Jewish World Review July 14, 2005 / 7 Tamuz, 5765

Dumbing down the War on Islamic Terror

By Jonathan Tobin




Our enemies think they are fighting a war, but even after London, do we?


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Last week's atrocity in London, like last year's in Madrid, added dozens more to the toll of those murdered by Islamic terrorists. But for all of the sympathy generated for the victims in London, there still seems to be something missing from much of the fallout from recent events.


In the aftermath of Sept. 11, it seemed as if most of us were finally awake to the fact that Islamic fundamentalists had been engaged in a war against the West for years.


The result of this awakening brought about an American counter-offensive that knocked off the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, ended Saddam Hussein's reign in Iraq, and generated a wave of pressure that threatens to create bridgeheads for democracy in the Arab Middle East.


On the negative side of the post-9/11 ledger is the clear fact that much of our response has created new problems and failed to solve some old ones.


A new Department of Homeland Security and a change in the federal intelligence hierarchy was supposed to make us more secure, but other than making air travel more onerous it isn't clear that these reorganization plans have actually made that much of a difference.


Elsewhere, the conflict in Iraq may eventually turn out to be a turning point in the history of the Middle East. But the slow and painful pace of the counter-insurgency war has made it a natural focus of discontent, both domestically and internationally.


Most of all, with the passage of time, many Americans seem to have forgotten what all this fuss was about in the first place.


While complaints about the administration's mistakes in carrying out the war are often justified, the obsessive focus on one side of the equation makes it seem as if we are shadow-boxing with ourselves and not locked in a death struggle with a vicious foe.


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But as dozens of London travelers learned last week, the war Islamists are waging against us was not hatched in the fevered imagination of Karl Rove. So before we all slide back into a post-London torpor, it is worthwhile to recapitulate a few important points by asking ourselves a few questions:

That is a question that only the history of the coming decades will conclusively answer.


Skeptics rightly claim that if Arab countries were democracies rather than autocratic tyrannies, Islamists, not liberal democrats, would win. But liberalization of the Islamic world, and the eradication of regimes that use hatred of Israel and the West to control the rage of their subjugated peoples, is the only possible way to change the culture of hate that animates the terrorists and their supporters.


Concessions by Israel or the West will not end the jihadist dream. The transformation of the Arab and Islamic world into one where freedom   —   rather than fundamentalism   —   rules may seem like a fantasy. Without it, this war on Islamist terror will go on without end.