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September 12, 2006
Defining the enemy
One of the things I most liked about the president's speech last night was to see him come closer to a definition of the enemy we are fighting: Since the horror of 9/11, we have learned a great deal about the enemy. We have learned that they are evil and kill without mercy _ but not without purpose. We have learned that they form a global network of extremists who are driven by a perverted vision of Islam _ a totalitarian ideology that hates freedom, rejects tolerance and despises all dissent. And we have learned that their goal is to build a radical Islamic empire where women are prisoners in their homes, men are beaten for missing prayer meetings, and terrorists have a safe haven to plan and launch attacks on America and other civilized nations. The war against this enemy is more than a military conflict. It is the decisive ideological struggle of the 21st century, and the calling of our generation.As Admiral Lehman and many others have observed, terrorism is not war; it is a tactic in war. Lehman proposed calling the enemy not terrorists, but jihadists: This not a war against terror any more than World War II was a war against kamikazes.This morning, however, I was startled to read an editorial which inverts the Lehman argument with the claim that it is wrong to call the war a "war" at all. "Talk of 'war' is misleading and dangerous" warns law professor Bruce Ackerman in an Inquirer headline: We made war against Japan, not its kamikaze pilots.Huh? Unregulated marketplace? I hope that's not a call for UN gun control. Actually, he's complaining about the trade in weapons of mass destruction: We are at a distinctive moment in modern history: The state is losing its monopoly over the means of mass destruction. Once this happens, it's almost impossible for government to suppress the lucrative trade completely. If the Middle East were transformed into an oasis of peace and democracy, other fringe groups would replace al-Qaeda in the marketplace for death. A tiny band of home-grown extremists blasted the Federal Building in Oklahoma City. Others will want to detonate suitcase A-bombs as they become available.We make what worse by calling it "war"? What would he call the jihadists with an A-bomb? Criminals? I'm afraid so. That's what Ackerman calls jihadist Jose Padilla, and he warns that Padilla plus the Japanese internment precedent makes us all "potential Jose Padillas": ...a federal court of appeals upheld the president's seizure [of Padilla] as within his powers as commander-in-chief, and the Supreme Court refused to review this remarkable decision.I, too, worry about the expanded use of the terrorist metaphor. And, much as I think that animal rights fanatics (or anti-abortion fanatics) who commit crimes belong in prison, common sense suggests to me that a monkey thief is not an enemy combatant. However, this does illustrate the difficulty of using the legal system to grapple with what is clearly war. Al Qaida declared war on the United States, and so have its affiliated and not-officially affiliated jihadists. Animal rights and anti-abortion groups have declared war on clinics, labs, companies, and maybe a few Wal-Mart-type industries, but that is not analogous to jihad. Right now I think the most worrisome question is how to keep open-ended definitions from creeping into what should be questions of common sense. Let me give another example. Regular readers who know me might think I was being facetious when I said "I hope that's not a call for UN gun control" in the context of Professor Ackerman's discussion of weapons of mass destruction. They're right but wrong! As is so often the case, my facetiousness is someone else's substance. Mantra, even. From IANSA (the United Nations-gun-grab-treaty group which made headlines over the summer) Small arms are weapons of mass destruction, killing hundreds of thousands of people around the world each year. That’s far higher than the casualty count from conventional weapons of war like tanks, bomber jets or warships.By this definition (which seeks to interpose itself into US law), WMDs are right here in my house. All I need to do is get worked up enough about an issue with which enough powerful people disagree, get myself accused of using "eliminationist rhetoric," and voila! I become a "home grown terrorist" "armed with WMDs." This is not to say that there aren't home grown jihadists, and that they are not at war with the United States and sworn to its destruction. But just as monkey thieves are not jihadists, there is plenty of room for mischief making when terrorism becomes a political grab bag. Hell, I could imagine even crimes with zero political connections being lumped in; SWAT teams are now used for routine drug law enforcement, and war-on-terrorism rhetoric is routinely employed. (Not only are small arms WMDs, but as we all know, Philadelphia is Beirut.) If the enemy isn't clearly defined, the definition can become the enemy. posted by Eric on 09.12.06 at 08:07 AM |
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As a good liberal, Professor Ackerman undoubtedly is an opponent of Fascism, rather than just Fascists. Also, if he is willing to do a bit of research, he will remind himself that, at the time, WWII was widely-stated and widely-believed to be against Fascism, Naziism and militarism and, overall, against aggression. Will his next yawner be against all that? I await breathlessly his forthcoming essay on grammar, syntax and vocabulary.