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merica
has suffered blows as brutal as they were unexpected. She is regaining
her balance, helped in part by a swelling anger in response to these
massacres. So far little of this anger has been seen. Attention
is still concentrated upon the scenes of devastation and the official
response. In the coming days, however, the world will witness what
has been called "fury of an aroused democracy."
President George
W. Bush and his Cabinet have so far coped admirably with this unprecedented
crisis. They have avoided the temptation to assuage this anger with
an immediate response. It will be hard, humanly let alone politically,
for President George W. Bush to keep telling the victims' families
that they must wait for their grief and fury to be addressed. Yet
that is precisely what he will have to do. A rapid American military
response is unlikely to be effective. Above all, it is precisely
what the terrorists want. Nothing would please those who organized
the mass slaughter more than to see America flailing around in response.
Nothing would give greater succour to their propaganda than for
innocent Afghans, for example, to be killed by American cruise missiles.
A counter atrocity, even if on a smaller scale or inflicted by accident,
will allow the butchers of September 11 to justify their crime.
There are no easy answers, no quick fixes delivered by cruise missiles.
The terrorist
commanders, probably lead by Osama bin Laden, may well have a second
wave of attacks ready to unleash in response to the expected American
retaliation. They are expecting rapid retaliation, hoping that it
will allow them to shift the focus from American suffering to the
alleged "arrogance" of American power. The terrorists
want America to use massive force against them, to show to those
who publicly or quietly sympathise with their brutal tactics that
not even the vast power of America can defeat them. Any military
response, therefore, should aim to be as effective and targeted
as possible, avoiding the needless devastation of which they terrorists
are so enamoured. Above all, terrorists are by their nature paranoid.
Nothing would unnerve them more than for the U.S. government to
organize a patient, calculated and deliberate response. The time
and the place of America's replies must be entirely of America's
choosing.
The terrorists
think that they have struck a blow at the global economy. They have
not, as some have claimed, attacked the "symbols" of American
power. Every New Yorker from age five upwards knew that the "World
Trade Center" was simply the name for a pair of office blocks.
Terrorists, however, live in a world of conspiracy theories. Arch
conspirators themselves, they genuinely believe that the world economy
is covertly controlled out of downtown Manhattan. Terrorists are
not historians, sitting around in seminar rooms scratching their
heads as to whether social forces or high politics ultimately shape
human destiny. They do not waste their time wondering if history
is événements or mentalités.
For them history is not made through the tedium of elections and
messy compromises of representative government, it is a series of
audacious attacks and catastrophic events.
The attackers
want to see global chaos, with America collapsing into recriminations.
Instead, there has to be a determined effort not to play the terrorists'
game. The citizens of New York and Washington know that they must
recreate a sense of normality as soon as possible. The sooner New
Yorkers are again expressing themselves at the many joys, and ample
frustrations, of their great city, the better. Other Americans may
sometimes have looked at New York with incomprehension. One survey
indicated that Americans were more likely to want to visit Bosnia
than New York drawing the rasping riposte from Rudy Giuliani:
"We'll kick your city's ass." The massacres of September
11 will go a long way towards erasing the alleged "cultural"
gap between the rural, religious Midwest and the city slickers of
the East Coast. New Yorkers have responded to being thrown into
the frontline with courage, with Mayor Giuliani himself amply rising
to the challenge.
There will
be a minority in America who will seek scapegoats, but they must
be ignored because such recriminations only embolden the terrorists.
There is no easy way out of this crisis. The terrorists have no
demands, no realistically attainable goals, simply the insane desire
to destroy America. There will be mutterings that none of this would
have happened had America not supported Israel, a crutch for the
fringe to express its isolationism and anti-Semitism. Let there
be no doubt: If Israel moved to Antarctica, the ice might bloom
but the attacks would not cease. Others may try to blame Islam generally
and Muslim Americans in particular. The opposite reaction is best.
Muslim Americans are a diverse group, who do not wish to be seen
as a potential shelter for terrorists. Palestinian Americans, for
example, do not hide their views on the Middle East, but they have
made a point of being law abiding. Muslim Americans, particularly
from the Middle East, may well be able to provide the language skills,
insights and the human resources so sorely lacking in America's
intelligence agencies.
The more broadly
supported the eventual U.S. response is, the more continuously effective
it can be. Much European support will prove to be pure rhetoric,
but there is probably little that the Europeans can contribute.
The British, unquestioningly, will assist. For Britain, treaties
entail commitments, not meal tickets. Few Britons will sit and calculate
when the lives of so many Americans have been so cruelly taken.
The French too will participate, with their traditional last-minute
shilly-shallying and wriggling. Other European nations have the
usual excuses at the ready, that public opinion is hostile, domestic
security too weak. While little is to be expected of our shabbier
allies, they should expect few favors in the future.
It is vital
that Arab and Islamic nations support the new antiterrorism campaign.
This is not just because the canard of the anti-Muslim and anti-Arab
America has to be slayed, but because America has longstanding alliances
based on defending Islamic nations. Too many forget that Islam was
almost wiped out in the Soviet Union, that it was, and is, the U.S.
which has consistently stood for Muslim religious freedom. America's
Islamic and Arab allies should not be publicly pressured, for that
too would play into Bin Laden's hands. Many will claim that they
dare not defy so-called "public opinion," but what assistance
they are willing to offer should be accepted. A broad consensus
means greater isolation for the terrorists. Even Iran, itself no
friend of America, will require little prompting to observe a benevolent
neutrality in the event of an American attack on the Taliban, should
they prove to have been involved. The Taliban, by murdering Iranian
diplomats and slaughtering Afghan Shi'a Muslims, have achieved the
remarkable feat of displacing America as the main object of Iranian
fear and hate. Pakistan, a close supporter and ultimately the creator
of the Taliban, will need to be quietly reminded of its utter dependence
on American assistance. With the U.S. increasingly willing to take
India seriously as a potential ally, General Pervez Musharraf should
have little difficulty in choosing between an alliance with Kabul
and an alliance with Washington.
As for the
Taliban themselves, they have repeatedly made it clear that they
are uninterested in offers of diplomatic recognition in return for
handing over terrorist suspects. Given the contempt in which the
Taliban hold the rest of the world, recognition carries few benefits.
On the contrary, recognition implies the presence of prying diplomats,
questioning foreigners challenging the Taliban's brutal treatment
of the long-suffering population of Afghanistan. The temptation
should therefore be resisted to issue an ultimatum to the Taliban,
as that will simply give them the opportunity to defy it. There
are times when American policy can be a little too open, when discussions
seem to take place as much in the columns of the Washington Post
as in the White House. Openness with allies is vital, but enemies
must be left in doubt. The terrorists must be forced to go through
the same uncertainty as Americans themselves, to constantly ask
themselves when and how the responses will come, until time and
again it is too late.
Any assistance
offered by Russia and China, normally unlikely and unpalatable allies,
should also be accepted, even solicited. Both countries crave to
be accepted as America's equal, to have their great power status,
respectively declining and rising, acknowledged. Here is their opportunity
to show that they can use their power responsibly.
The terrorists
will in time learn the unpleasant lesson that they have fundamentally
changed American military doctrine. No American officer will argue
that retaliation operations are undesirable because they might lead
to casualties. The absurd doctrine of "force protection,"
under which the prime goal of America's armed forces is to protect
themselves, will wither away. Armed forces exist to win wars, not
to keep out of trouble.
The responses
of America and her allies must therefore be as cold, calculated,
determined, focused, and unrelenting as the attacks launched by
the terrorists' themselves. There will be considerable frustration
at the lack of an immediate response, at the necessary diplomatic
campaign of coalition building. America's leader may be accused
of indifference, even cowardice. They must keep their heads and
show a determination and a pragmatism which may even disgust themselves.
They must accept the need for a campaign that will last years. The
American public will naturally express a raging appetite for revenge.
Satisfy it too soon, with half measures, and the terrorists will
be confirmed in their belief that they setting the pace in their
long war of attrition. Let it be the other way around. America must
attempt to set the rules, the pace and the battles, to take the
initiative. This will be a long campaign. America must get off on
the right foot.
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