The Mumbai metropolitan area is home to an estimated 19 million people,
but it took just 10 men to shut the city down.
Last week's terrorist attacks involved a handful of men armed only with
guns, grenades and homemade bombs. But they killed more than 170 people,
closed universities and businesses, shut down India's National Stock
Exchange and did incalculable economic damage to a country that boasts
the world's third-largest military and internationally respected police
and intelligence services -- none of which managed to prevent the
attacks.
Sound familiar?
It should. It should remind you of 9/11, when 19 men armed only with box
cutters ultimately killed nearly 3,000 people. And the 2004 Madrid train
bombings, which killed 191, and the 2005 bombings on London's
Underground, which killed 52. Each of these attacks involved a small
number of perpetrators. Each was low-tech. Each caused enormous
psychological and economic damage in addition to loss of life, and each
occurred in countries with sophisticated security forces.
Get used to it.
Because the Mumbai attack should also remind you of Timothy McVeigh and
the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, which killed 168, and the 2002 D.C.-area
sniper attacks, in which two men killed 10 people and caused so much
fear that for weeks people were reluctant to go to shopping centers or
gas stations, and the 2007 Virginia Tech shootings, in which one man
killed 32 people.
The perpetrators of those attacks weren't Islamic extremists. McVeigh
was a white supremacist; the D.C. snipers were a disgruntled African
American Army vet and his gullible teen sidekick; the Virginia Tech
killer was a psychologically troubled Asian American student. They had
nothing in common except anger and a desire to cause death, pain and
panic. And they succeeded.
We can't even stop school shootings by disturbed teenagers. Don't
imagine we'll be much better at stopping ideologically motivated
terrorists. As long as terrorists keep it low-tech and simple, they're
hard to stop.
On Wednesday, the congressionally appointed Commission on the Prevention
of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation and Terrorism asserted that
"it is more than likely that a weapon of mass destruction" -- most
likely biological -- "will be used in a terrorist attack somewhere in
the world by the end of 2013." I take that warning seriously. But I also
wonder: Why would a terrorist bother to manufacture a nuke or "weaponize"
a virus -- a complicated, costly, risky and time-consuming process --
when all he needs is a few determined people, some cheaply and easily
obtained weapons or explosives, and boom? Even the most sophisticated
society would be left paralyzed with fear.
If we let ourselves become that frightened.
Like crime, terrorism will always be with us, and terrorist attacks will
increase as long as we succumb to the panic they're intended to inspire.
But if we resist the temptation to lash out indiscriminately, we can
take sober steps to reduce terrorism through improved intelligence,
carefully targeted disruptions of specific terrorist organizations and
efforts to address specific grievances (such as disputes over Kashmir).
With a new U.S. administration about to take office, isn't it finally
time to say goodbye to the "war on terror"? After all, we already have
two real wars to worry about.
rbrooks@latimescolumnists.comYou can
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