About a year ago, I had lunch with someone
who then held a relatively high position in America's homeland security forces.
During our conversation, I casually referred to "somebody setting off a
suitcase nuke in an American city." He replied, "That will happen."
I therefore found striking the headline in this Sunday's Washington
Post: "U.S. Sees Drop in Terrorist Threats." The first
paragraph of the story went on to say,
"Reports of credible terrorist threats against the United States are
at their lowest level since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, according to U.S.
intelligence officials and federal and state law enforcement authorities.
"The intelligence community's daily threat assessment … currently lists,
on average, 25 to 50 percent fewer threats against domestic targets than it
typically did over the past two years, said one senior counterterrorism official."
What is going on here? Are we really safer, or is Washington living in
a fool's paradise?
Three factors seem to have led to this new confidence in our homeland security.
The first is real, the other two are delusions. The real factor is that our
security forces may have gotten over the Chicken Little Syndrome, where any
indicator sent them squawking in panic. As the Post story reports,
"Counterterrorism officials said the atmosphere, particularly in the
Washington area, also has calmed because they are less jittery and less inclined
to warn the public about every vague, unsubstantiated threat. . .
"'People are more hesitant to pull the trigger, and now think, "Let's
wait a day or two" to investigate,' said John Rollins, former chief of
staff for DHS' intelligence unit…."
This change is for the better. The Department of Homeland Security's (DHS)
color-coded warnings had become a national joke.
Less good is the second factor: our Washington-based intelligence services
are forgetting the threat of the "unknown unknown," terrorists who
understand how our intel system works and know how to evade it. The Post
reports that people outside Washington see this danger:
"Several officials in urban areas that are considered prime targets,
said they worried most about what law enforcement is not detecting. 'I'm not
so comforted' by the drop in intelligence warnings coming out of Washington,
said one senior U.S. intelligence official based elsewhere. 'I'm concerned about
what is going on under our radar scope. And I'm worried about the radar scope.'"
This concern is valid. It would not be difficult for our enemies to game our
sometimes less-than-sophisticated intelligence process, and thus learn how to
spoof or bypass it.
The third factor is an even greater worry: Americans seem incapable of
grasping our enemies' concept of time. We are an impatient people; they are
not. We want results fast; they please Allah by simply carrying on the struggle,
leaving results in his hands. To Americans, "oldies" are 10 years
old; Osama bin Laden muses about the loss of Spain in the 15th century.
In his new book, The
Fourth Power, which argues that America today has no grand strategy
and needs one, former Senator Gary Hart hits this nail on the head:
"The war in Iraq shortly led to guerilla operations against U.S. and
UN presences but did not immediately stimulate retaliation against the U.S.
homeland. It is necessary to recall, however, that al-Qaeda documents captured
in Afghanistan substantiate the connection between the stationing of American
troops in Saudi Arabia following Gulf War I in 1991 and the wave of terrorist
attacks that began with the first attack on the World Trade Center two years
later. It will take some time before we know whether initiating a war against
a major Arab state makes us safer or more in danger, more secure or less. Terrorists
have proved to be patient."
Patient indeed, as you can be when you have, literally, all the time in the
world.
It could be years before a suitcase nuke goes off in an American city.
It may be several decades before America gets hits with a genetically engineered
plague that kills millions or tens of millions of Americans. But so long as
we continue pursuing an offensive grand strategy, the goal of which is world
domination, it is only a question of when, not whether, such events will happen.
The paradise of fools turns into the purgatory of fools' successors.