Is There Still a Terrorist Threat?
BY JOHN MUELLER
Foreign Affairs
Despite all the
ominous warnings of wily terrorists and imminent attacks, there has been
neither a successful strike nor a close call in the United States since
9/11. The reasonable -- but rarely heard -- explanation is that there are
no terrorists within the United States, and few have the means or the
inclination to strike from abroad.
The myth of the omnipresent enemy
For the past five years, Americans have
been regularly regaled with dire predictions of another major al Qaeda
attack in the United States. In 2003, a group of 200 senior government
officials and business executives, many of them specialists in security
and terrorism, pronounced it likely that a terrorist strike more
devastating than 9/11 -- possibly involving weapons of mass destruction --
would occur before the end of 2004. In May 2004, Attorney General John
Ashcroft warned that al Qaeda could "hit hard" in the next few months and
said that 90 percent of the arrangements for an attack on U.S. soil were
complete. That fall, Newsweek reported that it was "practically an article
of faith among counterterrorism officials" that al Qaeda would strike in
the run-up to the November 2004 election. When that "October surprise"
failed to materialize, the focus shifted: a taped encyclical from Osama
bin Laden, it was said, demonstrated that he was too weak to attack before
the election but was marshalling his resources to do so months after it.
On the first page of its founding
manifesto, the massively funded Department of Homeland Security intones,
"Today's terrorists can strike at any place, at any time, and with
virtually any weapon."
But if it is so easy to pull off an
attack and if terrorists are so demonically competent, why have they not
done it? Why have they not been sniping at people in shopping centers,
collapsing tunnels, poisoning the food supply, cutting electrical lines,
derailing trains, blowing up oil pipelines, causing massive traffic jams,
or exploiting the countless other vulnerabilities that, according to
security experts, could so easily be exploited?
One reasonable explanation is that
almost no terrorists exist in the United States and few have the means or
the inclination to strike from abroad. But this explanation is rarely
offered.
Huffing and puffing
Instead, Americans are told -- often by
the same people who had once predicted imminent attacks -- that the
absence of international terrorist strikes in the United States is owed to
the protective measures so hastily and expensively put in place after
9/11. But there is a problem with this argument. True, there have been no
terrorist incidents in the United States in the last five years. But nor
were there any in the five years before the 9/11 attacks, at a time when
the United States was doing much less to protect itself. It would take
only one or two guys with a gun or an explosive to terrorize vast numbers
of people, as the sniper attacks around Washington, D.C., demonstrated in
2002. Accordingly, the government's protective measures would have to be
nearly perfect to thwart all such plans. Given the monumental imperfection
of the government's response to Hurricane Katrina, and the debacle of FBI
and National Security Agency programs to upgrade their computers to better
coordinate intelligence information, that explanation seems far-fetched.
Moreover, Israel still experiences terrorism even with a far more
extensive security apparatus.
It may well have become more difficult
for terrorists to get into the country, but, as thousands demonstrate each
day, it is far from impossible. Immigration procedures have been
substantially tightened (at considerable cost), and suspicious U.S. border
guards have turned away a few likely bad apples. But visitors and
immigrants continue to flood the country. There are over 300 million legal
entries by foreigners each year, and illegal crossings number between
1,000 and 4,000 a day -- to say nothing of the generous quantities of
forbidden substances that the government has been unable to intercept or
even detect despite decades of a strenuous and well-funded "war on drugs."
Every year, a number of people from Muslim countries -- perhaps hundreds
-- are apprehended among the illegal flow from Mexico, and many more
probably make it through. Terrorism does not require a large force. And
the 9/11 planners, assuming Middle Eastern males would have problems
entering the United States legally after the attack, put into motion plans
to rely thereafter on non-Arabs with passports from Europe and Southeast
Asia.
If al Qaeda operatives are as
determined and inventive as assumed, they should be here by now. If they
are not yet here, they must not be trying very hard or must be far less
dedicated, diabolical, and competent than the common image would suggest.
Another popular explanation for the
fact that there have been no more attacks asserts that the invasion of
Afghanistan in 2001, although it never managed to snag bin Laden, severely
disrupted al Qaeda and its operations. But this claim is similarly
unconvincing. The 2004 train bombings in Madrid were carried out by a tiny
group of men who had never been to Afghanistan, much less to any of al
Qaeda's training camps. They pulled off a coordinated nonsuicidal attack
with 13 remote-controlled bombs, ten of which went off on schedule,
killing 191 and injuring more than 1,800. The experience with that attack,
as well as with the London bombings of 2005, suggests that, as the former
U.S. counterterrorism officials Daniel Benjamin and Steven Simon have
noted, for a terrorist attack to succeed, "all that is necessary are the
most portable, least detectable tools of the terrorist trade: ideas."
It is also sometimes suggested that the
terrorists are now too busy killing Americans and others in Iraq to devote
the time, manpower, or energy necessary to pull off similar deeds in the
United States. But terrorists with al Qaeda sympathies or sensibilities
have managed to carry out attacks in Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Saudi Arabia,
Spain, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and elsewhere in the past three years;
not every single potential bomb thrower has joined the fray in Iraq.
Perhaps, some argue, terrorists are
unable to mount attacks in the United States because the Muslim community
there, unlike in many countries in Europe, has been well integrated into
society. But the same could be said about the United Kingdom, which
experienced a significant terrorist attack in 2005. And European countries
with less well-integrated Muslim communities, such as Germany, France, and
Norway, have yet to experience al Qaeda terrorism. Indeed, if terrorists
are smart, they will avoid Muslim communities because that is the lamppost
under which policing agencies are most intensely searching for them. The
perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks were ordered generally to stay away from
mosques and American Muslims. That and the Madrid plot show that tiny
terrorist conspiracies hardly need a wider support network to carry out
their schemes.
Another common explanation is that al
Qaeda is craftily biding its time. But what for? The 9/11 attacks took
only about two years to prepare. The carefully coordinated, very
destructive, and politically productive terrorist attacks in Madrid in
2004 were conceived, planned from scratch, and then executed all within
six months; the bombs were set off less than two months after the
conspirators purchased their first supplies of dynamite, paid for with
hashish. (Similarly, Timothy McVeigh's attack in Oklahoma City in 1995
took less than a year to plan.) Given the extreme provocation of the
invasion of Iraq in 2003, one would think that terrorists might be
inclined to shift their timetable into higher gear. And if they are so
patient, why do they continually claim that another attack is just around
the corner? It was in 2003 that al Qaeda's top leaders promised attacks in
Australia, Bahrain, Egypt, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi
Arabia, the United States, and Yemen. Three years later, some bombs had
gone off in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Yemen, and Jordan (as well as in the
unlisted Turkey) but not in any other of the explicitly threatened
countries. Those attacks were tragic, but their sparseness could be taken
as evidence that it is not only American alarmists who are given to
extravagant huffing and puffing.
Terrorists under the bed
A fully credible explanation for the
fact that the United States has suffered no terrorist attacks since 9/11
is that the threat posed by homegrown or imported terrorists -- like that
presented by Japanese Americans during World War II or by American
Communists after it -- has been massively exaggerated. Is it possible that
the haystack is essentially free of needles?
The FBI embraces a spooky
I-think-therefore-they-are line of reasoning when assessing the purported
terrorist menace. In 2003, its director, Robert Mueller, proclaimed, "The
greatest threat is from al Qaeda cells in the U.S. that we have not yet
identified." He rather mysteriously deemed the threat from those
unidentified entities to be "increasing in part because of the heightened
publicity" surrounding such episodes as the 2002 Washington sniper
shootings and the 2001 anthrax attacks (which had nothing to do with al
Qaeda). But in 2001, the 9/11 hijackers received no aid from U.S.-based al
Qaeda operatives for the simple reason that no such operatives appear to
have existed. It is not at all clear that that condition has changed.
Mueller also claimed to know that "al
Qaeda maintains the ability and the intent to inflict significant
casualties in the U.S. with little warning." If this was true -- if the
terrorists had both the ability and the intent in 2003, and if the threat
they presented was somehow increasing -- they had remained remarkably
quiet by the time the unflappable Mueller repeated his alarmist mantra in
2005: "I remain very concerned about what we are not seeing."
Intelligence estimates in 2002 held
that there were as many as 5,000 al Qaeda terrorists and supporters in the
United States. However, a secret FBI report in 2005 wistfully noted that
although the bureau had managed to arrest a few bad guys here and there
after more than three years of intense and well-funded hunting, it had
been unable to identify a single true al Qaeda sleeper cell anywhere in
the country. Thousands of people in the United States have had their
overseas communications monitored under a controversial warrantless
surveillance program. Of these, fewer than ten U.S. citizens or residents
per year have aroused enough suspicion to impel the agencies spying on
them to seek warrants authorizing surveillance of their domestic
communications as well; none of this activity, it appears, has led to an
indictment on any charge whatever.
In addition to massive eavesdropping
and detention programs, every year some 30,000 "national security letters"
are issued without judicial review, forcing businesses and other
institutions to disclose confidential information about their customers
without telling anyone they have done so. That process has generated
thousands of leads that, when pursued, have led nowhere. Some 80,000 Arab
and Muslim immigrants have been subjected to fingerprinting and
registration, another 8,000 have been called in for interviews with the
FBI, and over 5,000 foreign nationals have been imprisoned in initiatives
designed to prevent terrorism. This activity, notes the Georgetown
University law professor David Cole, has not resulted in a single
conviction for a terrorist crime. In fact, only a small number of people
picked up on terrorism charges -- always to great official fanfare -- have
been convicted at all, and almost all of these convictions have been for
other infractions, particularly immigration violations. Some of those
convicted have clearly been mental cases or simply flaunting jihadist
bravado -- rattling on about taking down the Brooklyn Bridge with a
blowtorch, blowing up the Sears Tower if only they could get to Chicago,
beheading the prime minister of Canada, or flooding lower Manhattan by
somehow doing something terrible to one of those tunnels.
Appetite for destruction?
One reason al Qaeda and "al Qaeda
types" seem not to be trying very hard to repeat 9/11 may be that that
dramatic act of destruction itself proved counterproductive by massively
heightening concerns about terrorism around the world. No matter how much
they might disagree on other issues (most notably on the war in Iraq),
there is a compelling incentive for states -- even ones such as Iran,
Libya, Sudan, and Syria -- to cooperate in cracking down on al Qaeda,
because they know that they could easily be among its victims. The FBI may
not have uncovered much of anything within the United States since 9/11,
but thousands of apparent terrorists have been rounded, or rolled, up
overseas with U.S. aid and encouragement.
Although some Arabs and Muslims took
pleasure in the suffering inflicted on 9/11 -- Schadenfreude in German,
shamateh in Arabic -- the most common response among jihadists and
religious nationalists was a vehement rejection of al Qaeda's strategy and
methods. When Soviet troops invaded Afghanistan in 1979, there were calls
for jihad everywhere in Arab and Muslim lands, and tens of thousands
flocked to the country to fight the invaders. In stark contrast, when the
U.S. military invaded in 2001 to topple an Islamist regime, there was, as
the political scientist Fawaz Gerges points out, a "deafening silence"
from the Muslim world, and only a trickle of jihadists went to fight the
Americans. Other jihadists publicly blamed al Qaeda for their post-9/11
problems and held the attacks to be shortsighted and hugely miscalculated.
The post-9/11 willingness of
governments around the world to take on international terrorists has been
much reinforced and amplified by subsequent, if scattered, terrorist
activity outside the United States. Thus, a terrorist bombing in Bali in
2002 galvanized the Indonesian government into action. Extensive arrests
and convictions -- including of leaders who had previously enjoyed some
degree of local fame and political popularity -- seem to have severely
degraded the capacity of the chief jihadist group in Indonesia, Jemaah
Islamiyah. After terrorists attacked Saudis in Saudi Arabia in 2003, that
country, very much for self-interested reasons, became considerably more
serious about dealing with domestic terrorism; it soon clamped down on
radical clerics and preachers. Some rather inept terrorist bombings in
Casablanca in 2003 inspired a similarly determined crackdown by Moroccan
authorities. And the 2005 bombing in Jordan of a wedding at a hotel (an
unbelievably stupid target for the terrorists) succeeded mainly in
outraging the Jordanians: according to a Pew poll, the percentage of the
population expressing a lot of confidence in bin Laden to "do the right
thing" dropped from 25 percent to less than one percent after the attack.
Threat perceptions
The results of policing activity
overseas suggest that the absence of results in the United States has less
to do with terrorists' cleverness or with investigative incompetence than
with the possibility that few, if any, terrorists exist in the country. It
also suggests that al Qaeda's ubiquity and capacity to do damage may have,
as with so many perceived threats, been exaggerated. Just because some
terrorists may wish to do great harm does not mean that they are able to.
Gerges argues that mainstream Islamists
-- who make up the vast majority of the Islamist political movement --
gave up on the use of force before 9/11, except perhaps against Israel,
and that the jihadists still committed to violence constitute a tiny
minority. Even this small group primarily focuses on various "infidel"
Muslim regimes and considers jihadists who carry out violence against the
"far enemy" -- mainly Europe and the United States -- to be irresponsible,
reckless adventurers who endanger the survival of the whole movement. In
this view, 9/11 was a sign of al Qaeda's desperation, isolation,
fragmentation, and decline, not of its strength.
Those attacks demonstrated, of course,
that al Qaeda -- or at least 19 of its members -- still possessed some
fight. And none of this is to deny that more terrorist attacks on the
United States are still possible. Nor is it to suggest that al Qaeda is
anything other than a murderous movement. Moreover, after the
ill-considered U.S. venture in Iraq is over, freelance jihadists trained
there may seek to continue their operations elsewhere -- although they are
more likely to focus on places such as Chechnya than on the United States.
A unilateral American military attack against Iran could cause that
country to retaliate, probably with very wide support within the Muslim
world, by aiding anti-American insurgencies in Afghanistan and Iraq and
inflicting damage on Israel and on American interests worldwide.
But while keeping such potential
dangers in mind, it is worth remembering that the total number of people
killed since 9/11 by al-Qaeda or al-Qaeda-like operatives outside of
Afghanistan and Iraq is not much higher than the number who drown in
bathtubs in the United States in a single year, and that the lifetime
chance of an American being killed by international terrorism is about one
in 80,000 -- about the same chance of being killed by a comet or a meteor.
Even if there were a 9/11-scale attack every three months for the next
five years, the likelihood that an individual American would number among
the dead would be two hundredths of a percent (or one in 5,000).
Although it remains heretical to say
so, the evidence so far suggests that fears of the omnipotent terrorist --
reminiscent of those inspired by images of the 20-foot-tall Japanese after
Pearl Harbor or the 20-foot-tall Communists at various points in the Cold
War (particularly after Sputnik) -- may have been overblown, the threat
presented within the United States by al Qaeda greatly exaggerated. The
massive and expensive homeland security apparatus erected since 9/11 may
be persecuting some, spying on many, inconveniencing most, and taxing all
to defend the United States against an enemy that scarcely exists.
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