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Pat Buchanan
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The Rationale of Terror

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Arguably the most successful act of revolutionary terror was the June 1914 assassination of the Archduke Francis Ferdinand in Sarajevo.

Believing his mission to murder the heir to the Austrian throne had failed, Gavrilo Princip suddenly found himself standing a few feet away from the royal car. He fired twice, mortally wounding the archduke and his wife.

Tactically, that act of terror eliminated the reformist Ferdinand, who meant to address the grievances of his Slav subjects by granting them greater autonomy and equality with Austrians and Hungarians inside the empire.

Strategically, the assassination succeeded beyond the wildest dreams of its Black Hand plotters.

Hard-liners in Austria demanded an ultimatum to Serbia. When her demands were not met in full, Vienna declared war. Czar Nicholas mobilized in support of Russia's little Slav brothers. The Kaiser ordered mobilization. When the French refused to declare neutrality, Germany declared war. In hours, the British Cabinet had reversed itself to back war with Germany on behalf of Belgium and France.

Princip had lit the fuse that set off in six weeks the greatest war in history. While Serbia suffered per capita losses as great as any other nation, she ended the Great War as the lead nation in a Kingdom of the South Slavs embracing Slovenes, Croats, Bosnians, Albanians, Montenegrins, Macedonians and Hungarians. The Habsburg Empire at which Princip had struck had vanished.

Last week's Mumbai massacre seems a similar triumph of terror.

Tactically, by sending a platoon of suicide warriors into India's financial capital, terrorizing a train station, two five-star hotels and a Jewish center, and killing nearly 200 in over 60 hours, the plotters assured themselves of round-the-clock worldwide television coverage.

In so riveting the world's attention for four days, this terrorist atrocity was a success.

And by using Pakistanis to perpetrate the massacres and Karachi as port of embarkation, the plotters focused India's rage exactly where they want it, against Pakistan. By this slaughter in India's commercial capital, the Islamists have destroyed the detente Pakistan was seeking with India and pushed both toward war. Out to murder moderation and stoke militancy, the terrorists succeeded.

Years ago, this writer observed:

"Terrorism is a tactic, a technique, a weapon that fanatics, dictators and warriors have resorted to through history.

If, as Clausewitz wrote, war is the continuation of politics by other means, terrorism is the continuation of war by other means."

Yet terrorism — the killing of innocents for political ends — can only triumph if the aggrieved play the role the terror masters have scripted for them in their bloody drama. What, then, may we surmise are the tactical and strategic goals of the terror masters of Mumbai?

To humiliate, wound and outrage India in her pride as a great new democratic and economic power in Asia. To imperil Mumbai's future as a safe and secure financial capital in which to live, work and invest. To awe the world and inspire Islam's young by their audacity. To attain immortality.

But the strategic target of the militants is the Pakistani government.

Pakistan's offenses? Cooperating with America in Afghanistan and the border region, battling al-Qaida and the Taliban, withdrawing from the fight for Kashmir, seeking peace with a Hindu nation where 170 million Muslims are denied their place in the sun.

President Bush should pray New Delhi does not adopt his Bush Doctrine of preventive war or the Cheney Doctrine: "Even if there's just a 1 percent chance of the unimaginable coming due, act as if it is a certainty." For war in the subcontinent between India and Pakistan would be a calamity and a triumph for the terrorists across what Zbigniew Brzezinski has called the "Global Balkans."

War would pit two nuclear powers against each other for the first time since the Sino-Soviet border clash of 1969. It would spawn bloodshed between Muslim and Hindu in India. It would see the collapse of Pakistan, its possible dissolution and a military dictator in a nation already divided against itself over whether to continue resisting al-Qaida and the Taliban, or cut ties to the unpopular Americans.

Wounded and enraged by the atrocities of 9-11, America lashed out, first at Afghanistan and the al-Qaida source of the conspiracy, then at Iraq, which had nothing to do with the attacks. Thus did the Bush administration disunite its nation and forfeit its mandate.

For India to lash out at a Pakistan that was not complicit in the Mumbai crimes against humanity, but harbors elements within that are guilty and are celebrating, would be as great a mistake.

India and Pakistan both have a vital interest in no new war.

But a new war is exactly what the terrorists killed for and died for.

Should it come, they win — and enter history as revolutionary terrorists alongside Princip and the perpetrators of 9-11.

Patrick Buchanan is the author of the new book "Churchill, Hitler and 'The Unnecessary War." To find out more about Patrick Buchanan, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

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Sir;....Clausewitz was right, and Ho Chi Minh was right, and at least in part you are wrong... It is never about victory or defeat, it is always about the political solution... Don't think there was not violence toward the Muslims, or against the Vietnamese before each responded with violence... Yet, if we know that the political solution is what is behind the violence; then that should always be the focus of our efforts... To that end, being there is perhaps the worst possible situation to have for ourselves, and for the prospects of a solution... Think of what Frederick the Great said about holding everywhere, and holding nowhere.... Think of what Clausewitz said about attacking fixed positions... Think with your own head about the value of any army tied down.... To go to places like Iraq which was not in the least necessary, since we could have forced a change of leaders with a serious military demonstration...To try to prop up a government of our choice that would then be a drain on our resources for an exchange of oil is crazy... It is an invitation to continued violence.... The job of an army is to fight, or to prepare to fight...Mobility is the essence of tactics, and we have given up mobility to force a political situation that cannot possibly be lasting...We should have went in, and come out... Invasion is what we were made for... The cost of invasion is steep.. The cost of staying is ruinous.. And ditto for Afghanistan... We cannot fight their war... WE have to let them form up if we are going to beat them, and the only way they will form up is to get out, and make them feel they have driven us out... To stay there invites stalemate and bleeding, and spreads the hard feeling and hatred far and wide... .And they hit us, the West, where we ain't, soft targets... Considering that democracy has always been defensive as a form of social organization, we should wall them off, isolate them, and instead of propping up leaders as corrupt as they are powerless, -go in, beat the crap out of them, get out, and ask them if they want some more... To stay is stupid because it prolonges the conflict and puts off the political solution... It is non sense.. You can't beat a people...Genocide is illegal... Islam is indomitable... Look at what your terror does??? It take a tremendous energy to keep all on their guard... War is worse, in that it keeps everyone on edge, and divides everyone's attention... If you are not prepared to beat them all to death, or find some other way to kill them all, then they must be quarantined...And never give up on the political solution... Some one should talk to them... Maybe they are republicans...Even if they are not, there is not a single price tag on that end of the world...Those people make deals as a course of life... We can do the same... Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Tue Dec 2, 2008 5:19 AM
Okay, Byuke. Now turn your attention to what terrorism did to alter the course of U.S. history in the 60's. We got it times three with the assassination of John and Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Masako
Sat Dec 6, 2008 9:28 PM
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