Paris Terror Should Be The Final Wake-Up Call
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS - I'm getting tired of living in a guerrilla terrorist war zone and 
having friends ask me if I'm all right. If you think that I'm exaggerating in 
describing Paris as such, consider the 129 civilians killed (at last count) and 
352 injured here in coordinated Islamic State-inspired terrorist attacks -- mass 
shootings, suicide bombings and hostage taking -- last Friday night while 
attending a concert, having dinner at a café or otherwise spending a night out 
in the city. It's the very definition of asymmetric warfare.
In the aftermath, stores and movie theaters were closed, travelers faced long 
delays at airport customs, and the streets were much quieter than usual, except 
for at a vigil at the Place de la Republique, where people nearly trampled each 
other after some jerk set off firecrackers and caused a panic.
Oh, but all this inconvenience is such a small price to pay for freedom, right? 
Wrong. Maybe this sort of thing is routine in Damascus or Baghdad, but it's an 
unacceptable standard in a G-7 country.
It's not the first time that France has come under attack this year. There was 
the massacre perpetrated by jihadists at the Paris headquarters of the Charlie 
Hebdo satirical newspaper in January. In June, an assailant with Islamic State 
ties decapitated his boss and then tried to cause an explosion at a chemical 
plant. Then, in August, passengers were able to thwart an attempted massacre by 
an Islamic extremist on a Thalys high-speed train.
The backgrounds of the six Paris attackers who have been identified so far 
illustrate booth fronts of the threat. Five of them were French nationals (some 
with Belgian jihadist connections). One was a Syrian who reportedly exploited 
the recent migrant wave to get into the country.
The open borders of Europe sure do close in a hurry after a large-scale 
massacre. French President Francois Hollande reimposed France's border controls 
in the wake of the attacks and called for tighter border controls across Europe.
It took Hollande long enough. The war against terrorism is an intelligence war. 
Intelligence is the only way to stay ahead of the threat while balancing 
security with the civil rights. According to former French President Nicolas 
Sarkozy, the French intelligence services are monitoring about 11,000 "Fiche S," 
or "S file," individuals, defined as "persons being investigated to prevent 
serious threats to public safety or security of the state, since information or 
solid evidence has been collected on them." French intelligence had opened S 
files on many of the individuals involved in the terrorist attacks that have 
taken place this year.
Knowing that French intelligence services are already overwhelmed, why make it 
easy for even more potential S file cases to enter the country? Saudi Arabia and 
other Persian Gulf countries have declined to accept Syrian migrants, refusing 
to sacrifice domestic security in the name of humanitarianism. So why is Europe 
always so eager to fall on its sword?
The obvious starting point is for France to require immigrants to undergo 
background checks BEFORE they arrive on French soil. This should have been the 
case before the start of the migrant wave.
Until now, French politicians had been afraid to address the lurking terrorist 
threat for fear of being accused of overreacting. It's as if the prevention of 
murderous rampages was somehow an extremist position. Did politicians believe 
the jihadists would be touched and positively swayed by the government's sense 
of reserve?
Why are S file individuals subjected only to haphazard monitoring when they have 
been identified as threats to national security? In the wake of the Paris 
attacks, Sarkozy, who now leads France's opposition party, wants S file 
individuals to be placed under house arrest or monitored with electronic 
bracelets. Why is there not yet a mechanism compatible with French law to expel 
or incarcerate these people? In the meantime, Sarkozy's idea is better than 
letting ticking time bombs roam around unfettered.
Meanwhile, Hollande is talking about changing the constitution so that dual 
nationals can be stripped of French citizenship if they're convicted of 
terrorism, even if they were born in France. But by the time anyone is convicted 
of terrorism, they've usually stripped others of life. Hollande also wants to 
prevent dual nationals who are deemed to be a security risk from entering the 
country -- which is a no-brainer and should have long ago been the case.
So here we go yet again -- another opportunity for the French government to take 
action to protect its citizens in the wake of a terrorist attack. Try not 
sidestepping effectiveness for lack of political courage this time.
COPYRIGHT 2015 RACHEL MARSDEN