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Richard Purser Purser: It's a Long, Long War

Authorities arrested five suspected terrorist plotters

Written by Richard Purser   
 
 
 
 
 
After U.S. authorities arrested five suspected terrorist plotters in Miami on June 22, there was considerable skepticism about the seriousness of their plot, which allegedly included an intention to bring down the Sears Tower in Chicago. The accused (including two other men arrested separately) appeared not to have advanced very far with their plot – “more aspirational than operational,” said the FBI’s deputy director – and to have been amateurish in their activities to date. But action had to be taken when it looked like they were cottoning on to a government informant posing as an al-Qaeda representative.

Only as the case wends its way through the courts will we learn just how dangerous these men really were.

There had already been some skepticism expressed after the sensational arrest by Canadian authorities of 17 terrorist suspects in and around Toronto on June 2. At least some of the suspects appeared less than up to attaining their lurid list of alleged goals, which included the prime minister’s head. But action had to be taken; explosives had already been purchased, which is more than can be said of the Miami case.

Again, we won’t really know until the details come out in the courts. But there was little skepticism voiced after the events of August 10, when British authorities arrested a couple of dozen men who were allegedly on the verge of blowing up as many as 10 airliners bound from the UK to the U.S. Within less than two weeks, about half of those arrested had been formally charged, eight of them accused of conspiring to commit murder by smuggling bomb components onto aircraft to assemble and detonate.

Simultaneous with the arrests came a crackdown on airport security, since the police could not be certain they had captured all the plotters. The ramifications of this have been worldwide and will be long-felt. Large-scale plots aside, we can never be certain that individual freelance bombers will not be inspired to die spectacularly in the service of whatever loathsome cause they represent.

The particular loathsome cause in all of the above cases is radical Islam, although the pioneer of modern suicide bombing – pardon me, “martyrdom operations” – appears to be a Hindu gang of murderers, Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tigers. The term given by President Bush to the present form of Muslim extremism is “Islamo-facism.” Kashif Ahmed of Regina, communications director of Muslims for Peace and Justice, recently complained that this was ”highly prejudicial as it characterizes as fascist the faith of more than 1.2 billion Muslims.” Of course, it does nothing of the kind. It characterizes as fascist the faith only of those Muslims who are extremists, not all 1.2 billion Muslims! But “fascist” is perhaps not an ideal label; it derives from European political movements of the 1930s. I would prefer “Islamo-fanaticism.”

But enough of semantics. Let’s go back to the British plot. What’s really scary is to think about what would have been the result if 10 planes had vanished over the North Atlantic in a single afternoon – or crashed in populated areas on their approach to their destinations – followed by release of the “martyrdom videos” that the police say they have captured. It might have been the end of the age of aviation as we know it.

Even as it is, it will be difficult for some time – perhaps permanently – to board a U.S.-bound intercontinental flight without feeling some qualm. And one does not want to think about the stress that must be felt by the U.S. airline crews who regularly fly these heavily travelled routes. Of course, you don’t have to be Muslim to be a fanatic or a terrorist. But today, Islamic terrorism poses a worldwide threat to civilization, and it is futile to be in denial about this. It’s tough for ordinary Muslims living in the West and trying only to make their way in the world, yet feeling that they are being looked at askance every time they walk down the street. But the gloves have to come off in the “war on terror,” and if individual sensibilities sometimes have to suffer in the process – well, as Walter Cronkite used to put it, “that’s the way it is.”