Bin Laden has won

By Joseph Farah

I didn’t think it was possible that U.S. Mideast policy could get any worse than it was under former President Clinton.

I was wrong.

It just got worse – a lot worse.

In fact, viewed through the eyes of the Islamic world, President Bush’s announcement that he favors the creation of a Palestinian state as part of a comprehensive Middle East peace initiative can only be seen as a huge strategic victory for terrorism.

I don’t know how it can be interpreted any other way.

The message is loud and clear: Keep up the violence, intensify it, keep raising the stakes, make the U.S. pay a price and your demands will be met – eventually.

I’m sick to my stomach over the U.S. sellout of Israel. There would never be a good time for this, but following the dramatic Islamic terror attack on the U.S. makes it appear the U.S. is caving to pressure. You know why it looks that way? Because, like it or not, we are.

I know we’re all supposed to rally around our commander in chief right now, but what Bush has done is unconscionable. It will not achieve the goals it is designed to achieve. We are not dealing with honorable adversaries in the Middle East. We are dealing with murderers, liars, cheats, thieves.

This is not a conflict between two reasonable sides with legitimate grievances. It’s a conflict between right and wrong, good and evil.

Bush’s decision will result in more bloodshed beyond our imaginations. It will result in more terrorism in the U.S. – much more deadly even than what we witnessed Sept. 11.

This is worse than negotiating with terrorists. This is unconditional surrender to them.

It no longer matters what the U.S. does to Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan. He has already won the war. He has managed to enshrine himself as the hero to hundreds of millions of radical Muslims worldwide whose goal is – and always has been – the destruction of the Jewish state and, ultimately, Islamic hegemony over the whole world. Alive, he will be a hero. Dead, he has achieved martyrdom status.

The Bush administration has decided to make its bed with the totalitarians in the Arab world at the expense of the one bastion of freedom in the Middle East – Israel.

What the administration will soon learn is you can never win by making concessions to these tyrants. No concession is ever enough. It took many in Israel a long time to figure this out.

We are rewarding terrorism – pure and simple.

Remember who will lead this new Palestinian state for life. His name is Yasser Arafat, the father of modern-day terrorism – a man with lots of American blood on his hands.

For 30 years of hijackings, Olympics murders, execution of U.S. diplomats, suicide bombings, torture of dissident Arabs, the cold-blooded killings of Israelis and more, the reward for Arafat is the presidency of his own state.

With this model in mind, isn’t it time to consider giving bin Laden a state, too?

But as any astute observer of the Middle East can tell you, a Palestinian state was never the final goal in the first place. So this is not the end. The Palestinian state was, at best, an interim step toward the annihilation of the state of Israel. It’s only a strategic step to chip away at the Jewish state’s security, to make it vulnerable, to make an Arab military victory more achievable.

President Bush has also moved the world a step closer to nuclear war with his incredibly ill-advised decision. Because, as Israel’s conventional security is compromised by land concessions and co-existence with yet another hostile state, its reliance on the nuclear option increases.

I’m sure they are celebrating in Arafat’s headquarters today. I’m sure they are shooting guns in the air in bin Laden’s lair. I’m sure the Iranians, the chief sponsors of international terrorism are grinning broadly in Tehran. I’m sure there are smiles on the faces of leaders in Damascus and even Baghdad today.

This is a war on terrorism?

It seems more like a victory for terrorism.

It seems more like an international celebration of terrorism.

It seems more like surrender to terrorism.


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Don’t miss the upcoming issue of Whistleblower magazine featuring an in-depth look at Islamic terrorism by Joseph Farah and a profile of Yasser Arafat – the father of modern-day terrorism. Click here for more information.

Joseph Farah

Joseph Farah is founder, editor and chief executive officer of WND. He is the author or co-author of 13 books that have sold more than 5 million copies, including his latest, "The Gospel in Every Book of the Old Testament." Before launching WND as the first independent online news outlet in 1997, he served as editor in chief of major market dailies including the legendary Sacramento Union. Read more of Joseph Farah's articles here.