Paris: You Don’t Want to Read This
ByPeter Van Buren
November 15, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - You
don’t want to read this, and I take no pleasure in
writing it, and no one really wants to hear it right
now. But I believe it needs to be said.
I join the world in grieving for the
dead in Paris. I have grieved for the dead from 9/11
forward — the Australians who died in terror attacks on
Bali in 2002, Londoners who died in terror attacks in
2005, the French citizens who died in the Charlie Hebdo
attacks in January of this year, the Russians whose
plane went down over the Sinai a week or so ago. So many
more non-Western deaths barely noticed in the U.S.
media. I grieve also for those killed in smaller attacks
already smuggled deep into the obscurity of our memory.
Leave the
Middle East alone. Stop creating more failed states.
Stop throwing away our freedoms at home on falsehoods.
Stop disenfranchising the Muslims who live with us.
Understand the war, such as it is, is against a set of
ideas — religious, anti-western, anti-imperialist — and
you cannot bomb an idea.
And so we Tweet hashtags and phrases
in high school French and post GIFs to Facebook. We know
what to do; we’ve done this before.
But it has to be said, especially
looking at the sick repetition of the same story, that
despite fourteen plus years of a war on terror, terror
seems to be with us as much as ever, maybe even more. It
is time to rethink what we have done and are doing.
Since that day in 2001, the one with
those terrible sparkling blue skies in New York, we have
spied on the world, Americans at home and foreigners
abroad, yet no one detected anything that stopped the
Paris attacks. We gave up much to that spying and got
nothing in return.
Since 2001, the United States has led
nations like Britain, France, Australia and others into
wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and Syria, with drone
attacks on people from the Philippines to Pakistan to
all parts of Africa. We have little to nothing to show
for all that.
Since 2001 the U.S. has expended
enormous efforts to kill a handful of men — bin Laden,
al-Zarqawi, al-Awlaki, and this weekend, Jihadi John.
Others, many without names, were killed outside of media
attention, or were tortured to death, or are still
rotting in the offshore penal colony of Guantanamo, or
the dark hell of the Salt Pit in Afghanistan.
And it has not worked, and Paris this
weekend, and the next one somewhere else sometime soon,
are the proof.
We gave up many of our freedoms in
America to defeat the terrorists. It did not work. We
gave the lives of over 4,000 American men and women in
Iraq, and thousands more in Afghanistan, to defeat the
terrorists, and refuse to ask what they died for. We
killed tens of thousands or more in those countries. It
did not work. We went to war again in Iraq, and now in
Syria, before in Libya, and only created more failed
states and ungoverned spaces that provide havens for
terrorists and spilled terror like dropped paint across
borders. We harass and discriminate against our own
Muslim populations and then stand slack-jawed as they
become radicalized, and all we do then is blame ISIS for
Tweeting.
Note that it is the strategy of
Islamic terror to generate a crackdown in France in
order to radicalise French Muslims.
Hundreds of French citizens have already traveled to
Syria to fight with groups including ISIS.
As one of the most intelligent
commentators on all this, Bill Johnson, said, terrorism
is about killing pawns to affect the king. The attacks
in Paris are not about the murder of 150 innocent
people. Hell, that many die nearly every day in Iraq and
Syria. The true test for France is how they respond to
the terror attacks in the long-game — that’s the king in
all this. America failed this test post-9/11; yet it
does not sound like France understands anything more
than America. “We are going to lead a war which will be
pitiless,” French president Hollande said outside the
Bataclan concert hall, scene of the most bloodshed.
If I had exactly the right strategy,
I’d tell you what it is, and I’d try and tell the people
in Washington and Paris and everywhere else. But I don’t
have the exact thing to do, and I doubt they’d listen to
me anyway.
But I do have this: stop what we have
been doing for the last 14 years. It has not worked.
There is nothing at all to suggest it ever will work.
Whack-a-mole is a game, not a plan. Leave the Middle
East alone. Stop creating more failed states. Stop
throwing away our freedoms at home on falsehoods. Stop
disenfranchising the Muslims who live with us.
Understand the war, such as it is, is against a set of
ideas — religious, anti-western, anti-imperialist — and
you cannot bomb an idea. Putting western soldiers on the
ground in the MidEast and western planes overhead fans
the flames. Vengeance does not and cannot extinguish an
idea.
Start with those things and see, even
if you won’t give it 14 years to succeed, if things
improve. Other than the death tolls scaling up further,
I can’t imagine we could be doing anything worse.