Orchestrating Terrorism
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
The
US has a vast and very expensive Homeland Security bureaucracy with
nothing to do. There hasn’t been a terrorist attack in America since
2001. There have been a vast quantity of terror alerts, the purpose
of which was to scare Americans into supporting an unnecessary and
illegal aggressive attack on Iraq.
As
very few, if any, real terrorists have turned up, the FBI has resorted
to creating terrorists by soliciting Muslim-Americans and appealing
to them with schemes to aid "jihadists." Recently, two
American citizens were caught in a FBI sting. One, an Ivy-League
educated physician, is charged with agreeing to provide medical
care to wounded holy warriors in Saudi Arabia. The other, a famous
jazz musician, is charged with agreeing to train jihadists in martial
arts.
According
to the Washington Times (June 1) the FBI began its sting
in 2003, so it took two years of work and cajoling to manufacture
the case against these two Americans.
What
the FBI has done to Dr. R.A. Sabir and to Tarik Shah was once known
as entrapment. Judges would throw out entrapment cases, because
crime was believed to require intent to commit a crime. If the intent
was given to the accused by the police through enticement or threats,
it was not regarded as criminal intent on the accused person’s part.
Unfortunately,
"law and order" conservatives used fear of crime to "give
our police more effective measures to clear criminals off our streets"
and managed to eliminate the entrapment defense.
Some
years ago the FBI, posing as Arab oil sheiks, entrapped US Representatives
in a sting operation. The FBI handed out large bundles of cash to
Congressmen who accepted the offer to represent the fake sheiks’
interests. Film footage of the Congressmen stuffing their pockets
with money was all the FBI needed to convict the members. The fact
that campaign contributions come from interest groups that expect
to be represented did not count in the stung US Representatives’
favor.
Note
that the two latest victims, Sabir and Tarik, could not have offered
their services to jihadists, because no jihadists were present.
Note also that Sabir and Tarik are not accused of actually performing
an act of service. Sabir and Tarik had no contact with real jihadists,
and they committed no act of service to jihadists. Yet, both face
$250,000 fines and 15 years in prison.
All
that happened was that two productive American citizens were deceived
by government agents for no other purpose than those agents having
to show "results" in the "war on terror."
How
does it make us safer to put a medical doctor and a jazz musician
in prison? Why did the FBI spend two years entrapping these two
American citizens?
Both
men have wives and children. Suppose both men agreed to provide
some service to jihadists. (We don’t know that they did. We only
have the FBI’s word for it, a word that is not worth much.) The
reason could easily be fear of reprisals.
Suppose
you are a Muslim-American and FBI agents misrepresenting themselves
as dangerous jihadists demanded services of you? Neither of the
accused agreed to participate in a terrorist act: no bombs, no shootings,
no hijackings. A doctor agreed to keep his Hippocratic oath if presented
with wounded people in Saudi Arabia. A jazz musician agreed to teach
martial arts. When was the last time a terrorist attacked with judo
or karate?
Many
years ago there was a movie about a British medical doctor who treated
a man wounded in an act of rebellion against England. The English
judge, portrayed in the movie as unjust in the extreme, ruled that
being humane was tantamount to being a rebel and the doctor was
sold into slavery to the Spanish. Unless memory fails, the movie
was Captain
Blood with Errol Flynn.
In
the movie, the doctor did actually treat the wounded man. The charge
against Dr. Sabir is that he agreed to treat a wounded man if presented
with one in Saudi Arabia in the future. There is no way of knowing
if he would have done so. But if the US is prepared to deny medical
treatment to its opponents, why does anyone doubt the torture stories?
The
FBI is so desperate to capture a terrorist that it spent two years
setting up a doctor on this specious charge.
Like
the police who find it easier to frame people than to convict them
on the evidence, the FBI will find it easier to manufacture "terrorists"
with entrapment than to catch real terrorists.
June
7, 2005
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and Research
Fellow at the Independent Institute.
He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal,
former contributing editor for National Review, and a former
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2005 Creators Syndicate
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