By Richard Fernandez in PJ Media
In the year 1942, on the tropical island of Guadalcanal, two
Marines independently created the most enduring superhero image of their
generation. John Basilone and Mitchell
Paige both won the Medal of Honor in the same spectacular fashion,
by firing water-cooled Browning machine guns from the hip, mowing down their
enemies by the dozen. Other men, like attack pilots and certainly submarine
captains, might have dispatched more of the enemy, but none in so cinematic as
manner of these two men, who wreathed in steam and gunsmoke, stood like
Achilles astride the battlefield, possessed by an almost supernatural force so
that friend and foe alike might recall that Mars himself stood by their side
feeding the murderous belt of cartridges into the ravening gun. Mitchell Paige
later became the model of GI Joe for Hasbro toys.
The public probably needed superheroes because the real Cold War
world was so frightening. But with Captain America, Batman and others on
duty, we never despaired. Our worst imaginings were held at bay by our
imaginary defenders. Nobody needed to fear Cobra while GI Joe was on guard.
Even awesome Hydra, with their fearsome green costumes emblazoned with a
serpent emblems, could be safely left to Nick Fury and SHIELD.
But somewhere along the line the superheroes were retired.
The imaginary as well as the real heroes of America were replaced by new,
gentler advocates like Captain Planet or all-Islamic 99.
The old lines defenders of the imagination faded away. Uncle Sam became a
suspected bigot. The Green Lantern came out as gay. Superman renounced his
American citizenship. Mr. District Attorney was played by Martha
Coakley. The G-men shrank to ordinary FBI agents. Even the Secret Service
became old and arthritic, too lost in booze and party girls to stop space
aliens, North Korean terrorists or even middle aged fence jumpers from barging
into the White House.
The supervillain franchises by contrast, have flourished.
The bad guys are churning them out faster than the public can keep count.
Just today the newspapers announced the existence of more
terrorist groups than heretofore imagined. The government, eager not to alarm
the public, has kept the emergence of most groups secret until now, when all
can be revealed in the aftermath of the air strikes on Syria. No it’s not
true that terror groups have been decimated. A whole alphabet soup has
spilled out of the can.
Those include the al-Nusra Front, which has ties to al-Qaeda and
has made clear its intent to launch attacks outside of the Syrian battleground.
Speaking at the same conference, James Clapper, director of US National
Intelligence, said the Khorasan Group, part of al-Nusra, represents a threat on
par with Islamic State. The Khorasan Group is also part of the core al-Qaeda
that operates along Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan.
Not only are Osama’s acolytes not decimated, they’ve
been reduced to bush league (pardon the pun) in comparison to new supervillain
franchises that are springing up like mushrooms. ISIS is clearly
more powerful than fuddy-duddy old al-Qaeda and “Khorasan” is on par with ISIS.
Not only that, these groups wear evil
costumes, just like in the comics.
And we haven’t even begun to talk about the Boko Haram, al-Shabab,
the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, Hezbollah or the Taliban and all those
other supervillain teams — a veritable real life Legion of Doom. But the
Khorasan group has fired the imagination of journalists like nothing else in
recent memory.
Eli Lake at the Daily Beast describes how the faint
traces of its secret genesis were pieced together by American sleuths. Two
years ago U.S. intelligence began to pick up the first clues of the group’s
existence. At the risk of their lives they teased out its plans to strike
at the West. And just when American operatives were close to nabbing them, “the
Khorasan Group went dark.”
At first, the group was believed by U.S. intelligence agencies to
be al Qaeda’s senior operatives and linked to al Qaeda’s franchise in Syria
known as al-Nusra. But beginning in the spring, the intelligence community
began to call the outfit “the Khorasan Group,” named in part because many of
its members are affiliated with the Khorasan Shura, a leadership council within
al Qaeda. Khorasan in Jihadist literature refers to the region that includes
Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran.
And analysts think Khorasan is only the tip of the iceberg.
There could be more out there and their main goal is to kill Americans
and other Westerners.
“My suspicion is what we are hearing about Khoresan is only part
of the group,” said Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, an expert on al Qaeda at the
Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. “It strikes me as quite possible we
are only hearing about the external operations wing and not the entire
organization.” … planning from the Khorasan Group though suggest at least an
aspiration to launch more coordinated and larger attacks on the west in the
style of the 9/11 attacks from 2001.
The Khorasan Group has been experimenting with different types of
non-metallic explosives for attacks on Western targets, according to U.S.
intelligence officials. Most of the members of the group come from Yemen,
Afghanistan and Pakistan and have for months been coordinating with bomb-makers
drawn from al-Qaeda’s affiliate in the Arabian Peninsula, the most persistent
and creative of al Qaeda groups in efforts to bomb U.S.-bound passenger jets.
The physical Jihad is a hard enough nut to tackle without
conceding to them the sword of the imagination. When the Left decided to
deconstruct all aspects of American culture and to denigrate every aspect of it
as shameful, racist and cringeworthy they unwittingly threw away weapons of the
mind that in their own way were more powerful all the bombers and fighter jets
that ever flew. For nothing defended the West more effectively and at cheaper
price than the American myth.
At the outermost ring of the Pax Americana stood the symbols of
American invincibility. Thor, Ironman and GI Joe.
Unsurprisingly, Khoresan has been described as “obsessed with
next 9/11″ probably so much for the actual damage they may cause, though that
will be considerable, but because it advances their goal of shattering the
American aura. Ironically the Jihad appreciates the power of the American
myth more acutely than the American left.
The Jihad is a young man’s game. And to young men, imagination is
real. The men join the Jihad are motivated by more than simple religious
belief. They join it to wear supervillain costumes and carry an AK-47.
To get a nom de guerre, to feel the excitement of
conspiracy and be upborne by a sense of purpose. They can see
themselves all decked out in this paraphernalia. People don’t join
Hydra, Cobra, SMERSH or SPECTRE for the money. They join it in fulfillment of
their adolescent dream. Take it from Kim Philby. When asked why he
betrayed his country to join the KGB, Philby answered “you do not hesitate
to join an elite force.”
Watch out. America has other superheroes, even if they’re
presently in Russia.
The old-time comic book artists understood the now forgotten
warning of the Baptismal vows: beware the Glamor of Evil. Beware the idea
that evil is cool. Young rootless men don’t want to serve under some
colorless, politically correct bureaucrat. If they are going to raise
Hell they want to be led by the Red Skull. And by the same token those
who aspire to stop them want to be led by GI Joe. GI Joe, where have you
gone?
Perhaps someday America will regain her confidence. And part of
that process will be to inspire kids to look out the window again, imagining
themselves as Americans and superheroes, and for once unashamed to be either.
No comments:
Post a Comment