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Released:
September 12, 2001
Fifty
Years of Appeasement Led to Black Tuesday
By
Leonard Peikoff
Fifty
years of increasing American appeasement in
the Mideast have led to fifty years of
increasing contempt in the Muslim world for
the U.S. The inevitable climax was the tens
of thousands of deaths on September 11,
2001—the blackest day in our history, so
far. The Palestinians, among others,
responded by dancing in the streets and
handing out candy.
Fifty
years ago, Truman and Eisenhower ceded to
the Arabs the West's property rights in
oil—although that oil properly belonged to
those in the West whose science and
technology made its discovery and use
possible.
This
capitulation was not practical, but
philosophical. The Arab dictators were
denouncing the wealthy egoistic West. They
were crying that the masses of their poor
needed our sacrifice; that oil, like all
property, is owned collectively, by virtue
of birth; and that they knew all this by
means of ineffable or otherworldly emotion.
Our Presidents had no answer. Implicitly,
they were ashamed of the Declaration of
Independence. They did not dare to answer
aloud that Americans, rightfully, were
motivated by the selfish desire to pursue
personal happiness in a rich, secular,
individualist society.
The
Arabs embodied in extreme form every
idea—selfless duty, anti-materialism,
faith or feeling above science, the
supremacy of the group—which our
universities and churches, and our own
political Establishment, had long been
preaching as the essence of virtue. When two
groups, our leadership and theirs, accept
the same basic ideas, the most consistent
wins.
After
property came liberty. The Iranian dictator
Khomeini threatened with death a British
author—and with destruction his American
publisher—if they exercised their right to
free speech. He explained that the book in
question offended the religion of his
people. The Bush Administration looked the
other way.
After
liberty came American life itself—as in
Iran's support of the massacre of our
soldiers in Saudi Arabia, and the
Afghanistan-based assault on our embassies
in East Africa. Again, the American response
was unbridled appeasement: a Realpolitikisch
desire not to "jeopardize
relations" with the aggressor country,
covered up by a purely rhetorical vow to
punish the guilty, along with an occasional
pretend bombing. By now, the world knows
that we are indeed a paper tiger.
We
have not only appeased terrorists, we have
actively created them. The Reagan
Administration—holding that Islamic
fundamentalists were our ideological allies
in the fight against the atheistic
Soviets—poured money and expertise into
Afghanistan to create an ever-growing band
of terrorists recruited from all over the
Mideast. Most of these terrorists knew what
to do with their American training; their
goal was not to save Afghanistan.
The
final guarantee of American impotence is the
bipartisan proclamation that a terrorist is
an individual alone responsible for his
actions, and that "we must try each
before a court of law." This is
tantamount, while under a Nazi aerial
bombardment, to seeking out and trying the
pilots involved while ignoring Hitler and
Germany.
Terrorists
exist only through the sanction and support
of the governments behind them. Their lethal
behavior is that of the regimes that make
them possible. Their killings are not
crimes, but acts of war. The only proper
response to such acts is war in
self-defense.
We
do not need more evidence to
"pinpoint" the perpetrators of any
one of these atrocities, including the
latest and most egregious—we already have
total certainty with regard to the
governments primarily responsible for the
repeated slaughter of Americans in recent
years. We must now use our unsurpassed
military to destroy all branches of the
Iranian and Afghani governments, regardless
of the suffering and death this will bring
to the many innocents caught in the line of
fire. We must wipe out the terrorist
training camps or sanctuaries, and eliminate
any retaliatory military capability—and
thereby terrorize and paralyze all the
tyrannies watching, who will now know what
is in store for them if they choose in any
form to attack the U.S. That will be the end
of the terrorists.
Our
missiles and occupation troops, however,
will be effective only if they are preceded
by our President's morally righteous
statement that we intend hereafter to defend
by every means possible each American's
right to his property, his liberty, and his
secure enjoyment of life here on earth.
To
those who oppose war, I ask: If not now,
when? How many more corpses are necessary
before this country should take action?
The
choice today is mass death in the United
States or mass death in the terrorist
nations. President Bush must decide whether
it is his duty to save Americans or the
governments who seek to kill them.
Leonard Peikoff is the founder of the Ayn
Rand Institute in Marina del Rey,
California. The Institute promotes the
philosophy of Ayn Rand, author of Atlas
Shrugged and The Fountainhead.
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