When terrorism against America began . . .

CaptnKirk

Lifer
Jul 25, 2002
10,053
0
71
Interesting observation about the origin of Terror Attacks inside our country

Special request for CkG: (Not registered)


<DIV class=content>Thirty-five years ago, early in the morning of June 5, 1968, the United States received a stark warning about the costs of its foreign policy when New York Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was shot and killed in Los Angeles, just hours after he won the Democratic presidential primary in California.

That night, a young man named Sirhan Bishara Sirhan raised a cheap .22-caliber pistol in the Ambassador Hotel and aimed at Kennedy from a distance of just a few yards. When former L.A. Rams football player Rosey Grier and others tackled Sirhan as he was still firing his weapon, the shooter cried out, "I can explain." Explain what?

He also allegedly said, "I did it for my country." What country? What exactly was Sirhan trying to say? And did the United States listen?

What Americans seemed to see in the assassination was yet another political murder climaxing a decade ripped by violence: JFK, Vietnam, Watts, Detroit, Newark, Martin Luther King and now RFK. Time magazine seemed to speak for millions when it asked, "Why?" and darkly spoke of "deep doubts about the stability of America."

Time went on to state that the best way for the country to move forward was by "eradicating the conditions that trigger the assassin's finger." In an effort to do that, President Lyndon B. Johnson quickly appointed a commission to investigate violence in the U.S. and asked Congress for gun control legislation.

These were real issues, to be sure, but were they the only ones? What was Sirhan trying to explain?

In fact, Robert Kennedy's murder offered another, utterly different lesson that the nation completely failed to absorb, a lesson about Palestinian anger. The Robert Kennedy assassination was the first case of Middle Eastern "terrorism" here at home ? decades before the 1993 and 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center, decades before Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda became household names.

Sirhan was a Palestinian whose parents had fled their home in West Jerusalem as refugees during the first Arab-Israeli war, in 1948, when he was 4 years old. Raised first in Jordanian-controlled East Jerusalem and later in Pasadena, Sirhan grew up deeply embittered about Israel and the plight of his fellow Palestinian refugees.

Sen. Kennedy, by contrast, admired the Israelis, a feeling that dated from his days as a young correspondent for the Boston Post covering the war in Palestine in 1948. Sirhan's early support for Kennedy turned to hatred after the senator advocated the sale of advanced F-4 Phantom jets to Israel in the wake of the 1967 war in the Middle East, a war that also signaled the growing U.S. support for the Jewish state.

Sirhan's diaries revealed the depth of his swelling anger when they recorded, "RFK must die!"

Kennedy was shot one year to the day after Israel launched the 1967 war.

Although most Americans quickly became aware after the assassination that Sirhan was an Arab (he was referred to as a "Jordanian" citizen), the source of his rage was not clearly explained in most stories. In those days few people even knew what a "Palestinian" was ? Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir said shortly afterward that there was "no such thing" as a Palestinian people and that "they did not exist" ? and even fewer understood their grievances.

The occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip by the Israelis was barely a year old, and the Palestine Liberation Organization would not be taken over by Yasser Arafat until a year later. The hijackings and killings that would bring the Palestinians to the center of the world stage had not yet begun.

Did we miss an important, early opportunity to draw important conclusions about the political backlash we might experience as a result of U.S. policy in the Middle East? Sirhan may have been mentally unstable ? and there was plenty of testimony at his trial to suggest as much ? but he clearly saw himself, as today's suicide bombers see themselves, as fighting for the Palestinian people. It also seems clear that Sirhan's fellow Palestinians became convinced after the assassination that high-profile violence might advance their cause and put the name Palestinian into the headlines: One month later, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine hijacked its first plane, an Israeli passenger jet; 14 months after that, the front hijacked its first American plane.

Some Palestinians clearly saw Sirhan as a hero; in February 1973, when members of the Black September organization seized (and eventually killed) American hostages at the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Khartoum, one of their demands was the release of Sirhan.

Bin Laden and the Al Qaeda operatives who attacked the World Trade Center and the Pentagon decades later were, like Sirhan, Arabs motivated by anger at American foreign policy toward the Middle East. But today, as in 1968, Americans seem to obfuscate this political motivation by focusing on what our leaders insist are broader cultural reasons for the attacks.

The president and the secretary of State quickly called the terrorist strikes an "attack on civilization" and assaults "on democracy." In dodging any political motivations for 9/11, our leaders are doing us a great disservice at this crucial time by leading us down the same path of delusion as when many Americans de-politicized Robert Kennedy's murder 35 years ago.

The roots of terrorism, like those of crime, are complex. They require an appreciation of the complexities and interconnectedness of the modern world. I fear that once again the nation is missing an opportunity to address the hard questions posed by violent acts associated with its role in the Middle East. Who knows where we might be today if we had learned different lessons from the tragedy of June 1968? Have we already missed the lesson of September 2001 by invading Afghanistan and now Iraq?
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CADsortaGUY

Lifer
Oct 19, 2001
25,162
1
76
www.ShawCAD.com
So what do you people propose we do, instead of just whining about what we did and are doing?

Problems get solved with solutions, not second guessing or whining.

CkG
 

CaptnKirk

Lifer
Jul 25, 2002
10,053
0
71
Looks to me like a driving force in this way that the U.S.A. is perceived
is our interaction with Israel in the center of the surrounding Arab countries.
Palestine Homeland problem (?) has been festering for over 40 years with
no real effort to find a working solution.
Our blind support of Isreal on every issue hurts our view to the Arab world, right of wrong.

Will Bushes 'Middle East Peace Plan' work ? Is it different now than it was when he took office ?
Open for discussion, too much riding on this to continue to ignore the ramafications.
 

Nitemare

Lifer
Feb 8, 2001
35,461
4
81
ok, so I don't approve of the way you handle your business...Does that give me a right to kill you?
 

Insane3D

Elite Member
May 24, 2000
19,446
0
0
So what do you people propose we do, instead of just whining about what we did and are doing?

Cad, no offense. I think it might be more fair to ask what he (kirk) thinks is the solution as opposed to you people. I would bet kirk will agree he speaks for himself, and not anyone else, and just lumping him in with a group is not really fair IMO. Again, no offense....just an observation...take it as you will. :)
 

CADsortaGUY

Lifer
Oct 19, 2001
25,162
1
76
www.ShawCAD.com
Originally posted by: Insane3D
So what do you people propose we do, instead of just whining about what we did and are doing?

Cad, no offense. I think it might be more fair to ask what he (kirk) thinks is the solution as opposed to you people. I would bet kirk will agree he speaks for himself, and not anyone else, and just lumping him in with a group is not really fair IMO. Again, no offense....just an observation...take it as you will. :)

I wanted to say that, and infact it was originally typed up that way, but some people here don't take direct confrontation well(claiming "you put words in my mouth;) ) so I decided to leave it open so that anyone who is whining about our handling of "terrorism" could be included :D Plus he didn't exactly definatively state his position(even though it could be quite obvious;))

CkG
 

Zrom999

Banned
Apr 13, 2003
698
0
0
Originally posted by: Nitemare
ok, so I don't approve of the way you handle your business...Does that give me a right to kill you?

Only if the way you handle business is going to get me killed ;).
 

tcsenter

Lifer
Sep 7, 2001
18,953
576
126
Is this supposed to be some 'enlightening' revelation? Yes the Arabs went off the deep-end because we supported Israel against their aggressive Arab neighbors who had every intention of attacking Israel in order to continue where Hitler was forced to leave off.

You gotta take a stand some times and chose sides. It can't be all about 'how to stay nice and safe and never stick your neck out for fear of upsetting someone'. We aren't France!

I'll take democratic and progressive Israel over fanatical repressive Islamic-Arab states any day, whatever the cost.

Its not as though we "asked" to be Israel's primary supporter and ally. What we wanted was for EUROPE to police this issue, for Britain and France to occupy their respective positions there, but Britain and France wanted no part of it any longer.

Europe would have stood there with their thumbs up their ass doing nothing while the Arab states steamrolled every Jew then asked "Hmm, why didn't the Americans didn't do something?"