Thinking the Unthinkable: The Islamists’ Manhattan Project

Posted By N.M. Guariglia On September 30, 2010 @ 12:00 am In Culture,
Homeland Security, Politics, Religion, US News, World News | 8
<http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/thinking-the-unthinkable-the-islamists%e2%80%9
9-manhattan-project/?print=1#comments_controls>  Comments

At the beginning of this century, Americans believed in the world. Why
wouldn’t we? The United States emerged from the Cold War as the planet’s
sole economic and military superpower. We had shaped the globe’s
institutions to our liking; they functioned under our captaincy. Then in
2001, our cities and people were attacked. The world displayed a month or
two’s worth of empathy — since then, apathy. The organizations that anchor
international rules have proven ineffective and corrupt. Nearly every
American accepts this truism: the United Nations cannot prevent a nuclear
9/11. And that is what it’s all about, is it not?

Though 9/11 was nine years ago, the act fundamentally restructured the
American conception of internationalism. Colloquially, we say the attacks
changed everything; in actuality, more was clarified than changed. The
collapse of the World Trade Center did not make obsolete the timeless
instruments of statecraft. International harmony and multilateral accords
are good insofar as those who participate in these pursuits continue to
adhere to the rules in which they are ground. As a foundation for peace and
order, these concepts are merely sometimes necessary – but are always
insufficient.

Just as a prudent lawmaker would consider the legislation of morality a
futile effort, so too those involved in foreign affairs ought to remind
themselves that the attempted adjudication of human behavior is bound to
fail without the credible threat of force.  The liberal democracies that
comprise the free world are precariously in error to assume their
adversaries are as equally devoted to the perfection of man as they. The
belief that all cultures are equal  — all peoples alike and with similar
desires — is nothing more than collective hope-think; it is the most
dangerous kind of mirror-imaging. It is a great lie.

In some quarters, the “enemy” has become an almost passé notion, where
al-Qaeda killers are said to be misguided or politically immature — “a
friend we haven’t done enough for yet,” in
<http://www.amazon.com/Civilization-Its-Enemies-Stage-History/dp/0743257499>
the words [1] of philosopher Lee Harris. This therapeutic, post-modern
worldview is prevalent in government and academia, and it directly
undermines a society’s ability to interpret reality.

No international body has prevented Kim Jong Il from sinking South Korean
vessels and kidnapping Japanese girls. Amnesty International never tamed the
sadistic tendencies of Uday Hussein. The United Nations bureaucracy has
shown no interest in stopping Vladimir Putin from poisoning people he
dislikes. The promises of economic interdependence have yet to convince
Mullah Omar or Dr. Zawahiri to take their theological inclinations a bit
less seriously, and to discontinue their violence against innocents
worldwide. Our enemies of the Islamist variety want atomic bombs. They want
them for use. UN Secretary-General Ban
<http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,240800,00.html>  Ki-moon [2] does not
intimidate them. Dictators are unimpressed, too.

The despot is not interested in international organizations, save for his
attempts to use the cult of victimization to bend these organizations to his
will. Take the Islamists’ support for the Organization of the Islamic
Conference to compel the UN Human Rights Council to make criticism or
mockery of Islam a crime under international law. Does this support
underscore the Islamists’ respect for the UN or dedication to the rule of
law?  No. For if these international bodies reject their demands — and
subsequently, an unflattering cartoon lampooning their beliefs is drawn by
someone, somewhere — then all bets are off. Fatwas are issued, embassies
overrun, and unsuspecting good men and women killed. Such Islamist deviants
are thus able to pursue the institutionalization of their deviancy, all the
while operating outside the purview of international norms. It is not the
mere hijacking of planes they seek, but of the apparatus of international
order.

People of all philosophical persuasions ought to be able to acknowledge
three unassailable truths: 1) there are dozens of international
organizations comprised of hundreds of thousands of individuals who perceive
a religious obligation to destroy American cities; 2) these individuals are
the twisted-type; they’re sincere in their warped convictions and determined
to accomplish their monstrous objective; they cannot be deterred, dissuaded,
or bought off; 3) these individuals will one day ascertain the atomic means
to achieve their calamitous ends — sooner rather than later, certainly
within most of our lifetimes.

Martin Shubik, the Yale economist, liked to draw a curve of the number of
civilians ten determined men could kill before they were killed themselves.
Throughout history, the change in this number is sobering. As time goes on,
fewer men have always been able to kill more people. Consequently, it is not
fatalistic or paranoid to assume that we will likely one day witness ten men
with ten vans or suitcases attempting to vaporize ten American metropolises.
And if ten targets proved too ambitious — bin Laden called off the West
Coast attacks on 9/11, after all — then five targets would suffice.  St.
Louis might make the cut, but New York City would not.

The intent is there. The technology exists and is proliferating
exponentially. This isn’t a possibility. It’s a probability.

What would this day of days look like? Jerome Corsi once wrote a
second-by-second synopsis <http://www.wnd.com/?pageId=29862>  [3] of a
nuclear attack in midtown Manhattan. The improvised nuclear device (IND) is
in the back of a truck, driven by the terror cell’s leader. The operatives
know they are going to die. “Assume the IND is detonated outside the Empire
State Building at 11:45 a.m.  Assume that the weapon is a 150-kiloton HEU
gun-type bomb,” Corsi states.

1 second after detonation: “a shock wave with an overpressure of 20 psi
(pounds per square inch) extends four-tenths of a mile from ground zero.
This destroys the Empire State Building and all other buildings within that
radius, including Madison Square Garden, Penn Station and the New York
Public Library.”  A mushroom cloud rises into the sky from the center of
Manhattan. In this second, between 75,000 and 100,000 people die. “New York
City falls off the world communication map.” Nobody knows what happened.

4 seconds after detonation: “The shock wave extends for at least a mile with
an overpressure of 10 psi … all concrete and steel-reinforced commercial
buildings are destroyed or so severely damaged that they begin to collapse.”
An additional 300,000 people perish. The survivors are all burned and
injured, buried in hundreds of feet of rubble. Those in the subway system
are trapped underground. There is no radio, television, or telephone
communication with New York City.

6 seconds after detonation: Midtown
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Midtown_Rainbow_Weeh_jeh.JPG>  is gone
[4]. The Chrysler Building, Grand Central Station, the skyscrapers on
Madison and Park Avenue — destroyed.  Another 220,000 people are killed.
“The outside world has virtually no contact with New York City.  The first
six seconds is too short an interval for government officials in Washington,
D.C., to have any real idea what has happened to New York.”

Though Corsi’s reputation has suffered somewhat, his portrayal of a nuclear
attack is a tour de force. Corsi elaborates the horror: the situation one
hour after detonation, by the end of the day, contemplating the U.S.
response, and so forth. More than 1.5 million people are killed; another 1.5
million injured, more than 75% of which will die within a week. Roads,
bridges, and tunnels will be unusable. There will be no police, no fire
department, no government authorities; buildings will burn until they fall.
The entire city would be contaminated. Thousands would be trapped in
elevators and beneath bricks, steel, rubble, and debris.

How would the United States respond? Against whom would we retaliate — and
in what way? The attack occurred from an unknowable source. All evidence was
destroyed in the blast. As time goes on, what powers would the American
public concede to the government? How could anyone ever move their family to
a big American city again? An era of de-urbanization would begin at once.

This is the Islamists’ Manhattan Project. Osama bin Laden calls it a
“religious
<http://belfercenter.ksg.harvard.edu/publication/18230/nuclear_attack_a_wors
tcase_reality.html>  duty [5].” The sole defense against this scenario is
executive force: actionable intelligence, military strength, strong
partnerships with allies, human espionage, covert and psychological
operations, economic and diplomatic pressure — and a whole lot of killing
and capturing the enemy, wherever he is, for decades if need be.

The benefits of cultural and economic connectivity — the “togetherness” of
globalization — provide our world with great promise and advantageous
opportunity for peace. International clubs like the United Nations can, in
some cases, provide us with forums in which we can explain our mindset to
the world. We must remain tempered in our internationalist idealism,
however, and always acknowledge that some men do not consider themselves to
be a part of our world. This is an unwelcome thought in 2010, but it is not
a point against those who draw conclusions which are not designed as to make
one feel happy.

  _____  

Article printed from Pajamas Media: http://pajamasmedia.com

URL to article:
http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/thinking-the-unthinkable-the-islamists%e2%80%99
-manhattan-project/

URLs in this post: 

[1] in the words:
http://www.amazon.com/Civilization-Its-Enemies-Stage-History/dp/0743257499

[2] Ban Ki-moon: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,240800,00.html

[3] second-by-second synopsis: http://www.wnd.com/?pageId=29862

[4] Midtown is gone:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Midtown_Rainbow_Weeh_jeh.JPG

[5] religious duty:
http://belfercenter.ksg.harvard.edu/publication/18230/nuclear_attack_a_worst
case_reality.html

 



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