Editor's Letter jam: Dissecting Terror A merica was at a teachable moment on 9-11, that fateful day in 2001 when Osama bin Laden loyalists from Al Qaida brought the terrorist fight to our soil and shocked us from our ignorance about the new world order. The airliner assault spurred us to mull our vul- nerabilities individually and as a nation. In our innocence, we couldn't comprehend anyone plotting to murder 3,000 inno- cent people in the name of Allah. Following the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union and end of the Cold War, America seemed safer Robert A. Sklar during the 1990s despite the first Editor Al Qaida attack on the World Trade Center occurring in 1993. Come 9-11, we faced a more pronounced danger: Muslim terrorists unafraid to tell the world they hated the West, Zionism and Jews. It was against this backdrop that Dr. Warren Bass, a member of the 9-11 Commission's profes- sional staff, spoke at Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield on "Who's Winning the War on Terrorism?" As Jews and Americans, we live with the threat of terror, but what is terrorism? Dr. Bass defined it at Shaarey Zedek's Tapestry program fol- lowing Havdallah on Oct. 29. Rabbi Lauren Berkun met Dr. Bass when they were Wexner Graduate Fellows. While I understand the sweep of its impact, ter- rorism remained somewhat of a mystery to me. I now had a chance to dissect it with Dr. Bass, a Toronto-raised Jew with a doctorate in history from Columbia. Today, he's a New York-based journalist. I listened intently. "I think sometimes there is a tendency to think of terrorism as just some blind, unreasoning force of hatred and violence — that it's just killing for killing's sake," Dr. Bass said. Yes, America has laws to fight terror and those who harbor terrorists. But you must define terror before you can legislate against it. "First, it's killing civilians," Dr. Bass said. "In the Just war' theory, there is a bright line that is drawn between killing soldiers in time of war and killing people like you and me who don't have weapons, who aren't pressed to exercise on behalf of the gov ernment, who are just ordinary citizens going about their day-to-day business. These people are considered out: You are not allowed to kill them with armies or with terrorism bombs!' He said terrorism also is political violence born from a sick belief that you'll improve the world. Further, it's the work of non-state actors — of small bands of improvisers who beg, borrow and steal to acquire-their cherished asset: high-powered weapons. I flinched as Dr. Bass finished the definition. "Terrorism:' he said, "is about getting a reaction. It's a provocation strategy. The violence is designed to send a message. It's designed to be done in front mg November 10 2005 of TV cameras. It's designed to be broadcast to the world." Indeed: It's meant to both stir people sympathet- ic to the terrorists' message and plant fear in those aghast by the horror driving the shadowy cause. The same day that Dr. Bass spoke, Hamas placed on its Web site a new video publicizing a renewed commitment to annihilating Israel and remaining the "resistance" group of choice for Palestinian and other anti-Zionist terrorists. Just as Al Qaida sees America as an evil power preying on all Muslims, Hamas sees Israel as a hateful occupier out to con- trol all Palestinians. Based on Dr. Bass' strategy for how the U.S. could break Al Qaida, I extrapolated what Israel must do against Hamas and other jihadists: It must unmask them so that their ideology repulses the Arab world. The process must take root within the Arab political culture; Israel can't just will it. Just as the Arab political structure must conclude that bin Laden is no friend, the Palestinian people (who also are Arabs) must realize that terror cells like Hamas are ene- mies, not saviors. In each case, the West can help the. process but it also can hinder it. Ultimately, funda- mental change must bubble up from within the Arab soul. As Dr. Bass put it: "We have to start show- ing that there are some other appealing ideas as well, which is some- thing that Arab politics Dr. Warren Bass: "I think has not done — pro- sometimes there is a tendency to think of ter- viding an alternative. If rorism as just some I had an easy answer blind, unreasoning force about how to get it of hatred and violence." done, I would have shared it with my own bosses on the 9-11 Commission. This is a very dif- ficult and long haul proposition. "But I do think that is the challenge we are engaged in." I left his talk primed for the long haul if not enlightened. ❑ Is it realistic to think anti-Zionist indoctrination in the Middle East can be reversed? Can societal pressures to reform overcome the apparent allure of terrorist ranting? E-mail your thoughts to: Z IL letters@thejewishnews.com . ! DONATE YOUR CAR! JARC recently purchased a much-needed van with the proceeds of donated vehicles... your gift WILL make a difference! 248 538.6611 Jac For 36 years, helping people with disabilities be included in their community — all through their lives. vvwwjarcorg 30301 Northwestern Highway Suite 100 Farmington Hills, MI 48334 5