Nonchalance Does Nothing To Discourage Terrorism
By: Rachel Marsden
Last Friday, 25-year-old Moroccan-born Ayoub El-Khazzani allegedly boarded a
Paris-bound Thalys train in Belgium with a Kalashnikov rifle, nine magazines of
ammunition, a pistol and a box cutter. Had he not been disarmed by passengers,
including two traveling American military servicemen and their childhood friend,
the incident could have easily become another terrorist bloodbath, barely seven
months after the massacre at the Charlie Hebdo headquarters in Paris.
"The lesson to be learned is in times of terror, to please do something -- don't
just stand by and watch," said American college student Anthony Sadler as he and
his friends received the Legion of Honor from French President Francois Hollande
for their bravery.
Sadler nailed the crux of the problem: complacency.
I was subjected to an attack on a French subway train in January 2011. It was
what the French police called an "aggravated mugging" by two young men who
appeared to be of Arabic descent. I chased them out of the subway car, through
the station and down the busy Paris streets, and when I caught them, they
threatened to shoot me in the head. Since they lacked a visible weapon, I just
told them to shut up, and they did. The police took so long to arrive on the
scene that I had to eventually abandon them, along with any hope of retrieving
my iPhone, which one of them had shoved down his pants. I was promptly chastised
by French police for having chased them and was advised that inaction is the
preferred course of action.
Inaction is effectively nonchalance -- and El Khazzani's entire story
exemplifies it.
According to French media reports, El-Khazzani was free to score himself a
Kalashnikov in Belgium. Earlier, he was free to be radicalized in a Spanish jail
after being arrested for selling hashish. Flagged by Spanish intelligence, who
informed their French counterparts of El-Khazzani's high-risk status, he was
free to land a job in France for a few months -- that is, when he wasn't also
free to float around Turkey, Germany, Austria, Belgium and Syria. It's hardly
shocking that someone with such a profile would attempt to wreak havoc on a
passenger train.
El-Khazzani reportedly told his defense attorney that he just wanted to rob
train passengers so he could get a bite to eat. That's where his freedom ended,
thanks to some fellow passengers. Brings a tear to your eye, doesn't it? I mean,
aren't most armed robberies of civilian targets committed by guys on trains with
a case of the munchies?
The ridiculous excuse says a lot about what's perceived to play well in the
court of French public opinion. Anyone who feels victimized by life gets a lot
of leeway, which is why the prevention of terrorist incidents via discreet and
effective intelligence work and the diligent application of existing regulations
is so critical. Because once there's even a hint of a crackdown -- even if
terror suspects are the target -- the French tend to get nervous. Such was the
case in late 1993, when French authorities rounded up dozens of suspects in
Operation Chrysanthemum amid a rash of killings and kidnappings by Algerian
militants.
Far-leftism -- the quintessential ideology of the spoiled brat -- has long been
terrorism's reliable accomplice in Europe.
The communist guerrilla organization Action Directe was responsible for a series
of attacks and assassinations across France in the 1980s, echoing the work of
Germany's Red Army Faction terror group. The renowned Marxist terrorist Carlos
the Jackal is still holed up in a Paris prison, years after a terrorism spree
that began when he became the head of European operations for the Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine in 1973. Italy's far-left terrorist group Red
Brigades found refuge in former French Socialist President Francois Mitterrand's
doctrine of non-extradition.
While far-left ideology is nowhere near as prevalent today, it has nonetheless
taken on new life in the form of nanny-statism that continues to pollute the
European mindset, and particularly that of Europe's elites.
That's why a terror suspect can end up believing that he's entitled to his
Kalashnikov, his radicalization while in state custody, his jaunts across
Europe, and a case of the munchies that only nine magazines full of ammunition
can resolve. No one is calling for a fascist crackdown, but there's a lot of
wriggle room between that and a Gallic shrug.
COPYRIGHT 2015 RACHEL MARSDEN