http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=20826
Creating Effective Incentives
 
by Walter E. Williams 
Posted: 05/22/2007
What should our response be if terrorists set off a nuclear explosion, or
some other weapon of mass destruction, in one of our cities? I put this
question to Professor Victor Hanson, senior research fellow at Stanford
University's prestigious Hoover Institution, who spoke on the Iraq war at
the Wynnewood Institute lecture series.

His answer to my question bore a slight resemblance to a classroom practice
of mine. At the beginning of each semester, I tell my students that I'm
getting old and a cell phone ringing during my lecture could be devastating
to my train of thought. Therefore, the penalty for a student's cell phone
going off in class is a five percent reduction in his total points for the
semester and a five percent reduction in the total points of the students
sitting on either side of him. Of course, the students are shocked. The
penalty might not be fair, penalizing a person for the actions of another,
but I've not had trouble with cell phones going off in class.

Professor Hanson's answer referenced his July 6, 2004, National Review
article titled "Another 9/11? The Awful Response That We Dare Not Speak
About." He argues that without the direct aid of countries like Iran, Syria
and rogue elements within the Saudi Arabian, Jordanian and Pakistani
governments, and millions of ordinary Arabs, who know who terrorists are and
where they sleep and won't turn them in, a massive terrorist attack on the
United States would be nearly impossible. That means terrorists have some
kind of local support. If there is an attack on our country, with weapons of
mass destruction, the first thing we can expect is for country officials to
deny any responsibility. Hanson says that we should beforehand tell the
leaders of Middle East countries that if there's an attack on the United
States, we will hold them responsible if they're proven to have aided or
sheltered the terrorists. 


Holding the country responsible would mean that in response to an attack
we'd totally destroy their military bases, power plants, communication
facilities and, if necessary, totally destroy their major cities. You say,
"Williams, that's unthinkable!" Yes, while unpleasant, it is thinkable.
That's precisely how 50 years of peace were maintained between the Western
powers and the former Soviet Union. The leaders of the USSR knew that any
attack on the United States would provoke an immediate massive nuclear
retaliation. As frightening as the policy of Mutually Assured Destruction
was, in the absence of a better strategy, neither Americans nor Russians
were incinerated.

Laying down such a gauntlet is nothing new; it simply requires courageous
leadership. In the wake of the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, President John F.
Kennedy credibly warned the leaders of the Soviet Union that: "It shall be
the policy of this nation to regard any nuclear missile launched from Cuba
against any nation in the Western Hemisphere as an attack by the Soviet
Union on the United States, requiring a full retaliatory response upon the
Soviet Union." There's little question that President Kennedy's "full
retaliatory response" would have included nuclear weapons.

Unfortunately, today, there's neither the American leadership nor the
American character to protect ourselves from people whose declared aim is to
destroy us. It's not just Americans, but the West in general, who have lost
the will to protect themselves from the barbarism of the Middle East. Keep
in mind that the mighty Roman Empire fell to barbarians who ushered in the
Dark Ages.


 



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