Posted on 07/07/2006 8:53:17 AM PDT by TChris
The lessons of London
On this first anniversary of the July 7th Tube and bus bombings, I'll be re-posting all weekend long some of my commentary on the slaughter and its lessons for Britain and the rest of us. This is what I wrote an hour or so after the bombs for The Daily Telegraph the following morning - July 8th 2005:
One way of measuring any terrorist attack is to look at whether the killers accomplished everything they set out to. On September 11th 2001, al-Qaeda set out to hijack four planes and succeeded in seizing every one. Had the killers attempted to take another 30 jets between 7.30 and 9 that morning, who can doubt that theyd have maintained their pristine 100% success rate? Throughout the IRAs long war against us, two generations of British politicians pointed out that there would always be the odd crack in the system through which the determined terrorist would slip. But on 9/11 the failure of the system was total.
Yesterday, al-Qaeda hit three Tube trains and one bus. Had they broadened their attentions from the Central Zone, had they attempted to blow up 30 trains from Uxbridge to Upminster, who can doubt that they too would have been successful? In other words, the scale of the carnage was constrained only by the murderers ambition and their manpower.
The difference is that 9/11 hit out of the blue literally and politically. 7/7 came after four years of Her Majestys Government prioritizing terrorism and security above all else - and the failure rate was still 100%. After the Madrid bombing, I was struck by the spate of comic security breaches in London: two Greenpeace guys shin up St Stephens Tower, a Mirror reporter blags his way into a servants gig at Buckingham Palace a week before Bush comes to stay; an Osama lookalike gatecrashes Prince Williams party. As I wrote in the Telegraph last March:
History repeats itself: farce, farce, farce, but sooner or later tragedy is bound to kick in. The inability of the state to secure even the three highest-profile targets in the realm - the Queen, her heir, her Parliament - should remind us that a defensive war against terrorism will ensure terrorism.
To three high-profile farces, we now have that high-profile tragedy, of impressive timing. Its not a question of trying and prodding and testing and finding the weak link in the chain, the one day on Monday or Wednesday, in January or November, when an immigration official or a luggage checker is a bit absent-minded and distracted and you slip quietly through. Instead, the jihad, via one of its wholly-owned but independently-operated subsidiaries, scheduled an atrocity for the start of the G8 summit and managed to pull it off at a time when ports and airports and internal security were all supposed to be on heightened alert. Thats quite a feat.
Of course, many resources had been redeployed to Scotland to cope with Sir Bob Geldofs pathetic call for a million anti-globalist ninnies to descend on the G8 summit. In theory, the anti-glob mob should be furious with al-Qaeda and its political tin ear for ensuring that their own pitiful narcissist protests the papier-mache Bush and Blair puppets, the ersatz ethnic drumming, etc will be crowded off the news bulletins.
But I wonder. It seems just as plausible that there will be as many supple self-deluding figures anxious to argue that it's Blairs Iraq war and the undue attention it invites from excitable types thats preventing us from ending poverty in Africa by the end of next week and all the other touchy-feely stuff. The siren songs of Bono and Sir Bob will be working hard in favour of the quiet-life option. There is an important rhetorical battle to be won in the days ahead. The choice for Britons now is whether they wish to be Australians post-Bali or Spaniards post-Madrid.
That shouldnt be a tough call. But its easy to stand before a news camera and sonorously declare that the British people will never surrender to terrorism. What would you call giving IRA frontmen their own offices at Westminster? Its the target that decides whether terror wins and in the end, for all the bombings, the British people and their political leaders decided they preferred to regard the IRA as a peripheral nuisance which a few concessions could push to the fringe of their concerns.
They thought the same in the 1930s back when Czechoslovakia was a faraway country of which we know little. Today, the faraway country of which the British know little is Britain itself. Traditional terrorists the IRA, ETA - operate close to home. Islamism projects itself long-range to any point of the planet with an ease most G8 militaries cant manage. Small cells operate in the nooks and crannies of a free society while the political class seems all but unaware of their existence.
Did we learn enough, for example, from the case of Omar Sheikh? Hes the fellow convicted of the kidnapping and beheading in Karachi of the American journalist Daniel Pearl. Hes usually described as Pakistani but he is, in fact, a citizen of the United Kingdom born in Whips Cross Hospital, educated at Nightingale Primary School in Wanstead, the Forest School in Snaresbrook and the London School of Economics. He travels on a British passport. Unlike yours truly, a humble Canadian subject of the Crown, Mr Sheikh gets to go through the express lane at Heathrow.
Or take Abdel Karim al-Tuhami al-Majati, a senior al-Qaeda member from Morocco killed by Saudi security forces in al Ras last April. One of Mr al-Majatis wives is a Belgian citizen currently resident in Britain. In Pakistan, the jihadists speak openly of London as the terrorist bridgehead to Europe. Given the British jihadists whove been discovered in the thick of it in Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Palestine, Chechnya and Bosnia, only a fool would believe they had no plans for anything closer to home or, rather, home.
Most of us can only speculate at the degree of Islamist penetration in the United Kingdom because we simply dont know, and multicultural pieties require that we keep ourselves in the dark. Massoud Shadjareh, chairman of Britains Islamic Human Rights Commission, is already advising Muslims not to travel or go out unless necessary, and is particularly concerned that women should not go out alone in this climate. Thanks to Islamophobia and other pseudo-crises, the political class will be under pressure to take refuge in pointless gestures (ie, ID cards) that inconvenience the citizenry and serve only as bureaucratic distractions from the real war effort.
Since 9/11 most Britons have been skeptical of Washingtons view of this conflict. Douglas Hurd and many other Tory grandees have been openly scornful of the Bush doctrine. Lord Hurd would no doubt have preferred a policy of urbane aloofness, such as he promoted vis a vis the Balkans in the early Nineties. Hes probably still unaware that Omar Sheikh was a westernized non-observant chess-playing pop-listening beer-drinking English student until he was radicalized by the massacres of Bosnian Muslims. Abdel Karim al-Tuhami al-Majati was another Europeanised Muslim radicalized by Bosnia. The inactivity of Do-Nothin Doug and his fellow Lions of Lethargy a decade ago had terrible consequences and recruited more jihadists than any of Bushs daisy cutters. The fact that most of us were unaware of the consequences of EU lethargy on Bosnia until that chicken policy came home to roost a decade later should be sobering: it was what Don Rumsfeld, in a remark mocked by many snide media twerps, accurately characterized as an unknown unknown a vital factor so successfully immersed you dont even know you dont know it.
This is the beginning of a long existential struggle, for Britain and the west. Its hard not to be moved by the sight of Londoners calmly going about their business as usual in the face of terrorism. But, if the political class goes about business as usual, thats not a stiff upper lip but a death wish.
I wasn't here, then; thanks for posting it. He's spot on, as usual.
marking
Steyn holds up over time - truly the mark of a great journalist.
bttt
You're right. The test of time is a good indicator.
bttt
Good grief, I have to disagree with Mark Steyn! And his piece was written long after 9/11. No, Mr. Steyn, the failure on 9/11 was NOT total. By the fourth flight, the system had changed forever. We have the heroes of Flight 93 to thank for that. A flight will never be taken again, at least not without a fight to the finish. The terrorists realize they no longer face rows of sheep but rather rows of tigers. Flight 93 did not hit its target. The system learned.
I don't think Steyn was including the passengers within "the system". The piece is about the government protecting its citizens, not the citizens protecting themselves. Apparently the UK is not taking the idea of protecting its citizens as seriously as is the US.
I think his point is that on 9/11, the US government entirely failed to protect the victims in the WTC and on the planes. That's accurate. His main point, though, is that since 7/7, the UK's government continues in that same style of failure.
Last night I caught a British woman journalist on Fox. She was refreshingly plain spoken and said that the UK had to come to terms with the enemy, that it's a religion, Islam.
So-called moderate Muslims pretend their religion isn't espousing murder and mayhem, but by remainin silent, they're aiding and abetting mass murder. It was her opinion that if the UK can't even name its enemy, it cannot defeat Jihad. Makes sense to me.
Sounds like she's been reading Steyn too. :-)
Actually, thinking back, Steyn is right. He speaks of flights taking off between 7:30 and 9:00am on 9-11-01. Had there been 30 filghts highjacked during that 90 minute period, perhaps one or two others would have had the Flight 93 passengers' reaction, but most would have followed the then-protocol of doing what the highjackers told them, assuming they would land somewhere and negotiate with officials.
I think the only reason there weren't more flights highjacked that morning is that it would have required more hijackers, thus creating a higher chance of the plot being revealed before it could be achieved. Remember the early tape of bin Laden bragging about his accomplishment and stating that most of the highjackers themselves didn't even know the plot till they were pretty much getting on the plane? Secrecy was their first weapon. Our idiotic policy of not challenging hijackers supported their effort.
There were credible and eyewitness reports that they had terrorists IN THE "JUMP" seats of other planes, but due to the oh-so-familiar departure delays, they were still on the ground when the first 4 planes went down and airspace was shut down. These 'pilots' scrambled off the planes and out of sight.
Reports name the Capitol as one target, Hoover Damn and others.
So they were successful, but not totally
One time to be deeply grateful for airport delays. :-/
Right - besides the ones that DIDN't get off the grounds, the one that those brave citizens fought for, and went down in that PA field would've likely made it to it's goal - the Capitol bldg - had it not been late in getting off the ground, resulting in the passengers on Flight 93 learning what the real plans were.
You would think that - having narrowly escaped a firery death in the Capitol bldg, the so-called representatives that gather there would be a little more dedicated to taking out the enemy instead of aiding and abetting them
Here is a problem I have with the article:
"Douglas Hurd and many other Tory grandees have been openly scornful of the Bush doctrine. Lord Hurd would no doubt have preferred a policy of urbane aloofness, such as he promoted vis a vis the Balkans in the early Nineties. Hes probably still unaware that Omar Sheikh was a westernized non-observant chess-playing pop-listening beer-drinking English student until he was radicalized by the massacres of Bosnian Muslims. Abdel Karim al-Tuhami al-Majati was another Europeanised Muslim radicalized by Bosnia. The inactivity of Do-Nothin Doug and his fellow Lions of Lethargy a decade ago had terrible consequences and recruited more jihadists than any of Bushs daisy cutters."
So we should intervene everywhere an attempt to end the 'root cause' of radicalism, Mark? I know you hate the Tory idiocy re: Iraq, but Judas priest, don't hop onto the wrong train because it'll run over the bad guy. You'll end up in the wrong place.
Additionally, one could make an argument that intervention there was even WORSE for London, because had their been no intervention, perhaps these 'radicalized' folks would have GONE to Bosnia to fight Serbs, instead of terrorizing Britain!
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