Diana West - A reader recently e-mailed me about casualties sustained
by his nephew's Stryker unit in Iraq after an attack by an
Iranian-manufactured IFD. "Why," he wrote, "are we not leveling the
plants in Iran that manufacture these weapons?"
Well, that would make too much sense. It's obvious Iran is at war with
us—and not just in Iraq, where its agents and proxies kill and maim
Americans by arming and organizing some of our many foes there.
Throughout the region, from Hamastan (Gaza) to Hezbollah-land (Lebanon)
to Taliban strongholds in Afghanistan, the Islamic Republic of Iran,
along with Syria, is fighting against us, against our interests. But we
pretend, as a matter of policy, not to notice.
Why?
I don't claim to know the whole answer, but fear must surely figure
into it — fear of wider war, which I guess is natural, but also fear of
a deeper truth, which is more difficult to overcome. That deeper truth
starts with the realization that our strategic interests do not lie
within the borders of Iraq. After all, what do we get even if the
"surge" succeeds in establishing security in Baghdad and even if — and
this is the impossibly big "if" — the Iraqis manage to establish a
functional government?
The answer, under the best of circumstances, would seem to be a Shi'ite
state that not only enshrines Shariah (Islamic law) above all, but also
promises to be a natural ally of Iran. Which doesn't exactly sound like
an ally in the war on terror, or whatever we're calling it these days.
Worse, even if we ultimately manage to establish "the new Iraq," we
still won't have addressed the greater problems posed by the old Iran
and Syria.
And why is it that all we can hope to get out of our costly, lengthy
Middle Eastern war is just another Western-hostile Shariah state? Here
comes another difficult realization: It turns out that bringing
democracy to Islam just brings democracy to Islam. In other words,
ballot booths don't change the illiberal aspects of Islam; they merely
provide for them to be voted into office. At the end of the election
day, it's still an Islamic culture — whether it's in Iraq, the
shrinking Palestinian Authority, Afghanistan or elsewhere. As such, it
functions more or less according to guidelines laid out in a
supremacist theology that fails to recognize the equality of women and
non-Muslims, and, in its political manifestations, is doctrinally
ill-suited to Western alliances that are anything but fleetingly
expedient.
Of course, this realization is the Big No-No, the stake through the
heart of multicultural teachings that give life to platitudes that
everyone — every culture, every religion, every people — is the same,
or, rather, wants the same things. (How many times have we heard the
president or the secretary of state talk specifically about the
normalcy of theoretical "Muslim Moms and Dads" even as actual "Muslim
Moms and Dads" were celebrating mass murder committed by their
suicide-bomber offspring?) For most, if not all, of our leadership,
civilian and military alike, this is the blow to be warded off at all
costs. As in: Live multiculturally or die.
And so, it seems, we crouch defensively over Iraq as though the secret
to our national security lies within these lines on a map drawn by
colonial powers in the early 1920s. We hone in on its provinces, its
cities, its sects, its militias, its religious rivalries, its turf
battles. We freely risk our men's lives and limbs in its dangerous
neighborhoods, along bomb-mined streets, past booby-trapped houses,
where we seek to destroy (or arrest) hunkered-down enemy fighters — as
though our men were worth less than their civilians. Our soldiers learn
to tell tribe from tribe and gang from gang, as though it were really
our business.
And in Baquba this week, where we have massed troops against 300 to 500
al Qaeda fighters dug in among civilians (because they know we value
our men less than their civilians), we are attempting to tell thug from
thug. According to the New York Times, our men are equipped "to take
fingerprints and other biometric data from every resident who seems to
be a potential fighter."
And here lies another part of the answer for my letter-writing reader
as to why Iran continues to fire away at us with impunity: In waging
war through a microscope, we have lost sight of the big picture.
Original
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