WSJ
 
 
 
Europe’s New Terrorist  Normal
Islamist attacks are becoming routine  on the Continent.

 
 
Feb. 15, 2015 2:52 p.m.  ET 
Islamist violence visited Denmark twice on the weekend, underscoring Europe’
s  new terrorist normal. Homegrown or immigrant Muslim terrorists targeting 
 innocents and the Western way of life are becoming a feature of 
Continental  life. 
The alleged assailant didn’t choose his victims at random. First he fired  
dozens of rounds at a cafe in Copenhagen during a debate on free speech, 
killing  one and wounding three. Police believe the same man attacked a 
synagogue hours  later, killing a Jewish civilian guard and maiming two 
officers. 
Early Sunday  police killed the man they believe committed both attacks. 
Witnesses heard him  cry “Allahu Akbar” during the cafe assault. 
Among those attending the debate at the Krudttoenden cafe was Swedish 
artist  Lars Vilks, who has received death threats and an al Qaeda bounty since 
the 2007  publication of a cartoon he drew that mocked Muhammad. A failed 
suicide bomber  attacking downtown Stockholm in 2010 mentioned Mr. Vilks’s name 
in an email  explaining his motives, and later that year the cartoonist’s 
home was the target  of arson. He lives under police protection. 
Denmark is also home to Jyllands-Posten, the newspaper that set off days of 
 Muslim rage world-wide in 2005 by publishing Muhammad cartoons. Five 
suspected  terrorists were arrested in 2010 and four later convicted for 
plotting 
to murder  Jyllands-Posten staffers, and an ax-wielding Somali tried but 
failed to murder  one of the newspaper’s cartoonists at his home. 
The 8,000-strong Danish Jewish community has also been besieged by  
anti-Semitism from the country’s Muslim quarters. In 2012 Israel’s Ambassador 
to  
Denmark warned visiting Israelis not to wear kippahs and other visible 
religious  symbols.  
Elite hostility to Israel amplifies street-level anti-Semitism. The Danish  
government has disbursed millions of kroner to anti-Israel activists and  
agitprop campaigns in recent years, according to NGO Monitor, an Israeli  
civil-society organization. Perhaps Danish officials will now spend less time  
henpecking Jerusalem about efforts to prevent terrorism and devote more 
energy  to protecting their own citizens from the same forces. 
They might look to France, where since the attacks on the satirical 
newspaper  Charlie Hebdo and a kosher supermarket, the government of Prime 
Minister 
Manuel  Valls has ramped up counterterror powers. These include isolating 
jihadists in  prison, giving security forces broader authority to monitor 
terror suspects  online, and boosting staff and funding at intelligence 
agencies. These prudent  measures, so bewailed by imprudent civil libertarians, 
can 
help avert  large-scale atrocities that would result in public demand for 
mass detentions,  expulsions and other broad restrictions. 
Stopping terrorism from becoming normal will also require describing  
accurately the jihadist threat. The Obama Administration in the U.S. has 
refused  
to identify Islamism—or even “Islamic extremism”—as the ideology behind 
the  recent attacks on the Continent and the horrors in Syria and Iraq. Such  
obfuscation doesn’t help moderate and reformist Muslims, whose cooperation 
is  essential to defeating jihadists. Copenhagen can set a counterterror 
example by  calling the enemy by its name.

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
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Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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