33 years before the Iranian Revolution and 55 years before the 9/11 terrorist attacks, a section (pages 24-34) of the very first of the intelligence reviews published by the Military Intelligence Division of the U.S. War Department identified Islam as a threat to world stability. It would be interesting to know how many of the higher-ups in our intelligence agencies and Defense Department were even aware of this report when the hijacked planes slammed into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and the Pennsylvania ground.
According to its authors, Islamic countries were “full of discontent and frustration” and were aware of their “inferiority.” These feelings manifested themselves in “killings and terrorism,” which were reported in “daily news accounts.” The analysts knew about the feud between the Sunnis and Shi’a. They also knew about Wahabism and the Muslim Brotherhood.
For the historically-minded, “Islam: A Threat to World Peace” is fascinating reading. Here it is, in its entirity:
The Moslem world sprawls around half the east, from the Pacific across Asia and Africa to the Atlantic, along one of the greatest of trade routes; in its center is an area extremely rich in oil; over it will run some of the most strategically important air routes.According to its authors, Islamic countries were “full of discontent and frustration” and were were aware of their “inferiority.” These feelings manifested themselves in “killings and terrorism,” which were reported in “daily news accounts.”
With few exceptions, the states which it includes are marked by poverty, ignorance, and stagnation. It is full of discontent and frustration, yet alive with consciousness of its inferiority and with determination to achieve some kind of general betterment.
Two basic urges meet head-on in this area, and conflict is inherent in this collision of interests. These urges reveal themselves in daily news accounts of killings and terrorism, of pressure groups in opposition, and of raw nationalism and naked expansionism masquerading as diplomatic maneuvers. The urges tie together the tangled threads of power politics which—snarled in the lap of the United Nations Assembly—lead back to the centers of Islamic pressure and to the capitals of the world’s biggest nations.
The first of these urges originates within the Moslems’ own sphere. The Moslems remember the power with which once they not only ruled their own domains but also overpowered half of Europe, yet they are painfully aware of their present economic, cultural, and military impoverishment. Thus a terrific internal pressure is building up in their collective thinking. The Moslems intend, by any means possible, to regain political independence and to reap the profits of their own resources, which in recent times and up to the present have been surrendered to the exploitation of foreigners who could provide capital investments. The area, in short, has an inferiority complex, and its activities are thus as unpredictable as those of any individual so motivated.
The other fundamental urge originates externally. The world’s great and near-great powers cover the economic riches of the Moslem area and are also mindful of the strategic locations of some of the domains. Their actions are also difficult to predict, because each of these powers sees itself in the position of the customer who wants to do his shopping in a hurry because he happens to know the store is going to be robbed.
In an atmosphere so sated with the inflammable gases of distrust and ambition, the slightest spark could lead to an explosion which might implicate every country committed to the maintenance of world peace through the United Nations Organization. An understanding of the Moslem world and of the stresses and forces operative within it is thus an essential part of the basic intelligence framework.
History of the Moslems
The influence which integrates the Moslems is their religion, Islam. This religion began officially in the year 622 A.D., when Mahomet [Muhammad] was driven from Mecca because of his preaching of a synthesis of Jewish and Christian heresy, and took flight to Yathrib (Al-Medinah). Taking advantage of the age-old feud between the two towns, he soon rallied an army to his side, made extensive compromises with Medinah paganism, and attacked Mecca. At his death in 632 A.D., he was the master of all Arabia.
His successors, the Caliphs (or Khalifs) quickly overran much of the known world; they reached India and penetrated TransCaspiana and Musa ibn Tariq, and crossed the straits at the western end of the Mediterranean, giving to the mountainous rock at their entrance the name of Jebel al-Tariq (the mountain of Tariq), which the Spaniards later corrupted to “Gibraltar.” In 732 A.D.—just one century after the death of the Prophet—the Moslem advance in Western Europe was finally turned back at Tours, France, by Charles Martel. To the north of Arabia, the Byzantine Kingdom held back the Moslem tide until the 15th century, when Constantinople fell and central Europe became a Turkish province. From that high point, Moslem expansion gradually receded. Although for centuries the Moslem world had been contributing to western arts, science, and trade, a period of increasing sterility set in, and during the next 400 years, the Moslems advanced very little in any phase of human endeavor.
At the present time there are no strong Moslem states. The leadership of the Moslem world remains in the Middle East, particularly in Arabia. This area lies near the geographical center of Eurasia’s population, with industrial Europe to the west and the agricultural countries of India, Indonesia, and China to the east. Through it passes the Suez Canal; and north of it lie fabulously rich oil fields around the Persian Gulf.
Present Forces Tending to Weaken Moslem Unity
The many forces tending to tear the Moslem world apart have been so strong that there has been no central Moslem authority since the 8th century; the factors which generate disunity are discussed briefly below.
1. Lack of a common language.—Moslems east and south of the Tigris River (except those in Malaya and Indonesia) usually speak Urdu, Persian, or Turkish. West of the Tigris River, the dominant language is Arabic, but its far western dialects are unintelligible to the eastern Arab.
2. Religious schisms.—The oldest of these schisms is the Sunni-Shiah controversy, which arose in the 8th century. The eastern Caliphate, with its capital at Baghdad, gave impetus to the Shiah sect, but it was not until the 17th century that the Shiah creed was officially adopted in Iran. The majority of Moslems, however, belong to the Sunni (unorthodox) sect although islands of Shiah believers exist in Sunni regions. Neither sect has a recognized leader. In theory the Sunni should have a Caliph, a successor to the Prophet; but the historic Caliphate came to an end in Baghdad around 1350, and there have since been only “captive” Caliphs—puppets set up by secular powers and not generally recognized. The Emir Husayn of Mecca desired the British to recognize him as Caliph in 1916, and in recent years King Faruq (Farouk) of Egypt has made gestures indicating he would be willing to play the part. Nationalism keeps the Moslems apart, however, and no serious bid for the traditional role of a leader of Islam now exists.
Islam is also beset with modern movements which try to make it conform to new historical evidence and to modern psychology and science. These have included a reform movement known as Babism, which appeared a century ago in Iran, followed by Bahaism, which adopted many features of the former.
Along with “the acids of modernity,” there have been atavistic movements designed to preserve the original “purity of Islam.” In 1703 an Arab chieftain, Abdul Wahab, revived a fanatically purist faith, which soon swept over all Arabia. Thousands of “pagan Moslems” were massacred at Mecca by desert adherents of the new faith. Around 1850 the movement suffered eclipse but again appeared in 1903, led by Abdul Aziz of the Saud family. Again it overran the Arabian Peninsula, and it is now the recognized faith of Saudi Arabia. These Wahabis believe that the Koran is the only source of faith and that it contains the only precepts for war, commerce, and politics; they regard any innovation as heresy.
Paralleling this reactionary tendency, there have appeared in Egypt and elsewhere several societies that stress Islamic culture; these are openly anti-European and secretly anti-Christian and anti-Jewish. The best known is the Ikhwan el-Muslimin (Brotherhood of Moslems), which encourages youth movements and maintains commando units and secret caches of arms (it is reported to have 60,000 to 70,000 rifles). The militant societies, such as the Shahab Muhammad (Youth of Mahomet) and the Misr al-Fattat (Young Egypt), are led by demagogues and political opportunists. They issue clandestine pamphlets, attack the government, stir up hatred of the British, and sow the seeds of violence. In recent months, Premier Ahmad Maher of Egypt was assassinated, and former Premier Nahas Pasha was wounded by people associated with these groups. Christian minorities in the Middle East fear these fanatical and nationalistic Moslem societies which exploit the ignorance and poverty of the masses, and even the more enlightened Moslem leaders must cater to their fanaticism in order to retain their positions.
3. Geographical isolation.—The Indian Moslem knows little or nothing of his fellow believers in Mongolia and Morocco. To a Sudanese, Turkey and Iran are meaningless terms. High mountains, broad deserts, and great distances separate one group from another, and provincialism has inevitably resulted.
4. Economic disparities.—Throughout the Moslem world, social conditions closely approximate medieval feudalism. In Egypt, a few thousand people own the land on which 15 million labor as share croppers. In Saudi Arabia, where the purest desert “democracy” exists, the contrast between the living conditions of the peasant and the feudal land-holding classes is very great. That contrast is common throughout the whole Moslem world, where the lack of industrial development has made it easier than elsewhere to retain the feudal system of exploiting the land and the peasants. Social reform has been given only lip service, and the Moslem peasants have a growing conviction, stimulated by Soviet propaganda, that the landowners are their worst enemy. In northern Iran, the peasants have openly revolted under the instigation and protection of the Red Army, and such a revolt can happen anywhere in the Moslem world.
5. Political rivalries and nationalism.—The Iranian has always looked upon the Arab as a wild man and upon the Turk as a “son of a dog”; the Turk in turn considers the Iranian a degenerate but agrees with his views of the Arab; and so goes the cycle of animosity. These mutual dislikes have existed for centuries, but they have a deeper meaning in the present era of nationalism. For example, after exiling the puppet “Caliph” in 1923, the Turks completely nationalized the idea of Islam. Pilgrimages ceased almost entirely, the Koran was translated into Turkish, and all prayers were put into that language. Oaths no longer needed to be made on the Koran, but on one’s honor. Thus, the roots of Islam were cut, making religion a purely passive phase of nationalism.
Likewise in Iran, during the period of 1920 to 1940, religious holidays were displaced by national fiestas, national heroes were substituted for those of Arab origin, and the old customs of Islam were replaced by new.
Even within the Arab-speaking world, nationalism transcends religion. Egypt is concerned with local issues. Saudi Arabia is absorbed in the age-old feud between its royal family and that of west Arabia. Nationalists in Syria, Lebanon, Tunisia, and Morocco are concentrating on means to throw off the French yoke.
Only when a cause in another region would be of value in their own do the Moslems cooperate. For example, their widespread sympathy for the Palestinian Arab in his struggle against Zionism is translated into action only by the Arab states bordering on Palestine. The largest single group of Moslem believers lives in India, but its principle fear is of being swallowed up in a sea of Hindu millions; to these Moslems, the establishment of a colony of Jews three thousand miles to the west is by comparison a matter of little concern.
In addition to the dissension and selfish interests that tend to split the Moslem world from within, various foreign countries have parceled it into spheres of influence or areas of outright domination. From 1930 to 1940, only three Moslem states, with a total population of less than 40 million people, had any real degree of independence. They were Turkey, Iran, and Saudi Arabia, and each of these was jealous of the others and on the defensive to protect its national existence against the great powers.
6. Prostitution of leadership.—At the end of the 18th century, Moslem power had fallen so low that a series of self-appointed Protectors of Islam appeared. One of the earliest was Napoleon, who, as governor of Egypt from 1799 to 1802, outdid the old Moslem rulers in celebrating Islamic festivals and reviving decadent customs.
Later, Great Britain assumed the role, but her efforts had small success because her Zionist policy antagonized the Arabs.
Then Mussolini and Hitler represented themselves as guardians of the Moslems. Axis money and intrigue proved effective in many instances, so that with the approach of war, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem and Rashid Ali al-Gailani of Iraq, among others, were in the Axis camp. In Iran, a group of important persons was formed into a loose political party which favored the Axis, and in Egypt the British could trust neither the king nor the premier.
The most recent claimant as Protector of Islam is the Soviet Union, which before the war showed little interest in championing religion but now realizes the value of such a rule as an instrument of policy. Thus, while the London BBC and Delhi radio have recently broadcast recitations in Arabic from the Koran and admonished the faithful to continue their devotions, Radio Moscow has told of the facilities which the Soviet Union had made available to pilgrims for traveling by air to Mecca.
Recent Soviet broadcasts have quoted the imam of the Moscow mosque, Sheikh Nasr ad-Din, on freedom of religion in the Soviet Union. The imam stated that “every Moslem in the U.S.S.R. is well aware of the fact that the Stalin constitution is a guarantee for the freedom of expression and belief,” and (citing the oppression of Moslems under Christian regimes) that “Moslems in the U.S.S.R. always beseech Allah to protect the Soviet authorities and our great father and friend of all nations, the great and wise Stalin.” The imam was also quoted as saying that “as a result of the consideration shown by the government toward Soviet Moslems, tombs of distinguished Moslem religious leaders are being maintained” and reconstructed. Another Moscow broadcast, directed at Arabic-speaking peoples, declared that rumors circulating in Arab circles regarding the Soviet Union’s attitude toward religion, particularly the Islamic, were “nothing but political maneuvers of the imperialists, who are afraid of the Arab march on the road of democracy and true liberty.”
The election in Moscow of the Grand Mufti of the Central Muslim Administration is reported to have been scheduled for January. Arab circles are reported to have taken more interest in this assembly of Moslems than in any other Soviet propaganda effort. It is to be anticipated that the election of the Grand Mufti of the Central Moslem Administration may prove as useful propaganda as was the election of Alexius to the Patriarchate of All Russia. The Soviets have also solicited the favor of the Coptic Church in Egypt and that of other religious groups in the Middle East.
The net result of all these intrigues has been that the Moslems are properly suspicious of their leaders. The moment a new leader appears, he is tempted by various European powers to accept their “assistance,” and almost inevitably his loyalty and discretion are eventually sold to one of them.
Present Forces Tending to Strengthen Moslem Unity
1. The Pilgrimage to Mecca.—This ancient duty formerly brought many hundreds of thousands of pilgrims from all sections of the Moslem world to Mecca, where ideas were actively exchanged, along with goods. Although the pilgrimage is still made (the last was in November and December 1945), the number participating had dwindled greatly. The scarcity of shipping during the war reduced the usual horde to about 20,000-30,000 per year. While the numbers will probably increase now, they are not likely to reach their former proportions. Turkey discourages pilgrimages; Iran (where the dissident Shiah sect is the official religion) has prohibited them altogether since 1944. Yet they will continue to be a unifying force when Moslems from the East and West meet and repeat prayers in a common language.
2. Classical Arabic.—All written Arabic, as well as that spoken in public assemblies, is based on the classical forms. Accordingly, a newspaper printed in Casablanca can be read in Baghdad or by members of the Lebanese colony in New Jersey. The Arab press is reviving. Al Ahram, a daily newspaper in Cairo, has almost as large a circulation outside the country as within. Many new books have been published on the lives of the early Moslem heroes, and a “Book of the Month Club” distributes biographies of famous characters, almost all Moslems. The American Readers’ Digest, in its Arabic translation, sells around 100,000 copies a month, indicating the increasing demand for reading material. It is still too early to know whether this literary revival will tend to break up Moslem solidarity by introducing new ideas, or will lead Islam out of its slough of intellectual inaction.
3. Modern communications.—The development of fast, comfortable, and relative [sic] cheap travel is affording a more cosmopolitan outlook to a small group in each country. Radio programs in all the languages of the East flood the air. Thus, for a few, the isolation of the past has ended, and these few will act as a leaven for the rest. Any growth in understanding among the poverty-crushed masses, however, will be very slow.
4. The Arab League.—After a spasmodic upheaval, such as that led by Lawrence in 1916-1920, the pan-Arab movement broke up under the pressure of British and French policies and because of rivalries between the Hashmite family of west Arabia and the Saud family of east Arabia. Nevertheless, two other forces were driving the Arabs of the Middle East toward greater cohesion: (1) hatred of European exploitation and (2) fear of a Jewish state on Arab soil. By 1942, leaders of the Arab world were advancing plans for the formation of an Arab federation, and in February 1943, British Foreign Secretary Eden declared that Great Britain favored any move toward Arab unity.
Soon there was a stirring of political activity, culminating in October 1944 with the announcement of the Alexandria Protocol of the Arab League Conference. A constitution was drafted in March 1945, and seven states (or mandated territories) have become members. The League aims to include all Arabs in North Africa and then to take in Turkey and Iran. It represents the sympathetic and broader vision that is being expressed by the Arabs of both East and West for the first time in centuries. At the very least, the League serves as a rallying point for Moslems, and many of them hope will restore Islam to some degree of political power.
The Present Estimate
If the Moslem states were strong and stable, their behavior would be more predictable. They are, however, weak and torn by internal stresses; furthermore, their peoples are insufficiently educated to appraise propaganda or to understand the motives of those who promise a new Heaven and a new Earth.
Because of the strategic position of the Moslem world and the relentlessness of its peoples, the Moslem states constitute a potential threat to world peace. There cannot be permanent world stability, when one-seventh of the earth’s population exists under the economic and political conditions that are imposed upon the Moslems.
Marc—
Anymention of the Nazi collaborater Haj-Amin al-Husseini, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem? Without reference to this jihadist
asshole, such documents are meaningless.
We cannot blame the religion for terrorism,rather some group of people who want to live in the fame and money,they are creating all these nonsenses in the name religion..It is there in Islam,Christian,Hindu and every religion in the world..Percentage may vary,But the fact is every religion is have some contribution in terrorism…
Hey Sakthi – If it makes you sleep well at night go ahead and blame every other religion for terrorism…
How far do you go back in order to justify your self serving point of view?
Shall we go back to the Middle Ages? How about the Crusades? Are the Crusades still fair game? Because, if they are, I will tell you what I told another apologist like you. “I had no idea that the United States was involved in the Crusades! No wonder they flew planes into our buildings killing 3,000 American civilians”
No Sakthi, I am very sorry to tell you that it is only the followers of Islam that today threaten to cut people’s heads off and place bounties on western intelectuals and writers. I am so sorry to point out to you that radical Islam has totally cowed the west so that knighting a well know British writer faces a bounty from the followers of Islam and a terrible hand wringing from the west.
Believe me when I tell you that I don’t consider this “nonsense in the name of religion.” I take it very seriously…
“Percentage may vary???” Please name the leaders of one other religion other than Islam that has placed a bounty on a “non-believers” head or called for the destruction of another race of people in the last decade, two decades, three decades… You can’t Sakthi, and that is where your argument evaporates…
I would so love it if you became part of the solution rather than making excuses for the problem. Do you not realize that Islam is in a very precarious state? How long do you think the world will put up with this lethal “religious nonsense”??? What do you think the time frame is until something really terrible happens?
Quite frankly, I think we have about 5 more years until a nuclear exchange. How long do you think we have Sakthi???
Babs—
Well said! If Saktghi is so concerned about the terrorist connections of religions other than Islam, maybe he can show
us infidels the equivalent of Quran sura 9 in the holy books of those other religions.
If the invasion of Iraq is not a modern day crusade, then what is? It was an unprovoked invasion with tall tales of horrors to befall the civilized world if it did not happen, coupled with assurances that the invaders would be greeted as liberators. I am sure that is pretty much what Pope Urban the Second told the Christians who went to fight the Turks. The Iraq invasion is a crusade dressed up in nation building.
Kitsune
Unprovoked?
What do you consider a provocation?
In your world would failure to live up to the terms of a ceasefire agreement constitute provocation?
How about paying bounties to families of suicide bombers?
How about killing thousands of people?
I assume that you believe that Bosnia was also unprovoked?
If your neighbors house were burning you would not lift a finger until your house started burning as well.
If you remember your history, you would remember that the Crusades were a response to the aggressive and barbaric conquest of the Middle East, North Africa, Spain and parts of France and Eastern Europe in the hundred years after the Death of Muhammad.
The Crusades were an effort to retake the Holy Land from a horde that conquered it.
People who bring up the crusades never remember the aggressive conquests by Islam.
Islamo-Fascists are an aggressive, violent, expansionist cult. They intend to subjugate anyone who does not agree with them.
So be prepared to convert or be a second class citizen.
Because that is your fate if we lose.
And your way of thinking, if agreed with by enough people, will make us lose.
“We cannot blame the religion for terrorism”
No, but we can probably blame religion in general for modern terrorism in that what we see today was born of the conflict in Ireland. Stern copied the methods of the Irish Republicans in his efforts against the British and the UN in the Palestine Mandate. Noting the success of the Irish in gaining independence from Britain, it is logical that he would copy their methods under the reasoning that “nothing succeeds like success”. The Arab population in the Palestine Mandate adopted and copied Stern’s methods and so that is pretty much where we are today. The Palestinians had these methods pretty much validated with the creation of the Camp David process. Through terrorism, they gained legitimacy. It worked and Carter is actually the prime enabler of terrorism in modern times.
Carter has once again shown that terrorism is a viable means to a political end and so we see it continuing as it is copied in other places around the world.
Mescalero,
See this sentence in the document: “Axis money and intrigue proved effective in many instances, so that with the approach of war, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem and Rashid Ali al-Gailani of Iraq, among others, were in the Axis camp.”
Crosspatch
The Irish Republicans were not very observant. The Catholic Church did not back the Irish revolution, rather the opposite.
Catholics were oppressed under British rule, it was a christian form of dhimmitude. But for the most part religion was used as a shorthand identifier of the warring tribes—Irish, Scotch-Irish and British..
But you are correct that modern guerrilla warfare was the product of the leadership of Michael Collins. Collins had the best intelligence service in the war, and that is what won the war. Terror was used but the terror of Michael Collins was not random or indiscriminate. It was focused on the British Army and Police, especially undercover detectives. This focused terror led to the compromise that was the Irish Free State, which in turn led to the Irish Civil War, and Irish neutrality in WW II. Terror was not an end for the Irish it was a means. Contrast the Palestinians. If the Palestinians had a Michael Collins, they would have accepted the Peel Commission recommendations in 1938.
But back to the point, the IRA use of less discriminate terror bombings (there generally were warnings, and no use of suicide bombing) is a more modern development than the Irish revolutionary war (i.e. post WW II.)
Mao, Ho Chi Minh, the rebels in Burma and the Irgun all studied Michael Collins guerrilla campaign. After all, it was only the second successful revolt from British rule in modern history.
The first successful revolt, of course, being the poor insignificant colonies on the Eastern Shore of North America. No one could quite figure out how they pulled off their revolution.
I wasn’t thinking so much about “modern guerrilla warfare” so much as modern terrorism using bombs. Stern used the same tactics to murder UN and British personnel in the Palestine Mandate and was the first to use the large car bomb in modern times when they drove a truck bomb into a British police station in Haifa on January 12, 1947. His group then began exploding large car and truck bombs against Palestinians in addition to British. Then deserting British soldiers aligned with the Palestinians began to use the same tactics in return and it has pretty much been the weapon of choice in that region ever since. Most importantly after the 1947 bomb:
And so it has been the warfare in Ireland that is both the inspiration and the model for a lot of the death and destruction in the ME.
Crosspatch
I think we are talking past each other. My point was that indiscriminate terror bombing was not part of the Irish Revolution and Irish Civil War (1916-1923) but a more modern development.
Your reply seems to confirm this. Indeed your reply seems to indicate that discriminate (i.e. targeted at opposing forces) and indiscriminate car bombing had a conceptual origin that was not Irish, but occurred in the Middle East, the Far East and Southern Europe.
When the IRA, who do not necessarily represent the Irish, adopted terror bombing in 1972, they accidentally industrialized the weapon. To the detriment of us all.
Let us make one thing clear: the IRA did a lot of evil, as did other factions in Ireland. Hopefully, that seems to be overcome today by wiser heads on both sides of the fence. But only time will tell on the peace.
But my major point is that anyone who looks for the source of the evils of the modern era in Ireland is making an incorrect historical analysis. The disputes in other regions are not related to Ireland (unless British administration is the connecting factor and British administration ended in the 1940s and 1950s in the Middle East.) And the disputes (primarily over power) drive the tactics, whether guerrilla warfare or terror.
You seem to imply that the Irish Republicans didn’t engage in indiscriminate bombings and I know that they did. They would often explode bombs in the protestant neighborhoods simply to cause carnage and terror. Anyone who claims that the IRA were some kind of “freedom fighting” group of boy scouts is agenda driven. They engaged in murder, intimidation, and mass murder of civilians in addition to military and police. The IRA is the genesis of modern terrorism. The only difference today is the scale to which it has been developed, mainly thanks to Iran.
No such implication should be made. You are changing the subject. and putting words in my reply that I did not say.
Not a fair or moderate way to discuss a topic.
There is no claim the modern IRA were freedom fighters. Any more than there is a valid claim that most socialist insurgencies are freedom fighters. There is also no claim that the IRA did not engage in terror. My contention that The IRA bombing was more discriminate than that found today is based on a recent speech by the lead Scotland Yard anti terrorism official.Peter Clark called “Learning From Experience”
From .pdf page 20 of a 64 page .pdf of the speech:
“It [the Irish campaign} was essentially a domestic campaign using conventional weaponry, carried out by terrorists in tightly-knit networks who were desparate to avoid capture and certainly had no wish to die. The use of warnings restricted the scale of the carnage, dreadful though it was. The warnings were cynical and often misleading, but by restricting casualties were a factor in ultimately enabling the political process to move forward, however haltingly.
I believe that if you take the reverse of many of these characteristics you are not far away from describing the threat we face today. It is global in origin, reach and ambition. The networks are large fluid, mobile and incredibly resiliant. . ..”
http://www.policyexchange.org.uk/images/libimages/260.pdf
Clarke’s speech is quite thoughtful and well worth reading.
None of this is intended to minimize the tragedy caused by IRA terrorism. It is intended to show that Ireland is not the source of all the evils of modern terrorism.
Why don’t you address the issues raised in my replies?