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Politics : America Under Siege: The End of Innocence

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To: Teresa Lo who started this subject10/30/2001 5:05:06 PM
From: opalapril  Read Replies (1) of 27666
 
Generally, I am not given to violence against anyone, much less innocent parties. But this passage from Seymour Hersh's seminal article in The New Yorker makes sense to me in the present circumstances. We are confronted by fanatics who respect nothing on this Earth but their insular religious and family ties. They are supported by a vast and largely ignorant Islamic population around the world while supposed 'moderate' Muslims sit silent. Better this approach than wasting them all with nuclear weapons, which I fear may soon become the only alternative:

(Excerpt from "What Went Wrong" by Seymour Hersh, Oct. 8, New Yorker Magazine:)

"One hard question is what lengths the C.I.A. should go to. In an interview, two former operations officers cited the tactics used in the late nineteen-eighties by the Jordanian security service, in its successful effort to bring down Abu Nidal, the Palestinian who led what was at the time "the most dangerous terrorist organization in existence,"according to the State Department. Abu Nidal's group was best known for its role in two bloody gun and grenade attacks on check-in desks for El Al, the Israeli airline, at the Rome and Vienna airports in December, 1985. At his peak, Abu Nidal threatened the life of King Hussein of Jordan—whom he called "the pygmy king"—and the King responded, according to the former intelligence officers, by telling his state security service, "Go get them."

"The Jordanians did not move directly against suspected Abu Nidal followers but seized close family members instead—mothers and brothers. The Abu Nidal suspect would be approached, given a telephone, and told to call his mother, who would say, according to one C.I.A. man, "Son, they'll take care of me if you don't do what they ask." (To his knowledge, the official carefully added, all the suspects agreed to talk before any family members were actually harmed.) By the early nineteen-nineties, the group was crippled by internal dissent and was no longer a significant terrorist organization. (Abu Nidal, now in his sixties and in poor health, is believed to be living quietly in Egypt.) "Jordan is the one nation that totally succeeded in penetrating a group," the official added. "You have to get their families under control."

"Such tactics defy the American rule of law, of course, and the C.I.A.'s procedures, but, when it comes to Osama bin Laden and his accomplices, the official insisted, there is no alternative. "We need to do this—knock them down one by one," he said. "Are we serious about getting rid of the problem—instead of sitting around making diversity quilts?"

globalpolicy.org
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