On Point: Al-Qaida's Terror Chatter Exploits Obama's Credibility Gap


by Austin Bay
August 6, 2013

Fifteen years ago, on Aug. 7, 1998, al-Qaida terrorists bombed the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

In August 2013, public officials warn that U.S. intelligence agencies believe al-Qaida intends to attack American embassies and other consular facilities. Al-Qaida "chatter" mentions domestic U.S. targets. San Francisco, Los Angeles and, of course, New York City make the hit list.

Chatter is often cheap verbal theater, but the threats make strategic sense. Al-Qaida strategists thrive on iconic dates as well as iconic targets, and Aug. 7, 1998, is a touchstone. The spectacular acts of mass murder in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam served as the terror group's international declaration of war on America.

In 1998 Americans didn't know they were at war. To our grief, it took the events of Sept. 11, 2001, to make that evident.

In August 2013 America remains locked in a long war with militant Islamist terrorists because they remain locked in a war with us. As American soldiers say, the enemy gets a vote. Al-Qaida voted on 8-7-1998 and on 9-11-2001. The 9-11-2012 attack on our consulate in Benghazi, Libya, was another enemy war vote.

Yet in his February 2013 State of the Union address, President Barack Obama assured the American people that a decade of war was ending.

Yes, Obama said that. To make it worse, his bevy of media admirers responded with kudos.

Al-Qaida commanders heard Obama's February declaration of impending peace, and they beg to differ. Our security agencies are scrambling to defend our embassies. Police forces in major American cities are asking citizens to be vigilant. Apparently the end of war is not so nigh.

This isn't the first time an Obama-crafted new word order failed to produce a new world order.

In 2009 Obama forbad using the word "war" in our struggle with al-Qaida. Obama banned use of the Bush administration's Global War on Terror (GWOT).

Rhetorical gimmickry served Obama's immediate personal political interest. Saddle Bush with the sobriquet of War President, and Obama becomes the Peace President. Voila, a Nobel Peace Prize! Erasing "global" also served a sly and dirty purpose of impugning Bush's motives. It implied that Bush just might be responsible for globalizing the conflict, even though Osama bin Laden's stated goal was a global caliphate.

In lieu of the GWOT, Obama announced his administration would conduct "overseas contingency operations." But Fort Hood, Texas, is not overseas. Nor is Boston. U.S. territory has suffered several terror attacks since 2009. The war is global because the enemy fights a global war.

Obama's peace rhetoric simply does not reflect the harsh long-war reality we face.

Al-Qaida's 2013 chatter may prove to be mere verbal threat to fray nerves and test security reactions. In the worst case, al-Qaida has deployed terror teams to attack our embassies and reprise August 1998.

A common thread links these scenarios: Al-Qaida is definitely exploiting the disconnect between Obama's words and the world.

Our adversaries and friends have noticed the president's credibility gap. Loss of credibility has weakened him as a leader. Ask Vladimir Putin. Despite Obama's protests, Putin granted the NSA's Edward Snowden asylum in Russia. Putin sees no downside.

Though bin Laden is dead, al-Qaida isn't. Bin Laden urged Muslims to back "the strong horse." America has withdrawn from Iraq and intends to leave Afghanistan. Al-Qaida commanders see America's weak president as emblematic of a weakening America and weakening American will. At some point it will take more than drones firing missiles to prove them wrong. 

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To find out more about Austin Bay and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

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