Tag Archives: Osama Bin Laden

Khan Job

The casual observer might think nothing of the candidacy of a fellow named Suhail Khan for election to one of two open seats on the Board of Directors of the American Conservative Union – the political Right’s largest and most influential grassroots umbrella organization.   Certainly, for most Americans, the man’s faith would be of no interest.   If the fact that Khan is an adherent to Islam were even known, it probably would be seen as an asset ­– another Muslim-American seeking to become more involved in the political process just like, for example, Rep. Keith Ellison, the Muslim convert who recently won a Minnesota seat in the House of Representatives.

Something else appears to be at work here, however.   The tip-off is the fact that anti-tax activist Grover Norquist, who sits on the ACU Board, is promoting Khan’s candidacy.   Even that association, however, could be construed as nothing more than a calculated effort by a skillful conservative operative to insinuate a reliable ally into a useful post as the former struggles to overcome the damage done to his reputation and influence – and that of the Republican Party – by his scandalous collaboration with convicted felon Jack Abramof.

Unfortunately, there seems to be another and more insidious motivation for the Khan candidacy – one of a piece with a longstanding, if largely hidden, Norquist agenda that I first documented in these pages over three years ago.   In a 12,000-word report titled "A Troubling Influence," published on December 9, 2003 with a validating introduction by David Horowitz, I described the nature and extent of Norquist’s involvement in a political influence operation in the service of a number of Mr. Ellison’s co-religionists. Most, like Suhail Khan, have troubling ties to individuals and organizations with well-established sympathies for the ideologues known as Islamists.   Some of the latter have been directly tied to terrorism.

An Incomplete Resume

How many ACU members will be aware of this background as they cast their votes for the two open Board of Director seats – a process that is supposed to be concluded today – is unclear.   After all, most will probably be voting on the basis of nothing more than the highly sanitized resumé supplied together with the ACU’s on-line poll:

SUHAIL A. KHAN  

A lifelong conservative activist, Suhail Khan is presently serving as Counselor under U.S. Secretary Mary Peters at the U.S. Department of Transportation where he was awarded the Secretary’s Team Award in 2005. Previously Suhail served as Policy Director and Press Secretary for U.S. Congressman Tom Campbell (R-CA) where he worked closely on legislation relating to health antitrust reform, religious freedom, the preservation of the Second Amendment, tort reform, the reform of race-based affirmative action, and the 1998 impeachment proceedings in the House of Representatives.

After the 2000 elections, he aided the White House Office of Public Liaison in outreach efforts. In a volunteer capacity, Suhail is an active participant in the Republican National Committee’s 72-hour program and has been deployed to key races in states including Colorado , Washington , Iowa , Louisiana , Virginia , New Jersey and Pennsylvania . Born in Boulder , Colorado , to parents who emigrated to Wyoming and Colorado from southern India , Suhail grew up in California and earned his B.A. in political science from University of California at Berkeley in 1991 and his J.D. from University of Iowa in 1995.

Khan’s Other Credentials

The foregoing account of Suhail Khan’s personal history omits a number of details that ACU members – and, more importantly, the rest of us – should know.   Khan has contested the thrust of the following, inconvenient details about his family’s Islamist connections.   He has denounced those like me who have called attention to them.  

Khan has tried with some success to secure retractions from publications that ran articles referring to unsettling aspects of his background and associations – but without providing the evidence that they are wrong.  When "A Troubling Influence" appeared three years ago, David Horowitz offered Norquist and Kahn an opportunity to respond. Norquist, a first seemed ready to respond, then begged off saying he had a "revolution to run" and no time for such matters. Suhail Kahn submitted a letter challenging the specific claims in my article which were most damning – that his father, as head of a Wahabbi mosque in California, had hosted Osama bin Laden’s number two man, Ayman al-Zawahiri, and raised money for him, and that as a member of the White House staff – a position Norquist engineered for him – he had authorized radical Islamists to meet with President Bush.   Kahn’s denials were submitted to me and I rebutted them. But when Kahn was invited to respond, he went silent. Then, three years later, he challenged the same points when I repeated them in an article for Frontpage.

In other words, for three years Suhail Khan has attempted to challenge the information I supplied in 2003 but without actually refuting it. For the record, and as a public service in particular to members of the American Conservative Union, I reprise here the most troubling parts of the Khan clan background:

Mahboob Khan

The Khan family did not simply settle into its adopted country after emigrating from southern India . Over their years in the United States , the parents and to some degree their eldest son, Suhail, played prominent roles in several organizations associated with the Wahhabi strain of Islamism – a particularly virulent ideology that has this country in its cross-hairs.   

Suhail Khan’s father was the late Mahboob Khan, a PhD in solid-state physics.   His biography claims that he helped establish the Muslim Student Association (MSA) while a student in Boulder (presumably, this refers to the MSA chapter at the university as the parent organization was established in 1963).   The MSA is present on scores of American campuses and serves to recruit, proselytize and indoctrinate on behalf of Saudi-backed Islamists. [1] It is pro-Hamas – the MSA at UC Irvine even demanded that its members be allowed to wear Hamas armbands at graduation  – and openly sympathizes with terrorists. Dr. Khan held the post of MSA vice president and Western Zone representative.

The elder Khan also served as member of Majlis a’Shura (the governing council) of the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), which was created by the Muslim Student Association (MSA) in 1977 to promote the Islamist agenda among Muslims and the general population.  Another MSA arm is the North American Islamic Trust, the Saudis’ vehicle for providing the financing of, by some estimates, as many as 80% of the mosques in America.   That financing, and the control arising from holding title for the mosques’ real estate, affords the Saudis and their proxies the ability to determine: who will serve as imams in their American mosques; what materials are distributed to the congregations [2] and taught in the madrassas (mosque schools) [3]; to what purpose are the members’ obligatory tithes applied; which congregants will be eligible to make the haj pilgrimage to Mecca; etc.

Mahboob Khan founded one such mosque after he moved the family from Colorado to southern California in 1975.   The mosque, together with an Islamic center and an elementary school, comprises the Islamic Society of Orange County (ISOC), of which Dr. Khan served as president before moving on to San Jose in 1980.  

The Islamist character of the ISOC was evident in a visit there in December 1992, by Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman – better known as the Blind Sheikh, who was later convicted in connection with the first attack on the World Trade Center in 1993.   On the occasion of his fundraising visit to Orange County , Rahman " dismissed nonviolent definitions of jihad as weak. He stressed that a number of unspecified enemies had ‘united themselves against Muslims’ and that fighting them was obligatory. ‘If you are not going to the jihad, then you are neglecting the rules of Allah.’" [4]

The Blind Sheikh’s remarks were translated by Dr. Khan’s successor as the ISOC’s director: a fellow Indian expatriate and former president of the Islamic Society of North America, Imam Muzammil Siddiqi. Press reports credit Siddiqi with converting American jihadi Adam Gadahn to Islam. Gadahn now sports the nom de guerre "Azzam the American" and serves as a kind of Tokyo Rose for al Qaeda, producing propaganda videos in which he glories in the prospect of slitting "the throats of infidels." (More on Siddiqi in a moment.) 

After Dr. Khan relocated to the San Francisco Bay area, he established in 1983 the Muslim Community Association (MCA), whose Board he chaired.   The MCA, which declares its affiliation with the Islamic Society of North America, is made up of not one but two mosques, a cultural center and an elementary school.   According to the FBI, one of these institutions – the Masjid An-Noor Mosque – was the site of two fund-raising trips on behalf of the radical Islamist terror group known as Islamic Jihad. [5]   The solicitation was made by the man who is now Osama bin Laden’s Number 2, Ayman al-Zawahiri, who reportedly met with the "leaders of the An-Noor mosque in Santa Clara ." [6] If such a meeting did indeed occur, Dr. Khan would presumably have been among the participating MCA leaders, as he did not pass away until April 1999.

Malika Khan

Suhail Khan’s upbringing must have been further shaped by his mother, Malika Khan, who has her own troubling associations with pro-Islamist organizations.   She was a founding member and served on the Board of the Muslim Community Association. [7] She also has been a Board member of the California chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). [8]

The man who successfully put Sheikh Rahman behind bars, Andrew McCarthy, has noted that CAIR was "birthed by a Hamas creation: the Islamic Association for Palestine (IAP)." [9] IAP was started by "high-ranking Hamas operative Mousa Mohammed Abu Marzook," who is wanted on federal terrorism charges. In addition, McCarthy reports that CAIR’s founder and executive director, Nihad Awad – was a "high-ranking IAP officer." The former federal prosecutor also observes that the Hamas/IAP tie is "so incestuous" that "in 2004 a federal judge found the IAP liable for Hamas’ terrorist murder of an American citizen in Israel ." Finally, four of CAIR’s executives have been successfully prosecuted on terrorism-related charges. [10]    

In light of all this, even liberal Democrats have taken to distancing themselves from CAIR.   New York Democratic Senator Charles Schumer has said of CAIR, "we know [it] has ties to terrorism." [11] The Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin has noted that the organization is "unusual in its extreme rhetoric and its associations with groups that are suspect." [12] And most recently, California Democrat Barbara Boxer rescinded a "certificate of accomplishment" given to the executive director of Mrs. Khan’s chapter of CAIR in Sacramento , Basim Elkarra. According to Newsweek, Boxer’s press spokeswoman said the Senator "‘ expressed concern’ about some past statements and actions by the group, as well as assertions by some law enforcement officials that it ‘gives aid to international terrorist groups.’" [13]

Khan, Troubling in His Own Right 

Given Suhail Khan’s family background, it is hardly surprising that he, too, has spent a considerable amount of time associating with the sorts of organizations favored by his parents.   According to a December 2003 press release issued by the Islamic Society of North America, he served on one its committees. [14]   He has repeatedly been a featured speaker at MSA, ISNA and CAIR events, as well as those of other problematic groups, including the California-based Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) and the Islamic Institute (II, also known as the Islamic Free Market Institute or IFMI).   For example, Khan spoke most recently at an II meeting in December 2006.

The Islamic Institute was established by Grover Norquist in 1998 with $20,000 in seed money from Abdurahman Alamoudi (who is currently serving a 23-year federal sentence for terrorism-related activities). II is the principal vehicle for the Islamists’ influence operation aimed at the Bush Administration and Republican and conservative circles. Norquist was its founding president; Alamoudi’s long-time deputy, Khalid Saffuri, was its first executive director; and II’s offices continue to be housed in the downtown Washington office suite rented by Norquist’s Americans for Tax Reform.

In fact, Grover Norquist is the Islamic Institute’s chief enabler.  As Arab-American pollster, John Zogby, put it to the New Republic in November 2001, "[Grover]’s played the role of interlocutor. With all respect, many of the leaders [of the Muslim-American community] are immigrants and don’t have years and years of experience. Grover has filled that void." He went on to say that "absolutely, [Grover is] central to the White House outreach."

As detailed at length in "A Troubling Influence," [15] Norquist has for years used his weekly Washington "Wednesday Group" meetings of what he calls the "Center-Right Coalition" to promote Saffuri, Khan and others associated with the Islamic Institute team as movement conservatives, or at least as reliable allies.   Saffuri and Khan are routinely accorded privileged seating at these events. On occasion, in Norquist’s absence, Khan has actually chaired the meeting – a private-sector role of political activism during business hours that seems unlikely to be consistent with the guidelines for conduct of his day-job with the federal government.

If Suhail Khan is useful to Norquist today, he was incalculably valuable in his previous capacity.   Prior to becoming a political appointee in the Transportation Department’s Federal Highway Administration (where he reportedly has access to highly sensitive information about the movement of military convoys and nuclear and other hazardous materials and contingency plans),[16] Khan was responsible not just for "outreach" in the White House Public Liaison Office (as his sanitized ACU resume puts it); he oversaw Muslim outreach.   Presumably, that had something to do with why when a White House access list of Muslims to be invited to meetings in the presidential complex was prepared, it actually had Norquist at its top.  

Interestingly, most of the others on that list were drawn from the various Saudi-funded, pro-Islamist and generally anti-American groups that purport to comprise the so-called "Muslim-American leadership." People now serving hard time like Abdurahman Alamoudi and Sami al-Arian were at various points among those Khan, Norquist and Saffuri considered appropriate for courting by the Bush team. Others were individuals, like Jamal Barzinji, a board member of several Islamist-sympathizing organizations that were raided and investigated by the FBI on suspicion of fundraising for terrorists.  

A Case Study: Siddiqi

Another on that list was the Khans’ old family friend, Muzammil Siddiqi, even though he had a documented record of pro-jihadist remarks (including some made during a March 2000 rally outside the White House) [17] and ominous associations.   Siddiqi was nonetheless allowed after September 11, 2001, to have a private meeting with the President, at which he presented the latter with a Koran.

Worse yet, this imam was selected for the high honor of representing his faith three days after 9/11 at an ecumenical prayer service held at the National Cathedral.   Not surprisingly, his remarks to the distinguished audience were a grave disappointment.   As Charles Krauthammer caustically observed afterwards, Siddiqi could not even bring himself to condemn the terrorists. [18]  

It almost turned out very differently.   Siddiqi was running late in getting to the National Cathedral and for a few moments, another Muslim cleric – Sheikh Hisham Khabbani – was mistaken for the imam from Southern California and ushered into the holding area for speakers, only to be sent packing when Siddiqi arrived.  

If only the head of the peaceable, pro-American and law-abiding Sufi sect in North America had been given a chance to speak, instead of the radical imam based in Orange County , several things would surely have happened.   For one, it is certain that the terrorists would have been searingly condemned for their actions.  

Sheikh Kabbani would also have unambiguously denounced the ideology, organizations and nations that animate and support Islamofascist terrorism.   We know this because both points were features of the forceful presentation made when he appeared at the Secretary of State’s Open Forum in 1999, a chillingly prescient forecast of the mayhem our common, Islamist foes seek to inflict. [19]

In fact, the very course of the war may have been different had Sheikh Khabbani been given the sort of access to President Bush and the American people which Suhail Khan and his friends generally denied the Sufi leader – but were only too happy to provide to the likes of Muzammil Siddiqi.  

Sheikh Kabbani’s religious authority would have helped the United States rebut the charge that it was attacking all of Islam when it sought to counter and defeat the Islamists.   The President would have had the latitude to be clear and direct about the threat, not encouraged to use euphemisms – such as "the war on terror" – out of a misplaced fear of giving offense to truly peaceable Muslims.   We now know that such euphemisms have merely served to confuse the American people and made it far more difficult to develop, and sustain popular support for, the counter-ideological warfare our actual Islamofascist enemies require.

The Bottom Line

It is hard fully to calculate the magnitude of the damage done by the pro-Islamist influence operation run by Grover Norquist and his friends.  Law enforcement agencies have been forced to receive "sensitivity training" from the Council on American-Islamic Relations.  Norquist has lent conservative political cover to those who would weaken our counter-terrorism authorities and techniques.  He has helped place into positions of trust and official responsibility people whose often-undisclosed past associations at least raise questions about their reliability.

In short, thanks in part to the Norquist operation, America ‘s enemies have been emboldened.   And the United States is at considerably greater risk.

It is time, once and for all, for conservatives to take a hard look at what Norquist and his associates have been doing in the guise of Muslim "outreach." A good place to start would be for the membership of the American Conservative Union to reject the "Khan job" being perpetrated by Norquist’s influence operation.  

 

Notes:

[1] See Steven Schwartz, "The Muslim Student Association: A Wahhabi Front," Frontpage Magazine.

[2] See the Center for Religious Freedom (then at Freedom House), "Saudi Publications on Hate Ideology Fill American Mosques," January 28, 2005.  Texts distributed to U.S. mosques by the Saudi embassy included such passages as: "To be true Muslims, we must prepare and be ready for jihad in Allah’s way. It is the duty of the citizen and the government."

[3] See a study by the Center for Religious Freedom concerning Saudi textbooks being used in American and other Saudi-funded madrassas including such passages as: "Jews and the Christians are enemies of the [Muslim] believers" and that "the clash" between the two realms is perpetual and that the spread of Islam through jihad is a "religious duty."

[4] See "Azzam the American," by Raffi Khatchadourian.

[5] "Top Bin Laden Aide Toured the State," San Francisco Chronicle, October 11, 2001.

[6] A San Jose Mercury News article published in 1996 makes clear that Mahboob Khan was at that time the "chairman of the Muslim Community Association." ("Islamic School Battle Continues Impasse: Santa Clara Factions Argue over Industrial Site Used by Religious Center," Tom Schmitz, San Jose Mercury News, January 29, 1996.) 

[7] See "Anniversary Events- 10th Year Anniversary Dinner & Symposium."

[8] Op.cit.

[9] See Andrew McCarthy, "Singing CAIR’s Tune, on Your Dime," National Review Online.

[10] For a comprehensive assessment of CAIR’s history, goals and modus operandi, see "CAIR: Islamists Fooling the Establishment," by Daniel Pipes and Sharon Chadha Middle East Quarterly, Spring 2006

[11] FDCH Political Transcript, September 10, 2003.

[12] "Bad CAIR Day: Ex-Staffer Pleads Guilty to Terror Charges, Senate asks Questions on 9/11 Anniversary," Center for Security Policy.

[13] McCarthy, op.cit.

[14]  Curiously, a number of Islamist organization web pages that refer to Suhail Khan and his family are no longer operational.  A tantalizing excerpt from this December 24, 2003, item remains cached, however: "Unable to attend [an ISNA function] was new committee member Suhail Khan of Washington, D.C." (Emphasis added.)

Perhaps the disappearance of such documents amounts to a coincidence. Yet, we know for a fact that Khan has lately been demanding that certain publications expunge documents that he seems to feel are inconvenient to his political ambitions. (Emphasis added.)

[15]  See Gaffney, op.cit.

[16]  See Debbie Schlussel, "Jihad on Fox’s ‘24′", Frontpage Magazine.

[17]  Kenneth Timmerman reported in Insight Magazine ("Pipes Objects to Fox in the Henhouse," Insight, March 19, 2004) that, "During an anti-Israel rally outside the White House on Oct. 28, 2000, Siddiqi openly threatened the United States with violence if it continued its support of Israel. ‘America has to learn … if you remain on the side of injustice, the wrath of God will come. Please, all Americans. Do you remember that? … If you continue doing injustice, and tolerate injustice, the wrath of God will come.’" Timmerman went on to note: "Siddiqi also has called for a wider application of shari’a law in the United States, and in a 1995 speech praised suicide bombers. ‘Those who die on the part of justice are alive, and their place is with the Lord, and they receive the highest position, because this is the highest honor,’ he was quoted as saying by the Kansas City Star on Jan. 28, 1995."

[18] Charles Krauthammer, "Provocative Moderate: a Conversation with Sheikh Hesham Kabbani," San Jose Mercury News

The Islamic Emirate of Waziristan and the Bajaur Tribal Region: The Strategic Threat of Terrorist Sanctuaries

Eric Sayers

The events of September 11, 2001 forced the United States of America to recognize the strategic importance that sanctuaries provided to terrorist networks like al-Qaeda. A sanctuary, or “black hole” as a recent study by the Center for Strategic Studies termed it, can be defined as a territory where a terrorist organization is able to openly operate. This territory is considered safe either because the sovereign government in which the sanctuary exists has allowed it to exist, or because the government lacks the ability to police the territory in question.[i] With regards to the actual physical location of sanctuaries, the US National Strategy for Combating Terrorism recognizes that: “physical sanctuaries can stretch across an entire sovereign state, be limited to specific ungoverned or ill-governed areas in an otherwise functioning state, or cross national borders.”[ii]

This paper will begin by focusing on the problems that terrorist sanctuaries pose to international security. The sections within the 9/11 Commission Report and the US National Strategy for Combating Terrorism that pertain to sanctuaries will be outlined and discussed.

Next, the focus will outline the specific sanctuaries al-Qaeda has been able to gain control of in the tribal regions of western Pakistan. These include both North and South Wazirisitan and Bajaur. To assistant in explaining the probable causes that led to the establishment of these sanctuaries, a brief history of the events in this region since Operation Enduring Freedom was launched in Afghanistan will be conducted.

The possible consequences of the Pakistan sanctuaries, should they be allowed to persist, will then be addressed. Their existence poses a threat both at an international level, allowing terror networks the ability to plan and train for large-scale missions similar to 9/11, and at regional level, where these safe-havens allow al-Qaeda to continually destabilize the nascent democracy of Afghanistan.

Finally, both short and long term policy options will be considered. The strategy this paper will endorse will be to, as the 9/11 Commission recommends, “keep possible terrorists insecure and on the run” in the tribal regions, while ensuring Pakistan President Musharraf remains in power.[iii]

Islamist Sanctuaries

            Terrorist organizations that are able to establish sanctuaries – where either a government allows them safe passage or does not have the ability to police the area – pose a major threat to both international and regional security. On an international level, The National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States (9/11 Report) outlined both the threat posed by sanctuaries as well as the areas where they could possibly emerge. The report recognized that, “a complex international terrorist operation aimed at launching a catastrophic attack cannot be mounted by just anyone in any place.”[iv] The September 11th attacks, which killed 2,973 individuals, constituted a complex international operation that was the product of years of planning. Smaller attacks, like those in Bali in 2003, Madrid in 2004, and London in 2005, were planned and executed locally. Conversely, large-scale operations like 9/11 require a number of strategic advantages that can only be obtained through access to a sanctuary. In the case of 9/11, this sanctuary was found within the weakly governed state of Afghanistan, where the Taliban leadership allowed Osama bin Laden’s al Qaeda network to operate. According to the 9/11 Report, the advantages that a sanctuary can offer include:

Time, space, and ability to perform competent planning and staff work; a command structure able to make necessary decisions and possessing the authority and contacts to assemble needed people, money, and materials; opportunity and space to recruit, train, and select operatives with the needed skills and dedication, providing the time and structure required to socialize them into the terrorist cause, judge their trustworthiness, and hone their skills; a logistics network able to securely manage the travel of operatives, move money, and transport resources (like explosives) where they need to go; access; reliable communications between coordinators and operatives; and opportunity to test the workability of the plan.[v]

The Commission also addressed the areas of the world that seem to be prime locations for sanctuaries. The report notes that the best areas include characteristics like, “combine rugged terrain, weak governance, room to hide or receive supplies, and low population density with a town or city near enough to allow necessary interaction with the outside world.”[vi] Some possible areas mentioned in the report include: the Pakistan-Afghanistan border region, the Arabian Peninsula, Southeast Asia, and West Africa.[vii]

At the regional level, sanctuaries can also pose a significant threat to the stability of nascent democracies. The US National Strategy for Combating Terrorism, released in October of 2006, stresses the regional importance of sanctuaries: “Our terrorist enemies are striving to claim a strategic country as a haven for terror.  From this base, they could destabilize the Middle East […].”[viii]  This has been evident in Iraq, where Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s organization, Al-Qaeda in Iraq, was able to operate openly in Fallujah until November of 2004, and where Sunni insurgents continue to organize from the al-Anbar Province in western Iraq. These regions have provided the Sunni insurgency with many of the important advantages that were noted in the 9/11 Report.[ix] This is also the case in Afghanistan, where al-Qaeda and remnants of the Taliban, after fleeing U.S. forces during Operation Enduring Freedom in 2001, relocated to the tribal regions along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. From this sanctuary, al-Qaeda has been able to continually launch destabilizing attacks into Afghanistan and then retreat across the Pakistan border where Coalition forces cannot pursue them.[x]

Thomas Donnelly, Resident Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, believes that the object of U.S. strategy should be to deny sanctuaries due to the fact that, “as they grow they assume many of the traditional qualities of a military force, even of a nation-state.”[xi] Recent events have seemingly proven Donnelly correct, as the recruiting, training, planning, and organizing elements vital for the maintenance of an effective fighting force are all afforded to a terrorist network in control of a sanctuary. Furthermore, sanctuaries established recently in both Pakistan and Iraq have possessed qualities of a nation-state, just as Donnelly warns, both with governing structures and declared state-like names. In Pakistan, al-Qaeda has declared the establishment of The Islamic Emirate of Waziristan and set up a governing Shura council.[xii] The same has occurred in Iraq, where al-Qaeda’s governing body, the Mujahideen Shura Council, has declared the Islamic State of Iraq within the Sunni triangle.[xiii] The establishment of governing institutions allows Islamic militants to consolidate and legitimize their power within the region. As this occurs, and the Islamists ties to the region and community strengthen, it only becomes more difficult to mitigate the problem posed by the sanctuary.

Debating the anti-surge resolution

A U.S. Soldier with the Multi-Iraqi Transitional Team, 4th Battalion, 2nd Brigade, 5th Iraqi Army Division positively identifies and engages an enemy target during an operation in Buhriz, Iraq, Feb. 11, 2007. (DoD photo)

(Washington, D.C.): As a public service, the Center for Security Policy is providing excerpts from the more poignant speeches delivered this week in the House of Representatives by those members who recognized the folly of the recently-passed resolution opposing the President’s decision to send additional troops to Iraq in an effort to consolidate American victory in that country.

 

Jim Marshall (D-GA)

 

We are debating today a nonbinding resolution to disapprove the Iraqi-American military surge in Baghdad.  We do so knowing Congress cannot manage a war, let alone micromanage one.  We do so knowing the surge has begun, and we will continue despite our debate and vote.  We do so hoping our debate will not discourage those called upon to execute the surge, but we also do so knowing that it might….the anti-surge resolution is akin to sitting on the sidelines booing in the middle of our own team’s play because we don’t like the coach’s call.  I cannot join mid-play naysaying that might discourage even one of those engaged in this current military effort in Baghdad.

 

 

John McHugh (R-NY)

 

I have heard about how wherever they are, many Members tonight will go to the well when they ultimately vote and try to send the President a message, try to signify to the administration that this war has not been conducted in the appropriate way….

   

The reality is, if this message is heard at all at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue, it is going to speak in whispers. Whispers. But in other lands, in other continents, in other cities, far, far away, when this resolution comes before us, and if it is passed, it is going to crash like thunder. In places like Ramadi and Basra, from Baghdad and beyond, friend and foe alike are going to hear something far different than what we intend.

   

They are going to hear that through this vote we have abandoned the Iraqi people. They are going to hear that America has forsaken this struggle. They will hear that we disavow our military objective in Baghdad really before it has meaningfully begun, and most importantly in the shadows where our enemies lurk, in places like Tehran and Damascus, the message will fail where its authors intend, but it will succeed very, very mightily where they wish it would not.

   

Madam Speaker, for all of the good intent embodied in this proposal, it will not bring a single soldier home sooner. This vote…will not shorten this conflict by a single month, not by a week, not by a day. It will not change the course of a single battle. It will not even alter a pebble that lies on the battlefields in which those struggles will be fought.

   

It will, however, say to the insurgents, the Saddamists, the radical Islamic militants and their patrons that time is on their side. It will say that America has no stomach for this fight. And somewhere in a cave in Afghanistan, or in a hut on the Afghan-Pakistan border, Osama bin Laden is going to smile.

   

His words of a failure of America will be that much closer to reality. As he has said: "The epicenter of these wars is Baghdad, the seat of the caliphate rule." They keep reiterating that "success in Baghdad will be success for the United States, failure in Iraq the failure of the U.S. Their defeat in Iraq will mean defeat in all their wars and a beginning to the receding of their Zionist crusader tide against us."

 

Those are bad messages, Madam Speaker. But I would suggest respectfully to all of my colleagues for all the wrong messages this resolution will send to our enemies, nothing it contains will be more devastating than what it says to our troops, to our military, those brave men and women in uniform who answered the call to arms, issued not by some ephemeral entity, but by us, by this Congress.

   

And how do we say through the resolution we are considering here today, we support your needs, but we reject your mission? We allow for your deployment but we shun the premise of your departure? And what do we say to the wife or husband? How do we respond to the father or the mother or the loved one of the next warrior lost in battle who asks, why did you oppose through that resolution the job they were sent to pursue but did absolutely nothing from preventing them from going from the outset?

  

That is the tyranny, and I have to say it, Madam Speaker, that is the folly of the resolution before us for all its lack of practical result, for the fact that this resolution will do absolutely nothing. Never has this Congress in its history of war considered an action of such dramatic consequence.

   

Now, it is said during the Civil War that the great Southern general, Robert E. Lee, was really tired, and I think we can all relate to this, of the criticism, the second-guessing that was directed at his leadership through the major newspapers of his time.

   

And he observed, ‘Apparently all my best generals had become journalists.’ Today, tonight, I think it can be fairly said of some, apparently all of our best generals have become Congressmen. My colleagues, we are not generals. The Constitution of this great Nation does not provide for 535 Commanders in Chief, yet that is the reality lost in the proposal that we are considering this night in this week.

   

But I would suggest, instead of being diminished by that fact, instead of being lessened by what we are not, we need to be empowered by what we are. And I say to my colleagues tonight on both sides of the aisle, we indeed have a grave responsibility in this matter. But it does not lie in nonbinding resolutions that send wrong messages to our troops and absolutely wrong messages to our enemies. It rests in the authorities vested in us by the Constitution of this great land, the power to fund or not all matters of government, especially war.

 

 

Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL)

 

The Democratic leadership has drafted a resolution that undermines tactical military matters and seeks to override the decisions of our military commanders and the position articulated by General Petraeus. They do not want to discuss the grave consequences of withdrawal and surrender. They do not want to discuss the nature of the enemy, the Islamist militant extremists who seek to destroy us, who like vultures descend on us to prey on our weakness.

 

Some of our colleagues on the other side of the aisle seek to focus on the abstract rather than on the reality. They believe that security will come from withdrawal and surrender. On the contrary, retreat guarantees that the Islamic militants will intensify their efforts against us….

   

Since this resolution provides no concrete alternative, some have expressed support for new diplomatic initiatives. However, I must ask my colleagues: With whom? Do they propose engaging with rogue regimes such as Iran and Syria? These rogue regimes are part of the problem, not part of the solution.

   

Some of our colleagues may say that diplomatic engagement is the key to our success. But I ask them, how are we to engage our allies in the region to help foster security and reconciliation in Iraq if by our withdrawal and surrender we leave them to fend for themselves against enemies in the region who have been strengthened by our retreat? How is diplomacy to be effective in such an abstract context?  We cannot expect to achieve success if we are operating from a position of weakness….

   

Some may try to hide that fact by constantly repeating the empty words that they support the troops. But supporting our troops cannot be reconciled by refusing them the reinforcements that they need or with the retreat in the face of the enemy.

   

The hopelessness with which these measures spring is alien to our American spirit. That spirit has sustained us through many dark times, Mr. Speaker, throughout our history. This hopeful spirit springs directly from the hearts of the American people who have never given up faith in their belief, in their country, in their sons and daughters in uniform facing our enemies overseas.

   

Mr. Speaker, at the beginning of our revolution over two centuries ago when our country faced almost impossible odds and many counseled for retreat, Thomas Payne summoned forth the words that apply directly to the debate in this Chamber when he said, "These are the times that try men’s souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will in this crisis shrink from the service of their country, but he that stands by it now deserves the love and the thanks of every man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered, yet we have this consolation with us: That the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph."

 

 

John Shadegg (R-AZ)

 

This debate may benefit the American people. This resolution will undoubtedly harm America and harm our troops….

 

Let us begin with the text of the resolution….It is two sentences long. It essentially says: ‘stay the course.’ A resolution which says, ‘we oppose increasing troops, but we support our current troops’ is a resolution that says, ‘stay the course.’

 

It is not a resolution that says withdraw….It is not a resolution that says, ‘put in more troops.’ It is a resolution that says, ‘adding more troops is wrong, but we support those that are there.’

   

So why would we support staying the course?….My colleagues on the other side called for a change in strategy. This surge is the change in strategy….

 

Why do [congressional war-opponents] want a nonbinding resolution?  Because they do not want to accept responsibility….Those who oppose this war have a duty to take a stand, one side or the other.  If you oppose the war, then seek withdrawal.  If you do not, then do not undermine our troops.  Because make no mistake, this nonbinding resolution hurts our troops

 

 

Sam Johnson (R-TX)

 

The enemy wants our men and women in uniform to think that their Congress doesn’t care about them, that they are going to cut the funding and abandon them and their mission. They want Congress to cave to the wishes of those who advocate a cut-and-run attitude. And we should not allow that to happen.   We must learn from our mistakes. We cannot leave a job undone like we left in Korea, like we left in Vietnam, like we left in Somalia.  

 

Osama bin Laden said that "in Somalia, the United States pulled out, trailing disappointment, defeat, and failure behind it."  And we didn’t blink an eye when the radicals bombed the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia…or after the Kenya embassy bombings…or that same day at the Tanzania embassy…[or] the USS Cole bombing…and we all know how they tried to bring down the World Trade Towers and didn’t stop until they completed the job September 11.  

 

All of these tragedies of terrorism happened without a United States response.  We can’t waver in our fight for freedom. We cannot abandon the bedrock of democracy; they are the brave and selfless men and women of our United States Armed Forces. We will stand up with them. We must stand up with them. And I will stand up with them in Congress, because they stand up for our freedom every minute of every day.

 

 

David Reichart (R-WA)

 

There have been many bleak moments in America’s history, battles we have been engaged in where American victory was far from certain.

 

In 1942, hell bent on dominating the world with his ideology, Adolph Hitler and the Third Reich systematically marched through Europe, taking the most basic freedoms from the Jewish people and killing millions. The United States entered World War II reluctantly and we were not ready for the hurdles we faced.  Don’t forget, there were times when victory was far from certain. The outlook was grim. Many Americans and Europeans alive today can remember how bleak those times were as the war drug on and on and on. But we didn’t give up. We persevered, because we knew there was too much at stake.

 

Eighty years before World War II, in 1862, President Lincoln faced a war that most believed could not be won. He faced vocal and unrelenting criticism for his resolve to win the Civil War. When the war began, Lincoln called for 74,000 troops for 90 days; 74,000 troops for 90 days. And history has showed us that Lincoln greatly underestimated the resources needed, because, as we know, over 620,000 soldiers were killed during that war.  At a time in our history when it might have been politically expedient to win the Civil War without first achieving victory, President Lincoln pressed on, constantly seeking a new strategy, until he found one that worked because so much was at stake….

   

Today, the United States is engaged in another war, and just as before we face an enemy that wants to destroy our way of life. Just as before we face an enemy that thinks it is winning. Just as before our country is divided. Just as before we are making mistakes. Just as before we face a moment of truth about what to do next. And just as before the consequences of losing are devastating.

 

The enemy is clear about what their intentions are by what they say and what they do. Al Qaeda and the global movement that it has spawned have made it clear they want nuclear and biological weapons. It is clear they want to kill us, Americans. Osama bin Laden has called acquiring nuclear weapons a "religious duty." The fact is we are engaged in a global war with people intent on killing Americans, and regardless of how we got into Iraq, Iraq is now the central front of that war….

   

Sergeant Eddie Jeffers is a U.S. Army infantryman serving in Ramadi, Iraq.   Sergeant Jeffers has a firsthand appreciation for what is at stake in Iraq and our presence there and what it means to the Iraqi people.

 

He writes, "We are the hope of the Iraqi people. They want what everyone else wants in life: Safety, security, somewhere to call home. They want a country that is safe to raise their children in. They want to live on, rebuild and prosper. And America has given them that opportunity, but only if we stay true to the cause and see it to its end. But the country must unite in this endeavor. We cannot place the burden on our military alone. We must all stand and fight, whether in uniform or not. Right now the burden is all on the American soldier. Right now hope rides alone. But it can change. It must change, because there is only failure and darkness ahead for us as a country, as a people, if it doesn’t."….

 

In November, the American people told us they wanted a new strategy, not because they wanted to lose, but because they wanted to win. Now we have a new strategy before us…. we must find a way to achieve victory, and simply saying "no" to a new plan without offering up an alternative will not work and sends a terrible message to our enemies and our soldiers.

 

 

Jim Saxton (R-NJ)

 

Mr. Speaker, it has been said here on the floor by more than one speaker, or suggested at least, that the war in Iraq is not part of the war on terror. I disagree. I could not disagree more with that statement….

   

You don’t have to believe me. But listen to what our enemies say. I have here the text of a letter that was written on July 9, 2005, from Ayman al-Zawahiri, the author, the second in command in al Qaeda, to al-Zarqawi, the person who at that time was the leader of al Qaeda in Iraq. "Our intended goal in this age is to establish a caliphate in the manner of the prophet."….

   

The first stage of this process is to expel the Americans from Iraq, according to al-Zawahiri.  The second stage, establish an Islamic authority or an emirate, to develop it and support it until it achieves a level of a caliphate over as much territory as you can spread power in Iraq. The third stage, he says, is to extend the jihad wave to the secular countries neighboring Iraq. The fourth stage, it may coincide with what came before, he says, the clash with Israel, because Israel was established only to challenge any new Islamic entity….

       

So I think if we are going to take on this effort to develop a caliphate, as one of the previous speakers said before it gets here, then maybe we ought to do what the commander of the national VFW suggests.

   

The commander of the national VFW put out a press release, and I have the text of it here. "The national commander of the Nation’s largest organization of combat veterans is very concerned that the ongoing debate in Congress about the planned troop buildup will be perceived by those in uniform as a sign that America’s lawmakers have given up on them and their mission in Iraq."

 

"My generation," he said, "learned the hard way that when military decisions are second-guessed by opinion polls or overruled by politicians, it’s the common soldier and their families who pay the price."

   

"There is no question," he said, "that mistakes have been made in the prosecution of the war in Iraq," but "there is no playbook to fight an unconventional war against an unconventional enemy that wears no uniform and acts without conscience, yet our forces have adapted and are performing brilliantly," and I agree with him…."We need to send the message to our troops that America wants them to succeed in Iraq by giving the buildup a chance to succeed."

 

 

Cathy McMorris-Rogers (R-WA)

 

On October 10, 2002, before many of us were here, including myself, 296 Members of this body, including 81 Democrats, passed a bipartisan bill authorizing the use of military force in Iraq. The next day, 77 Members of the Senate approved a motion authorizing the same use of force.

 

What Congress realized then was the importance to the security of our own country of a free and stable Iraq and a peaceful and secure Middle East. Five years ago, Congress was at a crossroads and made a very difficult decision. Today, young girls in Iraq can now attend school, democratic elections have been held, a fledgling government is in place, and Saddam Hussein, a murderer of over 300,000 Iraqis, is no longer a threat to his own people or to our national security. In Iraq, we have acknowledged victories and successes.

   

In the past year, we all recognize the condition in Iraq has grown more grave. I know a lot has changed since I visited nearly a year ago. Al Qaeda operatives, Sunni death squads and Shia militias, propped up by the reckless dictatorship of Iran, have fueled violence and threatened the hopes and dreams of the Iraqi people.

 

So Congress is once again at a crossroads….There are three courses of action: leave things as they are; we know this is not sufficient. Draw down Armed Forces in Iraq; this will only lead to deadly indiscriminate violence, costing the lives of hundreds of thousands of innocent people. Or respond by giving our commanders in Iraq the resources and the mission options needed for success.

   

All of us here support our men and women in uniform. We must continue to empower them to defeat the enemies of freedom in Iraq.

 

 

 

 

Terror’s North African front

While news from Africa has lately focused on the nearly-avoided establishment of an Islamist government in Somalia, there is another looming Islamist threat that deserves close attention as it expands in scope.   Recent evidence suggests that a militant Sunni Islamist group based in Northern Africa and tied to al-Qaeda – the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (known by its French acronym, GSPC) – is broadening its reach, with deadly consequences.

Faithful Followers – Not Just Empty Rhetoric

Although GSPC is a relatively small group – whose membership diminished into the several hundreds following an amnesty offered by Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika in 1999 – it continues to carry out deadly attacks on a widespread scale in Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia.   In addition to conducting terrorist acts – which increasingly target westerners – GSPC has expanded its mission to include the provision of training and funding for other terrorist groups and the recruitment of jihadists for the war in Iraq. 

Through the GSPC, extremists are exploiting the abundant pool of young, jobless men inhabiting the region.   Cells spread their Islamist propaganda and calls to join the jihad by distributing CDs.   Recruits have come from Nigeria, Mauritania, Mali and perhaps elsewhere.   As explained by Fernando Reinares, an international terrorism analyst at Madrid’s Elcano Institute, "The GSPC has become more committed to targeting Westerners, including civilians, and to mobilizing recruits for Iraq," and its operatives pose a danger to southern Europe in addition to northwest Africa.  

If there is any doubt of GSPC’s clarity of purpose, one need look no further than the group’s pledge of allegiance to al-Qaeda in 2003, along with its recent name change to "al-Qaeda in the Lands of the Islamic Maghreb."   In a video released in early January of this year, GSPC leader Abu Musab Abdel Wadoud communicated the following message to Usama bin Laden:

Our precious Shaykh and Commander…Our swords are drawn and we are risking our lives, as we consider nothing too precious to sacrifice for the sake of the victory of Islam…In the name of Allah, we will not disappoint you as long as we have a pulse in one of our veins and an eye that can blind.   Our Shaykh, regardless of what happens, you will only find obedience in us, Allah willing.

This indicated a favorable response to a video released in September of 2006 by al-Qaeda’s second in command, Ayman al-Zawahri, who appealed to GSPC to work against Western interests, specifically the United States and France.  

Murderous Actions – Not Just Vague Threats

Since its inception, GSPC has engaged in deadly clashes with Algerian and Tunisian security forces – for example, claiming responsibility for the April 2002 truck-bomb attack on a synagogue in Djerba, in which 21 people were killed, including 14 German tourists.   And only this past Tuesday, GSPC claimed responsibility for yet another terrorist attack in Algeria, as seven bombs went off almost simultaneously, killing six people east of the capital Algiers in the elaborate assault.

More recently, in late December 2006, GSPC specifically targeted Westerners in an attack on a bus carrying contract workers for the construction firm Brown & Root – Condor.   The ambush resulted in the killing of an Algerian driver and wounded one American, four Britons, two Lebanese, a Canadian and an Algerian.   GSPC claimed responsibility, stating:

Allah…has guided a group of mujahideen in executing an operation that targeted crusaders working for the American company Brown & Root – Condor in Bouchaoui, on the road between Algiers and Zeralda…This operation is a modest gift that we offer to our Muslim brothers who are suffering from the misfortunes of the new Crusade that is targeting Islam and its sanctuaries.

Of particular concern is the fact that the group involved in the December attack – carried out by five Tunisians and one Mauritanian – crossed into Tunisia through the country’s sprawling desert border with Algeria, reminiscent of the manner in which Afghanistan’s deserts have harbored Islamic militants.

On January 12 of this year, Tunisian Interior Minister Rafik Haj Kacem announced the dismantlement of a GSPC cell, following a three-week period of separate gun battles between Tunisian security forces and the terrorists.   This resulted in the seizure of explosives, embassy maps and lists of foreign diplomats.  

And Moroccan authorities announced that same month that a radical Islamist network recruiting jihadist volunteers to fight in Iraq was broken up, resulting in the arrest of 62 would-be terrorists.   The network was reported as having solid ideological, financial, and operational ties to GSPC and the alleged leader of the group, 36-year-old Tunisian Abu Hashem, is a veteran of the Bosnia, Chechnya, and Afghanistan jihads, and has worked with jihadist cells operating in Northern Italy.   Hashem, in fact, was indicted in April 2005 in Milan, but left Italy before resurfacing to run operations in Tunisia.

Indicating the growing expanse of GSPC operations, in late-December 2006, the 10th and 11th stages of the Paris-Dakar Auto Rally race were cancelled on the advice of the French secret service, who believed GSPC might call upon 500 armed followers across the Sahara to carry out attacks.

Furthermore, reports suggest the group has established ties to the Moroccan terrorists responsible for the 2004 Madrid bombings.   The arrest of Moroccan terrorist Mbark El Jaafari – who may have received military training in al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan in 2001 – in the Spanish town of Reus is another of the latest examples of a GSPC–al-Qaeda presence in Europe and recruitment for fighting in Iraq.   In fact, according to Spanish police, GSPC has sent 32 recruits to Iraq to launch suicide attacks since May of 2006.  

Part of a Global Islamist Movement

To the Islamists it does not matter if we choose to limit our scope of attention to Iraq or Afghanistan.   The enemy is constantly on the march and will continue to wage war wherever Sharia law does not rule.   GSPC is only one example of a group sharing al-Qaeda’s ideology and international agenda.   It is a template repeated around the world, from the Egyptian group Jamaat al Islamiya, to Lashkar-i-Tayyaba in South Asia.

As detailed above, this radical Islamist group with origins in, and operating out of, Africa poses a threat to our allies in Europe and Americans in Iraq.   We cannot ignore their capability and willingness to wage jihad.   Abu Musab Abdel Wadoud said in his call to arms and appeal to al Qaeda, "Come dear brothers, and help Allah and his messenger!..Come and earn the honor of participating in the current Islamic battle between the camp of the believers and the camp of the infidels!"   It is time to fight back.

Our Continued Oil Vulnerability

A Saudi wing of al Qaeda, sometimes also referred to as the Bin Laden Brigade, has renewed calls for attacks on US oil suppliers throughout the world.   Reuters reports that the threat appeared on the organizations e-magazine, Sawt al-Jihad (Voice of Holy War), and posted on an Islamist militant web site yesterday. 

The posting of Sawt al-Jihad, the first time in almost two years that the previously biweekly magazine has been released, may indicate a resurgence of Saudi al Qaeda.

"It is necessary to hit oil interests in all regions which serve the United States not just in the Middle East. The goal is to cut its supplies or reduce them through any means," the group said.

Saudi and US government authorities are taking the threat very seriously. The group is the same one that was behind the failed February 2006 car bomb attack on the world’s largest oil processing plant at Abqaiq (a.k.a. Buqayq) in eastern Saudi Arabia.  This attack was the first ever by al Qaeda on a Saudi oil refinery.

The group has also been suspected as being behind the al-Qaeda linked beheading of American contractor Paul Johnson.

Visit our Energy Security Project to find out what we can do to end our oil vulnerability.

 

The nexus of evil

By Robert T. McLean

Fifteen years after the end of the Cold War, many remain surprised that a coalition of states has not formed to balance the power of the United States.  Authors such as Randall L. Schweller of Ohio State University continue to offer theories towards explaining the supposed state of affairs and attribute much of the unbalance to domestic political factors that discourage the necessary efforts to ultimately challenge American primacy.  But the last decade has witnessed something quite different as two powerful states have emerged to present the first post-Cold War challenge to a United States centered unipolar world.

Both Russia and China have exceedingly different foreign policy aims than the United States, and domestic complexities inevitably have distanced Moscow and Beijing from Washington on a series of pressing international matters.  The common aspiration to produce a multipolar world has driven Russia and China to effectively align against the United States incorporating a skilled approach of realpolitik that often results in support for actors that undermine the global security environment.  

One must look no further than the present crisis with Iran to come to terms with the fact that Moscow and Beijing have been rather unhelpful in pressuring the world’s most nefarious regimes to behave in a more responsible manner.  The unwillingness to apply sanctions or even mention the use of force only emboldens Tehran, giving the impression that serious negotiations are unnecessary because serious consequences will likely be avoided.  Likewise, North Korea’s nuclear threats may have never materialized had the Russians and, to a greater extent, the Chinese not provided economic aid and diplomatic protection to this communist holdover.  Unfortunately, the contemporary struggles in reaching a consensus on Iran and North Korea are neither new nor unusual.  In fact, from the time of its inception, the Sino-Russian alliance has been the facilitator of not only rogue regimes, but also the world’s most dangerous terrorist organizations.

The Origins of the Nexus

In 1996 Russia saw a fundamental shift in its foreign policy.  Yevgeny Primakov assumed the reign of the Foreign Ministry, and Boris Yeltsin wrestled with a Russian Federation weakened by the war in Chechnya.  Apprehensions over territorial integrity and the eastward march of NATO provided an impetus for the Kremlin to refocus its energies on promoting its national interests in more assertive tones.   

At the same time Beijing was experiencing a heightening of tensions in the Taiwan Strait resulting in President Clinton’s eventual deployment of two carrier battle groups in an effort to clearly warn the mainland against any escalation of military provocations toward Taipei.  Having observed the advances of the United States in missile technology during the Gulf War, the Chinese were also becoming desperate to obtain the advanced weapons and technology needed to modernize their military forces.  

While Russia resumed selling arms to China in 1990 as a product of improved relations derived from an altered Soviet foreign policy towards the end of the Cold War, it was not until 1996 that mutual suspicions began to seriously thaw.   This was essentially reflected in the transfers of Russian arms and technology to China.  According to the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO), in the seven years from 1990 through 1996 Moscow exported $3.8 billion in arms to Beijing, with $2.5 billion of that occurring in 1996 alone.  This trend has largely continued as China currently accounts for about forty-five percent of Russian arms sales.  

The event that likely contributed more than any other to the strengthening of ties between Russia and China, however, was the NATO intervention in Kosovo in 1998 and 1999.  Moscow and Beijing maintained a position that is rather consistent with how they have approached recent international exigencies.  An emphasis on diplomacy and consensus was the order of the day, and any action taken without a UN Security Council resolution was deemed illegal.  However, such denunciations of the use of force appear rather hollow when analyzing the rapid deployment of Russian forces to Chechnya just several months later.    

Yet the motivations for the Russians and Chinese were palpable.  Besides Moscow’s close relations with Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, both the Kremlin and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) feared ethnic separatist movements in their own respective countries and neither had the desire to set a precedent for uninvited foreign intervention.  The rapid escalation of ethnic conflict and the subsequent intervention by foreign powers provided a paradigmatic illustration of the fate that could fall on their own respective countries should such a likely scenario emerge.

If not the decisive turning point, it is clear that Kosovo represented a catalyst for pushing the leaders in Beijing and Moscow toward the conclusion that mutual cooperation to counter the West would be needed in the future.  Dr. Sergei Troush, a NATO Democratic Institute Fellow, stated at the time: "If earlier, foreign policy elites in both Russia and China had serious reservations to the thesis of ‘strategic partnership’ and different understanding of this partnership, now, the necessity to develop such partnership for countering ‘hegemonism’ and ‘military dictate’ of NATO outweighs all other arguments." Thus, the alliance was solidified, as was the policy of ending the American-led international order.  

This is a point that has largely been missed by both security policy practitioners and their observers in the media and academia.  Whereas a resurgence of proclamations reminiscent of those following the collapse of the Soviet Union labeling the United States an unchallenged superpower of the sheer dominance not seen since the Roman Empire occurred after September 11, 2001, it has become increasingly popular in the last several years to declare that America’s reign as the leader of a unipolar world will inevitably come to an end in the not-too-distant future.  

In fact, Coral Bell, a widely respected authority on power politics in the international arena, made the case in the Winter 2006 issue of The American Interest that we have indeed reached the "twilight of the unipolar world."   However, while Bell accurately stated that a foreign policy based on balance of power is both dangerous and likely to produce informal alliances against the United States, while acknowledging that such a scenario "would be the worst possible outcome for Washington’s diplomacy," she – reminiscent of countless other analysts – fails to recognize that this is precisely what has been taking place for the last several years.  This, along with the prevalence of colliding national interests, has inevitably provided the basis for the diplomatic difficulties experienced by both the Clinton and Bush Administrations when dealing with Moscow and Beijing.  

Guardians of the Rogues

Perhaps the most recognized element of Russia and China’s disturbing behavior has been their support for rogue regimes.  However, most references of the inability to get the Russians and the Chinese to side with the United States in the Security Council fail to include the dynamics behind the deadlock.  Rarely are the motivations of Beijing and Moscow articulated, and even less frequent have been any offerings of the dramatic impact that these nations’ policies have on the world. 

While the vast majority of publicized differences between the permanent members of the West and our eastern counterparts in Security Council relate to the weapons programs of both Iran and North Korea, the problem runs much deeper than that.   In an extensive list of rogue regimes that either or both Russia and China support it is apparent that many of these would certainly have their days numbered without the political and economic support of Moscow and Beijing.  The unfortunate fact is that these two powers have used their vast resources to sustain some of the world’s worst regimes in an effort to both serve their interests and to ensure that the United States is undermined wherever possible.  The scope of these relationships is far too vast to copiously encompass in this essay; nevertheless, it is worth examining just a few of the more noteworthy examples.

In Latin America Hugo Chavez has used his oil wealth and anti-American rhetoric to establish rather concrete partnerships with Russia and China.  Besides for an arms supplier in Russia and an alternative energy market to the "American fascists" provided by China, Chavez’s anti-American positions and anti-imperialist rhetoric made him the favorite in both Beijing and Moscow to a assume Latin America’s de facto designated seat on the UN Security Council.  The well documented sale of Russian arms to Caracas and Chinese investment in Venezuela’s hydrocarbon infrastructure only partially explain the motivations behind Moscow and Beijing’s expanding ties with Hugo Chavez’s regime.  

Commenting on the PRC’s view of its involvement in the Western Hemisphere, Chinese senior legislator Cheng Siwei told Xinhua in early October: "All being developing countries, China shares many common ground with Latin American countries."  He then clarified with a rather palpable reference to the United States: "We have all experienced the fight against imperialism and colonialism and the struggle for independence. All of these have forged the political basis for bilateral cooperation."  Just months prior, while referring to Chavez’s late July visit to Russia, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mikhail Kamynin expressed similar sentiments emanating from the Kremlin as he told the Moscow-based news agency Interfax that the "two countries’ positions on most international issues are similar or identical."  Considering the exhaustive list of outrageous public pronouncements by the Venezuelan leader, such a claim by a Russian spokesperson should be ample evidence that Moscow shares few of the same interests as the United States and envisions a quite different international order.

Beyond North Korea in Asia, the dictatorships in Burma and Uzbekistan have maintained their firm grip on power as a result of powerful relationships with both Beijing and Moscow.  After Uzbek President Islam Karimov had demonstrators massacred in Andijon in May 2005, the United States decisively responded and condemned the government’s actions.  This turn of events presented Russia and China with the opportunity to consolidate their relations with Karimov and have United States forces expelled from Uzbekistan.  However, the human rights situation in Burma is far more severe, and Washington has had sanctions on the military junta for the most of nineteen years to virtually no avail.  On January 12, the United States and its allies were finally able to put the issue to a vote at the UN Security Council. The failed draft resolution called for the Burmese regime to restore fundamental freedoms and engage in political reforms.  It is of little surprise, however, that it was both Russia and China that joined to veto the resolution.  

In Africa, the regimes in Sudan and Zimbabwe continue to receive political, economic, and military support from Beijing and Moscow.  The sense of vulnerability without Russian and Chinese support was illustrated when Zimbabwe’s president Robert Mugabe thanked the two countries in last year’s Heroes’ Day ceremony "for standing by us in the Security Council and fending off the threats from the West."  China, likewise, currently maintains that no United Nations peacekeeping forces should enter Sudan until the genocidal regime extends an invitation. Meanwhile, Mugabe continues to be propped up by Beijing’s financial assistance despite a disastrous economic policy that has resulted in the confiscation of land from both the country’s poor urban and white farming communities, thus resulting in inflation rates soaring above 1,000 percent.  

In Sudan hundreds of thousands are raped, murdered, and forced from their villages as the West’s efforts to improve the situation are undermined by unconditional support for the regime in Khartoum from Beijing and Moscow.  While Russia has refused to abandon its aid to the Sudanese military, China continually matches this effort with political and diplomatic endeavors of its own.  In fact, just as outgoing UN Secretary General Kofi Annan called for a hearing on the human rights abuses in Darfur in late November, the PRC had officials stationed in Khartoum for a meeting of the Sino-Arab Friendship Association celebrating the shared policy of "no interfering in internal affairs of other countries."  

Further north, despite the political assassinations in Lebanon likely conceived in Damascus, the Kremlin has maintained its traditionally strong relations with Syria and continues to provide them with various weapons systems and their components.  The sale of advanced SA-18 surface-to-air missiles in late 2005 is just one example.  Similarly, prior to Libya’s late 2003 disclosure and abandonment of its weapons of mass destruction programs, China and Russia fostered strong political and economic ties with the distinguished terror master Colonel Muammar Gaddafi.  As a consequence of its continued defiance of international norms, Libya fell under harsh penalties in the mid 1990’s with Congress and the Bush Administration deciding to renew the 1996 Iran and Libya Sanctions Act in the summer of 2001.  This drew sharp criticism from Russia, whose companies faced penalties for continued cooperation with Tehran and Tripoli.  A source in the Russian Foreign Ministry told Interfax at the time that Washington was "once again trying to give its internal legislation an extra-territorial character and put pressure on the other countries on an invented pretext."  The official also accurately claimed that these sanctions would not stop cooperation with either regime.  

Indeed, both Beijing and Moscow continue to maintain extensive economic ties with Iran.  Hard currency, natural resources, arms, and diplomatic support are the basis for this strategic triangle.  In 2005, Russia ran an approximate $1.8 billion trade surplus with Iran through the export of primarily arms, technology, heavy machinery, and steel.  While bilateral trade decreased in the first quarter of 2006, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has gone on the record to state that any possible placement of sanctions on Iran will fail to dissuade Moscow from continuing its military cooperation with Tehran.

To provide a glimpse into the military assistance the Iranians are receiving from Moscow, it is worth offering just a few examples in this vast arena of advanced weapons that have been, and continue to be, transferred to the increasingly problematic regime in Tehran.  In November 2005, Russia agreed to sell Iran 29 Tor-M1 air defense systems capable of destroying both aircraft and cruise missiles.  These were only one part of a reported $1 billion package that also included MIG fighter jets and patrol boats.  Moscow has also recently engaged in negotiations with Tehran regarding the S-300PMU1 long range air defense systems, radar stations, and T-90S tanks.  The British defense journal Jane’s Intelligence Digest reported in the spring that the Russian sale of highly advanced S-300PS surface-to-air missiles to Belarus may windup being secretly transferred to Iran as part of a trilateral agreement between Moscow, Minsk, and Tehran.  

But what is it that drives Moscow and Beijing to provide such substantial assistance to regimes such as that in the Islamic Republic of Iran?  The CCP Central Committee in a subsidiary publication of the People’s Daily published an article on in late August that makes all too clear the position held in Beijing on a series of international issues.  The newspaper, Huanqiu Shibao, has strong ties to the Chinese military, and lucidly makes the case that the United States is on the decline.  Commenting on the current difficulties with Iran, the publication celebrates that "Iran has seen through the US strategic situation and her pragmatic nature of ‘bullying the weak’ and ‘fearing the strong."  Such conclusions by Beijing are not only worrisome because they demonstrate a sense of solidarity with Tehran, but they also could be dangerous for the fact that a display of impotence with Iran on Washington’s part could well lead the PRC to the conclusion that the United States may be little more than a paper tiger.  

Again, it is worth emphasizing that the Russians and Chinese are not driven purely by national interests irrespective of the United States.  In fact, as was noted above, the interests of the nexus not only happen to differ from those of the United States on myriad international issues, but those interests are often centered upon the goal of weakening the United States’ relative power.  The bipartisan U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission presented similar conclusions in November with the release of its annual report to congress when it noted the following:

China’s regional activities in Latin America, Africa, and the Middle East and around East Asia are beginning to assume the character of a counterbalancing strategy vis-à-vis the United States.  That is, China’s support for rogue regimes and anti-American governments and groups in vital regions serves an international purpose: to balance American power, create an alternative model of governance, and frustrate the ability of the international community to uphold its norms.

What the report fails to mention, however, is that Beijing’s regional initiatives are all the more potent and ominous with Moscow acting as co-chair of this global enterprise.  This has not only been demonstrated in both bilateral and trilateral relationships, but also in well established multilateral institutions.  The Russian and Chinese led Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) is the most alarming example of these as this expanding alliance has both in its stated objectives and in practice demonstrated its desire to create a new world order based on multipolarity.  While one of the stated central objectives of the SCO is to counter regional terrorism, Iran has not only become an observer nation in the organization, but the alliance is contemplating offering Tehran full-member status despite its widely held reputation as the world’s leading state sponsor of terror.  The contradictory nature of Iran’s association with the SCO is just one of the many illustrations of Russian and Chinese complicity with both rogue regimes, and even more critically, terrorists and their supporters.

Terrorism and Realpolitik

The basic presumption for most in the West is that while Beijing and Moscow may not be the most helpful partners, they at least share the common goal with the United States of eradicating terrorism.  Sadly, this is not true.

Hamas, Hezbollah, and even al Qaeda have benefited from actions out of the Kremlin and the Chinese security establishment.  It is no secret that Yaser Arafat and the Palestinian Liberation Organization were heavily supported by the Soviet Union in the seventies and eighties, and Moscow’s healthy relationship with Palestinian leadership is one of the many elements that survived the death of the Soviet Union.  The Kremlin’s rapid recognition of the Hamas dominated government in the Palestinian territories drew sharp criticism in various circles in the West, but it was the diplomatic support of Hezbollah in its recent standoff with Israel that all too clearly demonstrated Russian President Vladimir Putin’s willingness to work with terrorists if it improves Russia’s position in the Middle East and helps undermine the United States and its allies.

In fact, Hezbollah’s use of the Russian made Kornet-E anti-tank laser-guided missiles against Israeli forces in Lebanon displays that Moscow’s promiscuity in its arms export’s to rogue regimes has a direct impact on the forces terrorist organizations can employ.  Russia is know to have sold Syria these weapons and claimed to be shocked when the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) provided substantial evidence that Hezbollah used them in the July and August fighting in Southern Lebanon.  As noted above, Moscow also provides Tehran with advanced weapons despite the fact that Iran is a major supporter of Hezbollah.  The Russian foreign ministry has defended such weapons sales by stating: "Russia always limits its exports to Iran to arms used only for defense and [they are] not capable of destabilizing the situation in the region."  As we have seen, this explanation is rather unconvincing as many of these rogue states simply act as intermediaries in forwarding those weapons to third parties, not excluding terrorist organizations.  

Regrettably, Beijing has been an even greater enabler of terrorism than Moscow.   This was most clearly established after the United States fired cruise missiles into Afghanistan and Sudan following the bombing of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in August 1998.  A significant number of the missiles that landed in Afghanistan never exploded and Osama bin Laden and his cohorts were left with valuable technology that they had little capability of capitalizing on themselves.   Fortunately for al Qaeda, a buyer quickly emerged.   

Although Beijing denies the claims, European intelligence sources believe that the Chinese purchased several Tomahawk missiles from bin Laden to reverse engineer soon after the unexploded missiles landed in Afghanistan.  Both the Washington Post and The Guardian reported in October 2001 that Italian counter-terrorism officers essentially confirmed earlier reports through the bugging of an apartment of a local al Qaeda cell.  The papers obtained a transcript of the secretly recorded conversation in which the al Qaeda operative revealed that several "Chinese businessmen" paid as much as $10 million for the missiles.  

While the CIA has revealed little publicly on this matter, after the stories broke in the fall of 2001 a spokesman for the agency admitted that unsubstantiated evidence about this transaction had circulated since 1998, but it was unlikely that bin Laden received $10 million.  This explanation is far from comforting.  Beijing’s desire to obtain state-of-the-art missile technology coupled with their support of the Taliban at the United Nations – on December 19, 2000, China elected to abstain from UNSC Resolution 1333 which called on states to end their assistance to the Taliban – provide a solid foundation for the plausibility that the intelligence was accurate.  If indeed true, such a wanton act of providing Osama bin Laden with millions of dollars to further fund his terror campaign certainly needs to be addressed more thoroughly when examining who are Washington’s real partners in the War on Terror.   Considering the 9/11 Commission Report’s assessment that the operations that led to that fateful day cost about $400,000 to $500,000, it is not inconceivable that some of the money that may have been provided by Beijing could well have later helped finance the planning and execution of al Qaeda operations since 1998.  

It is also worth bearing in mind that bin Laden, Ayman al-Zawahiri and other wanted terrorists are believed to be hiding in northwest Pakistan.  While the regime of Pervez Musharraf has consistently refused to permit American military operations in the region or take strong actions themselves, it is also true that the Chinese have more influence than anyone in Islamabad.  Were Beijing to apply pressure on Musharraf to cooperate to a greater degree with the United States and join Washington in its criticisms of the placating peace treaty with the Taliban in Waziristan, the Pakistani leader might become a little more accommodating to plans to capture or kill bin Laden and his associates rather than claiming that such wanted terrorists persist in hiding out in Afghanistan.  It is more likely, in fact, that Beijing has been obstructive in this regard as they neither want a United States military presence in neighboring Pakistan, nor do they want offensive operations in Waziristan to lead toward instability throughout the country.  As long as Beijing can keep its approximate ten million Muslims in Xinjiang relatively isolated from extremist groups – as is the case with Moscow, the fear of ethnic separatism remains prevalent – the Chinese will have little concern with appeasing America’s enemies in Pakistan.  

While the United States is winning the War on Terror, things could be going considerably more smoothly had Russia and China truly been on our side.  Weapons, foreign terrorists, and Iranian agents have obstructed coalition efforts in Iraq – an integral part of the War on Terror – facilitated by Moscow and Beijing’s continued support of Tehran and Damascus.  

Neither Russia nor China desires to see a United States defeat in Iraq and for that country to descend into chaos and civil war.  Such a scenario would destabilize the entire region and provide a launching ground for future terrorist attacks throughout the region and the world.  However, Presidents Vladimir Putin and Hu Jintao are cautiously satisfied as the United States has been drawn into a counterinsurgency that challenges the vary foundations of an internationally assertive United States, let alone one that seeks to transform the Middle East through the promotion of democracy.  As Fyodor Lukyanov stated in The Moscow Times in mid-September, "Moscow bases its modus operandi exclusively on national interests and a balance of power more appropriate to the classical geopolitics of the 19th century," and thus, "[h]umanitarian and ideological motivations behind the actions of others are interpreted as an attempt to conceal the genuine intent."  This is as true in Iraq as it is in Russia’s near-abroad.  Whether Beijing’s suspicions are as real as Moscow’s in this regard is somewhat hard to determine, but the CCP’s one-party rule inevitably puts it at odds with a Washington that supports human freedom and democracy.

IT HAS NOW BECOME UNMISTAKABLE that from the last dictatorship in Europe to the first major foreign attacks on the continental United States since the War of 1812, both rogue regimes and terrorist entities have witnessed the benefits of a Sino-Russian effort to create a multipolar world.  While Moscow and Beijing rarely actively encourage rogue states and their terrorist counterparts to initiate regional or global confrontations, their failure to join responsible nations in efforts to confront and curb dangerous behavior provides encouragement enough.  When measured by historical standards, Russia, and even China, fall nowhere near the level of others that could truly be classifieds as evil states.  Thus, it would certainly be inappropriate to label them as such.  Yet, it must be kept in mind that every regime that has earned itself that distinction has the support of at least one, if not both, of the members of the nexus.  

The aforementioned August commentary published by the CCP Central Committee eerily warned when referring to a perceived relative deterioration of American power: "The mantis stalks the cicada, unaware of the oriole behind.   And the hunter is even targeting the oriole.  A new ‘hunter’ has shown up."  Regrettably, a majority of those in the West remain unaware of the predators that seek to destroy the current American-led international order.  The United States will not hypothetically be faced with competition for primacy at some uncertain time in the future; rather, it is being challenged at the current moment led by both Russia and China.  As long as this remains the case, Washington will continue to experience immeasurable difficulties in implementing a largely successful foreign policy.  The first step in meeting these challenges will be realizing that other major powers often have conflicting interests with the United States and some, regrettably, actively labor towards assisting its decline.  Democrats by and large fail to recognize that foreign policy difficulties reach beyond the current White House, while the Bush Administration, for its part, has failed to formulate creative policies for dealing with these complex dynamics.  It is in America’s interests that both parties come to fully understand that this nexus knows few limitations in the means in which they will employ to advance their interests and recreate a multipolar world.  

This essay by CSP Research Associate Robert T. McLean appeared on January 31, 2007 in Global Politician.

Afghanistan, the forgotten project

By Dat Cao*

Afghanistan was the first country liberated by the United States in the War on Terror after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.  The country ruled by the repressive Taliban regime was harboring and aiding al Qaeda terrorists who were responsible for carrying out the strike against the United States.  After repeated calls for the Taliban to denounce terrorism were met with deaf ears, the United Statesand its allies launched an invasion of the country dubbed Operation Enduring Freedom on October 7, 2001and drove the Taliban out of the capital of Kabulin little more than a month later on November 13th.

Since then, the United States has engaged in another liberation, that one on the country of Iraq ruled by an equally despicable tyrant, Saddam Hussein.  This military operation has been more controversial and thus has received most of the attention of the world ever since. Iraq’s status is tracked daily by the media outlets throughout the world and its fate has been tied to politicians in countries half a world away.  Meanwhile, Afghanistanis quietly struggling to rebuild itself after decades of warfare and strife.

This lack of notice on Afghanistan does not make it less important, however.  Located in a strategically important region of the world, wedged between the rogue nation of Iran to the west, the volatile American ally of Pakistan to its east and the uncertainty of the former Soviet republics of Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Kyrgyzstan to the north, Afghanistan’s success as a democratic and stable country is essential to American security.

Today, only two months from the upcoming five year anniversary of the liberation of Afghanistan, the country is still struggling to secure itself, despite the progress U.S. and NATO forces have made.  The nation has held elections for its president and legislature over the last couple of years.  Improvements have been made to scattered regions of the country as foreign troops along with NGOs have contributed to rebuilding the country. Afghanistanis slowly building its own military and police force, so that it can one day stand by itself.

Despite all of these advances, there is still much work to be done in Afghanistan.  Violence has increased in the past year as the remnants of the Taliban regime along with al Qaeda elements have emerged with a vengeance, especially in the southern regions.  Much of the billions of dollars of aid that has been promised by the international community have seemed to be lost in the transition with no tangible improvements to be seen.  The legislature is full of former warlords and other questionable people who are seen as roadblocks to further reforms.  The poppy trade has flourished in the last year, fueling the chaos and violence that still engulfs much of the nation.  Furthermore, the border with Pakistan remains porous as insurgents use Afghanistan’s neighbor as a safe haven to strike with impunity.

To ensure a bright future for Afghanistan, the international community, led by the United States need to redouble their efforts in rebuilding the nation.  The outpouring of aid needs to be monitored so that it can actually reach the people.  More pressure needs to be placed onPakistanto ensure that the Taliban and their al Qaeda allies do not have a refuge to hide.  A possible increase of troops might be needed to provide the necessary security for both the people, so they will have the courage to rebuild in the face of threats and attacks and for aid workers, who are risking their lives to help reconstruct the country.

 


Dat Cao is a former intern with the Center for Security Policy and a student of international relations at Stanford University.

States of denial

Decision Brief                             No. 06-D 50                                2006-10-02


(Washington, D.C.): So, Bob Woodward has become the latest journalist to try to influence the upcoming mid-term congressional elections with a new book, State of Denial – a harsh critique of the President and senior members of his administration whom he contends are in such a state with respect to Iraq. Woodward alleges as evidence a refusal by Mr. Bush to: recognize the magnitude of the problem there; adjust course; level with the American people; or fire Donald Rumsfeld for his supposed singlehanded responsibility for most of the difficulties we now face.

Who’s in Denial?

A more careful and rigorous examination of who is in denial and about what would establish that there is actually a pandemic of the phenomenon psychologists call “cognitive dissonance,” whereby people don’t see what they don’t want to see. In fact, there are at least four States of Denial afflicting the national security debate and decision-making process at the moment:

1) President Bush’s critics are by-and-large in denial about the true nature of the war we are in. They hector him about Iraq, but fail to address what Mr. Bush has been saying for some time: We are in a global conflict with a totalitarian ideology bent on our destruction.

As the President has correctly noted, the adherents to this ideology – “Islamic fascists” – did not start attacking us when we liberated Iraq. While our efforts to help deliver a powerful Arab nation like Iraq from their grasp has reportedly become a “cause celebre” for the Islamofascists, they are not interested only in defeating us there. Such totalitarians are convinced, as their Iranian front-man Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has put it, that “a world without America is not only desirable, it is achievable.” Most of those who focus, as Woodward has done, on fault-finding about Iraq seem to deny that there are any connections between this War for the Free World’s Iraqi front and the larger strategy of which our efforts to prevail there are a critical part.

2) The President’s critics are usually stunningly silent on the implications of the “strategic redeployment” from Iraq that they recommend on varying timetables – apart, that is, from getting U.S. forces out of harm’s way (at least for the moment). Indeed, they seem to be in a state of denial about the ineluctable reality that, as the recent National Intelligence Estimate they are so fond of selectively quoting observed: “Threats to the U.S. are intrinsically linked to U.S. success or failure in Iraq.” In other words, those who advocate an admission of failure in Iraq may object to calling it “cutting and running,” but they cannot escape the global consequences of doing just that.

3) Those who insisted that the George H.W. Bush administration cash-in the so-called “peace dividend,” and then urged Bill Clinton to cut America’s force structure and modernization programs even further, are in a particularly acute state of denial. They take no responsibility whatever for the contribution their past agitation has made to the U.S. military being sorely stretched by counterinsurgency operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Their short-term answer seems to be that, by getting U.S. forces out of the former, there will be more to deploy to the latter for the purpose of “finding Osama bin Laden.” Such a solution fails, however, to appreciate that bin Laden’s al Qaeda is just one manifestation of the Islamofascist movement that has been cultivated worldwide for decades by Saudi Arabia and, to a lesser extent, by Iran (see State of Denial #1 above.) It also ignores the predictable compounding of the danger posed by such totalitarians far-and-wide once we concede defeat in Iraq (see #2).

4) Most Democrats and Republicans appear to be cohabiting in another, particularly worrisome state of denial: the failure to recognize and respond appropriately to a danger not present in previous Wars for the Free World – namely, the substantial presence in America of a Fifth Column of Islamofascist organizations and cells, front groups and fellow travelers.

Apart from a hearing here or there (notably, Arizona Republican Senator Jon Kyl’s Terrorism Subcommittee has convened a few impressive ones) and the occasional comment from a legislator or two, neither party has been willing to date to come to grips with the strategic dangers of an enemy within.

As a result, American prisons, military units, college campuses and mosques continue to be used with impunity for Islamist recruitment and indoctrination. Organizations like the Council on American Islamic Relations that are – at the very least – sympathetic to our Islamofascist foes are charged with providing “sensitivity training” to FBI agents on how to “reach out” to Muslims. Senior State Department personnel are among the GOP and Democratic officials who regularly meet with and rely upon representatives of organizations that should be under surveillance, rather than treated as legitimate interlocutors with “moderate” Muslims. Unsurprisingly, neither party is even proposing, let alone waging, a competent program of anti-Islamist ideological warfare.

The Bottom Line

It turns out that there are plenty of States of Denial to choose from. On balance, the President and his party are less guilty of ignoring inconvenient facts and doing a better job of pursuing sensible and appropriate policies to deal with them than are their critics, whose denials of reality are transparently irresponsible and prone to costly failure. American voters will have to choose their poison. We better all hope they vote as if their lives depend on the outcome, because indeed they do.

Prevent Venezuela from joining Security Council

By Luis Fleischman

(Washington, D.C.): On October 16, a secret ballot of the United Nations General Assembly will decide who will be elected for the Latin American seat at the UN Security Council left vacant by Argentina. If no country wins two-thirds of the vote — 128 out of 192 — the Assembly votes again, until one country wins the necessary majority.

The two leading contenders are Venezuela and Guatemala, even though there are now talks regarding the possible candidacy of Uruguay for the seat instead of Venezuela.

Venezuela has put a lot of effort into winning this seat. Among those supporting Venezuela are the 22 members of the Arab League, the countries of the Southern Common market Mercosur including Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay. Bolivia, Cuba and the Caribbean Community 13 country trade bloc known as CARICOM. Russia and China have announced that they will also support Venezuela. Iran, of course, is a strong supporter of Venezuela. Opposed to Venezuela are Mexico, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Colombia, the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico. Most European countries seem to be backing Guatemala while Asia and Africa are divided. In Latin America Chile, Haiti and Peru remain undecided.

Even though Venezuela is a country led by a radical and delirious dictator, it has amassed great support. This is the effective result of a world campaign which included more than a mere public relations strategy. Venezuela has been offering subsidized oil to countries in the Caribbean, buying foreign debt bonds (Argentina) and offering financial assistance to far away countries in Asia and Africa.

Why should the world oppose Venezuela’s seat on the UN Security Council since it would be temporary?

There are a number of reasons why it is imperative to oppose Venezuela’s bid to be on the Security Council. Venezuela proclaims a strong anti-Americanism, and, at the same time tries, to counterbalance US power in the world and particularly in Latin America. In the course of that action Venezuela’s leader Hugo Chavez makes alliances with rogue and dangerous states such as Iran and Syria, tries to politically de-stabilize regimes in Latin America such as Peru, Mexico and Ecuador; actively supports radical guerilla and terrorist groups such as FARC and has declared open support for Hezbollah. As a matter of moral principle this should be unacceptable in an era characterized by a global war against terrorism and the danger of nuclear weapons falling in the hands of unscrupulous states and organizations. Appointing Venezuela to the Council would be the wrong message to the world community and a big defeat for the enlightened nations of the West.

By the same token and in more formal terms, Venezuela occupying a seat in the Security Council is nothing but a reversal of the reforms promoted by the US and European countries in the world body.

Nothing has reflected more the moral bankruptcy of the world body than the third world and the former communist block’s concept that social justice and social equality stood as supreme values above what is morally acceptable or human rights, properly speaking. Thus, membership of rogue states and ruthless dictatorships on the Security Council and on the Human Rights commissions has been routine throughout the history of the United Nations. This moral relativism has ultimately helped legitimize terrorism and other forms of political violence.

Thus, for example, Yasser Arafat was welcomed in the UN in 1974 at the peak of the most vicious massacres of civilians and children carried out by the PLO. The idea that attacking those perceived as being strong and powerful is acceptable regardless of human casualties or cruelty. This spirit was for years supported not only by the Soviet Union and the third world but often directly or indirectly by a French-led European community motivated mostly by dependency on the third world raw materials (mostly Arab oil) and its Gaullist dream of counterbalancing American power in the West. All this together explains the reason why this spirit prevailed despite the disappearance of the Soviet Union as a world power. There is no doubt in my mind that Osama Bin Laden counted on the support of this world attitude and the ambiguity of the world community before perpetrating the 9/11 attacks in order to win the public relations battle.

However, things have taken a different turn lately. The events of 9/11 were followed by terrorist attacks in the railways of Spain in March 2004 and attacks in Great Britain in July 2005. This has had some impact on Western European attitudes, particularly France. Despite the highly unpopular war in Iraq among European nations, Europe was willing to take an active role in the US initiative to stop Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, most notably France that only in 2003 was at the forefront of anti-American opposition. This is concurrent with the plan initiated and promoted by the Bush Administration to reform the highly shady United Nations.

Thus, the appointment of Venezuela to fill the Security Council seat would be a political and moral reversal. Venezuela is a country that has openly supported everything the western world stands against. Chavez’s concern for the Latin American poor and other "acts of compassion" should not blur the fact that the man is a regional conspirator and an ally of rogue states. If the world community provides a Security Council seat to Venezuela it would provide him with a platform to be a strong advocate of Iran and international terrorism. This would be a defeat not only for the US but also for the western hemisphere as a whole. Voting for Chavez is against the spirit of reform and moral improvement promoted by the United States and other Western countries. The fact that Europeans are not voting for Venezuela is encouraging but they must also apply their influence to convince Latin American countries, who themselves have a third very good reason to defeat Chavez: the stability of their still fragile and young democracies.

The US and its European allies must convince Latin American countries that the short-term benefits deriving from the relation with Venezuela should not interfere with the long-term stability of the region. Latin American countries must be reminded that Venezuela is a highly de-stabilizing force that has and can turn against democratically elected regimes in Latin America, as Hugo Chavez has already done in Peru, Mexico and Ecuador. It would be difficult to convince Argentina since Chavez, by buying foreign debt bonds from Argentina and providing other trade benefits, has enabled the Argentinean government to restore some of the reserves lost as the result of the payment of the foreign debt to the International Monetary Fund. However, Brazil is by far stronger and less dependent on Venezuela. Chavez incited Bolivia to nationalize Brazilian owned companies (Petro-Bras). Brazil, being the largest, most powerful and oil-independent country in Latin America has no reason to support Venezuela except for President Lula’s socialist affinity with Venezuela and solidarity with another member of Mercosur. Chile, under President Michelle Bachelet’s leadership, has for a long time shied away from the assertiveness of its predecessors and become apologetic of Latin American populisms. Chavez endorsed Bachelet when she ran for election. In return, Bachelet in early September, stated that to "vote against Chavez is to vote against the region". However, later the same month Venezuela and Chile confronted each other amid declarations by the Venezuelan Ambassador in Santiago accusing the Chilean Christian Democratic Party of having supported the coup against Chavez in April 2002 and the Pinochet coup against Allende in 1973. Bachelet declared that the Ambassador’s statements are "unacceptable" and represent interference in Chile’s internal affairs. Now the government of Chile is again considering whether it will vote for Chavez or not. This is a perfect time for American and western diplomats to persuade Chile to vote against Venezuela.

Chile has not only been an ally of the US but also one of the most economically successful countries in Latin America. Chile, like Brazil, does not depend on Venezuela. The US must convince Chile that the relationship with the US is important and that Chile’s position may be weakened by siding with somebody like Chavez. Furthermore, Chavez is not a regional leader but, as he has demonstrated, his authoritarian instincts may turn against an ally at the moment Chavez is displeased with certain policies carried out by a regional country. The same principle applies to Argentina and other countries. However, the stubborn personality of the Argentinean president does not allow for dialogue, at least for the time being. Furthermore, Argentina was a bankrupt country and Chavez’s help was badly needed. However, Chile is different. Chile is successful and it should not budge by showing weakness. Chile, like Brazil must be persuaded to oppose Venezuela. It goes without saying that Peru suffered direct interference by Chavez in its domestic politics. Chavez criticized the current President of Peru, Alan Garcia, during the election by confronting him and publicly supporting the pan-indigenous, ultra-nationalist Ollanta Humala.

In sum, it is imperative that US and European diplomats continue an aggressive diplomacy and give priority to the goal of defeating Chavez’s bid to the Security Council. World principles and world stability are at stake.

Securing Africa

By David McCormack

For decades, the United States has regarded its security interests in Sub-Saharan Africa as insignificant, instead treating the region as little more than a dumping ground for humanitarian assistance. Nowhere has this attitude been more conspicuous than in the structuring of U.S. Unified Commands (inter-service military commands) such that responsibility for the continent is divided among the European, Central and Pacific Commands.

Recent reports, however, indicate that the Department of Defense, under the forward-thinking leadership of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Peter Pace, strongly favors the creation of a separate military command for Africa. Under the right conditions, such a move would vastly improve the Nation’s security posture, as the African landscape is increasingly dominated by elements intent on undermining America’s wellbeing.

Islamofascism on the March

Islamofascists have found Sub-Saharan Africa to be particularly useful in advancing their agenda. With its massive Muslim population of 250 million, the region has become progressively radicalized over the past three decades through the introduction of Islamist ideologies by states from the Middle East. In fact, at least tens of billions of dollars have been poured into the subcontinent in support of Islamism. It is therefore hardly surprising that the state faith of Saudi Arabia – Wahhabism – has become the most dynamic ideological strain of Islamism in Sub-Saharan Africa, given that the Ministry of Islamic Affairs reportedly receives more money for activity in Africa than does the Foreign Ministry.

This environment, permeated with extremist Islamic thought, has created legions of terrorists and provided them a hospitable base of operations. Prominent international terrorist organizations such as al-Qaeda and Hezbollah have assumed a strong presence – primarily to finance and plan, but also to carry out, attacks – while several local terror groups such as al-Itihaad al-Islami and the Salafist Group for Call and Combat have emerged to wage jihad for control of Africa itself.

China on the Rise

Communist China has recently surfaced as a major player in the continent’s affairs, in an attempt both to put a stranglehold on Africa’s natural resources – especially its oil, which currently accounts for nearly 30 percent of Chinese imports – and to cultivate alliances that will increase its weight in the international political arena, with a primary objective being the diplomatic isolation of democratic Taiwan.

China’s presence, not surprisingly, has abetted Africa’s worst tendencies. For example, massive oil concessions granted to the PRC in Sudan have been exchanged for Beijing’s political and physical support of the genocidal, terrorist-sponsoring regime in Khartoum. Not only has China played a leading role in preventing the international community from taking serious action on Darfur, but it sold military hardware – including tanks, helicopters and anti-personnel mines – to Khartoum even as ethnic cleansing was being carried out.

In the Crosshairs

For a better understanding of the types of challenges America faces south of the Sahara, consider the following sampler:

Somalia. Nearly 13 years after the United States beat an ignominious retreat from Somalia, another force has moved to impose its own version of stability – that of Islamofascism. Over the past several months, the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) has been rapidly establishing itself as the most powerful military and political force in the country, and is poised to either topple the internationally-supported Transitional Federal Government (TFG). Significantly, both the ICU’s ideology and the manner in which it is seizing control are eerily reminiscent of the Taliban’s rise in Afghanistan.

The possible ascension of this "African Taliban," moreover, threatens to engulf the entire Horn of Africa in war. Unwilling to accept a radical Islamist neighbor, Ethiopia is preparing to strike at the ICU, which would almost certainly lead Eritrea – the ICU’s largest patron and Ethiopia’s greatest enemy – to retaliate, in turn potentially drawing in Kenya and Sudan on the sides of the TFG and the ICU, respectively. In addition to disrupting America’s counter-terrorism activities from its 1,800-strong base in Djibouti, a regional war would likely jeopardize passage through the strategically important Bab el Mandeb Strait, which is one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes.

 Nigeria. In the shake-up that followed liberation from military rule in 1999, twelve predominantly Muslim states in northern Nigeria took advantage of the central government’s weakened position and adopted separate legal codes based on full Shari’a, leading to interfaith fighting that has taken, according to some estimates, up to ten thousand lives. Recognizing the potential created by this situation, in a May 2003 tape, Osama bin Laden named Nigeria as one of six states "most eligible for liberation."

Additionally, the petroleum sector in Nigeria – which is the fifth largest supplier to the United States – is proving to be increasingly problematic. Over the course of the past months, ethnically-based militias have targeted the industry by kidnapping foreign workers and destroying critical infrastructure, shutting down up to 20 percent Nigeria’s total daily output. Additionally, China has augmented its profile exponentially. As explained by Iheanyi Ohiaeri, head of business development for Nigeria’s National Petroleum Corporation, "We haven’t been totally invaded by China yet, but it will come."

South Africa. Unquestionably the dominant actor on the continent due to its comparative economic strength, military power, and rich natural resources, the ruling African National Congress has been steadily leading the country – and hence the rest of Africa – away from a healthy relationship with the United States and toward ideologies and nations opposed to American interests.

Specifically, South Africa has strengthened ties with China, Iran, Syria and other gross violators of human rights and state-sponsors of terrorism, and last year concluded a defense and intelligence pact with Zimbabwe, signaling its solidarity with Africa’s most brutal dictator, Robert Mugabe. Of special concern, however, is the rapprochement taking place between South Africa and Muammar Gadhafi’s Libya, forming a north-south axis that is working with other radical political forces to control both the African Union and its representative governments.

What Needs to be Done

The United States would undoubtedly benefit both from streamlining and increasing efforts in Africa through the establishment of a new Unified Command. However, it is tremendously important this be done correctly. By locating certain Unified Commands inside the U.S. (think Southern Command and Central Command), America has surrendered significant influence in the regions it hopes to affect. Critically, then, a proper engagement strategy for Africa requires placing this new command where it will have the greatest impact – on the continent.

Fortunately, options for the development of such an operation exist, though they will take time to cultivate. In the short-term, then, it may be preferable to create a Sub-Unified Command for the continent within the European Command ? where much expertise on Africa is currently housed ? while working to relocate in theater in the longer-term.

Now more than ever, the United States must recognize that it is being targeted by enemies of freedom in an ideological battle for Africa that, if lost, will undermine U.S. success in the larger War for the Free World. America has so far been absent from this encounter, costing us dearly in terms of strategic position. It is time to engage.