(1) to inflict significant random casualties, causing as much terror and disruption as they can (terrorists always like to see people afraid).
(2) subvert the entire refugee process, hopefully ending it, so that all potential refugees will "know" that they can't escape, and will submit to them.
(3) make the name of Islam stink in the nostrils of the West (our own politicians and media are already helping spread the word that 'all Muslims are terrorists'), again to remove hope from all those in the Middle East who want them destroyed.
(4) to financially bankrupt the West as we attempt to destroy an idea militarily.
(5) to morally bankrupt the West as we subvert our own values in the name of freedom and the War On Terrorism.
First reaction: Damn them. Damn all anarchists /terrorists/ bombers/ fanatics, of every religion, of every creed, of every political persuasion, past, present and future, who always prefer to see frightened children, weeping families, and dead bodies than have anyone escape their cultish claws...
The problem with a war on terrorism is, of course, that it's actually a war on an idea, and ideas never die. But, when they become overwhelmingly popular and attractive, they can easily, rapidly lead to mass violence and murder. Now, before you go off and say, "see, I told you!" The other side of ideas is that people can change their minds, and an idea that seemed absolutely universally true can become relegated to something abhorrent, or quaint, or completely unimportant.
Examples: the divine right of kings, infant damnation, the geocentric solar system, the subjection of women, the general inferiority of other races (common in Europe, China,Anarchism was one of those ideas. The idea really caught on in the late 1700s, during the Enlightenment, when Jean Jacques Rousseau, my least favorite philosopher, wrote a number of works that, among other things, claimed that private property was the root of all evil, and that uncorrupted morals prevailed in the state of nature that [supposedly] existed before government came along. In his work The Social Contract, he said "The larger the state, the less liberty". (Yes, Thomas Jefferson read Rousseau - EVERYONE read Rousseau, from Robespierre to Bolivar to Ho Chi Minh, which, imho, is part of the problem.) Small, city-states were ideal, in which [only] men exercised their freedom on election day. Now here's where Rousseau put an edge on the blade: he believed that the majority would always be right; and therefore the minority must be "forced to be free", i.e., obey the majority. And if they continue to rebel, kill them.
and Japan), the mercantilist theory of economics, and the hugely popular notion that war is the normal condition between any two countries.
John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937), the richest man in America. Ever. |
The Gilded Age was Grover Nordquist's wet dream: no income tax, no unions, no minimum wage, no regulations on industry, and government's only role was to collect foreign tariffs and defend our borders. It was a time of huge economic inequality. From 1860 to 1900, the wealthiest 2% of American households owned more than a third of the nation's wealth, and the top 10% owned 75% of it. There wasn't much left for the rest. And the most popular philosophies among the upper classes said that was the way it should be: Herbert Spencer's Social Darwinism applied survival of the fittest to people and nations, making the poor simply lazy and unfit, while William Graham Sumner's push for a totally laissez-faire economy (What Social Classes Owe to Each Other, 1884) assured everyone that assistance to the poor only weakens their ability to survive in society.
Jacob Riis, Five Cents Lodging, Bayard Street |
Now the anarchists weren't the only ones challenging the status quo, but they got the most press because they were the most violent. They didn't just talk about destroying the state. Thanks to the invention of dynamite, they worked at physically destroying it. They bombed public places, killing innocent civilians. They assassinated some very important figures. Some of the more notorious examples are:
- November 8, 1893, the Barcelona Opera House was bombed during a performance of "William Tell", leaving 72 dead or seriously injured.
- December 9, 1893 - Anarchist Auguste Vaillant bombed the Paris Chamber of Deputies, injuring 20.
- Februrary 12, 1894 - Emile Henry bombed the Cafe Terminus in Paris, killing one and injurying 20.
- June 7, 1896 - an unknown anarchist dropped a bomb on the traditional procession of the Sacred Host (it was Corpus Christi) in Barcelona, killing 23 people.
- May 31, 1906 - a bomb was set off at the wedding of Spanish King Alfonso XIII and his bride Victoria Eugenie “Ena” of Battenberg. The royal couple survived, but 25 people were killed and 130 were injured.
- April, 1919 - at least 36 booby-trapped, dynamite-filled bombs were mailed to a variety of politicians, appointees, and businessmen, including John D. Rockefeller.
- June 2, 1919 - coordinated bombs were set off, almost simultaneously, in New York, Boston, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Patterson, New Jersey, Washington D.C., and Philadelphia. The intended targets included a mayor, a state legislator, three judges, two businessmen, a cop, and a Catholic priest. No intended victim was hurt, but it terrorized the American public.
- September 16, 1920 - a wagon full of explosives and shrapnel was set off in front of the Wall Street offices of J.P. Morgan & Co., killing 39 and injuring hundreds more.
And then there were the assassinations:
- June 24, 1894 - French President Sadi Carnot was stabbed to death in Lyon, France.
- March 13, 1881 - Russian Tsar Alexander II was killed by one of three bombs that were set off, killing him and at least two others, as well as wounding a number of people in the crowd.
- July 29, 1900 - King Umberto I of Italy was shot to death.
- September 6, 1901 - US President William McKinley was shot to death.
- February 1, 1908 - King Carlos I of Portugal, along with his heir Luis Filipe, were shot to death.
- September 10, 1908 - Austrian Empress Elizabeth (wife of Emperor Franz Joseph I) was stabbed to death.
- And, of course, on June 28, 1914, the Austrian heir to the throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife, Sophie, were shot by Gavril Princip, sparking World War I.
Assassination of Alexander II |
So, what was the reaction to these 30 years of terror, bombings, and assassinations? The following is patched together from Johann Hari's excellent article "Blood Rage and History" in the September 22, 2011 Independent: Terror, a crackdown on immigration, a "bonfire of civil liberties" - in 1920, after the Wall Street Bombing, Congress declared anarchism "un-American", and said anybody preaching it would be held responsible for "aiding" the attacks. (This was the first time that an idea had ever been declared un-American.) A wave of arrests and convictions of people who actually hadn't done anything but talk quickly followed. (There were some protests, but not a lot.) But Spain, Italy, and other countries were worse, "and the countries that had the harshest crackdowns ended up with the largest anarchist movements of all, while those that reacted calmly and kept their freedoms open saw the movements implode much faster."
"From the 1920s on, the anarchist attacks began to dwindle, and by the late 1930s they were over. Why? What happened? Nobody is entirely sure – but most historians suggest a few factors. After the initial wave of state repression, civil liberties slowly advanced – undermining the anarchist claims. The indiscriminate attacks on ordinary civilians discredited anarchism in the eyes of the wider public: after a young man blew himself up in Greenwich Park in 1892, his coffin was stoned and attacked by working class people in the East End. The anarchists' own cruelty and excess slowly deprived them of recruits.
"But, just as importantly, many of the anarchist grievances were addressed by steady reforms. Trade unions were finally legalised, and many of their demands were achieved one by one: an eight-hour working day, greater safety protections, compensation for the injured. Work was no longer so barbaric – so the violent rejection of it faded away. The changes were nowhere near as radical as those demanded by the anarchists, but it stripped them of followers step-by-step." Ibid, Hari.
Can this be applied today? The simple answer is, yes. Changes can be made that would address some of the Islamic extremist grievances - two suggestions Hari gives are to abolish torture (even if everyone else is doing it), get free of our oil addiction so we no longer have to be the hired guns for anyone with oil, starting with the house of Saud, which has been and is supporting, harboring, and financing Wahabism, Al Qaeda, the Taliban, and other extremist groups for years. (See Charles Pierce's Esquire piece, There Is Only One Way to Defeat Isis , in which he says "As long as people are dying in Paris, nobody important is dying in Doha or Riyadh.")
Even more, though, we should address the fact that most jihadists are unemployed young men, both those who are home-grown Arabs and those who are recruited from Western cities around the world. Let's face facts: young men who are not employed and/or married and (for whatever reason) cannot become employed and/or married are dangerous. They are restless, discontent, and prone to go off after anyone who will promise them what they want.
These young men have to be given hope, yes, but not just a vision of it (the extremists give them that), but actual practical things, like a job and a home and a family. Seriously, this is the way terrorism has always been sparked and how it has always been quenched, from Roman times (read up on the Zealots some time) to the Anarchists.
Two Notes: (1) this holds true for our own home-grown malcontents, who are responsible for the majority of those 290 deaths in mass shootings and counting in the USA in 2015. (2) The Middle East, China and India, have the highest levels of men to women sex ratios in the world, due to in utero sex selection, one-child policies, preference for boys, and (in the Middle East) guest workers. Right now we're worried about Middle East men. Some day, someone's going to have to deal with the 30 million [each] of Chinese and Indian men who will not only never be married, but never even be able to get a date. [Yes, there's a reason for the horrific rise of gang-rapes in India.] Unless someone figures out a peaceful solution, we will be dealing with new terrorist groups, under new names, but will be as horrific as the others. But more on that another time.
Sex ratio by country for total population. Blue represents more women, red more men than the world average of 1.01 males/female. DBachmann, Wikipedia |
"Instead of spending astronomical sums on arms, let us spend instead on roads, hospitals, schools, houses, businesses, to create jobs and so on. Instead of financing war, let us purchase peace." Girardian Jean Michel-Oughourlian, Psychopolitics, p. 23
Forsooth, you have the right of it.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jerry.
ReplyDeleteA thought provoking thesis, Eve. We, (the people) have a tendency to react to attacks on our freedom and our lives by seeking immediate retaliation. I am guilty of that. But it is a simplistic reaction to a complex problem. Something has to be done--and quickly. Unlike a war where the enemy is easily identified, (Hitler, the Kaiser), we are fighting an idea. That is a depressing thought.
ReplyDeleteI think you're right on the money, Eve. Which is precisely why I joined Special Forces when I was in the army. Our job was much more "hearts and minds" driven than those Rambo movies may lead folks to be believe.
ReplyDeleteFurther, I was constantly fascinated to discover how our previously-gathered intelligence was often put to good use in surprising ways. For instance: when conducting clean-up and reconstruction operations in a certain region of Panama (after removing Manuel Noriega from power), we tended to hire male indigenous population members to do the work, and we paid in cash. BUT ... we didn't pay the men; they had to send their wives to us, and we paid the cash to those women instead. When I asked the warrant officer in charge of payments why we had this policy, he explained that our intel indicated the men in this region would tend to spend the money frivolously (alcohol, gambling, living large), while the women evidently tended to spend the money more frugally, in a manner intended to support the family. Since part of our aim was to infuse capital into the suffering economy there, we were happy to pay large wages, but -- because we also wanted to ensure stability -- we paid those wages to the wives or mothers of the men who worked for us, instead of to the male workers themselves.
I would, however, also point out that I feel it is sometimes worthwhile to conduct selected targeting of certain individuals or small organizations (while still concentrating primarily on what I would term the "Psy-War"), in order to remove (or -- better yet -- discredit and embarrass) certain "true believers" who hold key positions of influence, in order to convince others that those individuals or organizations do not represent a logical or acceptable avenue to success. These types of operations, however, are not possible if the National Command Authority stays married to "safe for our forces", "stand-off" attack methods, such as airstrikes. Instead, success in this arena requires great skill coupled with strategic planning, along with deep-rooted area knowledge and intel, that permit very small teams to accomplish clandestine missions. Missions of this sort take place in a gray area, sometimes involving complex moral and ethical decisions, in which the physical or social destruction of a human (or humans) must be balanced against the negative implications of discovery. Not easy.
Herschel, it is a depressing thought - but humanity has fought ideas before and won, and THAT'S what we need to remember.
ReplyDeleteI agree, Dixon, sometimes specific "targeting" may indeed be necessary. But specific, careful, etc., which (sadly) I don't believe our drone warfare is. Every time a hospital, a child, a family is hit by a "safe for our forces" airstrike, it only makes us look heartless, and increases hatred. (As it would if someone used such tactics against us.)
Basically, a war against ideas takes thoughtful planning, thoughtful execution, attention all the way around... and when we're in full reaction mode, that's very hard to do. (Plus, but don't spread it too far, we in the US have a tendency to rely on the "we're the greatest!" way of thinking to "keep things simple.")
Agreed in full. Like I said: Not easy.
ReplyDelete--Dixon
Eve, I'm a believer.
ReplyDeleteSide note: I’ve never been in a labor union but I have friends pretty far to the right who insist unions are commie organizations. Yet a study of economics strongly suggests the rise of labor unions and the rights they obtained for citizens thwarted communism from taking root in the Americas.