The War That Hasn’t Ended. By Andrew C. McCarthy. National Review Online, November 13, 2015.
McCarthy:
There is always the chance that the next attack will knock the scales from our eyes. Always the chance that we will realize the enemy is at war with us, even as we foolishly believe we can end the war by not fighting it, by surrendering.
There is always the chance that the next attack will knock the scales from our eyes. Always the chance that we will realize the enemy is at war with us, even as we foolishly believe we can end the war by not fighting it, by surrendering.
As this
is written, the death count in Paris is 158. That number will grow higher, and
very many more will be counted among the wounded and terrorized.
“Allahu
Akbar!” cried the jihadists as they killed innocent after French innocent. The
commentators told us it means “God is great.” But it doesn’t. It means “Allah
is greater!” It is a comparative, a cry of combative aggression: “Our God is
mightier than yours.” It is central to a construction of Islam, mainstream in
the Middle East, that sees itself at war with the West.
It is
what animates our enemies.
Barack
Obama tells us — harangues us — that he is the president who came to end wars.
Is that noble? Reflective of an America that honors “our values”? No, it is
juvenile.
In the
real world, the world of aggression — not “micro-aggression” — you don’t get to
end wars by pronouncing them over, or mistaken, or contrary to “our values.”
You end
them by winning them . . . or losing them.
If you
demonstrate that you are willing to lose, then you lose. If you sympathize with
the enemy’s critique of the West on the lunatic theory that this will appease
the enemy, you invite more attacks, more mass murder.
France
is hoping the night’s bloodshed is done as it counts its dead. And perhaps it
is for now. But the atrocities are not over, not even close.
In
Paris, it has been but the blink of an eye since the Charlie Hebdo massacre, after which Western nations joined together
in supposed solidarity, supporting the fundamental right to free expression.
That
lasted about five minutes.
Intelligentsia
on both sides of the Atlantic rationalized that, while we of course (ahem) champion free expression — “Je suis Charlie!” and all that —
columnists and cartoonists who dare lampoon a totalitarian ideology are
bringing the jihad on themselves.
It was
a familiar story. In 2012, jihadists attacked an American compound in Benghazi,
killing our ambassador and three other officials. The president responded by .
. . condemning an anti-Muslim video that had nothing to do with the attack, and
by proclaiming that “the future must not belong to those who slander the
prophet of Islam.”
Islamic
supremacism killed Americans, and America’s president validated Islamic
supremacism.
How did
the French and the rest of the West react when jihadists attacked Charlie Hebdo in Paris?
After a
fleeting pro-Western pose, they condemned . . . themselves.
What
happened when American commentators who had spent years studying
Islamic-supremacist ideology warned that mainstream Muslim doctrine was fueling
jihad against the West?
The
Obama administration — the president and his secretary of state, Hillary Clinton
— reacted by targeting the messengers, not the aggressors.
Jihadist
terror would be obfuscated by euphemisms like “violent extremism” and
“workplace violence.” The critics of jihadist terror would be smeared as racist
“Islamophobes.” Mrs. Clinton led the administration’s effort to portray
examination of Islamic doctrine as hate speech, to brand commentary about
radical Islam as illegal incitement.
Wouldn’t
that be a betrayal of First Amendment free expression? If so, Mrs. Clinton
declared, the government had other ways to suppress it. The administration, she
said, would resort to extra-legal extortion: “old fashioned techniques of peer
pressure and shaming.”
American
government intimidation, not against the jihad but against opponents of the
jihad. Could we tell the enemy any more clearly that we don’t think we are
worth defending? Could we tell the enemy any more clearly that we are ripe for
the taking?
Hard
experience has taught us that when jihadists have safe haven, they attack the
United States and our Western allies. But as ISIS and al Qaeda expand their
safe haven in Syria and Iraq, we tell the world it is everyone else’s problem —
the Kurds have to do the fighting, or the Yazidis, the Iraqis, the “rebels,”
anyone but us.
As
hundreds of thousands of refugees flee the region — many of them young,
fighting-fit men whose potential terrorist ties cannot possibly be vetted — we
encourage Europe to open its arms and borders to them, promising to open our
own as well.
After
all, to do otherwise would be to concede that the war is against us — and Obama
is the president who “ends” war.
The
enemy is not impressed. What Obama calls “ending” war the enemy sees as
surrender, as the lack of a will to fight, much less to prevail.
So, as
night follows day, the enemy attacked Paris tonight, yet again. Jihadists
brazenly proclaimed that they were from Syria, spreading their jihad to France.
Obama
responded by soft-peddling the atrocity as a “tragedy,” the acts of war as a
“crime.”
A
“crime” that tonight killed 158 people (and counting). A “crime” by “criminals”
who vow more jihadist acts of war against Paris, Rome, London, Tel Aviv, and
New York.
We did
not ask for a war with jihadists. Years ago, they commenced a war of aggression
against us. Pace Obama, you can’t end
such a war by withdrawing, or by pretending it is just a crime. You end it by
winning it or losing it.
The
enemy senses that we are willing to lose it. Tonight, they pressed their
advantage. It won’t be the last time.