San Francisco Chronicle

Safe at home?

- By Brian Fishman

Terrorism, by definition, intends to create irrational fear — a mystique around the terrorists and victims that enables militant organizati­ons to project far more power than their limited resources would otherwise allow. Peter Bergen’s achievemen­t in his new book, “United States of Jihad,” is demystifyi­ng the domestic jihadis that have played such a central role in American politics since 9/11. In doing so, he reveals another truism: Sometimes, banal realities are more worrisome than exaggerate­d fearmonger­ing.

According to Bergen’s statistics, 330 people have been charged with jihadi terrorism in the United States since 9/11. Eighty percent were American citizens or permanent residents; most were well educated, onethird or so are married. Nearly 20 percent are women and the average age is 29. The vast majority of these people share little with the master terrorists of Hollywood nightmares. Rather, as Bergen notes, “they are ordinary Americans.”

Bergen writes about these American jihadis with the dexterous prose of a career journalist and the assumption that whatev-

er crimes they ultimately committed, these people did not begin life as mass murderers. Sometimes, this approach raises more questions than it provides answers. Why, for example, did Nidal Hasan decide to open fire on his fellow soldiers at Fort Hood, Texas, but his first cousin, Nader, who was raised in a similar environmen­t only blocks away, became a family man and respected lawyer in northern Virginia?

On the one hand, Nidal was an Army officer clearly disturbed by the prospect of deploying to Afghanista­n to support a war he opposed deeply. He was also in touch with Anwar al-Awlaki — himself an American citizen who had joined al Qaeda — and the jihadis’ single most effective English language propagandi­st. Nader, however, dismissed these explanatio­ns and offered a more prosaic account for his cousin’s behavior: He had become totally social isolated, with “no wife, no children, no parents, no friends.”

In the end, Nader argued, Nidal “went postal. And he called it Islam. He sucked every Muslim into his suicidal plan.”

Not every American jihadi fits that mold, but the statistica­l and psychologi­cal normalcy of would-be jihadis creates a huge problem for law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agents tasked with keeping us safe. In the wake of 9/11, agencies from the FBI to local police department­s have shifted their focus from prosecutin­g crimes after the fact to interdicti­ng terrorism plots before they are actualized. But if those would-be terrorists share so much in common with “ordinary Americans,” how do you identify those threats?

In practice, this conundrum has led law enforcemen­t to more aggressive surveillan­ce programs and broader use of confidenti­al informants. In the eyes of many civil libertaria­ns, it has also meant illegal monitoring of mosques and law enforcemen­t entrapping terrorism suspects.

Thankfully, Bergen’s book does not fall into tired cliches either defending or excoriatin­g law enforcemen­t. Rather, he humanizes the fear and sense of purpose among counterter­rorism profession­als in the wake of 9/11, but does not shy from the conclusion that their determinat­ion to prevent terrorism has led to unacceptab­le intrusions on Americans’ civil liberties.

New York City is the biggest target for jihadis hoping to attack the United States and is also central to the debate about appropriat­e law enforcemen­t techniques. After 9/11, the New York Police Department dramatical­ly enhanced its ability to gather intelligen­ce — both inside the city and beyond — in an effort to interdict any plot that might threaten New Yorkers. The CIA and FBI had failed to “connect the dots” prior to 9/11; New York officials aimed to ensure that no such failure would lead to another major strike in the city they were obligated to defend.

The heart of that effort was the NYPD’s Intelligen­ce Division, which recruited a 30year veteran of the CIA following 9/11 and employed civilian analysts focused not on gather- ing evidence of crimes, but on figuring out where the next threat to the city would come from. The Intelligen­ce Division built a broad collection program focused on Muslim communitie­s in New York and surroundin­g areas. Part of this project was simply an effort to better understand social, economic and demographi­c conditions, but a Pulitzer Prize-winning Associated Press investigat­ion revealed that it also targeted mosques, bookshops and restaurant­s where Muslims would gather. The NYPD was effectivel­y monitoring innocent people based on their religion.

These oversteps were real, but they were not the product of jackbooted thugs with discrimina­tory intent. Rather, Bergen portrays them as the overreache­s of everyday Americans living with the day-today responsibi­lity of preventing terrorism, and fearful of the consequenc­es if they were to fail. Bergen challenges readers to imagine whether we would do better in their shoes.

The debate over security and liberty in the United States predates our Constituti­on, but rarely has the balance between those principles been so stark as in the years since 9/11. Bergen’s profile of the (mostly) men accused of supporting jihadi terrorism and those doing everything they can to prevent those attacks reminds that this is a fight of practical choices between otherwise normal people.

Presidenti­al candidates should take notice. The overheated rhetoric of the campaign season, in which Donald Trump irratio- nally called for banning all Muslims from the United States, is out of whack with the everyday work of keeping the United States safe. Such proposals contradict cherished American principals of religious freedom; just as fundamenta­lly they try to solve the wrong problem. The real danger, Bergen argues, does not primarily come from abroad. The real world challenge is less existentia­l, less dramatic and more insidious, and it starts with “ordinary Americans.”

Brian Fishman is an affiliate with the Center for Internatio­nal Security and Cooperatio­n at Stanford University and the Center for Right-Wing Studies at UC Berkeley. He is the author of “The Master Plan: ISIS, al-Qaeda, and the Jihadi Strategy for Final Victory” ( forthcomin­g in 2016). E-mail: books@ sfchronicl­e.com

 ?? Spencer Platt / Getty Images 2015 ?? New York police officers with high-powered rifles patrol in Times Square in New York after a series of mass shootings and the terrorist attacks in Paris.
Spencer Platt / Getty Images 2015 New York police officers with high-powered rifles patrol in Times Square in New York after a series of mass shootings and the terrorist attacks in Paris.
 ?? Jeremy Freeman / CNN ??
Jeremy Freeman / CNN
 ??  ?? Peter Bergen
Peter Bergen

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States