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Getting to the Root - What's really behind the terrorism
National Review Online ^ | October 3, 2001 | Stanley Kurtz

Posted on 10/03/2001 7:46:13 AM PDT by Stand Watch Listen

Why was the World Trade Center destroyed? The Left tells us that U.S. foreign policy is at fault — specifically, our support for Israel and our sanctions against Iraq. The reply is that mere changes in policy won't placate the terrorists. It's America itself that the terrorists envy and hate — our freedom, our power, our prosperity. That sobering fact leaves us little alternative beside the use of diplomacy, finance, and force to bring the terrorists and the nations that harbor them to heel.

This is the debate of the moment, and rightly so. But if it's a question of why the World Trade Center was destroyed, why not go to the terrorists who attacked it? The hijackers are dead, of course, and their sponsor, Osama Bin Laden, is currently unavailable for interviews. But there remains a way to speak with some of those who attacked the World Trade Center. I'm thinking of the terrorists who ignited a truckload of explosives in the World Trade Center parking lot in 1993, killing six people. Had the amount of explosives in that truck been just a little larger, and had the truck been only slightly differently placed, the World Trade Center would have been destroyed, with a likely loss of two hundred thousand lives (the approximate combined casualty toll of Hiroshima and Nagasaki) — 50,000 office workers, 50,000 visitors, and 100,000 workers in the surrounding buildings (a better-placed blast would have toppled one tower into the other, and both towers would have crashed onto the surrounding buildings).

As it happens, U. C. Santa Barbara professor of sociology, Mark Juergensmeyer, interviewed Mahmud Abouhalima, a ringleader of the original World Trade Center bombing plot, while researching his book, Terror in the Mind of God. We also know a good deal about Sheik Omar Abdul Rahman, the exiled leader of the Egypt's most radical Islamic movement, al Gamaa-Islamiya ("the Islamic group"), who authorized the first World Trade Center bombing, and who, like Abouhalima, is now imprisoned for his role in the plot. Both Abouhalima and Rahman seem to have had ties, if shadowy ones, to Afghanistan and Osama bin Laden. Obviously, Bin Laden's September 11 operation finished off what Rahman, Abouhalima, and their accomplices began in 1993. So an understanding of Rahman's and Abouhalima's motivations should tell us a lot about the underlying causes of the terror we face today.

Given what we know about Rahman and Abouhalima, what are we to make of the claim that America's support for Israel is the root cause of the bombing (and the accompanying implication that a slackening of our support for Israel will bring an end to the terror)? Before assessing that claim, the craven and self-defeating nature of this whole line of thinking deserves comment. Everyone knows, yet too many forget, that it is foolish to negotiate with terrorists — that giving in to terrorist blackmail leads only to greater violence. That, after all, is what happened at the World Trade Center. A series of U.S. retreats in the face of terrorist attacks on our embassies, ships, and military barracks emboldened the terrorists to believe that a massive domestic assault on the United States would drive us out of the Middle East altogether. So even if the recent attacks were inspired by our foreign policy, how would changing that policy under terrorist pressure leave us any better off? Wouldn't such a retreat simply be inviting terrorists everywhere to manipulate our foreign policy through a series of nightmarish domestic attacks?

For the sake of argument, however, let's consider the claim that America's foreign policy is the "root cause" of the disaster at the World Trade Center. It's certainly true that Sheik Rahman vigorously condemned the United States for its support of Israel. Does that mean we ought to get tough with Israel, reducing our military and economic support by, say, 50 percent, and forcing Israel to make some key concessions to the Palestinians? I'm afraid that won't be enough, since what Rahman objects to is not this or that policy, but Israel's very existence.

Sheik Rahman, after all, is the leader of the organization that assassinated Egyptian President Anwar al-Sadat for simply recognizing Israel's existence. So to bring this terrorism to a halt — to satisfy Sheik Rahman and his fundamentalist allies — we're going to have to repudiate Israel altogether.

Let it also be noted that when addressing his terrorist followers, Sheik Rahman inveighed against America for our role in the Persian Gulf war. So obviously, to extirpate the causes of terrorism at their root, we'll need to send out a signal to Saddam Hussein that Kuwait is his if he wants it. Surely that will put a stop to the violence.

While we're at it, let's consider that other "root cause" of the attacks on the World Trade Center, our support for Egypt's secular government. More than anything else, it is our support, not for Israel, but for the government of Egypt, that turned Sheik Rahman against us. Rahman's dream, after all, is to return to Egypt, Khomeini-like, to stand at the head of a fundamentalist Islamic state. To that end, Rahman authorized the murder, not only of Sadat, but also of the Speaker of Egypt's Parliament and of the respected writer Farag Foda, whose crime was to publish books advocating the separation of religion from politics. And although the assassination attempts were unsuccessful, Sheik Rahman also authorized the murder of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and, perhaps most infamously of all, the murder of Egypt's beloved national icon, Nobel Prize-winning novelist Naguib Mahfouz, whose neck was slashed, and who lost the use of his writing hand in the attack. Rahman's only regret was that Mahfouz had not been punished earlier, since Rahman is convinced that Salman Rushdie would never have had the courage to write The Satanic Verses had Mahfouz been assassinated first. So to stop the terror at its source, we will surely need to withdraw our support from the Mubarak government, and from other moderate secular governments throughout the Middle East.

Then there are those annoying Copts — all six million of them — the Christian minority in Egypt whose very presence seems to mock Rahman's plans for a fundamentalist Islamic state. Since the rise of Islamic fundamentalism in Egypt, the Copts have lived in fear, victimized by persistent discrimination. Indeed on several occasions, Sheik Rahman has declared the wealth of the Copts to be forfeit and available to the (Islamic) faithful. So if we really want to get at the root causes of terrorism, maybe we ought to do something about those Copts. (For more on Rahman and Egyptian fundamentalism, see Fouad Ajami's superb study, The Dream Palace of the Arabs.)

But what of that other "root cause" of the terror — our sanctions against Iraq, supposedly responsible for the deaths of uncounted thousands of Iraqi civilians? Peter Beinart of The New Republic laid that claim to rest last week when he showed that it is not our sanctions, but Saddam's own policy of selling badly needed food and supplies to support his military, that is responsible for the misery of the Iraqi people.

But the problem goes beyond the tendency of the Left to blame the United States for what is in fact Saddam's cruel irresponsibility, or the Left's failure to consider our sanctions in light of the fact that Saddam is even now manufacturing weapons of mass destruction meant to be used against America's cities. Several commentators have noted that the United States gets no credit for having intervened to save many thousands of Muslims from ethnic cleansing in both Bosnia and Kosovo. It's worse than that, however. The United States is actually excoriated throughout the Middle East for not having acted sooner to rescue the Bosnian Muslims or the Albanian Muslims in Kosovo.

There's certainly a case to be made that we ought to have intervened more quickly in Bosnia and Kosovo, but it is almost unheard of for a nation to stage such massive military action on almost exclusively humanitarian grounds. In the perspective of history, it's remarkable that the United States acted at all, and perhaps more remarkable still that so many in the Muslim world, after all the complaints about American imperialism, feel free to saddle us with imperial obligations, and then give us no credit when we shoulder them. And how is it that we are to tolerate collateral damage against Serbs in the course of an attempt to stop their ethnic cleansing of Muslims, but are not to tolerate collateral damage against Iraqis or Afghans in an attempt to prevent the mass murder of American citizens?

And has it been remarked that, even before September 11, almost a quarter of Afghanistan's population was being kept from starvation by international food relief, the vast majority of which was supplied by the United States? In effect, the United States has been feeding the population of a country whose government has been harboring anti-American terrorists for years. Then there's the food aid delivered by the United States to literally hundreds of thousands of people suffering from drought in Syria and Jordan. Why is none of this included in the Left's careful cataloguing of American actions in the Middle East?

Of course, the real cause of terrorism is not United States foreign policy, but the ease with which America can be made to serve as a scapegoat for the profound social dilemmas of the Middle East. The life of Mahmoud Abouhalima, the terrorist who nearly murdered 200,000 Americans at the World Trade Center in 1993, stands as a sad testament to the weight of those problems.

Abouhalima fits the classic profile of the Islamic fundamentalist leadership — urbanized, college educated, with middle-class professional aspirations, but stymied by the weak economies of the Arab states. Quoted in a brief 1993 profile in the Los Angeles Times, Abouhalima's Egyptian friends say that he emigrated to Germany on a tourist visa after college, fearing that he would never be able to support a wife and family in Egypt. Abouhalima married a German woman to prevent deportation, then divorced her to marry another. Although maintaining a surface religiosity, Abouhalima's early years in Germany were a "life of corruption — girls, drugs, you name it." Eventually, however, both Abouhalima and his wife (who converted to Islam) adopted a rigorous observance of Islamic purity, and migrated to the United States.

In Abouhalima's view, having lived 17 years in the West, and having been tempted, and almost destroyed, by our dissolute secular values, he understands and can judge our society. "I lived their life [i.e. the Western life], he told Juergensmeyer, "but they didn't live my life, so they will never understand the way I live or the way I think."

Abouhalima's struggle is a magnified version of the difficulties faced by many young adults in the modernizing Middle East. The family networks and marriage arrangements so critical to Muslim social life depend upon the maintenance of a girl's virginity. Yet increasingly, young urbanized Muslim men and women mix in coeducational schools and professional settings, caught between the Western-influenced models of sexual freedom seen in television, movies, and magazines, and the rewards and requirements of the traditional family system. For these young people, there is no long apprenticeship in "dating" — no training in how to be "modern" — only an untutored giving in to temptation and chaos, or the alternative of a self-imposed return to traditions of purity and the veil.

Western social and sexual morality, along with America's political and economic power, are easily seized upon as scapegoats in such a setting. The accusation are distorted and contradictory, based not on "the West" as it really is, for all of its (many) faults, but on a simplistic and untutored caricature of our life. Yet the social problems that generate the accusations are real, and not at all unrelated to the encroachment of modernity and the ways of "the West" on these traditional societies. Nothing is more certain, however, than that neither tradition nor modernity will disappear anytime soon. Nor are they altogether irreconcilable, although the Islamic world, for complex reasons, has characteristically found the task of blending them a difficult one.

So we must balance the need to recognize and acknowledge the dignity, complexity — and anguish — of contemporary life in Arab and Muslim lands, with the need to swiftly crush the sad, but deadly and irredeemable product of that anguish — Islamic fundamentalist terrorism. There is no placating the Sheik Rahman's and the Mahmud Abouhalima's of the world. If we do not stop them with force, they will kill us. The Treaty of Versailles and the Great Depression were root causes of the Holocaust, after all, but the Nazis were no less dangerous for that.

The last word goes to an Egyptian dentist, who has, with difficulty, rescued some small measure of prosperity from the poverty of his land. Of his old friend, the terrorist Mahmud Abouhalima, this dentist says, "I love him like my brother, but if he had any relationship with this accident (at the Trade Center), I hate him, believe me. I want to destroy him before you."


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 10/03/2001 7:46:13 AM PDT by Stand Watch Listen
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Why was the World Trade Center destroyed? The Left tells us that U.S. foreign policy is at fault

Yet they think giving our military secrets to Communist Red China is fine, and the first bombing of the WTC during the Clinton regime should be forgotten ; Clinton raised up to sainthood.
It's always someone elses fault, never the fault of left wing Marxism.
It doesn't matter to them that every society that has ever attempted Socialism/ Marxism/ Maoism, has fallen.
To the left, the total distruction of our great nation would be their ultimate utopia, until they find out the drug stores are out of condoms.
Then they'd really freak! They'd find the error in their ways!

2 posted on 10/03/2001 8:03:32 AM PDT by concerned about politics
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

To: Stand Watch Listen
Way too much reason and far too many facts for the professional America-haters to digest.

Didn't you hear? Noam Chomsky has explained everything just fine for their tastes.

5 posted on 10/03/2001 8:28:12 AM PDT by 91B
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To: FreeThePalestinians
Stay where you are, pinhead! We'll get to you in time.
6 posted on 10/03/2001 8:29:51 AM PDT by PBRSTREETGANG
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To: FreeThePalestinians
The Holy Bible says woe to any nation that goes against Isreal.
Our Constitution was written and supported by the teachings in this book. Without the teachings, the Constitution will not stand, i.e., it will become a living , breathing document that can and will be corrupted.
Enough said.
Who gave Islam the right to chose our beliefs for us?
Like all the other left wing wacos, they should stop trying to rule the rest of the world.
7 posted on 10/03/2001 8:34:09 AM PDT by concerned about politics
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To: FreeThePalestinians
Wow -- that diatribe could heat a large tee-pee all winter -- some real high-density bullshit.

If any government official in a theocratic Muslim state could get past your formatting incompetence and read your anti-state rantings, you'd soon be looking around on the floor for your own head.

Consider your freedom to speak out publicly on this forum a gift of the American people. No thanks necessary.

8 posted on 10/03/2001 8:39:05 AM PDT by Monti Cello
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To: FreeThePalestinians
Nobody reads anything without paragraph breaks. Besides, I caught the first sentence. Take it to democraticunderground.com, ok?
9 posted on 10/03/2001 8:40:31 AM PDT by walden
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To: Stand Watch Listen

Getting to the Root - What's really behind the terrorism

We have let them live too long...

10 posted on 10/03/2001 8:43:27 AM PDT by unamused
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I believe FreeThePalestinians was quoting Bin Laden with his/her own 2 cents thrown in.
11 posted on 10/03/2001 9:07:29 AM PDT by Ms. AntiFeminazi
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Comment #12 Removed by Moderator

To: Stand Watch Listen
Terrorism roots lie at the bottom of totalitarian regimes and democracies. They practice terrorism in their own land and they promote it abroad. Period. People telling me that the likes of Saudi Arabia or Egypt are moderate are liers.
13 posted on 10/03/2001 9:33:04 AM PDT by lavaroise
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To: patent,lent,rebdov,MHGinTN,Boris,AGaviator,nunya bidness
Great article, one of the best.
14 posted on 10/03/2001 9:41:10 AM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: stingray,luvzhottea,wardaddy,harpseal,Kaj,FITZ,Samaritan
bttt
15 posted on 10/03/2001 9:42:34 AM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: ankaboot,gonzo,serge,Publius6961,jesda,jimkress,Manny Festo
bttt
16 posted on 10/03/2001 9:43:37 AM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: Travis McGee
thanks for the bump. Good article.
17 posted on 10/03/2001 9:57:26 AM PDT by patent
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To: patent
You bet.
18 posted on 10/03/2001 10:01:23 AM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: Travis McGee
Although some terrorists are self-appointed foreign policy critics, anyone can carry out terrorist actions who has opportunity and the means to do it. They need to be denied opportunity and means whenever possible.

The real foreign policy issue is having enough of a rule of law in all countries, where potential terrorists will be apprehended quickly and not allowed to recruit and train. This means having working relationships with other countries instead of trying to isolate them. It also means insisting on one set of rules which all countries adhere to, and listening to their concerns as much as we expect them to listen to ours.

19 posted on 10/03/2001 10:03:06 AM PDT by AGAviator
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To: concerned about politics
Islam is not a religion. It is a sandal wearing form of communism that wraps itself in a religious bedsheet. Its principal ideology is that of intolerent totalitarianism.

In its present form it is a political cult whose high priests, from Harlem to Teheran, are nothing more than lowlife murderous scum.

No person of intelligence, reason, or goodwill should even consider belonging to its congregation.

20 posted on 10/03/2001 10:21:27 AM PDT by Guillam
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To: Travis McGee
Thanks. Printing now.
21 posted on 10/03/2001 7:19:15 PM PDT by nunya bidness
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To: Stand Watch Listen
"The United States is actually excoriated throughout the Middle East for not having acted sooner to rescue the Bosnian Muslims or the Albanian Muslims in Kosovo."

Don't all of you remember the hundreds of thousands of Saudi, Syrian, Iraqi, Egyptian, Kuwaiti, etc. troops rushing to defend their Islamic bretheren? There were millions of Arab planes running sorties, Arab ships interdicted the enemy. The Arab nations were the most valiant fighters! Who needed the US to fight for the Muslims since their Arab bretheren were rusdhing in to rescue them?

22 posted on 10/03/2001 10:10:18 PM PDT by rebdov
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Comment #23 Removed by Moderator

To: Stand Watch Listen
Too much ink and paper. The terrorism in the world today is almost entirely ISLAMIC. That tells me the root cause rests with a so-called religion which breeds, fosters, nourishes, encourages, justifies, sponsors criminal, cowardly acts of terrorism against innocent, civilians-- women and children.

It is the shortcoming of Islam that is the root cause of terrorism.

Unless the religion is made to change, the results can be predictably the same as at present. But today, the leaders of Islam have been called upon, to anonounce and encourage Jihad. If the leaders of the religion do this, the religion is responsible.

Most would agree that religions, through the ages, have been central to forming ordered, lawful societies. Moral behavior was derived from religious teachings.

The behavior of Islamic terrorists is NOT MORAL. So I challenge any person who is willing, to explain how the present situation will change, unless and until the religous leaders change their message?

24 posted on 10/04/2001 12:29:19 AM PDT by truth_seeker
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To: Stand Watch Listen
I am no more interested in the motivations of these mass murderers than I am of what motivated the Japanese Empire to bomb Pearl Harbor and kill over 2000 US citizens. Like then, and should be now, their race, religion, or insane socio-political ideologies should be studied, but not for understanding or sympathy, but knowledge of how best to attack and kill them. The notion of many that the US had provoked this response by being warlike and "imperialistic" is laughable given the fact that had we truly been such, their shit eating culture would have ceased to exist long ago along with every member of their population.
25 posted on 10/04/2001 12:38:35 AM PDT by Imperial Warrior
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To: ankaboot
Did you read this article? Their complaint was why we didn't save Muslims earlier.No embargo. Day one. To which I wrote:

Don't all of you remember the hundreds of thousands of Saudi, Syrian, Iraqi, Egyptian, Kuwaiti, etc. troops rushing to defend their Islamic bretheren? There were millions of Arab planes running sorties, Arab ships interdicted the enemy. The Arab nations were the most valiant fighters! Who needed the US to fight for the Muslims since their Arab bretheren were rusdhing in to rescue them?

Why didn't they pour in immediately? Where were the valiant Arabian legions? Who are you trying to fool. ANd even after the embargo, had the Arab states begged the US to allow them to come in or face an oil embargo, do you think the US would have been deaf? They didn't give a hoot about their Muslim bretheren.

26 posted on 10/04/2001 6:13:53 AM PDT by rebdov
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bttt
27 posted on 10/04/2001 2:54:05 PM PDT by Stand Watch Listen
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Comment #28 Removed by Moderator

To: Manny Festo
Thanks for the links...appreciate them.
29 posted on 10/05/2001 5:19:47 AM PDT by Stand Watch Listen
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Comment #30 Removed by Moderator

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