A 9/11 Demurrer

Every year, I have the same debate with myself: whether the ferocity of my thoughts about this day renders them unfit for public consumption. This year, absent the time or desire to write, save, and then delete my true thoughts, there is just one original thought I will add to so many others today — that for me, 9/11 is at least half the reason I began blogging about this topic. Since then, my greatest fear has been that Kim Jong Il is building the arsenal of terror while the world looks away. I have come to believe that directly or indirectly, North Korea is the single most likely source for the means terrorists will use to execute an unimaginably ghastly attack on the country and people I unreservedly love.

The other half is my knowledge that all of history’s mass murderers began their work on a smaller scale and graduated to ever lower depths of depravity. What moral restraint stands between the murder of “impure” infants, the gassing of families, or the starvation of expendable millions and the next hellish crime? This, I perceive with absolute clarity: Kim Jong Il’s survival as a tyrant is incompatible with the safety of the world. Nothing I have observed since has offered faintly persuasive evidence to the contrary. Kim Jong Il must go. It is simply a question of how to accomplish it at the lowest possible cost in human suffering.

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I refer you to Christopher Hitchens, who has done so far better than I could, and very probably with much more restraint than I can muster even now.

Anyone who lost their “innocence” on September 11 was too naïve by far, or too stupid to begin with. On that day, we learned what we ought to have known already, which is that clerical fanaticism means to fight a war which can only have one victor. Afghans, Kurds, Kashmiris, Timorese and many others could have told us this from experience, and for nothing (and did warn us, especially in the person of Ahmad Shah Massoud, leader of Afghanistan’s Northern Alliance). Does anyone suppose that an ideology that slaughters and enslaves them will ever be amenable to “us”? The first duty, therefore, is one of solidarity with bin-Ladenism’s other victims and targets, from India to Kurdistan.

Don’t miss Hitchens’s next point, either. It’s one learned with only great difficulty by free societies that must come to terms with preserving their own existence.

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Legal wonks may be interested in this discussion of the legal rights of detainees. Reading it, it’s important to keep in mind that an ordinary court-martial offers the accused much higher protections than a federal or state criminal proceeding. The ordinary court-martial procedure, with its prohibitions on hearsay, coerced confessions, and rules against unlawful command influence, won’t work here. We need something specifically adapted to the war we face, and that adaptation must not reward those who intentionally target noncombatants.

3 Responses

  1. Kim Jong Il must go! Simply, yet eloquently put – I’m with you, brother! It saddens me to hear the wailing voices of his apologists through the mouthpiece of the ‘media’. God save us from ourselves…

  2. And to think…. the next jihad is probably going to be led by Nancy Pelosi when the Dems take the house in November. 2007 through 2008 is going to be investigations, public hearings, and subpoena after subpoena, all live on CNN. All for a political vendetta that’s left the evil threats to the US and world peace a distant second concern.

    “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.”
    -Edmund Burke

  3. With NK’s famine and economy, its leaders have to know it’s in no position to fight any kind of war. Historically, starving countries seldom start wars they themselves have to fight. News blackouts aside, NK’s school-age generations aren’t getting the kind of education that would provide some future relief or national edification. On the other hand, KSI’s a nut; his behavior indicates he believes he can keep his personality cult going forever even in the Information Age and he doesn’t seem to grasp that a re-unified Korea under any circumstances is the surest way to destroy that cult. Historically, however, when a small country with limited resources goes to war, the emphasis is always on rapidly inflicting unecessary and disproportionately high casualty rates on their targets. We must remain vigilant and concerned.