This
article by conservative columnist Pat
Buchanan was first published on January
12, 1999, nearly three years ago. It
displays remarkable prescience and
deserves repeating here. |
Is Cataclysmic
Terrorism Ahead? by Patrick J. Buchanan AMERICA is the only nation on
Earth to claim a right to intervene militarily in
every region of the world. But this foreign policy
is not America's tradition; it is an aberration.
During our first 150 years, we renounced
interventionism and threatened war on any foreign
power that dared to intervene in our hemisphere.
Can we, of all people, not understand why
foreigners bitterly resent our
intrusions? On the day after Pearl Harbor, ex-President
Herbert Hoover sat down and wrote to
friends: "You and I know that this continuous
putting pins in rattlesnakes finally got this
country bitten." Japan's sneak attack was one of the great acts
of state terror, but its motive was desperation.
The United States had cut off Japan's oil and sent
Tokyo an ultimatum: Withdraw from Indochina and
China, or we bring you to your knees. Japan decided
to seize the oil of the East Indies and eliminate
the one force that could stop her: the U.S.
fleet. Yet, after we crushed Japan, China fell to
Mao and Indochina to Ho Chi Minh and
the Khmer Rouge. Had we never intervened in East
Asia, Japanese, not Americans, would likely have
done the fighting and dying in Korea and Vietnam to
contain Asian communism. What calls to mind the phrase "putting pins in
rattlesnakes" is an unsettling paper by the Cato
Institute's Ivan Eland: "Does U.S.
Intervention Overseas Breed Terrorism? The
Historical Record." Eland's
argument: Americans are the principal targets of
terrorists because of our constant meddling in
foreign wars. If we do not abandon our compulsive
interventionism, we will one day be subjected to an
act of cataclysmic terror, with a weapon of mass
destruction, perhaps nuclear. Already, we have come close. The World Trade
Center bomb was designed to bring down one of those
110-story towers and kill perhaps 50,000 Americans.
Had the terrorists used poison gas, they might have
killed more than the 3,000 who died at Pearl
Harbor. And Osama Bin Laden, the rich,
U.S.-hating Saudi terrorist reportedly has long
been in the market for a nuclear weapon. Eland's empirical evidence linking U.S. military
interventions to retaliatory acts of terrorism is
impressive. Consider: U.S. Marines were sent into Lebanon to bolster a
Christian regime in 1983. Result: Islamic
terrorists bombed our embassy and Marine barracks,
killing hundreds, and Ronald Reagan withdrew
the Marines. Before 1981, Libya's Col. Qaddafi had not
targeted Americans. But Reagan sent U.S. ships and
planes across his "line of death" in the Gulf of
Sidra, shot down his jets and sank his patrol
boats. Result: Qaddafi blew up La Belle nightclub
in Berlin, wounding dozens of GIs. Reagan answered
with air strikes. Qaddafi retaliated with eight
acts of terrorism, by Eland's count, the most
horrific being the downing of Pan Am 103. In 1992, George Bush intervened in
Somalia. Bin Laden trained the terrorists who lured
U.S. Rangers into a trap, killed 18 and dragged the
body of one through Mogadishu. Bill Clinton
pulled out. Bin Laden calls Somalia his greatest victory and
is believed to have planned the 1998 bombings of
our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. What motivates
him? Hatred of America because of our huge military
presence on Islam's sacred soil of Saudi
Arabia. Robert Kennedy was murdered by a West
Bank Palestinian. George Bush was targeted for
assassination by Iraqis. Filipino terrorists used
to attack Americans until we withdrew from Subic
Bay and Clark Air Force Base. Now, they don't. The seizure of the U.S. embassy in Tehran and
other acts of state terror by the mullahs stem from
U.S. military support of the shah until 1979.
Today, there is a near-identical U.S. presence in
Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Both regimes are despised
by many of their own people, and Americans have
been targets of terrorist attacks in both. America is the only nation on Earth to claim a
right to intervene militarily in every region of
the world. But this foreign policy is not America's
tradition; it is an aberration. During our first
150 years, we renounced interventionism and
threatened war on any foreign power that dared to
intervene in our hemisphere. Can we, of all people,
not understand why foreigners bitterly resent our
intrusions? With
the Cold War over, why invite terrorist attacks on
our citizens and country, ultimately with
biological, chemical or nuclear weapons? No nation
threatens us. But with the proliferation of weapons
of mass destruction, America will inevitably be
targeted. And the cataclysmic terror weapon is more
likely to come by Ryder truck or container ship
than by ICBM. And no SDI will stop it. Madeleine Albright describes terrorism as
"the biggest threat to our country ... as we enter
the 21st century." But battling terrorism must go
beyond discovering and disrupting it before it
happens and deterring it with retaliation. We need
to remove the motivation for it by extricating the
United States from ethnic, religious and historical
quarrels that are not ours and which we cannot
resolve with any finality.
Relevant items on this website: -
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David
Irving: Radical's Diary, October 1, 2001 |
David
Irving writes a diary on the World Trade Center
bombing | Being
at war is not without its blessings; and
more speculation on that Pennsylvania crash |
Two young
Orthodox Jews claiming to be Holocaust survivors
state that New York smells like a
crematorium | Another
Radical's Diary: on the WTC bombing, War, and
events in the USA | Surely
the doomed hijackers are heard to utter more
than that? | "Now
that the aliens from inner space are threatening
them, the United States don't know what to
do" | Joe
Sobran on "The Unknown Enemy" | Five
Israelis detained for "puzzling behavior" after
WTC tragedy
-
The Mohammed Atta
letter
|