BY JAMES TARANTO
Monday, September 9, 2002 1:57 p.m. EDT
Why
We Hate Them
"Why
do they hate us?" was a common refrain after Sept. 11; far less often heard
was the converse question: Why do we hate them? Maybe that's because the answer
is so obvious, but even so, a reminder every now and then doesn't do any harm.
A group of radical Islamists in London are providing just such a reminder, holding
a rally to celebrate--yes, celebrate--the atrocities their coreligionists committed
a year ago. The poster nearby advertises the event with the slogan "September
the 11th 2001: A towering day in history." Oh, those wacky Islamic punsters.
"The conference, which will be attended by the most radical mullahs in Britain,
will argue that the atrocities were justified because Muslims must defend themselves
against armed aggression," the London Daily Telegraph reports. Al-Muhajiroun,
the sponsor, has a program for the confab on its Web site; it includes talks
on "The positive outcomes of the 11th September 2001," "The US conspiracy against
Islam and Muslims" and "The alliance of the US and Al-Saud [our friends the
Saudis] in their attack against Muslims." The men behind the celebration say
they're starting a new group called the Islamic Council of Britain, "funded
by Saudi-based businessmen, which, if true, will embarrass Saudi Arabia,"
according to the Telegraph.
This is of course enraging, but it's also just plain weird. What kind of country,
in the midst of a war, allows its mortal enemies to hold a hate-fest on its
own soil? It's as if Nazi sympathizers were holding Nuremberg-style rallies
in Britain and the U.S. in 1942. In most countries at most times in history,
surely the Al-Muhajirounites would be rounded up and arrested, if not executed,
for treason.
One might take a perverse pride that the Anglo-American tradition of freedom
is so robust, and so fearless, that it allows even the most thuggish fanatics
to speak their minds in public. Or one might argue that this is a case of tolerance
gone mad. In any case, let's hope the conference is well attended by folks from
Scotland Yard and MI5.
Baghdad
Jane
Maybe the Cold War is a better analogy than World War II. During that conflict,
there was a communist fringe in the U.S., and even more so elsewhere in the
West, which, McCarthyism notwithstanding, generally was free to express its
hatred for America. Everyone remembers how "Hanoi
Jane" Fonda went to North Vietnam in 1972 to show solidarity with the
enemy.
Call Scott Ritter "Baghdad Jane." The erstwhile U.N. weapons inspector
was in the Iraqi capital yesterday, where he told Iraq's "parliament"
as the BBC puts it, "that Iraq is not a threat to the outside world and
that military action against the country would not be justifiable." Ritter
did call on the Iraqis to let inspectors back in, but he also claimed Iraq has
no weapons of mass destruction--though it's hard to see how he could know this,
since no inspectors have been to Iraq in four years.
Saddam's
Nuke Quest
"Iraq could assemble a nuclear weapon in months if it had foreign help,"
CNN reports, citing a new study by the International
Institute for Strategic Studies. "The argument in favor of taking action
now, whether it's to compel Baghdad to accept inspectors or to use military
force to change the regime, is that it's better to act when [Iraq's] capabilities
are still short of reaching their ultimate objective," the report's author,
Gary Samore, tells CNN.
The New
York Times also reports that "Iraq has stepped up its quest for nuclear
weapons and has embarked on a worldwide hunt for materials to make an atomic
bomb":
In the last 14 months, Iraq has sought to buy thousands of specially designed
aluminum tubes, which American officials believe were intended as components
of centrifuges to enrich uranium. American officials said several efforts
to arrange the shipment of the aluminum tubes were blocked or intercepted
but declined to say, citing the sensitivity of the intelligence, where they
came from or how they were stopped. . . .
The attempted purchases are not the only signs of a renewed Iraqi interest
in acquiring nuclear arms. President Hussein has met repeatedly in recent
months with Iraq's top nuclear scientists and, according to American intelligence,
praised their efforts as part of his campaign against the West.
Iraqi defectors who once worked for the nuclear weapons establishment have
told American officials that acquiring nuclear arms is again a top Iraqi priority.
The Scotsman
has details on a dossier
it says Prime Minister Tony Blair will soon issue on Saddam's efforts to acquire
nukes. The Telegraph
reports that "Tony Blair and President George W Bush have agreed to topple
Saddam Hussein by military means even if the United Nations does not pass a
Security Council resolution authorising the use of force." So much for
complaints of U.S. "unilaterialism." Though the U.S. must be willing
to act alone, there's ample evidence that President Bush is in the midst of
assembling an international coalition:
- John Howard, prime minister of Australia,
tells the Associated Press that he agrees with "Washington's position
. . . that the United Nation's should play a greater role in resolving
the problem with Iraq's alleged nuclear ambitions."
- "President Jacques Chirac of France
proposed a two-stage plan today that could lead to United Nations authorization
of military force against Iraq," the New York Times reports.
- Germany's
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder says he's unalterably opposed to toppling Saddam--but
his challenger, Edmund Stoiber, is more flexible, and the election is less
than two weeks off.
- Bush is meeting with Canada's
Prime Minister Jean Chretien today--though Reuters quotes Chretien's deputy,
John Manley, as saying the Canadians "haven't signed on to" Bush's
plans for regime change.
Oddly, British and American opponents of overthrowing Saddam (with a few exceptions,
such as Brent
Scowcroft) have shied away from forthrightly making the case against intervention,
instead professing their ignorance and calling on President Bush to "make
the case" against Saddam. The Telegraph's Barbara
Amiel is on to them:
These voices never floundered before. They have never let information alone
stand in the way of telling Prime Ministers and Presidents what to do about
the Cold War, the Gulf war, the Panama invasion, the Falklands, Global Warming,
Poverty, Hunger and Dirt.
One suspects that they really want to put their collective heads in the sand
or, less generously, side with a coalition of anti-Americans, muddled Marxists
and confused admirers of Islamism all intent on seeing capitalism, Israel
and America crippled. But as this agenda is not quite respectable, so it must
be masked by a feigned thirst for knowledge.
And what about Arab opposition? "Syria is showing increasing signs of
unease at Washington's plans to topple Saddam Hussein in neighboring Iraq, fearing
it would be the first step in a wave of regime changes in the Middle East to
suit US and Israeli interests," the Christian
Science Monitor reports. (Such changes, of course, would also suit the interests
of the people of the countries whose tyrannical regimes change.) The
paper quotes Murhaf Jouejati, a Syrian specialist at Washington's Middle East
Institute: "Damascus would not like to see the regime toppled and substituted
by a pro-American regime because in that case Damascus would be totally surrounded
by American power."
Is
Osama Dead?
Al-Jazeera seems to think so. "A slip of the tongue by one of Osama bin
Laden's top henchmen seems to have betrayed al-Qaeda's most potent secret: its
charismatic leader is dead," the Times of London reports. In an interview
with the Qatar-based satellite network, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed "referred
to bin Laden, who has not been seen since the fall of Afghanistan's Taleban
regime, in the past tense. The reporter Yosri Fouda, London bureau chief for
al-Jazeera, concluded that bin Laden is now likely to be dead."
Mohammed also told Fouda that, in the Times' words, "the target of the
fourth, thwarted hijack attack in Washington was Congress, not the White House;
the original plan was to crash aircraft into atomic power stations; and the
plotters used simple codes to keep in touch by internet."
In its report on the al Qaeda confession, Reuters
declares, believe it or not, that "Washington has accused bin Laden and
al Qaeda of being responsible for the attacks."
Reuters
Outdoes Itself--II
As we
noted, last week Reuters published a photo of the World Trade Center site
with the following caption:
Recovery and debris removal work continues at the site of the World Trade
Center known as "ground zero" in New York, March 25, 2002. Human rights around
the world have been a casualty of the U.S. "war on terror" since September
11.
That photo has now disappeared from the Yahoo! archives, and the Washington
Post's Howard Kurtz reports that Nancy Bobrowitz, the wire service's spokeswoman,
"says the caption was a 'mistake' because the information, drawn from an
accompanying story, was taken 'out of context.' " Well, here are the first
two paragraphs of the accompanying
story:
GENEVA (Reuters)--Human rights around the world have been a casualty of the
U.S. "war on terror" since September 11.
In the year since Muslim extremists flew hijacked planes into New York and
Washington, killing some 3,000 people, many Western governments have armed
themselves with greater powers of arrest and curtailed the legal rights of
detainees as they hunt for accomplices.
The dispatch is headlined "Rights the First Victim of 'War on Terror,' "
and only in the third paragraph does reporter Richard Waddington attribute these
opinions to "human rights activists"--hardly an unbiased source.
Not
Too Brite--IV
"An Iranian man cut off his seven-year-old daughter's head after suspecting
she had been raped by her uncle," Reuters reports, citing a report in an
Iranian newspaper. " 'The motive behind the killing was to defend
my honor, fame, and dignity,' the paper quoted the father as saying."
Reuters apparently thinks the murder of a seven-year-old girl is kind of cute;
the story appears under the heading "Oddly Enough."
Great
Moments in Law Enforcement
"The government mistakenly gave alleged terrorist Zacarias Moussaoui classified
documents related to al Qaeda," ABC News reports. "The material--both
on disk and as hard copy documents--was sent to Moussaoui as part of discovery
for his legal defense, said several legal sources, including one at the Justice
Department."
Meanwhile, the Associated
Press reports that "German authorities had suspicions nearly two months
ago about a Turkish man suspected of plotting to bomb U.S. military bases in
Germany, but bureaucratic procedures delayed his arrest until last week":
A tip from U.S. security officials that a witness reported the suspect had
chemicals at home reached German prosecutors in mid-July, but a judge put
off questioning of the woman, scheduled for Aug. 13, because the summons could
not be delivered on time, said Elke O'Donoghue, a prosecutor in the city of
Stuttgart.
Prosecutors got a search warrant Aug. 30, and six days later they arrested
Osman Petmezci and his American fiancée, Astrid Eyzaguirre. "Inside
the couple's third-floor apartment, police found 287 pounds of bomb-making chemicals--which
investigators said Sunday could have been used to make about 44 pounds of gunpowder--along
with five pipe bombs, a book about bomb-making and electronic parts apparently
intended as detonators." The cops say they don't think the couple were
connected with al Qaeda.
Only
Outlaws Will Have Suicide Bombs
"Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat is to ask a key meeting of the Palestinian
parliament on Monday to outlaw suicide bombing and to reaffirm the Palestinian
commitment to peace with Israel," the Associated Press reported. But he
ended up doing no such thing. Instead, as the New York Times reports, he "told
Palestinian legislators today that he condemned acts of terror against Israeli
and Palestinian civilians, and said he believed that peace with Israel was still
possible. But he stopped short of calling for an end to all attacks against
Israelis."
Even Arafat's condemnation of terror "against Israel civilians" doesn't
amount to much, for the Palestinian Arabs don't regard anyone who's ever served
in the Israeli Defense Forces (in a country with universal conscription) or
who lives in the disputed territories as a "civilian."
Agence
France-Presse, meanwhile, reports that the IDF found a "powerful bomb"
in the offices of what AFP calls "Arafat's mainstream Fatah movement."
Arafat won a Nobel Peace Prize in 1994.
Ha'aretz
reports that one of Arafat's cabinet members threatened that, in the paper's
words, "the Palestinian Authority might reconsider its recognition of the
State of Israel, in view of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's declaration that all
the signed agreements between the two sides are canceled." Oh, what a threat!
Next thing you know the Palestinians will initiate some sort of hostilities
or something.
Here's some good news from the Mideast. Time
magazine reports that the terror group Hamas is in ruins. "Israeli intelligence
officials tell TIME that since the start last spring of the West Bank offensive
known as Operation Defensive Shield, 98% of the members of Hamas' military wing
who are known to them in the area have been killed or arrested--a total of 70
men." Who says there's no military solution to terrorism?
A
Real Martyr
Contrary to early reports, at least one of the men whom U.S. special forces
troops shot and killed during an assassination attempt against Afghanistan's
President Hamid Karzai was not an assassin. The New York Times reports on how
Azimullah Muhammad became "Afghanistan's newest hero":
On Friday, television viewers around the world watched BBC reports of a man
in a brown tunic watching as an Afghan army guard turned his gun the wrong
way -- against President Hamid Karzai and the Kandahar governor, Gul Agha Shirzai.
"Azimullah didn't hesitate a second, he just jumped on him when he saw him
shooting," Khalil Pashtoon, the governor's press secretary, said today of
the young man. . . .
In the scuffle, the soldier apparently shot the young man as they wrestled
to the ground. Then, American Special Forces bodyguards apparently shot them
both dead.
Next:
O.J. Simpson Lectures Us on Nonviolence
Former tennis star John McEnroe weighs in with an op-ed in the Daily Telegraph,
and we swear we're not making this up:
In travelling the world as a tennis player, I have a better appreciation
of other countries than most Americans. We could do with being a little less
besotted with money, money, money, win, win, win. When I am in England each
summer people always ask: "Why don't English players win Wimbledon? They ought
to be more like Americans and play to win." To my mind, it's time Americans
started being more like the English--or at least learnt to lose with grace.
Those
Skeptics Will Believe Anything
Tom Brazaitis of the Cleveland Plain Dealer reports on an article in Skeptical
Inquirer (the piece itself isn't online) that says terrorism is no big deal:
The authors, research scientists Clark Chapman and Alan Harris, say that
the disproportionate reaction to Sept. 11 has been as damaging as the destruction
of lives and property on that day.
"An objective of terrorism is to multiply damage by inducing irrational fears
in the broad population," they write. "One defense is to learn to evaluate
such situations more objectively." . . .
"Every month, including September 2001, the U.S. highway death toll exceeds
fatalities in the World Trade Center, Pentagon and four downed airliners combined,"
they write.
Don't you feel better now?
You Probably
Think This Screed Is About You
Matt Drudge picks up a Sunday Times of London op-ed by Norman Mailer (the Times'
Sunday edition is no longer available online without a steep subscription fee)
in which the author says America is "so vain":
Culturally, emotionally America is growing more loutish, arrogant, and vain.
I detest this totally promiscuous patriotism. Wave a little flag and become
a good person? Ugly. If we have a depression or fall into desperate economic
times, I don't know what's going to hold the country together. . . .
There's just too much anger here, too much ruptured vanity, too much shock,
too much identity crisis. And worst of all, too much patriotism. Patriotism
in a country that's failing has a logical tendency to turn fascistic.
Freudian Slip
Bill Clinton called on the U.S. to "flush out" al Qaeda, not "flesh
out," as the Associated Press quoted him. We repeated
the error Friday.
The
Grass Is Always Greener on the Other Side
"U.S. politicians have expressed unhappiness with the idea of Canada in
any way easing its stance on marijuana and some say if Ottawa did relax its
rules, this could lead to a clampdown on the countries' long joint frontier,"
Reuters reports.
Homelessness Rediscovery Watch
"If George W. Bush becomes president, the armies of the homeless, hundreds
of thousands strong, will once again be used to illustrate the opposition's
arguments about welfare, the economy, and taxation."--Mark
Helprin, Oct. 31, 2000
"The 'Homeless in Paradise' Inhabit Beach Cities in Growing Numbers"--headline,
Los
Angeles Times, Sept. 8, 2002
No
Man's Land
"India's first eunuch mayor has been unseated in a legal dispute over whether
she is a man or a woman," the Washington Times reports:
As all Indian eunuchs do, Kamla Jaan dresses as a woman and believes she
is a female. But a judge in the central state of Madhya Pradesh ruled last
week that Kamla Jaan is, in fact, a man and should be disqualified from the
mayoral post, which is reserved under a quota system for a female candidate. . . .
Kamla Jaan, who is illiterate, argued that she was a "born eunuch"--an authentic
eunuch is a castrated male--and so should not be considered a man. But in
his 40-page ruling, the judge agreed with the group of petitioners that Kamla
Jaan is male.
The Times quotes P. Manorama, a physician who works with eunuchs, as saying
that "roughly estimated, one in a hundred eunuchs is a natural eunuch or hermaphrodite
born with deformed or ambiguous genitalia--neither a boy nor a girl." That
means the other 99 are all castrated. Which leads us to wonder: Why do press
reports treat this as a quaint feature of Indian culture, when it seems every
bit as barbaric as the African and Muslim practice of female genital mutilation?
You
Don't Say
"HP Researchers Make Tiny Memory From Molecules"--headline, Reuters,
Sept. 9
Of course, lots of big things, including trucks and skyscrapers, are also made
of molecules.
It's
the Eponymy, Stupid
A woman in Arlington, Wash., was driving her pickup truck when a red-tailed
hawk collided with it. "after she freed the bird's wing from the side-view
mirror, the hawk invaded the truck, bit [the woman's] lip and then sank its
talons into her right arm," the Associated Press reports. She drove to
a gas station and shouted: "Call 911! I have a hawk stuck to my arm."
The woman's name is Jamie Wing.
'My
Public Spirit Stops at My Daughter'
In a letter to the editor of the Washington Post, one April Falcon Doss explains
why she chose to send her daughter to a private school:
For a card-carrying liberal, I was surprisingly unapologetic about our decision.
Why should I sacrifice our daughter's future to an abstract principle? I wasn't
up to battling the school system about class size, curriculum and extracurricular
activities. And by the time any changes could be made, our daughter would
have already missed out on a vibrant education
Here in a nutshell is the definition of an American liberal: one who is willing
to sacrifice the future of other people's children to an abstract principle.
(Elizabeth Crowley helps compile Best of the Web Today. Thanks to Drew Parkhill,
Jenifer Sawicki, Rosanne Klass, David Gartenstein-Ross, Ian Wright, S.E. Brenner,
Jeffrey Weinstein, Tom Palermo, Dan Friedman, Peg Innis, David Merrill, Greg
Dougherty, Doug Levene, Raghu Desikan, Jose Guardia, Ken Jorgensen, Judith Kaplan,
Diane Ravitch, Jim Fehrle, Michael Segal, C.E. Dobkin, Carl Sherer, Ed Kehm,
Alan Perlman, Richard Haisley, Darren Gold, Marie Bourgeois, Daniel Ciment,
David Sherzer, Andrew Fox, Julie Carlson, Zabelle Huss, Jerome Marcus, Howard
Weiser, Yehuda Hilewitz, Jonathan Yunger, Alyssa Lappen, Russell Roberts, Aaron
Gross, Adam Flisser, Elliot Ganz, Brian Simmons, James Trager, Brian Meeker,
Steve Hilton, Thomas Leahey, Mike Rogers, Tom Episcopio, Mike Cakora, Joe York
and Francesca Watson. If you have a tip, write us at opinionjournal@wsj.com,
and please include the URL.)
Today on OpinionJournal:
- William
McGurn: Did Bill O'Reilly collude with the Saudis? We report, you decide.
(Plus: O'Relily vs. McGurn: The transcript.)
- Robert
Bartley: If we've learned anything in the past year, we'll topple Saddam.
- Brendan
Miniter: The speech New York needs, but won't hear, on Sept. 11.