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| P. O. Box 22100, Lexington, KY 40522 |
Phone: 859-255-5400
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Terrorism is not a crime
From, The Kentucky Citizen Digest, Novemer/December,
2001.
When great disasters strike,
we often find ourselves
looking for comparisons. When it became clear that the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon building had been attacked by terrorists, it was interesting
to note what event provided the closest parallel: Pearl Harbor.
As Americans turn from the grief and trauma caused by these unprecedented
acts to the question of how to respond, they need to keep this parallel in
mind. Furthermore, they need to notice what kind of parallel was not drawn
to the events of last Tuesday. They need to notice that, when we were searching
our memories for similar outrages, we thought of Pearl Harbor—not the Hillside
Strangler, or the Son of Sam, or Bonnie and Clyde.
Why is this important? It is important because, as more people are beginning
to understand, the attacks on New York and Washington were not crimes; they
were acts of war. As our nation’s leaders try to decide on a response, they
need to keep this distinction firmly in mind, since their view of what kind
of acts these were will affect their response.
Unfortunately, American leaders have traditionally considered terrorist attacks
as matters of criminal justice, rather than as military provocations. Recently,
our leaders have been saying that this is an act of war, but can we really
believe them when they so frequently resort to terms like “investigation,”
“suspect,” “prosecution,” and “extradition”? The use of these words by our
leaders tells us how they view the problem—and why we still have one. In
fact, it would not be too much to say that the attacks on New York and Washington
are a direct result of this view of terrorism.
It is time to abandon the criminal justice view of terrorism and replace
it with the military view.
When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor we did not respond by “launching
an investigation.” We didn’t try to identify who piloted the planes and try
to extradite them. We didn’t put anybody on trial—not at least, until the
war was over and the Japanese no longer a threat. No American was under the
delusion that Pearl Harbor was a crime to be solved; they knew it was an
attack to be resisted.
When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, we didn’t send in the SWAT team;
we sent in the Marines.
But who, someone may ask, do we send the Marines in against? Don’t we have
to wait to find out who did it first? The simple answer to that question
is, “No.” We don’t have to wait to find out who attacked the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon because we already know who did it:
Terrorists did it.
But do we know which terrorists did it? As a matter of fact, no. We don’t.
But, as Claremont Institute Distinguished Fellow Bruce Herschensohn has pointed
out, a terrorist is nothing more than a tool of a larger entity: what he
calls the “Nation of Terrorism.”
The “Nation of Terrorism” is an identifiable entity, with clearly distinguishable
leaders and a recognizable infrastructure. “The Nation of Terrorism,” said
Herschensohn in an article written after the bombing of the American Embassy
in Saudi Arabia in 1996, “is a chain of bases, training camps, safe houses,
and other facilities that dot portions of the map of the world, going into
and out of other sovereign states.” In short, we already know who the enemy
is.
We can declare war against the Nation of Terrorism—just as we declared war
against Japan. And in doing so, we can treat the allies of the Nation of
Terrorism as we would treat the allies of any enemy: as enemies as well.
We can do this—if we stop seeing terrorists as criminals that need
to be brought to justice, but rather as enemies that need to be defeated.
What is the alternative?
The alternative is to live in fear—and to try to assuage that fear by increasing
the power of government police and security agencies over our lives. If we
persist in thinking of these most recent terrorist attacks as crimes rather
than as acts of war, we risk buying our security by giving up our freedoms.
The ultimate success of the attacks in New York and Washington will depend
on our response. If we hand over our freedoms in return for greater security,
then whoever is responsible for these acts will have truly won.
Our response to terrorists should not be to make our lives more difficult;
our response to terrorists should be to make their lives more difficult.
We need to stop treating people like Osama Bin Ladin as Jack the Ripper,
and start treating him like Saddam Hussein—with one important difference:
We need to finish the job this time.
| Key Family Foundation
Contacts: Kent Ostrander , Executive Director Martin Cothran , Senior Associate Policy Analyst |