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Nidal Hasan will finally be punished for his act of jihad at Fort Hood nearly four years ago.  Further, outrageous delays evidently are unavoidable, but given the murderous nature of his treachery, ultimately Hasan will surely be executed.

There has been no discernable accountability for others in this horrific saga, however.  Not for even one of Hasan’s superiors, even though they knew of his jihadism.  Not for the Army’s top general who put “diversity” before the safety of his troops.  Not for those who decided to charge the would-be Islamist martyr merely with “workplace violence.”

If we are to prevent more of our servicemen and women – and perhaps civilians, too – from being massacred by jihadis, we better get serious about preventing this threat, not just punishing its perpetrators after the fact.

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