Hubris Prevails In The Eye Of 9/11 Hurricane
September 07, 2007 4:30 PM PT
We see this self-recrimination reflected in our current
All this tail-chasing comes only with the illusory thinking that the present lull is the same as perpetual peace. Have we forgotten that experts still insist that another strike will come, carried out by those already here or shortly to enter the
Look back at jihadist near-misses in this country since 9/11 — along with a disturbing recent Pew poll that found one in four younger Muslim-Americans approve, at least in certain circumstances, of suicide bombing to "defend Islam" — and the dire predictions seem plausible.
Recall the jihadists arrested in
Some angry loners — mouthing jihadist propaganda or anti-American slogans — simply act on their own to try to kill Americans. Iranian-American college student Mohammed Reza Taheri-azar hit several
Last summer, Omeed Aziz Popal was arrested for a hit-and-run rampage in
Recall also the American residents and citizens with direct connections to al-Qaida's terrorism network.
American Jose Padilla (aka Abdullah al-Muhajir) was just convicted by a jury of terrorist conspiracy. Khalid Abu-al-Dahab, a key al-Qaida recruiter, operated out of
Another American, Adam Gadahn, regularly narrates al-Qaida communiques. Khalid Sheik Mohammed — mastermind of the 9/11 mass murder and the Daniel Pearl decapitation — studied in
Two things seem clear here: (1) There have been, and are now, plenty of Islamic terrorists and their helpers in the
Meanwhile, Islamic-American organizations and sympathetic civil-liberties associations file lawsuits about supposed American security excesses and illiberal vigilance.
Last fall, several imams were taken off a flight from
But the brazen Shahin, it turns out, is more than just a bullied Islamic scholar; he has also helped raise funds for an organization that the
Our experts are too often in denial or disarray. Former White House counterterrorism adviser Richard Clark, former CIA operative Michael Scheuer and former CIA director George Tenet now make widely publicized strident attacks on ongoing efforts to stop terrorists and level charges against others — and each other. They rarely talk with any humility, much less apprise us of what we can learn from their own failures to stop the 9/11 jihadists during their long tenures.
In short, six years of quiet at home since 9/11 have fooled some into thinking that terrorists pose little danger here — or that we may be doing far too much rather than too little to stop such killers. No matter that this past week a jihadist plot to destroy
Others make the mistake of endlessly re-fighting the past six years — Who let al-Qaida grow? Who "lost" Osama bin Laden? Who fouled up postwar
Before 2001, the excuse for American complacence and infighting was naivete. But what will be the reason for the next successful strike against us by the jihadists? More naivete — or is it simple hubris?
Copyright 2007 Creators Syndicate, Inc
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