A Time to Choose
Center for Security Policy
Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2001
Washington, D.C. -- Among the most memorable passages in President Bush's
extraordinary
address to the Joint Session of Congress on Sept. 20 was the challenge
he
posed to others around the world: "Every nation, in every region, now has
a decision
to make. Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists. From this
day
forward, any nation that continues to harbor or support terrorism will be
regarded
by the United States as a hostile regime."
'Good Terrorists'?
The New York Post reported on Monday that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon
has asked that the United States formally include Hamas, Islamic Jihad and
Hezbollah
on its list of targeted terrorist groups in the wake of the Sept. 11
attacks
in New York and Washington. Such a step would establish that the
governments
of Iran, Syria and Lebanon and the Palestinian Authority (PA) -- all of
whom
"harbor or support" one or more of these groups -- would be deemed to be
"hostile
regimes."
Colin Powell's State Department is adamantly resisting this step, however.
In
fact, it is actively seeking to enlist the aforementioned (among other
unsavory
regimes, such as those of Sudan, Cuba and Algeria) as members of the
anti-terrorism
coalition. Just last Friday, Secretary Powell wrote members of the U.S.
Senate
opposing draft legislation aimed at imposing sanctions on the Palestinian
Authority's
access to weapons if it does not meet its commitments to fight terrorism.
His
letter claimed that, "The Palestinian compliance legislation...would be
counterproductive
to our coalition-building and peace process efforts and we would like to
see
it withdrawn." In other words, even if you are not "with us," you can
continue
to benefit from American legitimation and assistance.
This is all the more extraordinary - and insulting to Israel - since the
State
Department issued on September 12 a report condemning these groups and the
aid
and comfort they receive from the Palestinian Authority. As noted in
Sunday's
editions of the Israeli newspaper, Ha'aretz: "[The] half-yearly report
stated
that the PA was not preventing incitement and was even engaged itself in
incitement.
[It] added that, although the Palestinian Authority continued to adopt an
official
line opposing terrorism, organizations affiliated with the PA...were
responsible
for attacks against Israelis [and that] the evidence would suggest that
they
were aware of the involvement of [such organizations]...in the attacks but
did
little to restrain them."
Israel is not the only nation to have suffered from terrorism at the hands
of
such groups, though. As Salon Magazine reported earlier this month, the
State
Department has also determined that "Hezbollah is known or suspected to
have
been involved in numerous anti-U.S. terrorist attacks." Hamas has killed
American
citizens in its war on Israel. (For that matter, Yasser Arafat is
personally
implicated in the murder of two American diplomats in Khartoum more than
two
decades ago.)
On Our Side?
It is, therefore, extraordinary indeed that the Bush Administration has
been
courting organizations in this country that have refused to condemn the
likes
of Hamas and Hezbollah; some have even publicly applauded those terrorist
groups.
The President himself has met twice in as many weeks with leaders of
American-Muslim
organizations that have defended Hamas and Hizbollah. For example, in a
November
2000 rally held in Lafayette Park, the then-executive director of one of
these
organizations, the American Muslim Council, declared "We are all
supporters of
Hamas. I wish they add that I am also a supporter of Hezballah." When he
asked
those present whether there were any other supporters of Hezballah among
them,
the crowd roared its approval.
As it happens, even as Mr. Bush was meeting for the second time with
representatives
of the American Muslim Council and other self-appointed "leaders" of that
community
to express his solidarity with law-abiding people of the Islamic faith in
this
country, the AMC web site prominently featured a statement telling its
members
"Don't talk to the FBI." This warning, authored by the National Coalition
to
Protect Political Freedoms - a conclave of largely hard-left
organizations that
includes the AMC, the Council on American Islamic Relations and other
Muslim
groups - declared: "The FBI is looking for information to use against
you, your
family and/or your community. The FBI has a history of harassing and
harming
minority and immigrant communities. Some people are spending a long time
in jail
because they or their friends talked to the FBI."
The Bottom Line
It is hard to believe that Mr. Bush wants to be legitimating such views of
U.S.
law enforcement or discouraging, even implicitly, Americans of any faith
or community
from cooperating fully with the war on terrorism. It is equally improbable
that
he wants to communicate in any way that those who support terrorists -
whether
by endorsing their activities, providing them with financial assistance
and/or
harboring their organizations - can really be on our team.
If not, the President will have to make a choice, too, by insisting at a
minimum
that those who want the honor of meeting with him or otherwise being
deemed on
the right side in the war against international terror must first publicly
renounce
and convincingly end all associations with terrorist organizations and
their
supporters.
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
War on Terrorism