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"They hate our Freedoms"
07.31.05 (9:07 am)   [edit]

Jihadists groups have carried various attacks for a whole host of reasons, some totally unrelated to Iraq.  Various disputes between Morocco and Spain seemed to have figured into the Madrid attack.  http://slate.msn.com/id/2097370" title="http://slate.msn.com/id/2097370" target="_blank"http://slate.msn.com/id/20973...  Pace Mr. Hiller, one explanation that continually falls flat is the notion that the Jihadists have attacked and will continue to attack is because "They detest our freedoms, they detest our society, they detest our liberties".  The Swiss enjoy the same freedoms as Americans and Canadians do and no one thinks that Geneva is in immediate peril. 


As some have liked to say, it is what “we” do rather than who “we” are that explains it.  Al Qaeda brass has designs on the Middle East and they will use violence and advocate the use of violence to achieve their aims.  This includes bringing the war to the “far enemy” (i.e., those western states who impede in some way the prospects of a caliphate.)  


In order to rally their base, so to speak, in a war against the “far enemy”, Al Qaeda has focused on foreign occupation and or dominance of Muslim lands.  The difficulty for Al Qaeda and others of like mind is how to impose some sort of strategic matrix over the Jihadist world.   


Of late, they have been remarkably successful.   The Madrid bombing is something of a watershed in this respect.  Now, there was a lot made of the fact that in December of 2003 an article on a website was found indicating that the Jihadists wanted to influence the Spanish election.  This they did in a round about way.  The bombings set in motion a series of events that led to the conservative government’s defeat.  However, having driven a wedge between America and one of its allies the Jihadists almost drove everyone closer to the US by attempting to carry out an attack after Spain had already said it would pull out of Iraq.   The attack failed and the various Jihadists groups, including Al Qaeda tried to spin the failed attack as just a warning.  Indeed, Bin Laden went so far as offer a truce.  THIS is a message to our neighbours north of the Mediterranean Sea with a proposal for a truce in response to the positive reactions which emerged there.    ….



I offer a truce to them [Europe] with a commitment to stop operations against any state which vows to stop attacking Muslims or interfere in their affairs, including [participating] in the American conspiracy against the wider Muslim world. This first truce can be renewed upon expiry and the establishment of a new government agreed upon by both parties. The announcement of the truce starts with the withdrawal of the last soldier from our land and the door is open for three months from the date of the announcement of this statement.

Whoever rejects this truce and wants war, we are its [war’s] sons and whoever wants this truce, here we bring it.

Stop shedding our blood to save your own and the solution to this simple but complex equation is in your hands. You know matters will escalate the more you delay and then do not blame us but blame yourselves. Rational people do not risk their security, money and sons to appease the White House liar.”  


It was Bin Laden’s speech, his first aimed at Western audiences, including Western Muslims, rather than the bombing itself, that represented a new strategic turn as it were.  Since that time the Jihadists have debated anything that might drive the west together. 


The kidnapping of the two French journalists was a good case in point.  Inspired by Abu Musab al Zarqawi condemnation of the French head scarf ban, Jihadists in Iraq threatened in kill the journalists if France did not lift the ban.  Others feared that if would drive the France and US together. 


It was not clear why the journalists were released.  There were rumors about a ransom having been paid and still others claimed that they were released entirely for political reasons given.  Whatever the case, the pretext for releasing them is quite revealing.  They were freed ‘because they were proven not to spy for US forces, in response to appeals and demands from Islamic institutions and bodies, and in appreciation of the French government's stand on the Iraq issue and the two journalists' stand on the Palestinian cause’   http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/41159 75.stm" title="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/41159 75.stm" target="_blank"http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/mi...   It speaks to the strategic debate present in the Jihadist world. 


People must reference such a debate when making reference to how likely an attack on Canada is.  Strategically it makes little sense for the Jihadists to attack Canada under the pretext of our involvement in Afghanistan.  Pretty much every country in the world backed the operation in Afghanistan.   The Jihadists could try peeling off allies one by one, but why go to all that trouble?  The West is already divided as a result of Iraq and attacking attacking a country (e.g., Canada) under the sole pretext that it supported operations in Afghanistan might very well unify theWest.


The Iraq war, in other words, has turned out to be something a double edged sword for Canada and indeed for France and Germany as well.  In so far as the Iraq war has spawned more terrorists Canada is less safe in the long term.  However, on the other hand the Iraq war has placed Canada and the US in opposing camps and this has only served to make us safer. 


Relating this back to the London attacks, Blair is right to cast doubt on the argument that Britain was attacked solely because of Iraq.  Al Qaeda has championed various causes, most notably the Palestinian cause, for solely political reasons.  Iraq may very well be just a pretext.  What he did not say that it would not have strategic sense to attack Britain had they stayed out of the war.       


 

3 Comments
 
Canada's approach to Marijuana faces a Legitimacy crisis
07.30.05 (2:38 pm)   [edit]

The biggest barrier to the legalization of Marijuana is now and will remain the Americans.  The Liberal Government realizes this and so has sought to balance the concerns of the Bush administration with the population’s desire to see the country’s marijuana laws liberalized.  What Liberal government proposes will not work.  The government can not have its cake and eat it too.  The problem is that the population, rightly, views marijuana as being pretty innocuous.  Indeed, it is to the point now that the government, thankfully, has dropped any pretense of it being otherwise.  A 2002 Senate Committee bluntly stated that should marijuana be legalized it would be less dangerous and socially corrosive than alcohol.  Public officials talk about having tried the drug without embarrassment.  However, no one exemplified the country’s new casual attitude to the drug more than the man who first announced plans to decriminalize it, viz., Jean Chrétien.  When asked about the subject, the outgoing Chrétien said he might try the drug, but that he would happily pay the fine for doing so.  “I will have my money for my fine and a joint in my other hand.”  Chrétien acceptance aside, even parking tickets have to be seen to serve some legitimate purpose for people not to view them as an unfair imposition.  Such is not the case with the proposed Marijuana fines.  Sure, Canadians understand that the Americans would not be pleased about legalization and as such there would be certain practical advantages to not legalizing it. However, that does not make marijuana prohibition in a general sense legitimate in their eyes; it just means that Canada is tailoring its own laws to meet the illegitimate demands of the Americans. This can not stand.  Any perception that Canada is enforcing laws to please a bullying third party, whoever that may be, is simply poisonous to the health of a functioning democracy.  


The whole Mark Emery affair http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/ 2005/07/29/pot-raid050729 .html" title="http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/ 2005/07/29/pot-raid050729 .html" target="_blank"http://www.cbc.ca/story/canad...  will simply reaffirm for many Canadians that Canada is bending over backwards to please a bullying third party.  Indeed, Mark Emery is not just any distributor of marijuana seeds; he is the leader of the Marijuana Party.  Rightly or wrongly his threatened extradition will symbolize an attack on Canadian sovereignty.  It will be seen as an attempt by the Americans to short circuit the political debate about marijuana in Canada.    


This will be politically disastrous for the Liberals.  Given Chrétien’s aforementioned pronouncements and the Liberal dominated Senate Report, attempts to justify such criminal proceedings against Emery will ring hallow and Vichy like.  Martin’s reputation as a dither and someone easily cowed will be reinforced.  What is more the discord between upper echelon of the Liberal party and the party base will grow ever wider and one prominent Liberal Party ghost will cast an even greater shadow on today’s Liberals.   


Trudeau was not only part of the party’s advant-guard he was to use Hegel’s term for Napoleon “history on horseback”.  In other words, Trudeau’s foresaw historical forces just as they were emerging on the horizon and had the courage to champion policies that would birth the new age quicker than it might have otherwise been (e.g., his pronouncement that that the government has no business in the bedrooms of a nation.) This is in marked contrast to Martin.  Far from being part of the advant guard of the party, Martin has tried to rein in his party base as they and ideological kinfolk, such as Mayor Larry Campbell, press for policies designed to birth a new era.  The Liberal brass has been so tentative and temperamentally conservative that the judiciary seems positively activist by comparison.  This is quite a feat.     


The ability of the Liberals to make substantial gains in Vancouver, to solidify their support in Toronto and to reestablish a foothold in Quebec will be in no small measure determined by their willingness to champion socially liberal causes such as marijuana liberalization.  Championing them after the fact (i.e., after a landmark court decision) will not benefit the party.  (If the government continues to sit on its hands, the 6-3 2003 Supreme Court ruling Canada’s revamped marijuana laws constitutional will be revisited at some point and I would say reversed.)     


 

2 Comments
 
The Fly Paper Theory
07.09.05 (10:23 am)   [edit]

“I’m breaking the rules of the game here (no attacks on U.S. soil = Bush has made the U.S. less safe; a total of 2 attacks in other western democracies = Bush has made the world less safe), but please indulge me." 


The Iraq war is doing for a new generation of Jihadists what the Afghan war did for a previous generation.  It is radicalizing them training them in the art of war.  


Indeed, in so far as many of today’s Jihadists do not go to Iraq with any type of training, they can not be considered terrorists per say.  However, that is how they come out.  In a strange twist of fate, the situation in Iraq is such that terrorists have been able to replace the terror camps in Afghanistan with on the job training in Iraq.  The local population has been welcoming enough and forthcoming enough with information such that the Jihadists have been able to establish some sort of base of operations within the country coupled with some semblance of a command structure.  Indigenous forces (e.g., ex Republican guardsmen) have also provided Jihadists with invaluable training.       


To say that the US is safer now that thousands more Jihadists are proficient in the use of explosives, for example, strikes me as rather odd. 


That said, what is truly troubling is what all of this bolds for the future.  Afghanistan did not become a problem right away. It was really only after the Soviets pulled out that returning Jihadists began to cause major problems. Ironically, the US may find itself in a situation where victory in Iraq may spell greater danger for the US as Jihadists leave Iraq for greener pastures.      & nbsp; 


"I’m wondering why you focus on Iraq as a recruiting tool for al Qaeda, but seemingly overlook the fact that regime change in Afghanistan, by its very nature, could have only one outcome, and that outcome was ‘surprise! a recruiting tool for al Qaeda! ‘Who would have thunk it?’"    


The Afghanistan operation had more legitimacy in the eyes of world than did the Iraq operation.  For this reason alone it is not the “recruiting tool” that Iraq is.  Another reason is that Iraq is an Arab country right in the heart of the Arab world and Afghanistan not.  


Finally, for or strategic reasons the Jihadists have also tended to emphasis the Iraq as opposed to Afghanistan.  Pretty much every country in the world backed the operation in Afghanistan.   As a result, the Jihadists can not divide the West by attacking a country (e.g., Canada) under the sole pretext that it supported operations in Afghanistan.  Indeed, it would have the opposite affect; it would drive the West together.


The Jihadists know this.  One of the dominate themes of various Jihadist’s websites is how to best divide and conquer.  Hence, the kidnapping of two French reporters to protest the headscarf ban in France was roundly criticized on the grounds that it was drive the West together.  When the reporters were eventually released, the captors expressed “appreciation for the French attitude on the Iraqi question and the two journalist’s attitude toward the Palestinian cause”.           


The best that can be said about the fly paper theory from a US point of view is that it has brought the “war on terror”, via Al Jazzera and other Arab networks, into the living rooms of those in the Arab world.  This has and will continue to stimulate debate in the Arab world. 


 

5 Comments