The War on Terror Is Here to Stay. By Walter Russell Mead.
The War on Terror Is Here to Stay. By Walter Russell Mead. Via Meadia, August 6, 2013.
Mead:
It was
“mission accomplished” and “death throes” in the Bush-Cheney years. It has been
“on the run”, “decimated,” and “September 10” under the current leadership. The
real truth, as many in the press are starting to see, is that President Obama’s
counter-terrorism strategy has run into the ground. With the latest intercepted
chatter indicating that a major attack is being planned, and with the
corresponding shuttering of US embassies across the world, it’s clear that
al-Qaeda has adjusted to American tactics and taken advantage of the widespread
chaos and crisis across the Middle East. To make things even more troubling,
there’s now talk of al-Qaeda’s having gotten its mitts on a new kind of undetectable liquid explosive.
The
“Arab democracy” approach to the problem of terrorism that dominated both the
Bush and Obama presidencies was a classic example of American “quick fix”
thinking. Get democracy going, or so the thinking went, and we marginalize
al-Qaeda, make people happy, and the war on terror comes to an end. What
defeated both Bush and Obama was really the same thing: the deep resistance of
the Middle East to American quick fixes. The political, religious, cultural,
and social issues that keep that part of the world under stress and set the
conditions for al-Qaeda-type movements to arise are deeply rooted. Worse, we
really don’t have the answers to them.
From
Pakistan to Morocco there are countries and societies wrestling with demons we
can’t control and casting desperately about for answers we can’t supply. That’s
a reality that is hard for Americans to accept, but accept it we must. If there
are any answers for what’s troubling the Middle East, we don’t have them—yet
our interests continue to demand that we be entangled in its politics.
Presidents
Bush and Obama both thought they saw the evolution of a peaceful, democratic
Middle East hovering just on the horizon. Both were deceived by a mirage.
Instead of putting the finishing touches to beautiful castles of democracy and
riding unicorns from one tranquil, prosperous Middle Eastern country to the
next, we face a long slog of uncertain duration and changing risk against
people who really, really hate us, and really, really believe that killing as
many of us as possible is the shortest road to a better life for them and their
people.
This
number never has been a majority in the Middle East; nor is not now. The
overwhelming majority wishes the crazies would shut up and stop stirring things
up. So this is not a clash of civilizations, and it is not a “war against
Islam.” But that doesn’t mean it isn’t dangerous or that we will be permitted
to ignore it. The US media and the public could not be more bored with this
threat, but our best efforts to ignore it into insignificance are unlikely to
succeed.
The
forces of order and stability are weak across much of the region, economies are
in trouble, and the wars in Syria, Yemen, and Iraq are ensuring adequate
funding, weapons, training, and mobility for the bad guys. There is no reason
to think that the trend toward a stronger and more capable al-Qaeda won’t
continue for some time.