From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Sun Aug 11 2002 - 20:33:33 MDT
Are We Safer?
by Daniel Pipes
New York Post
April 30, 2002
Are Americans taking the necessary steps to protect themselves 
from further attacks? 
This question comes to mind on reading a news dispatch titled, 
"Iran Enthusiastically Celebrates the American ˜Humiliation' at 
Tabas 22 Years Ago."
It refers to Tabas, a remote desert town in Iran - the site of a U.S. 
military disaster. On April 25, 1980, a rescue team sent by 
President Jimmy Carter to spring 49 Americans held hostage in 
the U.S. embassy in Tehran had to abort when two U.S. aircraft 
collided at Tabas, leaving eight soldiers dead.
To this day, Iran's militant Islamic leadership keeps the memory 
of that day alive. Last week, the government bused thousands of 
militiamen to Tabas where they prayed and shouted slogans like 
"Death to America" and "Death to Israel." It will build a museum 
in Tabas exclusively devoted to chronicling the failed U.S. 
mission. Iranian television news informs viewers that the failure 
"proves the weakness of the United States."
The disaster has gone down the memory hole for Americans. But 
it's Americans (and Israelis and other Westerners) who really 
should be recalling the Tabas incident, for it marked a major 
turning point.
It was when the current round of militant Islam's war against the 
West took its first fatalities. "Death to America" proved to be not 
an empty slogan but the battle cry of this era's most vibrant and 
dangerous extremist ideology.
In retrospect, it is clear that the eight deaths at Tabas were the 
very first in a sequence that has continued for over two decades. 
Consider just some of the attacks on Americans:
* April 1983: U.S. embassy in Beirut bombed, killing 63.
* October '83: U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut bombed, killing 
241.
* December '83: U.S. embassy in Kuwait bombed, killing 6.
* January '84: Malcolm Kerr, president of the American 
University of Beirut, assassinated.
* April '84: Hezbollah attacks the environs of a U.S. airbase in 
Spain, killing 18 servicemen.
* September '84: U.S. embassy in Beirut again bombed, killing 16.
* December '84: Two Americans murdered on a hijacked plane in 
Tehran.
* June '85: U.S. seaman killed on a hijacked plane in Beirut.
And on and on. More recent incidents include the World Trade 
Center bombing of February '93, the two attacks on U.S. soldiers 
in Saudi Arabia in '95 and '96, the two U.S. embassies blown up in 
East Africa in August '98 and the USS Cole bombed in Yemen in 
October 2000. In all, some 600 Americans lost their lives to 
militant Islam before September 2001.
All of these were highly publicized incidents, dominating the 
headlines and furrowing brows about an effective 
counterterrorism policy. But they did not inspire action. The U.S. 
government neither attacked the enemy nor changed policies. For 
example, the 241 dead at the Marine barracks bombing (the 
largest number of Americans killed by militant Islam before 9/11) 
brought forth no retaliation at all and the World Trade Center 
bombing prompted no review of immigration procedures.
In short, although Americans were repeatedly attacked, they 
barely responded. One can hardly blame the militant Islamic 
groups and governments for concluding that the United States was 
weak, demoralized and ripe for attack. The population was 
feckless, distracted and complacent, the government incompetent.
And now? The trauma of September changed some things but not 
enough. The government won't name militant Islam as the enemy 
but hides behind the euphemism of "terrorism." The CIA and FBI 
remain largely unchanged. Airline security is a sham. Israel is 
constrained from rooting out the Palestinian terrorist 
infrastructure.
As the sense of vulnerability and resolve of seven months ago 
dissipates, Americans are returning to business as usual. Sept. 11 
increasingly feels like a remote nightmare without much 
relevance to the present circumstances.
To which I predict: If things proceed in this direction, there can 
only be one certain result - further assaults perpetrated by militant 
Islam. The carnage begun that awful day in the Iranian desert in 
1980 will not run its course until Americans understand how 
much they need to fear and loathe militant Islam. We can only 
hope this happens sooner rather than later, so that the number of 
casualties to come will be smaller rather than larger.
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