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July 5, 2007 Edition > Section: Opinion <http://www.nysun.com/section/31>  >
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NHS Opened the Door


BY DANIEL JOHNSON
July 5, 2007
URL: http://www.nysun.com/article/57858

The fact that the Al Qaeda plot to detonate car bombs in London and Glasgow
was carried out by doctors working for the National Health Service has
shocked the British public far more than the fact that they were Muslims.

The notion that the NHS might have been infiltrated by jihadists from the
Middle East is as disturbing as the emergence two years ago of young British
Muslim suicide bombers.

In fact, it is more disturbing, not just because doctors are meant to save
lives rather than commit mass murder, but because the violation of this
inner sanctum of the British way of life threatens the whole idea of
integration - which is meant to be the answer to Islamism. The line between
integration and infiltration is a thin one.

The NHS is the nearest thing to a religion that the British now have. For
half a century the British have convinced themselves that the NHS is the
envy of the world. It is - for the third world. And it is the third world's
doctors and nurses who keep alive this socialist cult of security from
cradle to grave.

No politician dares to reform the NHS, which is still run by its
white-coated medical priesthood. Even Margaret Thatcher, who was fearless
with terrorists, quailed before the doctors and nurses. "The NHS is safe in
our hands," she said. But the question has long been: are we safe in the
NHS's hands?

Aneurin Bevan, the man who created this monster, explained how he had
persuaded the senior doctors to submit to the state: "I stuffed their mouths
with gold." But training our own doctors is expensive. Today, the agencies
that supply the NHS with doctors recruit their staff throughout Africa and
Asia. Many are Muslims and, inevitably, some of them are Islamists.

The origins of the eight suspects arrested so far are diverse - Iraq,
Jordan, India, Saudi Arabia - but all spent time at NHS hospitals or medical
schools. One of them, who drove a blazing Jeep into an airport terminal and
set fire to himself, is now being treated for burns that cover 90% of his
body in the same hospital that unsuspectingly employed him. If he survives,
he will owe his life to his intended victims.

Anybody with medical qualifications has been able to enter Britain with few
questions asked. Of the 277,000 doctors in the NHS, some 128,000 - that is
nearly four out of 10 - were trained abroad. It was a loophole that should
have been obvious, given Al Qaeda's declared strategy of recruiting highly
educated professionals. The cell that launched last week's attacks is
probably not the only one.

After a slow start, the security operation has moved quickly, using
information gained from the cell phones that failed to detonate. The net was
cast widely enough to catch one suspect in Australia just as he was about to
fly to Pakistan. The only Anglican clergyman in Baghdad, Canon White, was
apparently warned by an Al Qaeda operative: "He said the people who cure you
would kill you."

What, though, has been the political response to this potentially
devastating conspiracy - one of dozens that are believed to be active in
Britain alone at any one time?

Gordon Brown's new government has been eager to contrast itself with Tony
Blair. To this end, it has excised three terms from the official vocabulary:
"Muslim," "Islam," and "the war on terror." There is to be no mention of the
wider context in which Al Qaeda and other Islamist terrorists operate. The
new home secretary, Jacqui Smith, laid down the new doctrine: "Terrorists
are criminals who come from all religious backgrounds." I am sure one or two
are Quakers.

Compared to Mr. Blair, Mr. Brown looks like a man in manic denial. But his
conservative opponent, David Cameron, is determined to out-deny him.

First, he insisted that the word "Islamist" should be censored from
political discourse. Then, after two Muslims were made junior ministers last
week, Mr. Cameron promoted Sayeeda Warsi to be a member of his shadow
cabinet, with the title of "community cohesion secretary." Having failed to
be elected, she is to be ennobled and will sit in the House of Lords. Ms.
Warsi is thus the most senior Muslim in British politics.

Yet Ms. Warsi turns out to hold views that are not only at odds with her
party's, but also with any "community cohesion" except the Islamist kind.
She not only opposed the Iraq war, but also welcomed the election of Hamas.
She opposes anti-terror laws and rejects the idea that extremism is a
problem for British Muslims: "When you say this is something that the Muslim
community needs to weed out, or deal with, that is a very dangerous step to
take." Mr. Cameron has taken a dangerous step by handing over his policy on
Islam to a person who appears to be part of the problem.

"Don't mention the war" was the catchphrase of the manic hotelier, Basil
Fawlty, played by Monty Python actor, John Cleese, in the BBC comedy series
"Fawlty Towers." While serving his German guests, he goose-stepped around
the room.

Now that the war in question is a holy war unleashed against Western
civilization, the joke is on us. Jihad may be preached from British pulpits,
but the word has gone out from Downing Street: "Whatever else you do, don't
mention the war on terror."

July 5, 2007 Edition > Section: Opinion <http://www.nysun.com/section/31>  >
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