How we Americans react to the horrible murder
of Paul Johnson by al-Qaeda extremists will tell us a great
deal about ourselves. We need to discover whether we are truly
determined to stop terrorists or merely appease them, pushing
the real fight down the road for another generation. The most
common reaction was disbelief, but anyone who was surprised simply
doesn't understand the enemy. Why is it such a shock that murderous
extremists would kill one man, when they glory in committing
mass murder nearly every day? Did anyone really think that prayer
vigils and news footage of neighbors lighting
candles would stop the terrorists from killing an "infidel"?
It's about time we wake up and face the nature of this enemy.
We cannot negotiate with them. We cannot bribe them. We cannot
appeal to their better nature -- if they have such a thing, they already
believe they're acting in accordance with it.
Terrorists firmly believe that God has instructed them to kill
us all, en masse or one by one if need be. That's their
grand scheme, their master plan, and everything they do works
toward that end. Nothing can talk them out of that belief or weaken
the resolve that springs from it. Exposing them to Western society
only heightens their loathing of it, even as they partake of its
freedoms. Their beliefs are rooted in a literal interpretation
of the
Qu'ran, which contains passages such as:
Let those fight in the cause of Allah who sell the life of
this world for the hereafter. To him who fighteth in the cause
of Allah - whether he is slain or gets victory - soon shall
We give him a reward of great (value).
- Sura 4.74
But when the forbidden months are past, then fight and slay
the Pagans wherever ye find them, and seize them, beleaguer
them, and lie in wait for them in every stratagem (of war);
but if they repent, and establish regular prayers and practise
regular charity, then open the way for them: for Allah is Oft-forgiving,
Most Merciful.
- Sura 9.5
Therefore, when ye meet the Unbelievers (in battle), smite
at their necks; at length, when ye have thoroughly subdued them,
bind a bond firmly (on them).
- Sura 47.4
The Saudi ruling family has turned a blind eye to the rise of
the fanatical Wahhabi
sect (an 18th century fundamentalist movement of the Sunni
form of Islam) for far too long. Worse -- in return for the
forbearance of terrorist groups, the Saudis have actively assisted
and funded them. That truce cost the Saudis dearly, according
to testimony by Dr. Alex Alexiev before the U.S.
Senate Subcommittee on Terrorism in June 2003. "Between 1975
and 1987, the Saudis admit to having spent $48 billion or $4 billion
per year on "overseas development aid," a figure which by the
end of 2002 grew to over $70 billion (281 billion Saudi rials),"
Alexiev stated. "The Saudi money is spent according to a carefully
designed plan to enhance Wahhabi influence and control at the
expense of mainstream Muslims. In Muslim countries, much of the
aid goes to fund religious madrassas that teach little more than
hatred of the infidels, while producing barely literate Jihadi
cadres. There are now tens of thousands of these madrassas run
by the Wahhabis' Deobandi allies in South Asia and also throughout
Southeastern Asia. In Pakistan alone, foreign funding of these
madrassas, most of which comes from Saudi Arabia, is estimated
at no less than $350 million per year." After 9/11, President
Pervez Musharraf vowed
to reform Pakistan's madrassa schools, but his efforts have
had little effect so far.
So what form should our response to these terrible murders
of American citizens take? Most Liberals and Democrats favor
what they call a "nuanced" approach -- trying to come to an agreement
with groups like al-Qaeda. Find out what they want and give it
to them. Certainly the terrorists will make demands, but
-- as always -- return to the attack after gaining the concessions
they request. Ask Israel for examples of the futility
of negotiating with terrorists. Trying to reason Islamofascist fanatics
out of their beliefs is like trying to reason a mad dog out of
its rabies -- it only gives the dog another chance to bite. There's
no "nuance" to a knife -- it cuts you, or it doesn't. There's
no "nuance" to death, either. One minute Daniel
Pearl, Nick
Berg and now Paul Johnson were alive, and the next they were
dead, beheaded by Muslim extremists who believe they were told
by God to "smite at their necks."
Killing or arresting the individuals who commit these atrocities
won't be enough. We need to go to the source. One thing we
can do is shut down the madrassas right here in the US, stop the
funding flowing to them from so-called "charities," and pressure
our allies to do the same. At one such school, the Islamic Saudi
Academy in Northern Virginia, students "file into their Islamic
studies class, where the textbooks tell them the Day of Judgment
can't come until Jesus Christ returns to Earth, breaks the cross
and converts everyone to Islam, and until Muslims start attacking
Jews." At another, "[m]aps of the Middle East hang on classroom
walls, but Israel is missing." Nationally, there are estimated
to be 200 to 600 of these schools, with at least 30,000 students.
Thousands of others attend Islamic weekend schools, according
to Valerie
Strauss and Emily Wax of the Washington Post. (Yes, even Washington
Post stories can contain facts, buried as they are in prose overly
sympathetic to the beleaguered students of jihad schools. Their
story, written less than six months after 9/11, made it a point
to report that "students in class also talk about the taunts they
face outside the school gates -- being called 'terrorist' and
'bomber' -- and ask whether Osama bin Laden is simply the victim
of such prejudice." It took less than six months to Blame America
First.) We need to pressure the Saudi ruling family to stop the
financing of terrorist groups from within their country. The bargain
they had made with al-Qaeda is obviously over; the royal family
must decide whether they want to be counted among our friends
or our enemies. Saudi Arabia has been moving inexorably toward
civil war since King Fahd's 1995 stroke left the government too
weakened to contain the frustration among the citizens; now
is the time to gain these concessions from them.
We have the ability to stop terrorism at its source, but do we
have the will? The upcoming Presidential election will be a referendum
on the war against terrorism more than anything else. Do we want
to have a "nuanced" conversation with the kind of people who behead
innocents on camera for their religion, or do we want to stop
the "barbaric people" and "extremist thugs" that President
Bush understands them to be? We'll find out in just a few
short months.