The Gitmo
Obsession
by
Charles Krauthammer
TownHall.com
WASHINGTON -- On Wednesday, Nigerian would-be bomber Umar Farouk
Abdulmutallab was indicted by a Michigan grand jury for attempted murder and
sundry other criminal charges. The previous day, the State Department announced
that his visa had been revoked. The system worked.
Well, it did for Abdulmutallab. What he lost in flying privileges he gained
in Miranda rights. He was singing quite freely when seized after trying to bring
down Northwest Flight 253 over Detroit. But the Obama administration decided to
give him a lawyer and the right to remain silent. We are now forced to purchase
information from this attempted terrorist in the coin of leniency. Absurdly,
Abdulmutallab is now in control.
And this is no ordinary information. He was trained by al-Qaeda in Yemen, and
just days after he was lawyered up and shut up, the U.S. was forced to close its
embassy in Yemen because of active threats from the same people who had trained
and sent Abdulmutallab.
This is nuts. Even if you wanted ultimately to try him as an ordinary
criminal, he could have been detained in military custody -- and thus
subject to military interrogation -- without prejudicing his ultimate
disposition. After all, every Guantanamo detainee was first treated as an enemy
combatant and presumably interrogated. But some (most notoriously Khalid Sheik
Mohammed) are going to civilian trial. That determination can be made later.
John Brennan, President Obama's counterterrorism adviser, professes an
inability to see any "downsides" to treating Abdulmutallab as an ordinary
criminal -- with a right to remain silent -- a view with which 71 percent of
likely voters sensibly disagree.
The administration likes to defend itself by invoking a Bush precedent:
Wasn't the shoe bomber treated the same way?
Yes. And it was a mistake, but in the context of the time understandable.
That context does not remotely exist today.
Richard Reid struck three months after 9/11. The current anti-terror
apparatus was not in place. Remember: This was barely a month after President
Bush authorized the creation of military commissions and before that
system had been even set up. Moreover, the Pentagon at the time was preoccupied
with the Afghan campaign that brought down the Taliban in two months. The last
major Taliban city, Kandahar, fell just two weeks before Reid tried to ignite
his shoe on an airplane.
To be sure, after a few initial misguided statements, Obama did get somewhat
serious about the Christmas Day attack. First, he instituted high-level special
screening for passengers from 14 countries, the vast majority of which are
Muslim with significant Islamist elements. This is the first rational step away
from today's idiotic random screening and toward, yes, a measure of profiling --
i.e., focusing on the population most overwhelmingly likely to be harboring a
suicide bomber.
Obama also sensibly suspended all transfers of Yemenis from Guantanamo.
Nonetheless, Obama insisted on repeating his determination to close the prison,
invoking his usual rationale of eliminating a rallying cry and recruiting tool
for al-Qaeda.
Imagine that Guantanamo were to disappear tomorrow, swallowed in a giant
tsunami. Do you think there'd be any less recruiting for al-Qaeda in Yemen,
Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, London?
Jihadism's list of grievances against the West is not only self-replenishing
but endlessly creative. Osama bin Laden's 1998 fatwa commanding universal jihad
against America cited as its two top grievances our stationing of troops in
Saudi Arabia and Iraqi suffering under anti-Saddam sanctions.
Today, there are virtually no U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia. And the sanctions
regime against Iraq was abolished years ago. Has al-Qaeda stopped recruiting?
Ayman al-Zawahiri often invokes Andalusia in his speeches. For those not steeped
in the multivolume lexicon of Islamist grievances, Andalusia refers to Iberia,
lost by Islam to Christendom -- in 1492.
This is a fanatical religious sect dedicated to establishing the most
oppressive medieval theocracy and therefore committed to unending war with
America not just because it is infidel but because it represents modernity with
its individual liberty, social equality (especially for women) and profound
tolerance (religious, sexual, philosophical). You going to change that by
evacuating Guantanamo?
Nevertheless, Obama will not change his determination to close Guantanamo. He
is too politically committed. The only hope is that perhaps now he is offering
his "recruiting" rationale out of political expediency rather than real belief.
With suicide bombers in the air, cynicism is far less dangerous to the country
than naivete.
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