Four years after 9/11 we are saying, effectively, that we are not winning
the "war on terror." 
 
http://www.newsday.com/news/columnists/ny-opcoc194349290jul19,0,2068467.colu
mn?coll=ny-news-columnists
 
  

A clearer view of terror in a blurry war

Marie Cocco

July 19, 2005

Michael Chertoff scares me. That's good, because Tom Ridge was just making
us laugh.

Chertoff, the new homeland security chief, has been making the rounds after
months buried in the bowels of the broken bureaucracy he inherited from
Ridge. He's thrown out the childish props that provided so much raw material
for late-night comics. No duct tape for him.

Chertoff knows that few of the most visible "homeland security" measures the
Bush administration made so much of after 9/11 are going to help us.
Certainly not the color-coded national threat-o-meter, which made people in
Minnesota think they needed to worry as much as people in Manhattan. Not the
30-minute, no-stand rule aboard airliners flying in and out of Washington.
Soon we may hear it is no longer necessary to force toddlers to remove their
Shrek sneakers before boarding.

Chertoff is a serious man who insists upon talking about such serious
possibilities as an attack involving nuclear materials and the need for his
department to have a chief medical officer to prevent and "mitigate" the
effects of a biological attack. Listening to him, you sense that he agrees
with just about every police official who popped up on TV in the days
immediately after the London bombings. We can't prevent every attack, they
said.

So in Chertoff's view, the federal government's job is to try to prevent -
and respond to - the worst of the worst-case scenarios. It is a sober idea,
and altogether impolitic. The homeland security secretary came under fire
from urban lawmakers, particularly those from New York, who took umbrage at
his musings about the need to put priority on preventing an attack that
would involve mass casualties, rather than "a bomb in a subway car (that)
may kill 30 people."

The logic is reasonable. But it leads inevitably to a judgment no one dares
speak.

Four years after 9/11 we are saying, effectively, that we are not winning
the "war on terror." What other explanation is there for a homeland security
chief - a man so competent that his public statements cannot hide his
conclusions - who has so much to worry about that he cannot really concern
himself with a mere subway bombing?

Or ask the question another way, perhaps the way Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld asked it in October 2003: "Are we capturing, killing or deterring
and dissuading more terrorists every day than the madrassas and the radical
clerics are recruiting, training and deploying against us?" Obviously not.

The Madrid and London transit attacks, not to mention the Iraq insurgency,
give lie to any assertion that we somehow are gaining ground in a "war" we
seem to insist can be won through military means. It cannot. We eliminated
the Afghan training camps, only to have London's homegrown bombers go to
Pakistan - a nation the White House counts as an ally - for terrorist
indoctrination or training or both.

President George W. Bush repeats the creed that we are fighting terrorists
in Iraq so that we do not have to fight them here at home. But Britain, too,
is fighting in Iraq. So was Spain at the time of the Madrid attack. Did it
make them safer?

What of the notion that the terrorists "hate our freedoms," as the president
has famously asserted, and detest our way of life? The presumed London
suicide bombers were themselves free, born and bred in Britain. The
attackers turned against family and country, but there's no indication they
sought to impose a fundamentalist theocracy upon England out of sheer hatred
for democratic capitalism.

The president recites mantras and calls them counter-terrorism policies.
They aren't. They are speeches meant first to soothe voters during his
re-election campaign and since then to placate a public increasingly ill at
ease with the Iraq war. They omit any reference to U.S. policy in the Middle
East, a political grievance that terrorist trainers exploit with ease.

Now the homeland security chief tells us we continue to be at risk for a
catastrophe that troubles his sleep more than the prospect of a bomb or two
on a subway or bus. Chertoff manages to instill faith in his own stewardship
while simultaneously undermining confidence in the president he serves. 

Copyright 2005 Newsday Inc.



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