, there is another, often overlooked comrade whose fidelity
is even more impressive, at least in a statistical sense. For while
the British are unique among some 200 nations, canine fidelity is
unique among the more than 10 million species of the earth.
The New Cold War
Familiar battle lines, unfortunately.
By David Pryce-Jones
Communist
and Islamic extremism both have militaristic and imperial aims,
directed to recruit where possible, and to attack elsewhere. Their
claims to be universal imply the actual destruction of all other
values. Communism turned out to be the Russian national interest
in disguise. Soviet grievances against the West were unreal, but
the expression of them was rational. In contrast, Islamic extremism
has a restricted territorial base, and by definition cannot appeal
to non-Muslims. The phenomenon arises from the complex interplay
of an identity wounded by modernity, and the complete political
and social failures of Muslim states. The grievances here are real,
but their expression is irrational, even suicidal. Islamic extremism
is therefore a more unpredictable and elusive enemy.
Fatal Contact
The Western influence on Islamic
radicals.
By John OSullivan
The
Islam to which Atta "returned," however, was not one of
the relatively relaxed strains available in the Arab world, but
radical Islamism. This is a harsh, puritanical, politicized version
of Islam, which - while it claims to return to the first traditions
of the religion actually couples them to radical strains
in Western political thought.
Under
Our Very Noses
The terrorist next door.
By Adrian Karatnycky
The
key hijackers, including Mohamed Atta, were well-educated children
of privilege. None of them suffered first-hand economic privation
or political oppression. Equally important, it is becoming clear
that hundreds, if not thousands, of graduates of bin Laden's schools
for terror are Muslims who have grown up and been educated in the
United States and Europe. To understand the September 11 terrorists,
we should have in mind the profile of the classic revolutionary:
deracinated, middle class, shaped in part by exile.
In
Castros Service
The undertold story of Cubas
spying, and terror.
By John J. Miller
What
makes Cuban espionage especially troubling now is the Castro regime's
longstanding support of terrorism. Cuba is one of the seven countries
on the State Department's terrorism list. It may not compare to
Iraq or the Taliban, but its indulgence of terrorists is beyond
dispute. Last year, Cuba was the only country attending the Ibero-American
Summit in Panama that refused to join a condemnation of terrorism.
This spring, Castro toured Libya, Syria, and Iran. At Tehran University
on May 10, the dictator declared, "Iran and Cuba, in cooperation
with each other, can bring America to its knees. The U.S. regime
is very weak, and we are witnessing this weakness from close up."
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