Winning the Peace

Anyone who believes that we are winning the so called “Global War on Terrorism” has not endured an airport screening lately. Winning the peace would mean that you could board a plane as stress free as you did before 9-11. No, what we see and feel in today’s America is not what peace looks like. This is what continuous war feels like, and it appears that our side is further from victory than we were in November of 2001 when Kabul fell to U.S. backed Northern Alliance. The strategy to win this long war is yet to be designed. Apparently there are no strategists in the Pentagon. Our generals operate at an operational level at best or perhaps even worse, as recent revelations concerning retired General Petraeus would indicate, maybe today’s generals make love not war.

Before FAOs can develop and implement strategies, the ruling class must first have the courage to identify and name the enemy. Did killing Saddam Hussein or Osama bin Laden help you to sleep more comfortably? Probably not, because by ridding the world of these two evil monsters we did little to weaken the enemy’s center of gravity. But who is the enemy and what is his center of gravity? More than ten years after 9-11 and that question remains unanswered, even unasked.

Do Salafists, as commanded by their Koran, mean to either convert non-Muslims to Islam, make us dhimmis (second class citizen with no real rights), or failing that, kill us? If so, they should be named as enemies of the United States. On the other hand if you believe that Salafists will choose to violate this fundamental precept and let non-Muslims live and let live, there is no reason to continue reading this post. The center of gravity in this long war is the support that certain regimes provide to Salafism. FAOs will develop strategies that cause those regimes to cease providing that support or replace them with regimes that will not. 

This must be an “all in” commitment by our citizens and politicians, not just another forgotten police action fought by our soldiers and Marines. We escaped relatively unharmed from the wars in Vietnam and Korea because our enemy was not motivated by religion. The American people, by and large, do not understand the Islamic-supremacist ideology. Prospects for defeating this enemy would be enhanced if Congress would debate the nature of the threat and declare war on regimes that actively support anti-American jihad. America is in a long war not of her choosing. In order to ensure the long term support of the American public during this clash of civilizations, the ruling class needs to get serious.

4 thoughts on “Winning the Peace

  1. I’m glad you brought up Osama bin Laden; that assassination occurred waaay after the fact. I heard ex- CIA Director George Tenet speak at Heritage and ObL was a known target years before 9/11. In fact, he was inspired by Ramzi Yousef who masterminded the WTC 1993 attack.

    The CIA found bin Laden years before 9/11 and was ready to take him out because U.S. intelligence had intercepted his plans. Unfortunately, President Clinton was on the golf course and couldn’t be bothered. He had 10 minutes to nail him but was too absorbed with yet another mulligan to save thousands of American lives.

    May he rot in hell.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Slick Willy Clinton was probably talking on the phone with Jeff Epstein (RIP) during that window of opportunity to plan their upcoming visit to Lolita Island. Some things are more important than national security when one is America’s Commander-in-Chief.

      Liked by 2 people

  2. Simon, it’s hard for me to respond in a civilized, professional manner because I am still affected by 9/11. I lived in the Wall Street area and took the WTC -1 subway to work everyday usually around 9 a.m. I lost friends who worked in WTC-2 on the 81st floor.

    I moved to Florida on 9/10/ 2010.

    I’m still freaking and I won’t lie; I want revenge (preferably nuclear) but I don’t know how we can pull that off.

    Liked by 3 people

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