The last
time I saw Paris, in early May 2011, there was a bomb scare near the Quai
d’Orsay. The streets, busy with bug-eyed tourist coaches, cars and hooting
scooters, were patrolled by blue-uniformed armed police.
A few days before,
American Seals had stolen into Pakistan under the cover of darkness and
assassinated Al Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden. French news magazines were full
of it. Bin Laden’s bearded face shone in hot sunshine on all the glossy covers
on news-stands. Evidently the French were apprehensive of retaliation by
Islamic jihadis.
Twelve years
earlier, in late March 1999, a writer friend and myself spent a long weekend in
the capital of love to celebrate the publication of a couple of books and to
see the exhibition of David Hockney’s three Grand Canyon paintings at the ugly
Pompidou Centre.
On the
afternoon of our departure the streets were full of armoured vehicles and CRS
men in their dark blue airmail hats. NATO had just started bombing Serbia in
response to the crisis in the Balkans. Tomahawk Cruise missiles were flying.
The French authorities feared some kind of backlash in the city. Coincidentally, the length of the Pont des Arts bridge was full of larger than
life statues of falling US Seventh Cavalrymen and Sioux Indians gripping –
tomahawks. The Battle of the Little Big Horn had come to Paris.
I happened
to be re-reading Frederick Forsyth’s The Day
of the Jackal round about the time of the latest massacre of
innocents in Paris. The eight masked Islamic State kamikaze nihilists must have been making their final preparations while I was reading. The book begins and ends with attempts to assassinate French
President Charles de Gaulle, first by members of the French military
disillusioned by Government policy over Algeria (the Secret Army Organisation),
then by a British hit-man, code-named Jackal, hired by the OAS. Against vast odds - many thousands of patrolling police oficers and paramilitary men - the Jackal comes within a whisker of killing the President. Part of the fascination of this story, first published in 1971, is that the reader watches the Jackal making his detailed preparations including four changes of identity. The security forces are always chasing, never lying in wait. If a fictional lone gunman could come close to destroying the status quo then why not a real group of trained and determined gunmen utterly indifferent to their own safety?
De Gaulle
survived seven or eight attempts on his life; he even survived the 1968 student
revolution which occupied the streets of Paris and the university quarter of
Nanterre. That bout of street-fighting, replicated in Berlin, London and
Chicago, was in part triggered by the (undeclared) Vietnam War. Although
widespread and intense, exciting much fervour among the impressionable young
and older intellectuals, the revolt did not result in casualties on anything
like the scale of either the Charlie Hebdo attack in Paris in January this year
(20 murdered) or these November killings (129 dead and counting).
The French
have known nothing like it since the war for independence in Algiers. In that
murderous encounter, embittered by the French defeat in Vietnam in 1954, the
French Government felt obliged to agree to talks with its enemy and eventually
to withdraw from Algeria. I don't think they'll be doing the same in this case because this is not a battle for independence but war on a way of life.
All this the
world well knows – doesn’t it? I thought so until I watched some of the
television reporting of the latest killings. That Islamic gunmen, driven by
religious fervour, anger at French military action in Syria and a shoot-to-kill policy, should take to
the streets of Paris and open fire on civilians seemed to come as a complete
surprise to some. It was as though they had no knowledge of recent history. Militant Islam's war on the West started in the mid-1970s with Black September, the late Yasser Arafat’s
Palestinian Liberation Organisation and continuing through the founding of the
Islamic Republic of Iran in 1979, the 1989 fatwah against Salman Rushdie and
thereafter the rise of the Mujahedeen in Afghanistan (funded by the United
States), followed by the religious nihilists of the Taliban, Bin Laden’s Al
Qaeda and latterly the black-masked killers of Islamic State.
Going back further, the jihad against the godless West has been going on ever since
General Gordon was killed in Khartoum by the Mahdi’s forces in January 1885 – 130
years ago. In Afghanistan it goes back to the early decades of the 19th century when the British made a bad choice of allies among tribesmen and ended up sending a punitive expedition from India through the Kyber Pass and into Kabul.
In the book We Love Death As You Love Life: Britain’s
Suburban Terrorists by Rafaello Pantucci, director of International
Securities Studies at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security
(founder, the Duke of Wellington), the point about the longevity of militant
Islam’s war with the West is re-stated:-
The reality is that
while British security services understand much better the networks they are
dealing with and what radicalisation looks like, there is still very little
understanding of how to counter and de-radicalise.
Among the wider radical
community, numerous arrests and lengthy incarcerations have not stopped a
steady number of young Britons posting radical material online, attending
meetings or seeking out others with similar ideas with whom they can plot and
form secret communities.
Britain’s jihad has
been underway for decades, and the appeal of the ideas that underlie it has
proved remarkably resilient.
Three main drivers usually
have to be in place before individuals become involved in terrorism: ideology,
grievance and mobilisation. How they coalesce is dictated by random events and
how individuals respond to a given situation, factors that are difficult to
forecast.
In his book
Pantucci explains each of these three factors in detail, giving them an
historical context. Like the emblems in a fruit machine, they have to be aligned in order
to drive an individual to terrorism.
One of the
problems of this murderous conflict is the different application of the word ‘martyr’.
The Christian and post-Christian West associates martyrdom with self-sacrifice,
not the taking of the lives of others. Usually this conscious act of
existential self-abnegation is undertaken by an individual who lays down his or
her life for others or in support of an idea. The eight Islamic State killers
in Paris killed or wounded hundreds of others to justify their adopted nihilism and their own acts of
self-immolation. Clearly they had no conscience about doing this because they
believed that the people they were shooting and bombing were infidels.
To fall into
this category appears to have little to do with belief in God or Allah; it’s
more to do with the Islamic caliphate as defined by the leaders of Islamic State.
Their followers happily kill fellow Muslims - Shias - wherever they find them. The
military forces of the West may have killed 100,000 Muslims in the ‘shock and
awe’ attack on Iraq in 2003; but in the eight year war between Iraq and the
Islamic Republic of Iran (the West supported Iraq in that one) more than a million
Muslims were killed. Few if any Muslims in this country felt compelled to join in. It didn't seem to be a public issue with them at the time even though the West tacitly supported Iraq.
The West’s military
meddling in Iraq and Afghanistan undoubtedly played a part in educating
disaffected young Muslims in the art of insurrection and insurgency. Islamic
State is one of the consequences. The refugee crisis now bewildering the
European Union is a concomitant consequence of that. Again, all this the world
well knows – at least I thought it did.
But the heart is also involved as well as the head. All day the sombre weight of what happened in Paris has been upon me.That weight has been there so many times in the past it's a wonder I have any humanity left. Gruesome newsreels of so many wars, civil wars, acts of genocide, terror attacks and hatefulness have been a constant feature of life since Korea in the early 1950s. Thirty of my nearly sixty-seven years were besieged by Northern Ireland, a conflict which the late Denis Healey said he could not imagine an end to.
I felt the same about the terrible civil war in Lebanon when various religious militias tore into each other and the fabric of the country. Thirty years ago or more Beirut was like Aleppo and other Syrian cities now. In the early Nineties it was the turn of Sarajevo. I had hoped the 21st century would be different from its blood-boltered predecessor. Fifteen years down the road I'm still hoping; but then, as Russians say, hope is the last thing to die.
But the heart is also involved as well as the head. All day the sombre weight of what happened in Paris has been upon me.That weight has been there so many times in the past it's a wonder I have any humanity left. Gruesome newsreels of so many wars, civil wars, acts of genocide, terror attacks and hatefulness have been a constant feature of life since Korea in the early 1950s. Thirty of my nearly sixty-seven years were besieged by Northern Ireland, a conflict which the late Denis Healey said he could not imagine an end to.
I felt the same about the terrible civil war in Lebanon when various religious militias tore into each other and the fabric of the country. Thirty years ago or more Beirut was like Aleppo and other Syrian cities now. In the early Nineties it was the turn of Sarajevo. I had hoped the 21st century would be different from its blood-boltered predecessor. Fifteen years down the road I'm still hoping; but then, as Russians say, hope is the last thing to die.