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Calling Fort Hood act of terrorism is simplistic, says OpEd
In which Frank Rich, OpEd columnist for the New York Times, makes some valid points as to the connection between the Fort Hood rampage and the policy in Afghanistan:
Rich critiques what those on the right have been saying, and offers up some valid points about the crux of what occurred:
(*For an opposing OpEd, see this piece at the American Thinker.)
THE dead at Fort Hood had not even been laid to rest when their massacre became yet another political battle cry for the self-proclaimed patriots of the American right.
Their verdict was unambiguous: Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, an American-born psychiatrist of Palestinian parentage who sent e-mail to a radical imam, was a terrorist. And he did not act alone. His co-conspirators included our military brass, the Defense Department, the F.B.I., the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the Joint Terrorism Task Force and, of course, the liberal media and the Obama administration. All these institutions had failed to heed the warning signs raised by Hasan’s behavior and activities because they are blinded by political correctness toward Muslims, too eager to portray criminals as sympathetic victims of social injustice, and too cowardly to call out evil when it strikes 42 innocents in cold blood. [. . . ]
[. . . ] As a snapshot of where a chunk of the country stands right now, these reactions to the Fort Hood bloodbath could not be more definitive. And it’s quite possible that some of what this crowd says is right — not about Islam in general, but about the systemic failure to stop a homicidal maniac like Hasan in particular. Whether he was an actual terrorist or an unfathomable mass murderer merely dabbling in jihadist ideas, the repeated red flags during his Army career illuminate a pattern of lapses in America’s national security. Whether those indicators were ignored because of political correctness, bureaucratic dysfunction, sheer incompetence or some hybrid thereof is still unclear, but, whichever, the system failed.Yet the mass murder at Fort Hood didn’t happen in isolation. It unfolded against the backdrop of Obama’s final lap of decision-making about Afghanistan.
For all the right’s jeremiads, its own brand of political correctness kept it from connecting two crucial dots:
how our failing war against terrorists in Afghanistan might relate to our failure to stop a supposed terrorist attack at home. Most of those who decried the Army’s blindness to Hasan’s threat are strong proponents of sending more troops into our longest war. That they didn’t mention Afghanistan while attacking the entire American intelligence and defense apparatus in charge of that war may be the most telling revelation of this whole debate.
The reason they didn’t is obvious enough. Their screeds about the Hasan case are completely at odds with both the Afghanistan policy they endorse and the leadership that must execute that policy, including Gen. Stanley McChrystal. These hawks, all demanding that Obama act on McChrystal’s proposals immediately, do not seem to have read his strategy assessment for Afghanistan or the many press interviews he gave as it leaked out. If they had, they’d discover that the whole thrust of his counterinsurgency pitch is to befriend and win the support of the Afghan population — i.e., Muslims. The “key to success,” the general wrote in his brief to the president, will be “strong personal relationships forged between security forces and local populations.”
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 12:40 on November 15th, 2009
Frank Rich is a simpleton.
Yes, Hasan is a psychopath. So is bin Laden. About a couple of percent are psychopaths in every major population group, maybe.
So, what. That was a one-man Act of War, a one-man Act of Terror, and a one-man Jihad, of which there are tons of examples at this point.
The left are actually also, besides the heirs of French Revolution Overreach on Reason, the purveyors or Arch-Dogma created in their own thoroughly mediocre minds. They are the new priesthood of secularism
They have arch-dogma, taboos, fixed ideas, formatory knee-jerk thinking, a list of types of people that are the devils of the world and the angels.
If they had a past life, they would have had to have been priests and nuns who had lost their faith, that is how close to type they play their inanities.