Terrorist Hijacks French Elections
By: Rachel Marsden
In France, an Islamic terrorist has likely hijacked the agenda for the
remainder of the French presidential race. That terrorist is 23-year-old
Mohammed Merah, a Franco-Algerian from Toulouse who was fatally riddled with
bullets by French forces last week after a 30-hour standoff and took the
television remotes of an entire nation with him.
Because of Merah, an election fought on economic grounds has become dominated
almost exclusively by national security. The extreme nationalist National Front
party has used the incident to leverage its support of stricter immigration
policy. Center-right French President Nicolas Sarkozy wants to crack down on
those who visit Internet "hate sites" and who spend ample French holiday time
training for jihad overseas. The Socialist candidate has parlayed the situation
into an opportunity to regale the electorate with homicide statistics.
Let's back up a bit. According to those who knew him and have been interviewed
thus far, Mohammed Merah was a really nice guy -- smart, polite and well-spoken.
His pastimes included making various trips to Afghanistan and to the
Afghan-Pakistani border for some one-on-one time with jihadists, and stocking up
on an international array of heavy artillery in the same way my grandmother
collected miniature spoons -- all under the lightly watchful eye of French
intelligence services, who claim that they even interviewed him once in the wake
of a Club Med Islamic Jihad visit and were unconcerned about his activities
because he handed them a USB key with tourist-like photos on it. While America
gave Merah the side-eye and slapped him on a no-fly list, French intelligence
was seduced by his innocuous photos of the world's foremost terror-tourism
destinations.
But then this nice quiet kid assassinated three French soldiers of foreign
origin in two separate incidents, followed a few days later by his killing of
three kids and a rabbi at a Jewish school. He holed up inside his apartment
while a French RAID team waited patiently outside for him, then escaped out a
window where his expiration was facilitated. The end.
Except that it's not. Now, everyone wants to know why this happened, and how to
prevent it from occurring again. But really, who cares why it happened? What
does it really matter what was going on in this guy's head? Doesn't proper
execution of security measures negate the need to delve into the sewer of his
psyche?
Unlike all the little old ladies groped at airports worldwide, Merah fit a
certain profile -- a profile so obvious that I shouldn't need to elaborate on
the details. Not that all people of Merah's profile should be subject to undue
harassment, but those who fit such a profile and make the same
holiday-destination choices really ought to be. How about starting there? And if
security services were blindingly dazzled and distracted by his winning
personality, or by a slideshow of him making thumbs-up signs in front of various
piles of sand, then we have a serious problem.
We're constantly told that everyone must be subjected to scrutiny because
terrorism, in adapting to stay ahead of security measures, will evolve to be
practiced by those who are a far cry from Merah's profile. Can we maybe focus
first on nabbing the guys who fit the profile perfectly? Because evidently,
they're still slipping through the cracks. Once that's perfected, then maybe it
will be time to move on to protecting the public from scenarios representing an
eventual danger in Fantasyland.
Merah had reportedly done jail time for robbery convictions, during which he may
have become radicalized when he came into contact with Islamic fanatics. Again,
does it really matter if he got his nutty ideas from prison, a comic book, or an
imagined image that appeared to him on a slice of burned toast?
The average person with an adequately formed conscience can be bombarded with
all sorts of loony ideas and respond with, "Wow, that's whack!" or "Shove it!"
-- even people who spend time in jail surrounded by other crazies. I don't care
how or where these lunatics end up getting their inspiration. I just expect that
should they choose to express their inspiration on a canvas of violence, we can
rely on the authorities to deploy their accrued wisdom to pre-empt any damage.
There are two things in Europe that could be seen at night from space until last
week: Belgium, and Mohammed Merah's warning signs. We don't need more or bigger
laws; we just need people doing their jobs with the ones that already exist.
COPYRIGHT 2012 RACHEL MARSDEN