The Manchester terror attack and the law of unintended consequences
By: Rachel Marsden
As U.S. President Donald Trump joined other leaders of the NATO military
alliance at its Brussels headquarters last week, virtually no one made the
connection between NATO's past actions and the terrorist bombing of an Ariana
Grande pop music concert in Manchester, England, earlier in the week. Instead,
many observers were busy analyzing the political implications of world leaders'
handshake strength and technique (particularly Trump's) as if the diplomatic
summit had been reduced to a strongman contest.
If Trump had planned on going to Brussels to achieve something concrete in the
eradication of existential threats, then he was way off-base in his speech to
fellow NATO leaders.
"The NATO of the future must include a great focus on terrorism and immigration,
as well as threats from Russia and on NATO's eastern and southern borders,"
Trump said.
Whoever wrote Trump's speech co-opted the same sort of establishment rhetoric
seen in European Parliament motions. Often crafted by rapporteurs from Eastern
European nations bordering Russia, European Parliament resolutions have labeled
Russia and the Islamic State as prominent threats to the European Union.
Terrorism, Russia ... Russia, terrorism. One of these things is an actual
problem -- as exemplified by attacks like the one in Manchester -- and the other
is a country currently leading the effort in the Middle East to eradicate
terrorists.
"These grave security concerns are the same reason that I have been very, very
direct with (NATO Secretary-General Jens) Stoltenberg and members of the
alliance in saying that NATO members must finally contribute their fair share
and meet their financial obligations, for 23 of the 28 member nations are still
not paying what they should be paying and what they're supposed to be paying for
their defense," Trump said.
As for NATO's counterterrorism efforts, maybe it had best just put the wallet
away altogether. Recent history suggests that the alliance has only exacerbated
the problem. For instance, had Trump evoked NATO's military intervention in
Libya, he could have justified withholding NATO funding and calling upon other
member nations to do likewise.
There is a link between the Manchester bombing and the NATO-led 2011 military
intervention to remove former Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi. The father of
22-year old bombing suspect Salman Abedi worked for Gaddafi's security forces
and fled Libya after supporting Islamists seeking to overthrow Gaddafi,
according to the New York Times.
With Gaddafi dead, jihadists have been running free in Libya in recent years,
and the Islamic State has established a foothold there in its perpetual quest
for a caliphate. Some, like Abedi, have apparently been shuttling back and forth
between England and Libya under the nose of the British intelligence services.
NATO should have known at the outset that its Libyan adventure could open the
floodgates to terrorism in Europe and the West. Its leaders were told as much.
In February 2011, Gaddafi warned then-British Prime Minister Tony Blair in a
phone call about the nature of the "Libyan rebels" seeking his ouster.
"Those people are from Guantanamo, we know them by name," Gaddafi told Blair.
"They support al-Qaida -- do you support al-Qaida?"
It was Britain under Blair and France under former president Nicolas Sarkozy
that led the early push for Libyan military intervention. Eight months later,
Gaddafi was dead at the hands of "rebels" operating under the protection of
NATO's no-fly zone.
Meanwhile, Russia was fuming, since it had abstained from vetoing the no-fly
zone when the U.N. Security Council voted on it, unaware that such a move would
lead to mission creep and ultimately to a NATO-facilitated regime change,
resulting in a power vacuum for terrorists to fill.
Russia has been determined not to make the same mistake in Syria, backing the
Assad regime against Syrian rebels supported by assorted terrorist groups,
Persian Gulf nations and their Western allies, all seeking to turn Assad into
the next Gaddafi. If Assad is deposed, Syria will become the sort of jihadist
nest from which terrorists such as Manchester bomber Abedi come and go.
During his presidential campaign, Trump called NATO obsolete. But after hosting
Stoltenberg at the White House in April, Trump changed his mind.
"The secretary general and I had a productive discussion about what more NATO
can do in the fight against terrorism," Trump said. "I complained about that a
long time ago, and they made a change, and now they do fight terrorism."
So handing victories to jihadists is an example of NATO fighting terrorism? It
sounds like another swamp -- and its piggy bank -- needs draining.
COPYRIGHT 2017 RACHEL MARSDEN