Faisal Shahzad, Subprime
Terrorist?
By Mark Steyn
NationalReview.com
Well, one way of falling
behind with your house payments is to take half a year off to go to
Pakistan and train in a terrorist camp.
The
story of the Times Square bomber reads like some Urdu dinner-theater
production of Mel Brooks’s The
Producers that got lost in translation between here and Peshawar: A
man sets out to produce the biggest bomb on Broadway since Dance a
Little Closer closed on its opening night in 1983. Everything goes
right: He gets a parking space right next to Viacom, owners of the hated
Comedy Central! But then he gets careless: He buys the wrong fertilizer.
He fails to open the valve on the propane tank. And next thing you know,
his ingenious plot is the non-stop laugh riot of the Great White Way.
Ha-ha! What a loser! Why, the whole thing’s totally — what’s the word? —
“amateurish,” according to multiple officials. It “looked amateurish,”
scoffed New York’s Mayor Bloomberg. “Amateurish,” agreed Janet
Napolitano, the White House amateurishness czar.
Ha-ha-ha! How
many jihadists does it take to change a light bulb? Answer:
Twenty-seven. Twenty-six terrorist masterminds to supervise six months
of rigorous training at a camp in Waziristan, after which the 27th flies
back to Newark, goes to Home Depot, and buys a quart of lamp oil and a
wick.
Is it so unreasonable to foresee that one day one of these
guys will buy the wrong lamp oil and a defective wick and drop the Camp
Osama book of matches in a puddle as he’s trying to light the bomb, and
yet, this time, amazingly, it actually goes off? Not really. Last year,
not one but two “terrorism task forces” discovered that U.S. Army
psychiatrisat Nidal Hasan was in regular e-mail contact with the
American-born, Yemeni-based cleric Ayman al-Awlaki but concluded that
this was consistent with the major’s “research interests,” so there was
nothing to worry about. A few months later, Major Hasan gunned down
dozens of his comrades while standing on a table shouting “Allahu
Akbar!” That was also consistent with his “research interests,” by the
way. A policy of relying on stupid jihadists to screw it up every time
will inevitably allow one or two to wiggle through. Hopefully not on a
nuclear scale.
Faisal Shahzad’s curriculum vitae rang a vague
bell with me. A couple of years back, I read a bestselling novel by
Mohsin Hamid called The
Reluctant Fundamentalist. His protagonist, Changez, is not so very
different from young Faisal: They’re both young, educated, Westernized
Muslims from prominent Pakistani families. Changez went to Princeton;
Faisal went to the non-Ivy University of Bridgeport, but he nevertheless
emerged with an MBA. Both men graduate to the high-flying sector of Wall
Street analysts. On returning to New York from overseas, both men get
singled out and questioned by Immigration officials. Both men sour on
America, and grow beards. Previously “moderate,” they are now
“radicalized.”
The difference is that Faisal tries to blow up
midtown Manhattan while Changez becomes the amused, detached narrator of
a critically acclaimed novel genially mocking America’s parochialism and
paranoia. Mohsin Hamed’s book was hailed as “elegant” (the
Observer), “charming” (the
Village Voice), “playful” (the
Financial Times), “rich in
irony” (the Sydney Morning
Herald), and “finely tuned to the ironies of mutual — but
especially American – prejudice” (the
Guardian). If only life
were like an elegantly playful novel rich in irony. Instead, the
real-life counterpart to the elegant charmer holes up in a jihadist
training camp for months, flies back “home,” and parks a fully loaded
SUV in Times Square.
He’s not an exception, he’s the rule. The
Pantybomber is a wealthy Nigerian who lived in a London flat worth £2
million. Kafeel Ahmed, who died driving a flaming SUV into the concourse
of Glasgow Airport, was president of the Islamic Society of Queen’s
University, Belfast. Omar Sheikh, the man who beheaded Daniel Pearl, was
a graduate of the London School of Economics. Mohammed Atta was a
Hamburg University engineering student. Osama bin Laden went to summer
school at Oxford. Educated men. Westernized men. Men who could be
pulling down big six-figure salaries anywhere on the planet — were it
not that their Islamic identity trumps everything else: elite education,
high-paying job, Western passport.
As for the idea that America
has become fanatically “Islamophobic” since 9/11,
au contraire: Were America
even mildly “Islamophobic,” it would have curtailed Muslim immigration,
or at least subjected immigrants from Pakistan, Yemen, and a handful of
other hotbeds to an additional level of screening. Instead, Muslim
immigration to the West has accelerated in the last nine years, and, as
the case of Faisal Shahzad demonstrates, being investigated by terrorism
task forces is no obstacle to breezing through your U.S. citizenship
application. An “Islamophobic” America might have pondered whether the
more extreme elements of self-segregation were compatible with
participation in a pluralist society: Instead, President Obama makes
fawning speeches boasting that he supports the rights of women to be
“covered” — rather than the rights of the ever lengthening numbers of
European and North American Muslim women beaten, brutalized, and
murdered for not wanting to be covered. America is so un-Islamophobic
that at Ground Zero they’re building a 13-story mosque — on the site of
an old Burlington Coat Factory damaged by airplane debris that Tuesday
morning.
So, in the ruins of a building reduced to rubble in the
name of Islam, a temple to Islam will arise.
And, whenever the
marshmallow illusions are momentarily discombobulated, the entire
political-media class rushes forward to tell us that the thwarted killer
was a “lone wolf,” an “isolated extremist.” According to Mayor Bloomberg
a day or two before Shahzad’s arrest, the most likely culprit was
“someone who doesn’t like the health-care bill” (that would be me, if
your SWAT team’s at a loose end this weekend). Even after Shahzad’s
arrest, the Associated Press, CNN, and the
Washington Post attached
huge significance to the problems the young jihadist had had keeping up
his mortgage payments. Just as, after Major Hasan, the “experts”
effortlessly redefined “post-traumatic stress disorder” to apply to a
psychiatrist who’d never been anywhere near a war zone, so now the
housing market is the root cause of terrorism: Subprime terrorism is a
far greater threat to America than anything to do with certain words
beginning with I- and ending in -slam.
Incidentally, one way of
falling behind with your house payments is to take half a year off to go
to Pakistan and train in a terrorist camp. Perhaps Congress could pass
some sort of jihadist housing credit?
Given the demographic
advance of Islam in Europe and the
de jure advance of sharia
in Europe (the Geert Wilders blasphemy trial) and
de facto in America (Comedy
Central’s and Yale University Press’s submission to Islamic
proscriptions on representations of Mohammed), you wonder why excitable
types like Faisal Shahzad are so eager to jump the gun. The Islamization
of the West proceeds apace; why draw attention to it and risk a
backlash?
Because the reactions of Bloomberg & Co. are a useful
glimpse into the decayed and corroded heart of a civilization. One day
the bomb will explode. Dozens dead? Hundreds? Thousands? Would we then
restrict immigration from certain parts of the world? Or at least
subject them to extra roadblocks on the fast-track to citizenship?
What do you think?
I see, as part of the new, culturally
sensitive warmongering, that the NATO commander in Afghanistan is
considering giving out awards to soldiers for “courageous restraint.”
Maybe we could hand them out at home, too. Hopefully not posthumously.
—
Mark Steyn,
a National Review columnist, is
author of
America Alone.
© 2010 Mark Steyn.