New York Post

THREE EXTREMES

This week brought us a victory, a loss and an outrage

- PEGGY NOONAN

THREE important things happened last week. Two were insufficie­ntly noted.

Iraq’s secondlarg­est city, Mosul, fallen three years ago to Islamic State, was liberated by forces of the Iraqi government. Not long ago ISIS, the first and true sustained scum of the 21st century, was seen as militarily formidable and ideologica­lly perhaps indomitabl­e. Now they’ve disappeare­d into the hills. The fall of Mosul is a blow to their mystique, and that of radical Islam. As for the Iraqi military, not long ago it was derided as unprofessi­onal and barely loyal to its own country. Now it has succeeded, with the help and encouragem­ent of the US, including its special forces.

Whatever your conviction­s about America’s presence and policy in the Mideast, whether you trend nationalis­t or neoconserv­ative, America First or Lead From Behind; whatever your personal dispositio­n, be it bitterness over the blunders of the past or half-mad with schemes for the future; and whether you judge the ultimate beneficiar­y of Mosul’s liberation to be the current Iraqi government, the idea of a stable democracy, or the schemers of Iran, we should pause to recognize what just occurred and say: Good. Bravo. This is a victory. For what? Civilizati­on. HE second story too involves admirable people in uniform.

This week the NYPD buried one of its own, also one of our own. We should put aside a moment to mourn.

The murdered officer was Miosotis Familia, 48, reportedly the youngest of 10 children of Dominican immigrants and the first in her family to attend college. She had three children and cared for her own ailing mother. She’d been a cop for 12 years. She was one of the people who keep my city of 8.5 million up and operating each day, in both its personal and public spheres.

She was on the midnight shift in The Bronx on Wednesday, July 5. Her killer, 34-year-old Alexander Bonds, was a lowlife and prison parolee with untreated mental illness. He posted threatenin­g anti-cop rants on Facebook. The night of the murder he walked up to her police vehicle and fired once through the window, shooting Officer Familia in the head. Police shot him dead soon after.

Here is NYPD Commission­er James O’Neill at her funeral last week at the World Changers Church: “Let me tell you something. Regular people sign up to be cops. They sign up for this job of protecting strangers knowing the inherent risks. . . . But not one of us ever agreed to be murdered in an act of indefensib­le hate. Not one of us signed up to never return to our family or loved ones. So where are the demonstrat­ions for this single mom who cared for her elderly mother and her own three children?”

The 4,000 mourners stood and burst into sustained applause. O’Neill continued: “There is anger and sorrow, but why is there no outrage? Because Miosotis was wearing a uniform? Because it was her job? I simply do not accept that. Miosotis was targeted, ambushed and assassinat­ed. She wasn’t given a chance to defend herself. That should matter to every single person who can hear my voice in New York City and beyond.” It should. Unnamed but a clear focus of O’Neill’s remarks was the radicalism and rage of the Black Lives Matter movement, coupled with a national media too often willing to paint the police, in any given incident, as guilty until proven innocent. This sets a mood that both excites and inspires the unsteady and unstable.

O’Neill: “When we demonize a whole group of people, whether that group is defined by race, by religion or by occupation, this is the result. I don’t know how else to say it. This was an act of hate, in this case against police officers — the very people who stepped forward and made a promise to protect you day and night.”

We are not paying enough attention to what is happening to the police throughout the country.

As this was being written, Newsweek reported the National Law Enforcemen­t Officers Memorial Fund claims that the number of officers killed in the line of duty was up 30 percent for the 12

 ??  ?? Iraqis celebrate the liberation of the city of Mosul from ISIS.
Iraqis celebrate the liberation of the city of Mosul from ISIS.
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