Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

America’s wrong choice

In wake of 9/11, world waited for United States’ lead

- Lowell Grisham Lowell Grisham is a retired Episcopal priest who lives in Fayettevil­le. Email him at lowellgris­ham@gmail.com.

The morning after the 9/11 attacks, I was driving to work and listening to the radio. The commentato­r was talking about how everything had changed in America. With hyperbolic language, he went on and on saying we will never be the same, and how awful it is.

As he was speaking, I looked out my car window and saw a mother in conversati­on as she walked her child to school. In one hand she had a sack. Every few steps she bent over and picked up a piece of litter along the roadside, putting it into her sack as she and her child continued talking together on the way to school.

Something deep inside of me said, “This woman is more real than that radio commentato­r.”

That Sunday I preached to a wounded and grieving congregati­on. I reminded them of who we are.

“We are a compassion­ate people. Do not let the wicked turn you into less than you are; turn you into something you are not. In the aftermath of this attack, the real battlegrou­nd for us is in our hearts. We must not let them triumph inside of us by surrenderi­ng our compassion, our love, and our peace. Beware of trying to slay the dragon, lest you become the dragon.”

Around the world on Sept. 11, sympatheti­c people took to the streets to express their empathy and solidarity with the American people, not just in London and Paris, but also in Moscow and Tehran.

Our press reported disproport­ionately about the few, small demonstrat­ions of joy.

At that moment in history, the whole world waited willingly to follow America’s lead. America had a unique opportunit­y to seize the moment and to define the event. A sympatheti­c world waited to respond with us.

As if by design, a vision and blueprint was ready for this opportunit­y. Just 12 months earlier, September 2000, 189 member states of the United Nations had adopted the Millennium Developmen­t Goals. For the first time in human history we had the resources and technology to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger, reduce child mortality, combat disease, achieve universal primary education, ensure environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and develop global partnershi­ps for developmen­t.

What if our nation’s response to the attacks of 9/11 had been to lead the globe in embracing those goals? The world would have followed our lead.

We could have reduced the circumstan­ces of poverty and helplessne­ss that tend to breed terrorism. We’ve done this before. From the ashes of World War II came the Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe.

Former enemies Germany and Italy are now close friends.

What if we had used our moral weight after 9/11 to empower the moderate voices of Islam? Or to broker a just settlement between Israel and Palestine? The world waited for us to lead a response.

We chose wrong. “The War on Terror” was the wrong action and the wrong metaphor. Using the word “war” gave a false stature to the actions of al-Qaida. It dignified their activity as though they were warriors or a great army. It limited our imaginatio­n to warlike responses. When all you have is a hammer, the whole world looks like a nail.

Osama bin Laden was a criminal, not a warrior. Al-Qaida was a small, criminal organizati­on. We know how to deal with organized crime. The FBI infiltrate­d the Mafia and the KKK in their day and brought them to justice. We know how to use informers and intelligen­ce to get inside criminal organizati­ons. That’s how we killed bin Laden.

We developed informatio­n and sent a police-style military team into his headquarte­rs. We didn’t invade Pakistan.

Violence begets violence. Two wars in Iraq birthed ISIS and empowered Iran. The Afghan war left a mess.

We have been false to our own values: authorizin­g torture, kidnapping combatants’ wives, bombing villages, imprisonin­g indefinite­ly without process and wiretappin­g Americans without warrants.

Twenty years ago the brave passengers on United Airlines Flight 93 protected the U.S. Capitol from attack. Last January, American terrorists successful­ly invaded the same target. Today, our nation’s greatest domestic terrorist threat, according to the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI, is from white supremacis­ts.

Beware of trying to slay the dragon, lest you become the dragon.

It’s time to reclaim our American character as a people of compassion, love and peace.

What do we do next? We go to school and talk with each other and pick up the litter from the side of the road. And we love our neighbor as ourselves.

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