Insanity and the Mistake Trap
14 Jan, 2007
When people hear the word “insanity,” they conjure up the image
of someone out of touch with reality and out of control; a
dysfunctional person fit to be tied. Yet, insanity comes in
numerous types as well as
degrees. It is also widely prevalent in groups, even in nations as
a whole.
One common and troubling form of insanity is, “Doing the same
thing over and over again and expecting different results,” warned
Albert Einstein.
When individuals make mistakes, the consequences are limited. But
when nations make mistakes, the results
can be catastrophic. It is disheartening to see the world’s best
hope for freedom and democracy, the United States of America,
repeatedly making the same mistake at crucial junctures. Once
again, America is at a critical point and facing troubles in
several hotspots of the world. A particularly dangerous threat is
gathering momentum in the greater Middle East. Iraq is an inferno,
Palestinian Territory is ready to ignite, the Syrians are busy
with their machinations, the Lebanese’ Hezbollah is stirring, the
Taliban in Afghanistan is resurging, and the Iranian Mullahs are
working overtime fanning any and all fires while furiously racing
to make the bomb.
The common denominator in all these troubles is Islam, with Iran’s
Mullahs its linchpin. The petrodollar rich
Shiite Mullahs are busily bankrolling any and all who are fighting
the “infidel” world, while their Sunni kin try to outdo them and
claim the mantel of leadership for the Ummeh.
Islam, in actuality, is a house of cards. Once the Mullahs fall,
the rest will quickly crumble with much less effort. Muslims are
among the world’s apt fence-sitters. They flock to the source of
power, as flies to honey. The minute they sense the defeat of
Islamism, they will likely abandon it en mass.
Presently, fanatical Islam is lashing out with mad fury before its
own final demise. The “infidel” world has been complicit in the
surge of Islamism through its mistakes, complacency, and greed.
“You can trust the capitalist to sell you the rope to hang him
with,” proclaimed Nikita Krushchev, at the peak of his glory days.
He was convinced that greed will blind the capitalists and will
spell their doom.
Today, Krushchev’s dictum applies to both the capitalists and the
Communists alike. All manner of capitalists such as the French,
the Germans, and the European Union stumble over one another,
buckets in hand, rushing to the Muslims’ oil spigots. The
Communist Chinese, even in the face of having a potentially
explosive Islamic problem of their own, are elbowing their way in
the oil queue to the front of the line. The ever-duplicitous
Russians are making a fortune selling arms and nuclear gear. One
and all feel that they deal with the Islam problem when they
absolutely have to and not a minute sooner. They also find
perverse satisfaction in seeing the United States pay the price of
fighting the Islamic menace, in both money and blood, for everyone
else.
Such are the vagaries of this world.
Containing and defusing the present crises of the larger Middle
East requires the united efforts of Americans and other free
people. Regrettably, even the American house is badly divided and
may not be able to deal effectively with the threat it faces.
Lincoln’s ominous warning, “A house divided against itself cannot
stand,” comes to mind.
The American public, as well as in-power and out-of-power
politicians, sorely tried by the Iraq mess, are advocating vastly
different piecemeal strategies for dealing with the crises. Some
propose nuking Iran to stop it from bankrolling the Iraqi
insurgency as well as preventing it from acquiring the bomb.
Others want to negotiate with Iran and somehow mollify it. As for
Iraq, some say that the United States has no dog in its sectarian
bloodletting, that the American forces should be brought home or
pulled back to safe barracks and let the parties slaughter one
another until they run out of guns and blood. Similar “solutions”
are offered in dealing with the other hotspots.
All extreme solutions, if unwise, are fraught with extreme
dangers. During the presidential campaign of the Vietnam War,
Barry Goldwater proclaimed, “Extremism in the defense of freedom
is no vice.” The collective wisdom of the American public
prevailed and Goldwater didn’t get a chance to put his belief into
practice. It is prudent to reserve extreme measures for extreme
cases. Just as important, it is best to follow the less glamorous
solutions of the problems as they gather momentum and diffuse
them.
With respect to the multifaceted problems of the Middle East, a
multi-prong, long-term, strategy is needed. A partial set of
proposed actions is listed below.
* The overarching goal should be the ideological defeat of
Islamism. A comprehensive long-term campaign of education, using
all available media, and pointing out the errors and futility of
this cult of death and destruction should be directed at the
masses of Muslims. The ever-burgeoning Islamic communities in the
West should be assisted in breaking with Islam and join the free
people of their new homelands with a new vision of life.
* The oil Sheikhs of Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States, who have
been leading a charmed life under the protection of the United
States, should be told that they must mend their ways and do so
without delay or equivocation. They must fully purge all their
media from engaging in hate-propagating indoctrinations of the
populace.
* Arab governments and Sheikhs should
completely cease supporting any exclusionary or
hate-based Islamic orders or organizations such as
mosques, Islamic centers, madresehs, and lobbyists.
* The free societies should enact laws to
prosecute the Imams and Mullahs, the traditional lead
communicators of the Islamic hate virus, who take
advantage of the freedom they enjoy by instilling
bigotry in their congregations.
* The U.S. government should, without
delay, underwrite a massive program of making the
nation energy independent so that the Islamic gas
station nations could no longer hold the country
hostage for oil. Each citizen, in the meantime, must
do everything possible to conserve energy and deny the
flow of dollars to the coffers of the enemy.
The not so grateful world owes the U.S. an infinite debt of
gratitude for defeating the evil of Nazism, and then the scourge
of Soviet Communism. Once again, this champion nation of freedom
is called upon to defeat the most tenacious and deadly enemy,
Islamofascism.
The Mullahs’ Iran is the heart and the nerve center of the battle
with the U.S. Any mistake by either side
poses a great threat to the survival of the other.
It is insane for the Mullahs to prematurely celebrate their
victory over the “Great Satan,” by citing the mess in Iraq and the
divided house of the U.S. The U.S. may not win in Iraq, but the
Mullahs are making a great mistake by believing that it will
vacate the region for them to rule.
It is also insane for the U.S. to make the mistake of placating
the Mullahs through concessions, attacking Iran militarily, either
in a limited or comprehensive fashion and, failing to
wholeheartedly support the Iranian democratic oppositions.
The U.S. has, in secular Iranians, its best friends in the entire
Islamic world. It is imperative for the U.S. to help these
Iranians to dislodge the vicious doomsday Mullahs, not as an act
of altruism, but as a prudent measure of enlightened
self-interest.