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Two Choices for
Europe
Logan Wright
After
ten blasts on four trains in
Madrid
on Thursday, March 11 opened a new, European front in
the global war on terrorism. The tactics of the killers
were simple and ghastly: bombs placed in backpacks on
crowded commuter trains at rush hour. The intention was
clear: mass murder on as large a scale as possible. The
targets were not government buildings or officers, but
innocent civilians. And 200 of those civilians died at
the hands of the terrorists, with more than 1,400
wounded. This was Spain’s – and Europe’s – September
11th.
Until
now, in continental Europe, the war on terror has been
perceived as fundamentally an American operation. The
European reaction to the attacks on the United States on
September 11th was to express sympathy and solidarity,
and pledge assistance to the United States. This was
essentially costless: European nations knew the United
States had little need for European military
assistance. Silently, Europeans assumed that the United
States was likely to be the target of all such future
attacks, and that the United States would continue to
manage these ongoing threats to global stability. Now
that European vulnerability to terrorism has been
exposed, Europe must decide how to react.
Spain
responded powerfully to its government’s calls for a
manifestacion against the terrorist attacks in
Madrid.
With city transit services all over the country waiving
fares on March 12, over 11 million people throughout
Spain, and over 2 million in Madrid alone, braved
pouring rain and biting cold to march between the Plaza
de Colon and the Puerta del Sol. Crossing streets were
packed with people farther than a mile from the central
plaza. The subway stations near Plaza de Colon were a
Malthusian nightmare, with demonstrators forced to wait
nearly half an hour simply to exit the station. The
crowd’s message was as powerful as its size: chants of
¨No mas assassins! No mas victimas!¨ dominated the
proceedings. The march was led by Spain´s Prime
Minister, Jose Maria Aznar, and the Spanish royal
family, who appeared without the benefit of umbrellas.
Spain´s emotional response to the attacks was powerful,
even if the country’s political reaction seemed the
opposite.
Upon
asking many participants about the political fallout of
the attacks upon
Spain’s
recent elections, the response centered upon which
terrorist group was ultimately responsible. If the
culprit was ETA, the Basque separatist\ organization,
many responses indicated that Aznar’s Partido Popular
would gain support, since they had taken a harder line
toward ETA in recent years.
However, if the group responsible was Al-Qaeda or
another Islamic militant group, the Spanish people were
likely to blame Aznar and his party for their strong
endorsement of the United States in the war in Iraq.
The implication, spoken explicitly by some demonstrators
but left unsaid by others, was that the war on Islamist
terrorism was not Spain’s war until Aznar unjustifiably
intertwined
Spain
with the United States in the eyes of the terrorists.
These sentiments illustrate two possible choices for
both
Spain
and Europe regarding the war on terror. Terrorism may
be either a tactic of a regional war within the
international system or a global war against the pillars
of the international system itself.
Based
on the election results yesterday, it seems clear that
the Spanish people want little part of the war on
terrorism at the present time. While the left-center
PSOE trailed last week by about 5 percentage points,
they registered a resounding 5 percentage point victory
yesterday against Aznarss PP. This translated to a
16-seat advantage in the legislature, reversing the PP’s
majority from the 2000 elections.
ETA fit
a typical mold of terrorist organizations as we
understood them in the late 20th century. They struck
government targets, killed relatively few people
(compared to recent attacks), and relied upon the
demonstration effect of their attacks to focus attention
upon their political goals. The new global terror
threat, exemplified by the tactics of Al-Qaeda, is
motivated more by religion than contemporary
international politics, emphasizes the links between
civilians and their governments, making all civilians
¨legitimate¨ targets, and aims to kill as many civilians
as possible. The shocking fact for many observers of
the September 11th attacks was not that 3,000 died, but
that the terrorists would have killed 30,000 or 300,000
had the means been available. They did not practice the
tactics of discretion or restraint. They were not
waiting for an offer of land for peace from any
government. They wanted to destroy governments
themselves.
Europe
has two choices. Europeans can view the recent attacks
in Madrid as isolated, random acts of violence, where
moral exhortations such as the recent demonstrations
will be sufficient to defuse the political momentum of
the terrorists.
Europe
can assume that the larger American war against Islamic
fundamentalist fascism will remain separate from their
own, domestic struggles against regional terrorists like
ETA. They can assume groups like ETA will have the
civility never to cooperate with Al-Qaeda, because it
just doesn’t make any sense for them to do so.
Europeans can assume Al-Qaeda will keep its focus on
America,
since even though Al-Qaeda’s sworn enemies are the free,
secular, decadent nations of the West, which surely
could not include Europe, with its obvious efforts to
incorporate Islamic culture and immigrants into a
tolerant, multiethnic, multicultural society.
Alternatively, Europe can recognize the recent attacks
in Madrid as a wake-up call that America’s war against
terrorism is its own. Europe could recognize that
regardless of who was involved in the attacks on Madrid,
Europe is extremely vulnerable to terrorist attack and
will remain vulnerable as long as it shares the free,
liberal values of the West. Europe can recognize
Islamist terrorism and its tactics are a global threat
to the values of the civilized world.
Europe
can realize, in this fight, its interests lie with the
United States rather than in a triangulated
alternative. The demonstration on Friday was a good
start in this direction, with some signs indicating,
"ETA and Al Qaeda- two dogs with the same collar." This
war will not leave
Europe
on the sidelines, as the bombings in
Madrid
demonstrated clearly. Will it take another attack to
make Europeans realize that
America’s
fight is their own?
Judging
from the election results in Spain, Europe seems
unwilling to confront the terrorist threat likely to
reemerge on European soil, by blaming the attacks on
Aznar’s Partido Popular rather than the terrorists
themselves. A different democratically elected
government is unlikely to spare Spain, or other European
countries, the wrath of global terrorism. The ultimate
choice to join this fight is
Europe’s
own.
Logan Wright, who was
in Madrid at the time of the attacks, is a doctoral
candidate at George Washington University.
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