"Make no mistake: The United States will hunt down and punish those responsible for these cowardly acts." So spoke President Bush in his address to the nation soon after the catastrophic events of September 11.
To me, this sustained record of violence looks awfully much like war, but Washington in its wisdom has insisted otherwise. Official policy has viewed the attacks as a sequence of discrete criminal incidents. Seeing terrorism primarily as a problem of law enforcement is a mistake, because it means: The time has come
for a paradigm shift, toward viewing terrorism as a form of warfare. Such
a change will have many implications. It means targeting not just those
foot soldiers who actually carry out the violence but the organizations
and governments that stand behind them. It means relying on the armed
forces, not policemen, to protect Americans. It means defense overseas
rather than in American courtrooms. It means that organizations and governments
that sponsor terrorism not just the foot soldiers who carry it
out will pay the price. It means dispensing
with the unrealistically high expectations of proof so that when reasonable
evidence points to a regime's or an organization's having harmed Americans,
U.S. military force can be deployed. It means that, as in conventional
war, Washington need not know the names and specific actions of enemy
soldiers before fighting them. It means retaliating
every single time terrorism harms an American. There is no need to know
the precise identity of a perpetrator; in war, there are times when one
strikes first and asks questions later. When an attack takes place, it
could be reason to target any of those known to harbor terrorists. If
the perpetrator is not precisely known, then punish those who are known
to harbor terrorists. Go after the governments and organizations that
support terrorism. It means using force
so that the punishment is disproportionately greater than the attack.
The U.S. has a military force far more powerful than any other in the
world: Why spend hundreds of billions of dollars a year on it and not
deploy it to defend Americans? I give fair warning:
The military approach demands more from Americans than does the legal
one. It requires a readiness to spend money and to lose lives. Force works
only if it is part of a sustained policy, not a one-time event. Throwing
a few bombs (as was done against the Libyan regime in 1986, and against
sites in Afghanistan and Sudan in 1998) does not amount to a serious policy.
Going the military route requires a long-term commitment that will demand
much from Americans over many years. But it will be worth
it, for the safety of Americans depends ultimately not on defense but
on offense; on victories not in the courtroom but on the battlefield.
The U.S. government needs to establish a newly fearsome reputation, so
that anyone who harms Americans knows that retribution will be certain
and nasty. Nothing can replace the destruction of any organization or
government that harms so much as a single American citizen. To those who say
this approach would start a cycle of violence, the answer is obvious:
That cycle already exists, as Americans are constantly murdered in acts
of terrorism. Further, by baring their teeth, Americans are far more likely
to intimidate their enemies than to instigate further violence. Retaliation
will reduce violence, not further increase it, providing Americans with
a safety they presently do not enjoy. |
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http://www.nationalreview.com/september11/sept11-pipes.asp
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