American and World Report
All War All the Time
Alan Caruba
Monday, August 1, 2005
I have a friend who recently made a list of all the nations
that have openly suggested they would like to "nuke" the United States. They
included North Korea, a general in Red China, and as soon as they announce they
have perfected a bomb of their own, we can add Iran to the list. Lots of other
nations have nukes, including Great Britain, France, India, Pakistan, and the
Russian Republic.
If the U.S. does suffer a nuclear attack, however, it is
more likely to be at the hands of agents of al Qaeda. It is not a nation, but
it is at war with just about every nation that tilts toward modernity of any
kind. An equal opportunity network of Islamist terrorists, it doesn't mind
killing either infidels or other Muslims. One has to pause to think of nations
where it has not used terror as its calling card.
I got to thinking about this on July 20 when the U.S.
embassy in Riyadh, the capital of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, issued a warning
citing evidence of "operational planning" in the one nation most responsible
for the existence of al Qaeda. Osama bin Laden was born in Saudi Arabia and is
a member of one of its most prestigious families. At some point this spoiled
little rich boy experienced some kind of epiphany that led him to reject the
royal family while committing his life to the Wahabi interpretation of Islam it
had promulgated from the days when Abdel Aziz ibin Saud set out to conquer or
buy off the other tribes of the vast desert peninsula.
In 1933, he proclaimed the country unified as the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia. However, other than fees collected from pilgrims traveling to
Mecca, this king was broke. Two thirds of his "Kingdom" was uninhabitable
desert when the first oilmen arrived. Had it not been for their modern science and
the world's increasing need for new sources of oil, the royal family would
still be living in tents or mud dwellings. It was not ibin Saud who built
modern Saudi Arabia, it was Aramco, the American oil company that discovered
and developed the source of the royal family's obscene wealth to this day.
Flash forward to July 20 and today. Saudi Arabia, the Sunni
citadel responsible for the worldwide spread of the most backward form of Islam
extant, is now the victim of its own success. Already, it has tasted the wrath
of al Qaeda for permitting "foreign", i.e., American troops on its "sacred
sands." Since it does billions of dollars of business with America, its oil
wells and refineries are the natural target of those who want to drag Saudi
Arabia back to the good old days when camels and goats were currency.
Since al Qaeda is largely funded by every criminal activity
you can name, it can afford to be indifferent to the oil riches of the Saudi
royal family. If, however, it can destroy their grip on its "sacred sands",
access to the oil would make al Qaeda the most powerful force for the
domination of Islam to have ever existed. There isn't a single Muslim on Earth
that does not know this.
And people wonder why the United States of America invaded
Iraq. The world's greatest empire is engaged in a whole new kind of war. It is
the famed "asymmetrical" war in which the enemy is everywhere and nowhere. As
Donald Rumsfeld, the US Secretary of Defense put it, "Our challenge in this new
century is a difficult one: to defend our nation against the unknown, the
uncertain, the unseen, and the unexpected."
In other words, all war all the time!
Don't believe me? As the new millennium dawned, there were
almost two thousand sustained armed conflicts in effect throughout the whole of
the world.
It is the reason the United States has its troops posted all
over the world, as often as not at the invitation of those nations where we
conduct the business of fulltime war against an unseen enemy and, occasionally
as was the case of Iraq, against a nation state that is a threat to world
order. Recall, please, Saddam's invasions of both Iran and Kuwait.
This is not to say the U.S. effort in Iraq will prove a
success; only that it was the right thing to do at the time.
That is the job of the United States. Our greatest export is
security. It is necessary for a world that is stable enough to engage in trade.
It is necessary to our economic growth. Any nation or any group such as al
Qaeda that threatens that stability is going to find itself subject to "regime
change" or the relentless hunt to find and kill its leaders and followers.
Do you think the 2008 election will change this? Or those to
follow? Unless we destroy al Qaeda, i.e. the renewed Islamic Jihad, there will
be no United States of America in which to hold an election. We have only one
choice and it is all war all the time for very long time to come.
Alan Caruba of The National Anxiety Center maintains an Internet site at www.anxietycenter.com. Caruba writes a weekly column, "Warning Signs", posted on the site and excerpted widely on many others. Alan's new book, "Right Answers: Separating Fact from Fantasy" has been published by Merril Press. In 2003, a collection of his columns was published by Merril Press. Alan can be reached at: letters@canadafreepress.com
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