Tashfeen Malik called herself a soldier. We call her the
29-year-old female terrorist who, along with her husband, killed 14
unsuspecting Americans during an office party. Either way, she is a cause
celebre now. The more we demonize her – and fittingly so – the more ascendant
her fame in the eyes of Jihadist everywhere.
A psychologist appearing on CNN’s “Smerconish” explained
Tashfeen’s actions in these terms: “She
seeks power, inclusion, and hero status.”
Seeking militarily to advance oneself – in any military – is
an ambition as old as military history, itself. Recently, America’s defense
secretary, Ash Carter, decreed that female soldiers serving in America’s
military would no longer be excluded from frontline combat units. It was the
right decision. Congressional Medals of Honor are scored on the battlefield,
not in supply depots. As long as women serve in our military, they deserve the
same breadth of field to satisfy their ambitions as men are afforded.
Tashfeen, too, moved to the front lines in her army’s
struggle with America. The psychologist appearing on Smerconish suggests that
Tashfeen believed that by attacking Americans in America, she was “making the
world better for her children.” I imagine our female soldiers yearning to fight
and their families, too. This is not an attempt to draw a moral equivalence
between Tashfeen and our own female fighters. It is simply an attempt to
understand Tashfeen’s motivations. If we truly want to defeat our enemy, we
must make a sincere effort to understand him. That begins with being honest
with ourselves.
On hearing about the killings in San Bernadino, Newt
Gingrinch exclaimed, “The terrorists have declared war on America!” Let us be
serious. Before the San Bernadino shootings, America had carried out over 6,000
airstrikes against ISIS targets in Syria, killing thousands of ISIS fighters
(and certainly some innocent men, women, and children besides.) Now, when was
the war declared, Newt?
Americans kill 11,000 Americans in gun-related violence each
year. In the past nine years, terrorists have killed 45 Americans in this
country, an average of five per year. Yet, it is the terrorists whom we fear
pose the existential threat.
At this rate, America cannot defeat terrorism, not as long
as we accept self-inflicted terrorism. Inner-city children are being
slaughtered in gang violence that has nothing to do with them. White
communities like Newtown and Columbine see the slaughter of their precious
babies, and nothing changes. Then, a Muslim couple opens fire at a gathering of
adults celebrating the holidays, and we self-righteously demand to know “who
radicalized them?”
A better question is:
Who is radicalized Dylan Roof, the man who shot nine black church
members in South Carolina? Who radicalized Chicago police officer, Jason Van
Dyke, who shot an African-American teenager 16 times? Who radicalized the
Planned Parenthood shooter? America has put 300 million guns into the hands of
a citizenry 300-million-strong. Who radicalized America into thinking that is a
solution?
You want to defeat terrorism? This is how: Put down the guns
and pick up the children. Teach them the lessons of love and respect. As long
as we treat them with love and respect, they will listen. Raise good children
and the need for guns will dissipate like a morning fog. When Americans truly
learn to respect one another, this crushing array of weaponry will simply
become an ugly reminder of the way we were. Let a terrorist come into that
America, and we will rip him apart with our teeth.
Rebuilding America will not be child’s play, (though it
could be a lot of fun.) It will be the greatest task the men and women of this
nation will ever undertake. It will take generations; we have time. For the
sake of our children – which are the sake of this American nation – we must
make time.
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