Future
Islamist terrorists can take comfort in the reluctance of both the media and
the president to blame the culture of Islamic extremism.
by Abraham H. Miller of PJ Media
Sometime in the not-to0-distant
future there will be meetings of the various law enforcement agencies involved
in the hunt for the Boston terrorists. They will look at what worked and what
didn’t, and what the terrorists did and how they might have been stopped
earlier. And sometime later down the pike, there will be an after action report,
a written product of these discussions that will enable the shared experiences
to serve as a learning module for future counterterrorism operations.
Somewhere in the Islamic world,
terrorists will be undergoing the same exercise, but for different reasons: to
obstruct and defeat the kind of operation they saw in Boston. Terrorists of all
varieties study and learn from operations precisely as do law enforcement
agencies. Terrorists have been known to study not only methods and operations
but also the key personalities likely to be involved in counterterrorism.
There are numerous examples of this,
but the most memorable, at least from my personal experiences, comes from a
conversation I had some years ago in Evian, France, with Dick Mulder,
who at the time was the chief hostage negotiator for the Dutch
government. A psychiatrist by training, Mulder had developed a series of
procedures that resulted in a high rate of terrorist capitulation by immersing
them in a ritualized psychodrama, not entirely unlike procedures developed in
the U.S. by the NYPD. Like most hostage negotiators, Mulder’s goal was for
everyone, including the terrorists, to walk out alive.
During the opening of one of these
negotiations with South Moluccan terrorists, Mulder repeated his introductory
line, “I am the negotiator for the Dutch government.” To his shock and
dismay, the hostage taker on the other end of the field telephone came back
with, “Oh, Dr. Mulder, you have been expected.” Mulder’s identity was
practically a state secret, but the terrorists knew who he was. And that,
of course, meant that they knew his methods.
This situation did not lead to the
usual capitulation but to an assault by Dutch marines and a loss of life. By
doing their homework, terrorists had neutralized Mulder’s methods, leaving
military engagement as the government’s only option.
Terrorists are too often mistakenly
seen as imitative, but terrorists are pragmatic, flexible, and highly
innovative. Part of that innovation comes from studying the methods of
our law enforcement the same way law enforcement examines its own operations
and the methods terrorists use.
One of the most obvious components
of the Boston operation was the way in which the police mobilized ordinary
citizens as an extension of the eyes and ears of the police. The British
used this technique in hunting IRA bombers and keeping mass events safe.
“Adopt a Bobby,” British subjects were told at major events. And that is
precisely what the British did; and by so doing, they extended the reach of the
police.
But recently, the Muslim American Civil Liberties Coalition and organizations at the City University of New York Law
School warned American Muslims not to cooperate with law enforcement.
This sentiment has been affirmed by the American Civil Liberties Union, which has made an issue of police surveillance of radical
mosques and Muslim neighborhoods, surveillance that is both legal and imperative
in light of the attacks by radical Muslims against Americans since 9/11.
What if Dzhokar Tsarnaev had
followed the tactic long used by both guerrilla fighters and terrorists and
swam in the sea of the people, his people? What if he had hidden in a
Muslim neighborhood or a college neighborhood inhabited by sympathetic
leftists, the kind who find convicted bomber and Weather Underground terrorist Kathy Boudin
an intellectual asset worthy of holding a faculty position at Columbia? Would
one of these terrorist sympathizers have picked up the phone to call police and
tell them that the object of their manhunt was hiding in his boat? And
who among the brothers’ family and roommates picked up the phone and identified
them? That’s right, not one of them.
Dzhokar Tsarnaev, a wounded
nineteen-year-old man on the run, brought a major American metropolis to a
grinding halt, siphoning billions out of the economy, spreading fear, and
bringing normal police work to a virtual halt. What if the next
terrorist attack is undertaken by more than one action group, hitting multiple
targets simultaneously? You don’t even have to imagine the ensuing chaos.
You can examine it. The Hanafi Muslims did exactly that in March, 1977 in Washington, D.C.
They struck three targets simultaneously: the DC municipal offices, the Islamic
Center, and the headquarters of Bnai Brith, the Jewish fraternal
organization. They brought the city to a standstill and overwhelmed a
police force unprepared in both tactics and armaments for that kind of
confrontation. President Jimmy Carter refused to provide armed federal
resources for fear of taking responsibility when the predicted mass killings
would start. He left the D.C. police largely to fend for itself. Fortunately,
the predicted mass killings did not occur.
Future Islamist terrorists can take
comfort in the reluctance of both the media and the president to blame the
culture of Islamic extremism. The media uttered the words “Chechyna,”
“Chechens,” and even “Russia,” endlessly. Only sporadically were the
words”Islam” or “Muslim” heard over the airwaves. As a Russian friend of mine
said, Chechens are not Russians. No one should make that confusion,
especially not after the horror and brutality Chechen terrorists inflicted on
Russian school children at Beslan.
In the aftermath, President Obama,
once again, showed us he is too tied to Muslims to tell the truth about the
threat of Islamic fundamentalism. The administration that gave us
“workplace violence” as a cynical and insulting explanation for the Fort Hood
massacre gave us a lecture on the strengths of multi-culturalism and diversity
in creating a resilient American society. Yet, it was Bostonians’
forebears, those that did not just yearn to come to America but also to be
Americans, who showed us what courage in the face of evil looks like. The
Tsarnaevs yearned to come to America to escape a brutal war and then the
parents went back to Dagestam , leaving their children here. They later
killed in the name of a vision of Islam that refuses not only assimilation but
even basic acculturation.
It is considered racism,
Islamophobia, or worse to say publicly what nearly every American thought
privately: the names of the terrorists were not going to be Tom, Dick,
and Harry, despite the fantasies of MSNBC’s Chris Matthews, NPR’s Dina
Temple-Raston, CNN’s Erin Burnett, and Salon’s David Sirota, who was rooting for the return of Timothy McVeigh. Future Islamist terrorists can take comfort in this
continual denial by America’s media elite of the reality of the threat.
Screaming “Islamophobia” will persist as a way to avoid the scrutiny of law
enforcement and the suspicions of some of our citizenry, while engaging the
protection of CAIR.
It is doubtful, given the political
correctness of an administration that refuses to use the words “Islamic
terrorism,” that the after action report will be any different from the
“workplace violence” idiocy of the military’s investigation into the Fort Hood
massacre. The Tsarnaev brothers will
be found to have been alienated youth, unable to fit in because of the barriers
erected by an inherently racist society — or because of some other form of
liberal “bullshit,” as Bill Maher so aptly put it, masquerading as compassionate insight.
Uninhibited by political
correctness, the terrorists will focus on the vulnerabilities of the infidels
and how to exploit their nonsensical multi-culturalism. Tactically they
will learn how to avoid surveillance cameras, create better escape plans,
precipitate multiple and simultaneous operations, and find a compliant and
encouraging population in whose waters they can swim. They will think about how
to recruit other Tsarnaev brothers.
We speak of the impact of a culture
of poverty on the social condition. We speak of a culture of racism and
its deleterious impact on our African American population. We speak of
culture in numerous contexts, but it is impossible to speak of the relationship
between the culture of Islam and terrorist violence. How many more people
have to die before our analysis of the threats that face us confronts
recognition that, history aside, violence and terror are no longer equal
manifestations of all religions? Jihad, for many, might simply mean
internal struggle, but for others, it also means holy war sanctioned by
theological doctrine. We can ignore the former, but we will not survive
if we ignore the latter.
Abraham H.
Miller is an emeritus professor of political science and a former head of the
Intelligence Studies Section of the International Studies Association.
And I thought a federal government
was responsible for a national defense.
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