Amid
Memorial Day parades, speeches and war movies on TV, Barack Obama declares that
Americans’ post-9/11 mindset has to change: “Our systematic effort to dismantle
terrorist organizations must continue. But this war, like all wars, must end.”
But
how? “Neither I, nor any President, can
promise the total defeat of terror. We will never erase the evil that lies in
the hearts of some human beings, nor stamp out every danger to our open
society.”
True,
but how do we define evil acts? At what point does lethal madness become
terror? If the Newtown killer had left behind any political babble, would he
now be ranked with the brothers who perpetrated the Boston bombings? Where do
we draw the lines?
The
Obama speech, says one national security scholar, “delegitimizes the
terrorists. They want to think of themselves as warriors. We want the world...not
to think of them as terrorists defending Islam, but as people who are psychos.
They are criminals."
In
the New Yorker Jane Meyer underscores
“the contrast between Bush’s swagger and Obama’s anguish over the difficult
trade-offs that perpetual war poses to a free society...While Bush frequently
seemed to take action without considering the underlying questions, Obama
appears somewhat unsure of exactly what actions to take. That is not a bad
thing: at least he is asking the right questions. In fact, by suggesting that,
after a decade and seven thousand American and countless foreign lives lost,
and a trillion dollars spent, it might be time to start downsizing the ‘war on
terror,’ he is leading the national debate beyond where even most Democrats
have dared to go.”
After
the President consoles Oklahoma tornado survivors on a weekend of American remembrance
of those who lose their lives to human violence, he will return to a Washington
of man-made turmoil. Not the least of his challenges will be to make good on
the effort to refocus homeland security away from total preoccupation with the
Middle East.
There
will and should be serious debate on relations with new governments there as
well as use of drone strikes and the closing of Guantanamo. But it would
be helpful to start focusing the war against terror on organized groups
plotting violence and leave the tracking down and prevention where possible of
acts by the criminally insane to those trained to deal with them.
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