"...a simplistic black-and-white view of the enemy is not helpful in
winning this kind of conflict. As counter-insurgency experts have
taught for decades, effective strategies to quell rebellions require
multilayered responses aimed at winning hearts and minds, not just
killing all possible enemies.

These military experts note that success requires identifying
legitimate grievances, taking concrete steps to address these
problems, and then isolating the hard-core enemies."

"After years of bloody attacks, the back-and-forth terrorism between
the IRA and Protestant militants was brought under control as new
leaders, ironically including British Prime Minister Tony Blair, edged
back from the hard lines, addressed the reasonable demands of the
warring sides, and isolated the violent fringes.

Yet, given how deeply Bush has dug himself in to his
“with-us-or-with-the-terrorists” strategies, it is difficult to
envision how the United States might clamber out of the hole,
especially the one in Iraq, in the near future."

It would be nice to be able to draw an exact parallel between the IRA
and Al Qaeda, but of course, there is a vast difference between the
political Marxist/nationalist IRA and the fanatic Islamist Al Qaeda. 
It is doubtful there is any middle ground whatsoever possible between
the U.S. position of endless war to stamp out terror and the Al Qaeda
position of endless war to extend the Wahhabi version of the Khalifah
worldwide.
Thus it is very likely that while the lessons in the article are
noteworthy, and essentially true, they will mean little in the context
of stamping out terror.  Nor will Bush43's premise for fighting the
war in Iraq to keep terrorists out of the homeland prove true; given
the huge jump in terrorist recruiting (our Army should be so lucky)
and the large terror training ground in Iraq that Bush43 has so
thoughtfully provided.  Its graduates will go somewhere they hate. 
And that is us.

David Bier
http://consortiumnews.com/2005/070905.html

Lessons of the London Bombing

By Robert Parry
July 9, 2005

At about 9:30 a.m. on July 7, an overcast Thursday, I left a hotel in
the Kensington section of London and walked â€" with my wife and
16-year-old son â€" toward the Earl’s Court subway station, planning to
take the Piccadilly line to Heathrow Airport to catch a noontime
flight back to Washington.

When we reached the Underground, we found a surge of people moving
away from the entrance. We were told that the station was being
evacuated because of some emergency elsewhere in the system, possibly
an electrical explosion.

With little prospect for finding a cab and unclear how widespread the
problem was, we began trudging off â€" luggage in hand â€" toward the next
stop on the line, at Barons Court. Many Londoners were doing the same,
some in their business suits with cell phones to their ears trying to
glean the latest detail of what was happening.

The sorry parade had the feel of a disaster film in which people are
suddenly denied the transportation that they so casually rely on.

When we finally reached Barons Court, guards barred the door to that
station, too, informing us that multiple explosions had forced the
closing of the entire London Underground. It was becoming clear that
this incident wasn’t just the result of a malfunctioning electrical grid.

At the advice of one security guard, we double-backed about a quarter
mile and found a store-front office of a “mini-cab” company. We
secured the services of its last available car, which for the price of
40 pounds took us â€" and an elderly chap on his way to Belfast â€" to
Heathrow Airport.

By the time we boarded our flight and departed for Washington early in
the afternoon, news reports were describing how four bombs â€" three on
subway cars and a fourth on a double-decker bus â€" had killed an
undetermined number of people in London. Suspicions were already
focused on an al-Qaeda connection.

Back in the USA

Several hours later, after we landed at Dulles Airport, we climbed
into a cab for the last leg of our trip back to Arlington, Va.

The cab driver was listening to a right-wing radio station that was
already drawing lessons from the London bombings. George W. Bush’s
wisdom and resolve were vindicated again, the radio voices told us,
while American liberals were cowards and traitors for wanting to
coddle terrorists.

We were back in the USA.

But what are the real lessons of the London bombings â€" and what do
those lessons mean for the Iraq War, the War on Terror, and the shaky
future of American democracy?

First, there is the forensic evidence, the relatively crude nature of
the four bombs.

That could be viewed as a negative or a positive. On the one hand,
assuming that these bombs indeed were the work of a militant Islamic
group, their simplicity could suggest a declining terrorist
capability. On the other hand, the bombs indicate that even amateurish
terrorist cells can disrupt the functioning of a sophisticated city
like London and kill scores of people.

The London bombings suggest, too, that al-Qaeda may be evolving into a
diffused movement, more an inspiration to disaffected Muslim youth on
how to wage war against the West than a centralized organization that
hatches complex plots and dispatches operatives to carry out the attacks.

Bush’s Illogical Claims

Second, again assuming that there is some tie-in to Islamic terrorism,
the London bombings undercut one of Bush’s primary arguments for
continuing the war in Iraq â€" that fighting the “terrorists” there
somehow prevents them for attacking elsewhere.

As Bush said in his June 18 radio address, “Our troops are fighting
these terrorists in Iraq so you will not have to face them here at home.”

This argument has always flown in the face of both logic and U.S.
intelligence analyses, which have concluded that hatreds stirred up by
the invasion of Iraq have been a recruiting boon for al-Qaeda,
strengthening Islamic extremism, not weakening it.

Plus, it made no sense to think that fighting extremists in Iraq
precluded other extremists from launching attacks in Europe or the
United States. Rather, the opposite would almost certainly be true,
that hardened veterans of the Iraq conflict â€" or sympathetic Muslims
already living in the West â€" were more likely to avenge the deaths of
Iraqi civilians by killing civilians in countries that have sent
troops to Iraq, such as Great Britain.

But Bush’s case for the Iraq War was never strong on logic. It’s
always been about pushing America’s “hot buttons” â€" whether
exaggerating threats from Saddam Hussein’s supposed weapons of mass
destruction or juxtaposing references to Iraq and the Sept. 11 attacks
despite the lack of evidence linking the two.

The use of “hot buttons” â€" rather than reason â€" has been a conscious
policy of Washington’s neoconservatives since the early 1980s when
this CIA-style practice, known internally as “perception management,”
was employed to control how Americans perceived the bloody conflicts
in Central America. [For details, see Robert Parry’s Secrecy &
Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq or his
earlier book, Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & Project Truth.]

Baiting War Critics

The neoconservatives found that these P.R. tactics from the 1980s
worked even better after the horrors of the hijacked-plane attacks on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. As Bush and his allies
consolidated political power after Sept. 11, 2001, the strategy â€"
especially during the run-up to the war in Iraq â€" was to bait
opponents, not debate them. [For more, see Consortiumnews.com’s
“Baiting, Not Debating.”]

Just last month, facing deepening criticism over his Iraq War
policies, Bush returned to this approach, unleashing his deputy chief
of staff Karl Rove to mock “liberals” for supposedly demonstrating a
cowardly naivety in the face of the Sept. 11 terrorism.

“Conservatives saw the savagery of 9/11 in the attacks and prepared
for war; liberals saw the savagery of the 9/11 attacks and wanted to
prepare indictments and offer therapy and understanding for our
attackers,” Rove said in a speech to the Conservative Party of New
York State on June 22.

“I don’t know about you, but moderation and restraint is not what I
felt when I watched the Twin Towers crumble to the ground, a side of
the Pentagon destroyed, and almost 3,000 of our fellow citizens perish
in flames and rubble,” Rove said.

Although Bush spoke after the London bombings about the need for an
“ideology of hope,” he has shown little willingness to rethink a
counter-terrorism strategy based on the prospects of endless war.

Indeed, a chilling subtext of Rove’s speech is the demonization of
anyone who suggests that conventional warfare may be a clumsy and even
counter-productive tool to employ against terrorism. To recommend
scaling back the level of violence â€" away from war toward a police
operation or, in Rove’s scoffing words, “to prepare indictments” â€" is
deemed proof of weakness.

‘Moral Relativism’

Typical of Bush’s backers, radio talk show host Kevin McCullough used
the London bombings as another opportunity to denounce American
liberals as cowards whose very existence endangers the nation.

“What none of the Left in America understand is that this life can’t
be lived by sheer moral relativism,” McCullough said, according to a
text of his comments distributed by the Christian Wire Service. “They
are afraid of this because they don’t wish to be forced to curb their
own behavior to actually become moral people.

“But their fears aside, the unwillingness to look at the face of Satan
and call it what it is jeopardizes all of us. These people can not be
trusted with national security because they have no sense of the
difference between good and evil.”

McCullough then advocated what he termed “the only moral way to deal
with” terrorists: “Track them down. Kill as many of them as we can in
the field of battle. Those we capture put on trial. Those who are
found guilty, put to death.”

Yet, while sentiments about exterminating terrorists may be satisfying
on an emotional level, vengeance is not a realistic solution to the
broader problem of Islamic anger against what vast numbers of Middle
Easterners see as Western exploitation and occupation of their lands.

According to polls, many Muslims â€" as well as many non-Muslims â€" see
Bush as a greater threat to the world than Osama bin Laden. So simply
lashing out at real or suspected “bad guys” is only likely to
perpetuate the cycles of violence and retaliation, not lead to some
end game to the conflict.

Cooler Heads

A third lesson from the London bombings appears to be that the world
does face a growing risk that the tit-for-tat violence between the
warring sides will spread geographically, worsening fears and
deepening hatreds.

Further, a simplistic black-and-white view of the enemy is not helpful
in winning this kind of conflict. As counter-insurgency experts have
taught for decades, effective strategies to quell rebellions require
multilayered responses aimed at winning hearts and minds, not just
killing all possible enemies.

These military experts note that success requires identifying
legitimate grievances, taking concrete steps to address these
problems, and then isolating the hard-core enemies.

Along these lines in the 1980s, conservative counter-insurgency
experts advocated a theory called “low-intensity conflict.” Their
thinking was that conflict existed on a broad spectrum of violence
from nuclear warfare at one end to political clashes on the other,
with conventional war and guerrilla fighting in between.

The goal was to shift conflicts toward the lower end of the violence
spectrum where eventually they could be handled by police, courts and
the political system.

In effect, Bush’s approach to the War on Terror and the Iraq War has
been a repudiation of these “low-intensity” theories, which were
promoted by conservatives, such as retired Special Forces Major F.
Andy Messing Jr., founder of the National Defense Council, a private
group that worked closely with Ronald Reagan’s White House.

By contrast, Bush has advocated escalating the violence up the
spectrum, especially with his conventional military invasion of Iraq
in March 2003. Meanwhile, at home, his advisers skillfully exploited
Bush’s image as a “war president” to achieve the Right’s long-sought
consolidation of political power across all three branches of the U.S.
government.

Though Bush’s approach has proven politically advantageous
domestically, it has led to the deaths of tens of thousands of Iraqis,
the loss of more than 1,700 U.S. soldiers and a worsening
international cycle of violence.

With this violence seemingly spinning out of control, Bush’s strategy
also has had the negative consequence of enhancing bin Laden’s
reputation among Muslims, rather than pushing him to the political
margins.

IRA Case

A fourth lesson that can be drawn from the London bombings is that the
route out of the current mess may come from letting cooler heads
prevail â€" as Londoners have done after the July 7 atrocities.

Besides their traditional stiff-upper-lip philosophy, Londoners may
have gained some wisdom from their previous experience with terrorism
â€" the bitter conflict with the Irish Republican Army.

After years of bloody attacks, the back-and-forth terrorism between
the IRA and Protestant militants was brought under control as new
leaders, ironically including British Prime Minister Tony Blair, edged
back from the hard lines, addressed the reasonable demands of the
warring sides, and isolated the violent fringes.

Yet, given how deeply Bush has dug himself in to his
“with-us-or-with-the-terrorists” strategies, it is difficult to
envision how the United States might clamber out of the hole,
especially the one in Iraq, in the near future.

But the restoration of rational â€" and even respectful â€" discourse
about realistic options might be a good place to start.

Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for
the Associated Press and Newsweek. 




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