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Bin Laden's Slow Rot


by Austin Bay
September 9, 2008

In late August 2004, after shutting off the recorder, I asked the British general to tell me how Iraq and coalition forces should handle the complex ethnic, sectarian and security challenge presented by Shia "Mahdi Militia" leader Moqtada al-Sadr. That month, Sadr's thugs had invaded Najaf's Grand Mosque and attempted to bait the coalition into bombing the shrine.

The coalition chose to follow the advice passed on by an aide of Shiite Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani: "Let us deal with Sadr. We know how to handle him and will do so. However, the coalition must not make him a martyr."

The British general shook his head. "Dealing with Sadr will appear indecisive, as the Battle of Najaf appears indecisive. But in the long run Iraq will be better off if Sadr withers, or defeats himself."

Seven years ago, Osama bin Laden was a Big Man on the planet, a bearded stud with a Himalayan reputation among young Muslim militants from Morocco to Indonesia. Now, bin Laden hides in the Himalayas.

The Hollywood finale to 9-11 would have U.S. special forces dragging a chained bin Laden from his hideout, the frightened wannabe Caliph squinting in the harsh sunlight.

The Hollywood ending hasn't happened. Bin Laden may yet be arrested and brought to trial and convicted -- it should be done.

Bin Laden's slow rot may be the "Sadr strategy" writ large, however. The slow rot certainly isn't as emotionally satisfying as Hollywood's denouement. It has political consequences. "Bush can't get bin Laden" is a frequent taunt. But in terms of forwarding America's long-range strategy for defeating Islamo-fascism and helping Middle Eastern Muslim nations address their long-term challenge, bin Laden's slow rot -- in lieu of ascent to martyrdom -- may prove to be ironically useful.

Every war is a series of mistakes -- bloody, expensive mistakes. France's Georges Clemenceau provided a more elegant rendering of the terrible hell of it: War is a series of catastrophes that results in a victory. Ultimately, winning any war, but especially this intricate, multidimensional war, demands perseverance and creative adaptation.

In war, the enemy makes mistakes as well, and al-Qaeda has made numerous strategic errors.

Al-Qaeda's dark genius has been to connect the Muslim world's angry, humiliated and isolated young men with a utopian fantasy preaching the virtue of violence. That utopian fantasy seeks to explain and then redress roughly 800 years of Muslim decline. Bin Laden concluded that attacking the United States and the infidel West was the way to energize these young Muslims -- a physical demonstration of "violent virtue" and its history-shaping effects.

Attacking the United States and Europe would be so overwhelmingly popular the West would leave Muslim nations. Al-Qaida would then take control of Saudi Arabia and Egypt. Bin Laden provided a sketch but few details. He would rely on anger and fervor -- and his own iconic leadership.

Seven years later, it appears attacking the West was a huge strategic blunder by al-Qaida -- and that's not a solely "Western" opinion. Al-Qaida's criminal record has wrecked its reputation in Muslim nations. We've had indications. StrategyPage.com noted on Oct. 27, 2005, that "the Muslim media is less and less willing to be an apologist for al-Qaida, at least when it comes to killing Muslim civilians" and that the Iraqi media in particular "really has it in for al-Qaida."

On Oct. 1, 2006, StrategyPage.com argued that "dead Iraqis were killing al-Qaida. ... Westerners, unless they observe Arab media closely, and have contacts inside the Arab world, will not have noted this sharp drop in al-Qaida's fortunes."

Al-Qaida's malignant message still dupes some young Muslim men. Nineteenth and early 20th century militant anarchist tracts still appeal to violent killers like the Unabomber. Rock music critics and late-night TV cable talk show hosts toy with anarchist tropes.

Bin Laden still has "gangsta" appeal, but mere survival was not his goal.

If bin Laden had been killed in Afghanistan in 2001, the United States would be combating a myth and a legend. Instead of caliphate, bin Laden has produced his own catastrophe. The bin Laden icon is seriously fractured, if not quite shattered.

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Dave_in_Pa       9/10/2008 11:19:48 AM
"The Hollywood ending hasn't happened. Bin Laden may yet be arrested and brought to trial and convicted -- it should be done."
 
I would respectfully disagree with that. Firstly, Bin Laden is not a civil criminal, to be handled by civil-type courts. IMO, the result of capturing Bin Laden alive would be the Mother of All Judicial Circuses. Given the propensities of a certain body of Democratic "legislators" and the equally clueless leftist majority on our Supreme Court, a capture and trial would guarantee a years-long legal circus.
 
Instead, were I President and were our Forces able to pinpoint his location and send in Special Forces to capture him, I'd order (an entirely lawful order, BTW) that he be summarily killed on the spot and his dead body brought back to one of our major bases in Afghanistan.  While our people do the DNA verification of Bin Laden's corpse, I would order that selected journalists be permitted to view the body and that photos be released (as what we did with the corpses of Uday and Qusay Hussein and what the Iraqi Govt did with the body of Saddam Hussein).
 
No matter what America does militarily, we are bashed by The Usual Suspects.  Therefore, let's go for the minimal bashing, no Mother of All Judicial Circuses, and a cremation and burial at an undisclosed site (as we did with the executed Nazis after the Nuremberg Tribunals, preventing a "martyr shrine".) The US is never going to be loved, therefore, we should instead make the blunt point that America, sooner or later, gets it's enemies.
 
 
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bropous       9/11/2008 2:35:15 PM
When it comes to the old "Bush can't find Osama bin Ladin" canard, I think of a couple of possibilities and would like to know what you folks think:
 
1. We know EXACTLY where he is, and we are monitoring his communications to more effectively target his underlings, using him as bait;
 
2. We know he is dead, have proof that he is dead, but it serves our purposes to act like we still think he is alive;
 
3. We have him in custody, have spread the impression among his former followers that he is dead to keep them from shutting down known communications conduits.
 
Thoughts?
 
I happen to be of the opinion that we are nowhere as clueless as we lead folks to believe.
 
Quote    Reply

RockyMTNClimber       9/11/2008 3:43:46 PM

When it comes to the old "Bush can't find Osama bin Ladin" canard, I think of a couple of possibilities and would like to know what you folks think:

 

1. We know EXACTLY where he is, and we are monitoring his communications to more effectively target his underlings, using him as bait;

 I have heard people give this opinion and it frankly baffles me. There can be no doubt that shackling Osama and dragging him to justice would have the same closure that Saddam's ultimate justice served. It saved no lives nor did it end the long tired animosities of internal and external Iraq, but it finally allowed his victims their day. Saddam will no longer terrorize and he can no longer profit from his past terrors. Bin Laden's turn is a day closer with every sunrise.

2. We know he is dead, have proof that he is dead, but it serves our purposes to act like we still think he is alive;

 This has an interesting possibility of being true. I don't think it is probable but some cynically might say it is to our advantage to leave him "alive" for the time being. Again, I don't agree with this view but at least there is a very very thin possibility.

3. We have him in custody, have spread the impression among his former followers that he is dead to keep them from shutting down known communications conduits.

 No way we could keep this secret for more than a few days. Too many people who know people involved not just in the US/allied forces but foreign services who would necessarily be involved. You could only keep a lid on something like this for so long before somebody drops a dime to the media......

Thoughts?

 

I happen to be of the opinion that we are nowhere as clueless as we lead folks to believe.

 
In the final analysis we probably have a educated guess where Bin Laden is within an area of about 50 square kilometers, at any given time. That area is protected by the tribal politics of the region and allies within the Pakistani military. His life has been reduced to wandering like a homeless beggar jumping at every bump in the night and wondering when the men inblack will finally find him with a Hellfire, a Tomahawk, or more likely the blade or bullet of one of his own followers. He will die like a cheap coward and a rabid pig.
 
Just like he deserves.
 
Check Six
 
Rocky
 

 
 
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jak267       9/13/2008 7:13:22 PM
The "Sadr Strategy" is what has turned Iraq into an Iranian client state - and is directly responsible for at least half of the Americans murdered there.
 

 
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To find out more about Austin Bay and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

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