Posted: 23 Jul 2014 08:30 AM PDT
There are two dimensions to fighting a War on Terror. One is
fighting terrorists and the other is fighting terrorism. In conventional
warfare there isn't that much of a difference between fighting men and their
tactics. There is a wider space between fighting terrorists and their
tactics.
Conventional
armies use tactics to defeat enemy forces and seize territory. Terrorists
however use tactics to take over mental territory. A suicide bomber is not
out to take over a particular block. He is out to change how the enemy and
his side think about that city block and the larger conflict.
Terrorism has succeeded in accomplishing that goal in Israel. The scale of
terrorism turned every piece of land into a mathematical equation. How many
lives was this village in Gaza worth? How many lives is this West Bank town
worth? How many lives is East Jerusalem worth?
This emotional calculus is misleading because it is an immediate response to
a set of deaths. However terrorists are not trading an end to violence for a
village or a town. They are calculating how many deaths it will take to force
Israel to abandon that village or town. And once they have it, they will use
it to inflict more terror on another town or village, this time using
rockets.
Israelis were convinced that a price in lives had been put on Gaza and that
if they withdrew, the killing would end. But Gaza was just the beginning. Not
the end. There is never an end.
The goal of a terrorist movement is to change the relative perceptions of
strength and the freedom of movement of both sides. Terror tactics create the
perception that the winning side is losing. This perception can be so
compelling that both sides come to accept it as reality. Terrorists
manufacture victories by trapping their enemies in no-win scenarios that wear
down their morale.
That is what has been happening to Israel. The entire carrot and stick of the
peace process and the suicide bombing, the final agreement that never comes
and the final solution that is coming, were designed to wear down Israelis,
to make their leaders and people chase down empty hopes and argue among
themselves over who is to blame because there is still no peace.
The last few decades were meant to create a sense of helplessness among
Israelis.
Taking hostages is one form of the no-win scenario. If the winning side can't
cut the Gordian Knot by rescuing the hostages, it faces a choice between
releasing terrorists or having to watch its own people held captive or
killed. Either one creates a sense of helplessness and defeat.
Terrorists are not attacking land or buildings. They are targeting morale.
Their goal is to destroy the mental and spiritual resistance of a people by
wearing it down with acts of terror, tying it down with moral and legalistic
debates, and finally finishing it off with negotiations that are also
designed to wear down the other side without ever concluding a final
agreement.
As important as it is to defeat terrorists as individuals, it is even more
important to defeat their tactics.
The first and best way to defeat terrorist tactics is to refuse to negotiate
with terrorists. Terrorist tactics work best when they create complicity on
the other side. The first wave of complicity comes from leftist activists and
sympathetic terror lawyers making human rights arguments. But the second wave
of complicity has to come from the authorities for terrorism to be
successful.
Negotiating with terrorists makes the negotiators complicit in whatever plans
the terrorists have. Once negotiations begin, the terrorists will force the
negotiators to violate their own side's values and to sell out portions of
their own population or those of allied countries. These tactics allow the
terrorists to divide and conquer the enemy. And to use one enemy against
another.
A terrorist group that seizes hostages from Country X in exchange for Country
Y freeing prisoners has managed to turn two of its enemies against each other
with a small investment of resources. If Country Y frees the prisoners, the
terrorists win. If Country Y doesn't free the prisoners, they still win
because Country X will now blame Country Y, rather than the terrorists, for
what happened.
Swap the two countries for two groups of people inside a country and it
becomes easier to understand what the terrorists are trying to accomplish by
taking hostages.
Once you negotiate with terrorists, they will leverage those negotiations to
make you complicit in their own violence against you. If you negotiate with
them long enough, you will end up defending and even validating their
acts of terror.
Israelis
were convinced that they could buy their way out of the problem by betraying
their fellow citizens living in the West Bank and Gaza. And then by betraying
the families of terror victims. European leaders are convinced that they can
have peace in their time by pressuring Israel and restraining America.
American leaders are convinced that peace will come if they can pressure the
Europeans and Israelis to stop offending Muslims.
This is classic divide and conquer.
The greatest danger of fighting terrorists is falling into a reactive
pattern. The more you react to what terrorists do, the more they set the
agenda. Taking hostages is the ultimate reactive trap. The kidnapping of
three Israeli boys has sent Israel into the same predictable pattern,
rounding up the usual suspects, making temporary arrests and a public outcry
that, like the one surrounding Gilad Shalit, can easily be turned into a
campaign to pay any price to free them.
The only way to defeat a terrorist tactic is to invalidate it. The act of
invalidating it is often painful, but it's less painful than not doing it.
Refusing to negotiate with terrorists cripples their ability to set the
agenda. It's hard to divide and conquer people who won't talk to you. It's
difficult to make them complicit in the terrorism against them if they won't
enter into a dialogue.
Human shields proliferate because they work. The only way to invalidate them
as a tactic is by reacting to terrorists the same way, whether or not they
are using a human shield. Hostages are taken because the terrorists have a
realistic expectation of striking a deal.
Eliminate the deal and the hostage taking ends.
Terrorists create a sense of helplessness by forcing a society to experience
pain without having any control over it. The experience of being terrorized
is not merely horror and death, but the inability to control how it happens.
It is this need for control that leads to Stockholm syndrome, identifying
with terrorists and accepting their agenda in exchange for having some
control over their terror.
It is not enough for a society to endure the pain that terrorists inflict.
Every person and every culture has their breaking point. Instead a society
must be willing to inflict pain on its own body to prevent greater pain and
suffering. A society that is no longer able to do this is caught in its own
sense of helplessness and is doomed. It is so focused on avoiding pain that
it can no longer fight back.
War is a form of pain that we inflict on our society to spare ourselves the
greater pain of conquest and defeat. Resistance to terrorism may also require
other smaller forms of martyrdom that allow a society to assert control over
its own destiny. One of these is not negotiating with terrorists.
When a society is willing to defy the power that its enemies wield over it by
causing its own pain, it destroys their power over it and escapes the
helplessness that will otherwise kill it. It breaks free of the chain of
concessions that will inevitably lead it to betray its principles and lose
its soul.
Israel
has already gone too far down the road to helplessness. And it is not alone.
Every nation, society and culture confronted with Islamic terrorism seeks
ways to spare itself the pain. But the pain can only end when the terrorists
are thoroughly defeated. A nation that cannot rouse itself to defeating the
terrorists in an overwhelming and comprehensive campaign, must at least learn
to defeat their tactics.
Defeating terrorist tactics can be more important than defeating terrorists.
It is not that hard for a modern nation to kill a terrorist. It is much more
difficult for it to take the harder route, to make a difficult sacrifice, to
violate its own sense of itself and to challenge its own morality. Drones
allow us to kill enemies from a distance at the push of a button. But drones
cannot protect the morale of a nation.
Every society must find its own reasons for continuing on. A conflict forces
us to question whether we can go on. It demands that we rise to the challenge
with courage, determination and sacrifice. And in doing so, we rediscover
ourselves.
Daniel Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger
and a Shillman Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
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