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It Is Time to Declare War
Ayn Rand Institute ^ | Sept. 20, 2001 | Leonard Peikoff

Posted on 09/30/2001 10:29:06 AM PDT by Nachum

September 19, 2001—Fifty years of increasing American appeasement in the Mideast have led to fifty years of increasing contempt in the Muslim world for the U.S. The climax was the thousands of deaths on September 11, 2001—the blackest day in our history, so far. The Palestinians, illustrating the region's hatred of what Iran calls "the Great Satan," responded to America's agony by dancing in the streets and handing out candy.

Fifty years ago, Truman and Eisenhower surrendered the West's property rights in oil, although that oil rightfully belonged to those in the West whose science, technology, and capital made its discovery and use possible. The first country to nationalize a Western oil company, in 1951, was Iran. The rest, observing our frightened silence, hurried to grab off their piece of the newly available loot.

The cause of the U.S. silence was not practical, but philosophical. The Arab dictators were denouncing wealthy egotistical capitalism. They were crying that their poor needed our sacrifice; that oil, like all property, is owned collectively, by virtue of birth; and that they knew their viewpoint was true by means of otherworldly emotion. Our Presidents had no answer. Implicitly, they were ashamed of the Declaration of Independence. They did not dare to answer aloud that Americans, properly, were motivated by the selfish desire to achieve personal happiness in a rich, secular, individualist society.

The Arabs embodied in extreme form every idea—selfless duty, anti-materialism, faith or feeling above science, the supremacy of the group—which our universities, our churches, and our own political Establishment had long been upholding as the essence of virtue. When two groups, our leadership and theirs, accept the same basic ideas, the most consistent side wins.

After property came liberty. In the first year of his theocratic revolution, Ayatollah Khomeini kidnapped 52 U.S. diplomatic personnel in Iran and held them hostage; Carter's reaction was fumbling paralysis. About a decade later, Iran topped this evil. Khomeini issued his infamous Fatwa aimed at preventing the publication, even outside his borders, of ideas uncongenial to Muslim sensibility. This was the meaning of his threat to kill the British author Rushdie and to destroy his American publisher; their crime was the exercise of their right to express an unpopular intellectual viewpoint. Here was government censorship on the widest scale. It was Iran's attempt, reaffirmed after Khomeini's death, to stifle, anywhere in the world, the very process of thought. Bush Sr. looked the other way.

After liberty came American life itself, which had been inviolate from foreign murder-networks for two centuries. The first killers were the Palestinian hijackers of the late 1960s.But the killing spree which has now shattered our soaring landmarks, our daily routine, and our souls, began in earnest only after the license granted by Carter and Bush Sr.

Many nations work to fill our body bags. But Iran, according to a State Department report of 1999, is "the most active state sponsor of terrorism," training and arming groups from all over the Mideast, including Islamic Jihad, Hamas, and Hezbollah. Nor is Iran's government now "moderating." Less than five months ago, the world's leading terrorist groups met and resolved to unite in a holy war against the U.S., which they called "a second Israel"; this meeting was held in Teheran. (Fox News, 9/16/01)

What has been the U.S. response to the above? In 1996, nineteen U.S. soldiers were killed in their barracks in Saudi Arabia. According to a front-page story in The New York Times (6/21/98): "Evidence suggesting that Iran sponsored the attack has further complicated the investigation, because the United States and Saudi Arabia have recently sought to improve relations with a new, relatively moderate Government in Teheran." In other words, Clinton evaded Iran's role because he wanted, in his words, "a genuine reconciliation." In public, of course, he continued to vow that he would find and punish the guilty. Clinton's inaction in this instance is comparable to his action after bin Laden's attack on U.S. embassies in East Africa; his action was the gingerly bombing of two meaningless targets.

Conservatives are equally responsible for today's crisis, as Reagan's record attests. Reagan not only failed to retaliate after 241 U.S. marines were slaughtered in Lebanon; he did worse. Holding that Islamic guerrillas were our ideological allies because of their fight against the atheistic Soviets, he methodically poured money and expertise into Afghanistan. This put the U.S. wholesale into the business of creating terrorists. Most of them regarded fighting the Soviets as only the beginning; our turn soon came.

For more than a decade, there was a further guarantee of American impotence: the claim that a terrorist is a man alone responsible for his actions, and that each, therefore, must be tried as an individual before a court of law. This viewpoint, thankfully, is fading; most people now understand that terrorists exist only through the sanction and support of a government.

We do not need to prove the identity of any of these creatures, because terrorism is not an issue of personalities. It cannot be stopped by destroying bin Laden and his army (although I hope they are already dead)—or even by destroying the destroyers everywhere. If that is all we do, a new army of militants will soon rise up to replace the old one.

The behavior of such militants is that of the regimes which make them possible. Their atrocities are not crimes, but acts of war. The proper response to such acts, as the public now understands, is a war in self-defense. In the excellent words of Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defense, we must "end states who sponsor terrorism."

Ending a state requires a war fought without self-crippling restrictions placed on our commanders in the field. It requires a real war, not the halfway fiasco or the public-relations charade of the Bush-Clinton years. These requirements rule out a coalition with the U.N., and especially with any terrorist nation(s)—which latter is the equivalent of going into partnership with the Soviet Union in order to fight Communism (under the pretext, say, of proving that we are not anti-Russian).

If America's President were to court a Mideastern coalition, it would be an admission that he needs the approval of terrorist nations in order to fight them. It would be a public declaration that the world's only superpower does not have enough self-confidence to act unilaterally in its own defense. Better to do nothing than to flaunt such moral cowardice, and thereby to invite into our cities the next wave of suicide-seekers.

If we do not wage a proper war now, then when? If our appeasement has led to an escalation of disasters in the past, can it do otherwise in the future? Do we wait until the terrorists unleash against us the nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons they are rushing to get hold of?

The future of America is at stake. The risk of a U.S. overreaction, therefore, is negligible. The only risk is underreaction.

A proper war is one fought with the most effective weapons we possess (Rumsfeld reportedly refuses, correctly, to rule out nuclear weapons). And it is one fought in the manner most beneficial to the American cause, regardless of the suffering and death this will bring to countless innocents caught in the line of fire. Only this approach ensures that the war will be won as quickly as possible, and with the fewest American casualties.

The public understandably demands immediate retaliation against Afghanistan. But in the wider context Afghanistan is insignificant. It is too physically devastated even to breed many fanatics. Since it is no more these days than a place to hide, its elimination would do little to end terrorism.

Terrorism is a specific disease, which can be treated only by a specific antidote. The nature of the disease (though not of its antidote) is suggested by Serge Schmemann in The New York Times (9/16/01). Our struggle now, he writes in part, is "not a struggle against a conventional guerrilla force, whose yearning for a national homeland or the satisfaction of some grievance could be satisfied or denied. The terrorists [on Tuesday] . . . issued no demands, no ultimatums. They did it solely out of grievance and hatred—hatred for the values cherished in the West as freedom, tolerance, prosperity, religious pluralism and universal suffrage, but abhorred by religious fundamentalists (and not only Muslim fundamentalists) as licentiousness, corruption, greed and apostasy."

Every word of this is true. The obvious implication is that the struggle against terrorism is ultimately a struggle of ideas, which can be dealt with only by intellectual and philosophical means. But this fact does not depreciate the crucial role of our armed forces. On the contrary, it increases their effectiveness, by pointing them to the right target.

Most of the Mideast is ruled by range-of-the-moment thugs who would be paralyzed by an American victory over any one of their neighbors. Iran, however, is the only major country in the region ruled by zealots dedicated not to material gain (such as more wealth or territory), but to the triumph by any means, however violent, of Islamic fundamentalism. This is why Iran manufactures the most terrorists.

If one were under a Nazi aerial bombardment, it would be senseless to restrict one's defensive efforts to Nazi satellites while ignoring Germany and the ideological plague it is working to spread. What Germany was to Nazism in the 1940s, Iran is to terrorism today. Whatever other countries it strikes, therefore, the U.S. can put an end to the Jihad-mongers only by taking out Iran.

We must not only wipe out Iran's terrorist sanctuaries, its training camps, and its military capability. We must also do the equivalent of de-Nazifying the country, by expelling every official and bringing down every branch of its government. This is a goal that cannot be achieved painlessly, by bombs and missiles alone. It requires invasion by ground troops, who will be at serious risk, and perhaps a period of occupation. But nothing less will "end the state" that most cries out to be ended.

The greatest obstacle to U.S. victory is not Iran and its allies, but our own intellectuals. Even now, they are preaching the same ideas that led to our historical paralysis. They are asking a reeling nation, in the name of "restraint," to apply only economic and diplomatic pressures, like those that have failed so spectacularly and for so long. The multiculturalist professors are pushing "understanding" in the name of avoiding "racism" (i.e., any condemnation of "another culture"). The friends of "love" are reminding us, not too loudly yet, of our duty to turn the other cheek.

The Superintendent of Schools in San Diego led a discussion of the bin Laden attack in an eleventh-grade history class. Among other things, he asked the students to empathize with the feelings that the event would engender in a Palestinian; and also "to compare the victims killed in the World Trade Center with those who died in Hiroshima." (San Diego Union-Tribune, 9/13/01)

These are the kinds of voices that will be heard increasingly in the universities, the churches, and the media as the country recovers from its first shock, and the professoriate et al. feel emboldened once again to conduct their ideological "business as usual." These voices are a siren song luring us to untroubled sleep while the fanatics proceed to gut America.

We can avert the catastrophe only if our government is courageous enough to hold out against the siren-singers. This requires, at minimum, that our bombs and troops be accompanied by our President's passionately righteous statement that we have broken with the clichés of our paper-tiger past and that the U.S. now places America first.

Mr. Bush must make it clear that we regard the war against terrorism as a sacred obligation to our Founding Fathers, to every victim of the men who hate this country, and to ourselves. He must make the world understand that hereafter, as a matter of principle, we will always and everywhere take up arms to secure an American's right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness here on earth.

The choice today is mass death in the United States or mass death in the terrorist nations. Our Commander-In-Chief must decide whether it is his duty to save Americans or the governments who conspire to kill them.

Leonard Peikoff is the founder of the Ayn Rand Institute in Marina del Rey, California. The Institute promotes the philosophy of Ayn Rand, author of Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
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I heard an associate of Leonard Peikoff's on KABC radio in Los Angeles who argues to not only destroy Iran's government, but every Islamic government in the middle east. This would include Iraq, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Afganistan. He also advocated the use of nuclear weapons.
1 posted on 09/30/2001 10:29:06 AM PDT by Nachum
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To: Nachum
this was a good article when it was first posted a week ago.
2 posted on 09/30/2001 10:32:30 AM PDT by Free the USA
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To: Nachum
Hmmm, some dissent in the ranks - this is almost the polar opposite of the arguments I've seen from the Lew Rockwell crowd...
3 posted on 09/30/2001 10:34:43 AM PDT by general_re
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To: Free the USA
Ah, did not see it. Sorry about the double posting. It seemed worthy of posting again though, with the radio coverage of the Ayn Rand Institute.
4 posted on 09/30/2001 10:38:15 AM PDT by Nachum
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To: Nachum
We should press the strategic advantage while we still have it. These people want to destroy us. Our response should be appropriate to their stated goals.
5 posted on 09/30/2001 10:42:31 AM PDT by clintonh8r
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To: Nachum
Thanks for posting this factual and decidedly excellent advice from the patriotic Ayn Rand Institute.

If we are to win this war, we must grant the Muslim nations their wish, by bombing all of them back into the 12th century. Praise Allah and go to hell.

6 posted on 09/30/2001 10:42:47 AM PDT by onyx
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To: Nachum
"Iran, however, is the only major country in the region ruled by zealots dedicated not to material gain (such as more wealth or territory), but to the triumph by any means, however violent, of Islamic fundamentalism. This is why Iran manufactures the most terrorists.

What Germany was to Nazism in the 1940s, Iran is to terrorism today. Whatever other countries it strikes, therefore, the U.S. can put an end to the Jihad-mongers only by taking out Iran."

I posted this article when it first was published in the Washington Post. If we can take out Bin Laden, will that be enough? Time will tell.

Peikoff is talking about something that no one in Washington wants to hear it seems. Iran is the most dangerous and capable enemy of the United States in the mideast. It was disheartening to read that we were considering bringing Iran into our coalition. It makes the United States appear weak when we try to befriend countries whose sworn goal is to wipe us off the face of the earth.

In a related story posted on FR this week, people in the streets of Iran were interviewed stating that the clerics are missing a golden opportunity to join with the West. I bet the ordinary citizens would love to see an end to the Ayatollahs' rule of Iran. We would be doing them a favor to liberate them.

7 posted on 09/30/2001 10:53:57 AM PDT by The Westerner
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To: Nachum;JMJ333
Fifty years ago, Truman and Eisenhower surrendered the West's
property rights in oil, although that oil rightfully belonged to
those in the West whose science, technology, and capital
made its discovery and use possible.

A guy discovers oil on my property.  Then insists
he owns it.  I don't quite understand the logic of that.
Am I missing something?  Do we own the
Athabasca tar sands in Alberta if we figured
out how to oil from it?

8 posted on 09/30/2001 11:01:52 AM PDT by gcruse
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To: Nachum
I agree that we should declare war, and point out chapter and verse that we haven't done that yet, (See below.) However, we should not be the first to use nuclear weapons. And in dealing with nations that support terrorism, assassination is a better method than bombing or invasion. It saves American lives, and it causes less harm and therefore adverse reaction from enemy civilians.

How many lives would have been saved had we succeeded in killing Hitler, or if his own people had succeeded in their afforts to kill him? And, in a declared war, all weapons and tactics are on the table including assassination, as witness our shoot-down of Admiral Yamamoto, architect of Pearl Harbor.

The (More er Less) Honorable Billybob,
cyberCongressman from Western Carolina

Click here for Billybob's latest, "Bush is DEAD Wrong." The next, "The ONE Commandment," will be posted after al Qua'da and Taliban are gone, or in about 48 hours.

Click here and go to "ALCU Watch" for "The Law of War," a detailed legal discussion of how the US declares war, both historically and in this instance.

9 posted on 09/30/2001 11:02:13 AM PDT by Congressman Billybob
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To: Nachum
The Ayatollah Peikoff has spoken! Destroy the infidels! So let it be written, so let it be done!

There's a real problem with Randianism. They talk radical individualism, but relish collective crusades with all the gunfire and bloodshed as much as any self-sacrificing altruist. Maybe, as with locusts and Vulcans, it's a seven year thing. As with Wilson or Clinton, the idea is that we need to set the world right once and for all, but a love of what one is supposed to reject is visible underneath all the rhetoric. Randianism, like other hyperrational ideologies, looks to be incompatible with human nature, in so far as what is undeniably human and emotional and irrational appears even in its mad mullah, Pope Leonard I.

We have to fight, and that means doing damage. But the Ayatollah Peikoff isn't any good guide to what our war aims should be.

10 posted on 09/30/2001 11:06:29 AM PDT by x
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To: Nachum
I'm sure Lenny P. would support a draft to accomplish these goals. No doubt, he will not wait to be drafted but will volunteer for service.
11 posted on 09/30/2001 11:07:16 AM PDT by parsifal
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To: x
Yeah! What you said! BTW, can you translate this gem [from above] for me. I am confused:

"The obvious implication is that the struggle against terrorism is ultimately a struggle of ideas, which can be dealt with only by intellectual and philosophical means. But this fact does not depreciate the crucial role of our armed forces. On the contrary, it increases their effectiveness, by pointing them to the right target."

Does this mean our soldiers should be trained in Objectivist theory? Is the military now tasked with correcting the epistemological errors of the Iranian mullahs? Helfen mir.

12 posted on 09/30/2001 11:12:42 AM PDT by parsifal
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To: gcruse
If I've leased the land from you, discovered the oil, built the wells, the refineries and the pipelines to the shipping operations, how does all of that belong to you? Now if you don't believe you have to honor the lease, then I see your reasoning. You just kick me off your land and take whatever I've left behind. Basically, the Westerners made a mistake thinking the Arabs believed in the rule of law.
13 posted on 09/30/2001 11:13:17 AM PDT by The Westerner
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To: Nachum
--you have to remember. It's not only 'the saudis' but their american business partners in this whole being hostage to foreign oil deal with our foreign policies. We're going to continue to eat it from the middle east until those americans with their oil business there have little say at the highest levels of government.

And if anyone thinks I'm being hypocritical because I still drive and use gas, I do hereby state I would pay double at the pump right now for my gasoline if I could be assured directly at the pump that not one drop came from the islamic countries. I want my money spent and re-spent inside CONUS, not shipped to the middle east were it goes to buy advanced weaponry for the islamics. The deal is, we have no choice the way it is set up right now. You couldn't, as an end user consumer, boycott or have a free market choice if you wanted to, we're STUCK with those bozos for the next buncha years.

And waiting in the wings is china, the next big public policy economic mistake that will finally bingo with people. And it won't be any little tiny wussy coupla buildings hit either, nope, try hundreds of thousands if not millions dead.

Short term profits, 'free trade" with the enemy= a few more millionaires and a lot more long term national in-security.

IMO. obviously.

14 posted on 09/30/2001 11:13:34 AM PDT by zog
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To: zog
I sympathize with your sentiment. My only observation is that our whole economy is dependant on oil as well. Our goods and many services would also cost much more. It would certainly have a large negative effect on the economy. Maybe even catastrophic.
15 posted on 09/30/2001 11:18:56 AM PDT by Nachum
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To: general_re
You don't find many Randian objectivists writing for LR.com. Peikoff and his bunch are atheists and are now livid over being attacked by religious fanatics. They despise Christians, too. Actually they despise everyone except their fellow objectivists. I doubt that there are more than a few thousand of them nationwide anyway.

Most of Lew's regular writers are Christians, some old line Southern conservatives, some small 'l' libertarians. The objectivists despise LR.com too.

16 posted on 09/30/2001 11:20:13 AM PDT by Twodees
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To: Nachum
First step is to capture amnd isolate all Arab oil fields. Once they are under American control, the supply of oil will not be interrupted.
17 posted on 09/30/2001 11:21:53 AM PDT by imperator2
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To: parsifal
Yep, Lenny's still waiting for ol' Ayn to rise from the dead and smite the dimwits who dare to reject her novels. Objectivists just kill me. The very first thing they suggest to anyone is that they read "Atlas Shrugged".

L. Ron Hubbard's Scientiologists could show them how to build a pseudo religion around a fiction writer.

18 posted on 09/30/2001 11:28:27 AM PDT by Twodees
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To: Twodees
I've read a few things Lenny has written over the years and the boy seems kind of high strung to me. He reminds me of another supercillious little twit, Sidney Blumenthal. Have you ever read "It Always Starts With Ayn Rand.?"
19 posted on 09/30/2001 11:33:43 AM PDT by parsifal
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To: The Westerner,JMJ333
1913: A survey of the Athabasca country was conducted by Sydney C. Ells of the Mines Branch. He saw the
      potential for using asphalt reserves as a road-surfacing material. Sydney Ells visited 10 plant sites in the United
      States in 1913, and discovered that a plant in California separated bitumen from the sand with hot water.

   I ask you again.  Do we own the Athabasca Tar Sands in Alberta, Canada?

20 posted on 09/30/2001 11:41:07 AM PDT by gcruse
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