http://www.townhall.com/Columnists/MarkMAlexander/2006/09/08/why_we_fight
 
Why we fight
By Mark M. Alexander
Friday, September 8, 2006
Five years ago, we Americans awoke to the horrifying reality that -- like it
or not, accept it or not -- our nation was at war with a terrifying and
mysterious enemy. 
Significantly, it was a group of ordinary Americans who launched the first
counteroffensive in this new war. They, of course, were the passengers of
United Airlines Flight 93, and they were led in their charge by the battle
cry of Todd Beamer: "Let's roll!" Having been made aware of the World Trade
Center attacks via cell-phone communications with their loved ones, the men
of Flight 93 acted swiftly and surely -- and they died as free men in
defense of their beloved country. 
In the weeks preceding this five-year commemoration
<http://patriotpost.us/September11/>  of 9/11, this column has examined the
locus of the threat <http://patriotpost.us/alexander/edition.asp?id=494>  we
face. The so-called "war on terror," we concluded, is a misnomer. Terrorism
is a tactic, a means to an end. Islam, conversely, is the ideology behind
modern terrorism. It's an ideology that is also inherently fascist. It is no
coincidence that these terrorist-fascists happen to be Muslim, for Islam
itself is a clerical-fascist system of belief. 
Next, having identified the origin of the threat, we examined the nature of
it <http://patriotpost.us/alexander/edition.asp?id=495> . While the
September 11 attacks constitute a grave tragedy, it is hardly the gravest
possible. Far more worrisome, we argued, is the stated intention of our
jihadist foe <http://patriotpost.us/papers/primer01.asp>  to detonate
nuclear weapons -- preferably several simultaneously -- in major U.S. urban
centers. With our borders virtually unguarded and only five percent of
incoming containers at our shipyards being inspected, it's possible that one
or more such weapons are already within our borders. Many prominent voices
in the security community agree that such an attack is probable, if not
inevitable. 
As we approach the anniversary itself, we are reminded of the words of
President Bush: "These terrorists target the innocent, and they kill by the
thousands. And they would, if they gain the weapons they seek, kill by the
millions and not be finished. The greatest threat of our age is nuclear,
chemical or biological weapons in the hands of terrorists and the dictators
who aid them." 
That statement wasn't part of the Bush/Rumsfeld rhetorical onslaught of
recent days. Nor was it poll-driven spin with an eye toward November's
crucial congressional elections. Rather, it was part of a speech to British
lawmakers at Whitehall Palace, London, in November 2003. 
Notably, President Bush's language has changed little since then. Addressing
the Military Officers Association of America earlier this week, the
President again intoned the threat of a WMD attack from jihadists: "Bin
Laden and his terrorist allies have made their intentions as clear as Lenin
and Hitler before them," he said. "The question is: Will we listen? Will we
pay attention to what these evil men say? We're taking the words of the
enemy seriously." 
While the President's view of the conflict has only galvanized in the past
five years, his view of the enemy has matured significantly. He is no longer
reflexive in affirming Islam as a "religion of peace," as he did at a mosque
in the days following 9/11. Instead, President Bush has finally begun to
speak bluntly about the threat posed by "Islamic fascism." 
Regrettably, the same cannot be said of other Beltway voices. "The facts do
not lie," said Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid in response to the
President's recent remarks. "Under the Bush administration and this
Republican Congress, America is less safe, facing greater threats and
unprepared for the dangerous world in which we live." 
Reid and his cohorts, who cannot or will not see the connection between the
war in Iraq and the global war on Islamic fascism, reinforce and are
reinforced by Americans who insist we are engaged in a "war for oil." 9/11
Scholars for Truth, a group of pseudo-academic conspiracy theorists, claim
that the Bush administration itself (after eight whole months on the job)
orchestrated the 9/11 attacks. Indeed, the movement has grown to such an
extent that it has produced the Journal of 9/11 Studies under a veneer of
scholarly respectability. 
The picture abroad is little better. Only this week, French Prime Minister
Dominique de Villepin ran up the white flag, rejecting any talk of a "war on
terror," much less a war on Islamic fascism. "We will only end this curse,"
he said, "if we also fight against injustice, violence and these crises." 
Thanks to the likes of de Villepin and Reid, we now not only fight Muslim
fascism abroad but also defeatism at home and throughout the West. As we've
stated before, we should call political opportunists such as Reid, John
Kerry, Ted Kennedy and Nancy Pelosi precisely what they are: Traitors
<http://patriotpost.us/alexander/edition.asp?id=342> . 
In stark contrast to the words of these scoundrels, the actions of Todd
Beamer and his comrades on Flight 93 live on in our nation's commitment to
defeat this jihadist scourge. Just this week, the administration released
its revised National Strategy for Combating Terrorism, a document that
details how our actions adapt as the war evolves. 
Appropriately, the NSCT identifies Islamic terrorism as "a form of
totalitarianism following in the path of fascism and Nazism" and
rearticulates U.S. strategies of international cooperation and force --
including pre-emptive force -- in defeating the enemy. The most important
weapon in this war, however, is our nation's commitment to democratization
abroad. "Democracy," the document continues, "is the antithesis of terrorist
tyranny, which is why the terrorists denounce it and are willing to kill the
innocent to stop it." 
With democracy as the cornerstone of our war-fighting strategy, our nation
has become the primary target of Islamofascism. That our foe is willing to
kill the innocent to check the course of democracy serves as a stark
reminder of what Todd Beamer and his colleagues were fighting for, and why
we must continue fighting the long
<http://patriotpost.us/alexander/edition.asp?id=318>  war until the battle
is won. 
Islamic fascism is not why we fight, it's what we fight. The distinction is
more than merely rhetorical. For all our necessary emphasis on what we're
fighting -- Islamic terrorists bent on the destruction of the West and the
establishment of a new caliphate -- we cannot forget what we're fighting
for. 
The United States of America is the last best hope of Western civilization,
and we fight because we know our way of life is worth defending to the last
man. 
As we reflect back upon the events of September 11, 2001, let us humbly
remind ourselves why it is that we fight. Let us remember that no great
civilization is defeated from without until it is first defeated from
within.


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