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WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 12 2001
Democrats should not fight fire with fire
SIMON JENKINS
First the horror. The attacks on the World Trade Centre and Washington
yesterday before a horrified world were the most vivid display of terror that I
can recall. The heart of darkness had come to the heart of light and wreaked
havoc.
New York is a city I love. It is bond-brother of London and cultural capital of a
nation that has entered the new millennium as master of the world. That
made it a natural target of envy and hatred. Those who question America�s
frequent global interventions in the cause of democracy do so always from a
position of respect. Leadership demands a price. When that price is paid in
such symbolic centres of the nation as New York and Washington,
Americans deserve every sympathy. Words may try to explain such events.
None can justify them.
After the horror comes the response. The wise general always keeps in mind his enemy�s 
objective. As with other recent attacks on Americans at home and abroad, the objective 
here cannot be the traditional one of those who
 wage violent war. It is not to defeat America, to undermine its economic power or 
military strength, nor even to damage its political stability. Such goals are 
unachievable. That is why comparisons with Pearl Harbor are
silly. The objective is to publicise a cause, humiliate America and goad her into a 
violent response.
To achieve this goal requires more than a big bang. It requires that bang to be 
publicised and for the reaction to it to be equally violent. Its effectiveness lies 
not in the death toll � a toll repeated daily on the road
s � but in the loudness of the echo through the world�s media. It lies in the action 
replay, the humanising of the tragedy, the publicity for those responsible. It lies in 
the aftermath.
There is no military defence against attacks such as these. Indeed there is no 
realistic defence at all. America will doubtless redouble its efforts to penetrate and 
contain the groups responsible. But they will not be de
feated by main force. Any plane can be hijacked. Any building is vulnerable. People 
can be protected individually but not in the mass. A community can always be gassed or 
poisoned.
The paradox of new technology is that it makes developed states more vulnerable to 
random assault. In the war of the weak against the strong, the weak can wield weapons 
more potent than ever before. Globalisation may rend
er the rich richer and the poor poorer. But it offers the self-appointed champions of 
the poor devastating means of forcing their attention on the world.
Faced with horrors such as these, �anti-missile� defence systems seem suddenly 
obsolete. No rogue state needs an intercontinental ballistic missile to assault 
America when a boy with a suitcase or a suicide hijacker can w
alk through any shield. A trillion dollars hurled into outer space cannot stop the 
blast of a civilian jet loaded with fuel out of Boston airport. Fylingdales may detect 
a menace from outer space, but not a virus in a han
dbag or a madman in Club Class.
To protect every American building is clearly impossible. To attempt to protect city 
centres against suicide attack plays the attacker�s game. It awards him the attention 
he craves, the apotheosis of fame. The constant se
arch for security becomes a ghostly re-enactment of the outrage, a reminder and a 
challenge to next time. That surely is why the World Trade Centre was targeted for a 
second time. It added an eerie echo to the �ripple� of
 the terror. Its power lies in the memory of blood-stained bodies and sobbing women, 
of shattered buildings and a world turned upside down.
If yesterday�s acts were committed under the sponsorship of a foreign state, 
retaliation might be understandable. But punitive action requires a collective entity 
that can be held responsible. Here there are only shadowy
groups, moving from country to country, terrifying their hosts as much as the rest of 
the world. In 1993 the World Trade Centre was the victim of a massive car bomb. It 
appeared to be the work of Arab fundamentalists with
 ties to Afghanistan and Sudan. No conceivable response to the attack made any sense, 
except to track down the individuals concerned. They appear to have struck again.
Nor did any good come from putting states such as Syria, Iraq, Libya, Iran and Sudan 
on a list of countries �responsible for sponsoring state terrorism�. Trade sanctions 
were imposed on destitute peoples with primitive po
litical economies. Sanctions entrenched and often enriched those already in power. To 
sponsor anti-Americanism has long been a guarantee of dictatorial longevity, witness 
Assad of Syria, Castro of Cuba, Gaddafi of Libya a
nd Saddam Hussein of Iraq.
The ardent non-interventionist might argue that incidents such as these can be 
avoided. They would plead with America not to intervene everywhere and thus render its 
territory a target to all whom its government has offen
ded abroad. This argument must be met since many enemies of America will cite it. They 
will point out that the scenes on television yesterday were different only in degree 
from those experienced by civilian victims of Ame
rican bombing in Yugoslavia and Iraq. Those critical of Nato bombing might offer 
America more sympathy if Nato had offered sympathy for the hundreds of civilian deaths 
from its missiles and cluster bombs far from home. US
 generals openly demanded the bombing of civilian targets in Belgrade and Baghdad, to 
�break the will� of local people. Is that not what the perpetrators of yesterday�s 
outrage might say? Here we tread warily. Sponsoring
the state of Israel led America into a prolonged and senseless hostility to the cause 
of the dispossessed Palestinians. The financing of anti-Soviet warlords in Afghanistan 
in the 1980s armed and galvanised terrorist grou
ps, including Osama bin Laden and others behind the 1993 bombing of the World Trade 
Centre. The criminalisation by the Americans of the trade in heroin and cocaine, of 
which America is the major consumer, ensures that cri
me triumphs in states throughout Asia and South America. The continuance of the 
Kuwaiti policing operation into weekly bombing of Iraq has made Saddam a regional hero 
and America an object of regional hatred.
These were not wise policies. The true policeman does not just project his awesome 
authority across the globe, he thinks through the consquences of his policy. But that 
is an issue distinct from yesterda�'s events. The ne
w Anglo-American �moral imperium� may be no less imperial than the old one, but I do 
not believe it to be cynical. The bombing of the Serbs and Iraqis was undertaken in 
the cause of peace. It was without self-interest on
Nato�s part.
America and its allies have �taken up the white man�s burden� with honest intent. They 
have done so aware of Kipling�s feared reward, �the blame of those ye better,/ The 
hate of those ye guard�. The wrong turns of Western
 policy in the Middle East may help to explain yesterday�s slaughter. They in no way 
excuse it. Nobody should want to see America terrorised into isolationism.
To seek revenge would be senseless. America showed after attacks on its East African 
embassies in 1998 that it regards revenge as a legitimate weapon in its geopolitical 
arsenal. The bombing of Afghanistan was ineffective
. That of Sudan was illegal and militarily indefensible. Revenge is not the response 
of a sophisticated political community. America above all should know Thomas Paine�s 
plea, to �lay the axe to the root and teach governm
ents humanity . . . sanguinary punishments corrupt mankind�.
To react to an atrocity by abandoning the customary self-control of democracy is to 
help the terrorist to do his work. He wants America to behave as the regional bully of 
local demonology. To extend further America�s Midd
le East economic santions, isolation and military aggression offers succour to the 
terrorist. These policies have not hastened the spread of democracy or stability 
through the region. They have, if anything, done the reve
rse. They should be replaced with policies of engagement, trade, friendship and 
contact.
The message of yesterday�s incident is that, for all its horror, it does not and
must not be allowed to matter. It is a human disaster, an outrage, an
atrocity, an unleashing of the madness of which the world will never be rid.
But it is not politically significant. It does not tilt the balance of world power
one inch. It is not an act of war. America�s leadership of the West is not
diminished by it. The cause of democracy is not damaged, unless we
choose to let it be damaged.
Maturity lies in learning to live, and sometimes die, with the madmen.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Copyright 2001 Times Newspapers Ltd.

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