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Wednesday, April 24, 2013


24 April 2013 –

The media are reporting well on the events of the Boston Bombings.  We are learning much about the accused perpetrators, the Tsarneav brothers: events of the brothers’ lives in the U.S.; their journeys from the Caucasus to the United States;  the mosque in the Boston area where the brothers knelt alongside convicted Islamic jihadists; the older brother’s violent, misogynist ways; their parents’ return to the Caucasus; the brothers’ voicing of their jihadist motives for murders; and, not surprising to those who study Islamic jihad, the older brother’s six-month séjour in Dagestan, where he probably underwent terrorist training.  All this has come out in less than two weeks, and more revelations probably are on the way.  When I was a new intelligence officer in the Air Force, I got most crisis information from a 100 word-a-minute teletype machine in a special-access-only vault.  Now, the Information Age allows all to compile large amounts of data in a short time.  But, information never changes itself easily into actionable intelligence.  We still must parse the information in the right way to make the right calls at the right time to resolve a crisis.  We can do that and still maintain an open and free society, but we need the right strategy. 

The Boston Bombing has become a legal case and has entered the evidence accumulation and due process phases.  Now, many will pose the inevitable question: How can we stop such violence in our society?  Sadly, our politicians will answer the question by enacting misdirected laws.  A better response is that we shouldn’t focus our efforts on the terminal phase of jihadist terrorism.  We need to understand the base cause and motive of jihadist violence and then determine steps to prevent it.    

I base my assessment on a career in military intelligence.  Among the topics where I was compelled to become an instant expert, I studied the wheres, whys, hows, whos, whens, and whats of what many now call Islamic jihadist terrorism.  I suggest that Western civilization and Islam have been fighting a thirteen-hundred-year war for world dominance and that jihadist terrorism is the latest campaign by a determined enemy to achieve victory.  Accepting that view will allow us to devise a successful strategy for our war against terrorists.  Mine is not a politically correct attempt to communally establish peace with fellow world travelers.  It is a statement that western civilization must protect its basic principles of tolerance and individual rights or lose its freedom to a determined enemy. 

Islamic jihadists are not uniformed military units.  They do not represent sovereign nations as official combatants; therefore, the laws of war, which we wrote as a by-product in the forging of modern Europe, do not apply well to the modern battlefield. But, jihadists are indeed soldiers, in a war of their making and on a battlefield of their choosing.   They successfully apply one of the basic principles of warfare: They control the initiative and the tempo of the war.  We let them do so because we still don’t want to call our actions a war on bad guys. 

Bad buys?  Well, they publicly reject the tenets of our Constitution and of western society; yes, they are indeed bad guys.  As any student of Islam must admit, state sovereignty in the traditional, western sense—separation of church and state and the individual rights of the citizen—has no place where Islam rules or tries to rule.  Religion and politics are not separate forces in Islamic society. They are one and will continue to be so until Islam rules the world.  Terrorism is today’s violent application of political/religious jihad.  This is a war.  

Tragically, we fuel our enemies by channeling billions of oil and gas dollars to the abettors of jihad in the oil-rich Moslem world.   We are funding our own defeat.  Our nation’s most decisive strategic act should be to become energy independent and, thereby, staunch the flow of money to those who would dominate us. 

And now?  For too long we watch the news as if it were a bad movie, horrible, but not touching us personally.  The stark reality is that this bad movie will not be over when the late-night comedians start their monologues.  Few Americans were physically harmed by the latest bombings; but, our way of life is seriously threatened.  The United States has been under attack by Islamic jihadists, home-grown and foreign, for a generation.  Our enemies have a persistent campaign, and they are winning every battle they choose to fight.  We must admit that and compel our elected officials to put on their big-boy pants and defend our way of life.  

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