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Saturday, April 16, 2005
Bush administration has some explaining to do on Hamas

Material Support to."Business Professionals"
The Bush administration has some explaining to do on Hamas.
Andrew C. McCarthy April 14, 2005, 12:06 p.m.
www.nationalreview.com/mccarthy/mccarthy200504141206.asp

Back in July, the Justice Department held a bells-'n-whistles press
conference to announce a major case: a 42-count indictment, charging seven
men and an ostensible charity with underwriting Hamas to the tune of nearly
$60 million. Hamas, a ruthless terrorist organization dedicated to the
annihilation of Israel and responsible for numerous gruesome attacks that
have claimed the lives of hundreds of victims - including Americans - has
been formally designated as a terrorist organization under various U.S. laws
for many years.

In announcing the indictment, then-Attorney General John Ashcroft could not
have been more straightforward: "To those who exploit good hearts to
secretly fund violence and murder, this prosecution sends a clear message:
There is no distinction between those who carry out terrorist attacks and
those who knowingly finance terrorist attacks. The United States will ensure
that both terrorists and their financiers meet the same, certain justice."
Evidently, Scott McClellan did not get the memo.
At his press briefing Wednesday, President Bush's spokesman was asked about
the very real possibility that Hamas could come to dominate what will pass
for the "legislature" of the Palestinian Authority (PA). There followed this
stunning exchange:
Question: In the event that Hamas, a terrorist organization not yet disarmed
by the PA, wins a majority in the legislative PA, will the Bush
administration still send $350 million U.S. taxpayer dollars to the PA, or
not?
McCLELLAN: It's - the one thing that you see when people have elections that
are free and fair is that they tend to choose people who are committed to
improving their livelihood, not people who are committed to terrorist acts.
And I think if you look back at the previous Palestinian elections, the
people that were elected, while they might have been members of Hamas, they
were business professionals. They were people that ran on talking about
improving the quality of life for the Palestinian people and addressing
their economic needs and addressing other needs that are important to them -
not terrorists. [Emphasis added.]

This assertion, by the public face of the Bush administration, is
breathtaking. Here's hoping it will be corrected, resoundingly, with due
haste.
What is McClellan thinking about here? All terrorist organizations engage in
this kind of beguiling propaganda. That Nazis had lots of spiffy spokesmen
talking about improving people's lives. So does the IRA. So does Hezbollah.
Osama bin Laden's construction concerns built roads and infrastructure to
improve people's lives in Sudan and Afghanistan - all the better for ingress
and egress to the many terror training camps he ran in those countries with
impunity.
The rationale for the Bush presidency, the bedrock basis for reelection, is
that the President has been clear-eyed and unflinching on the central issue
of the day: the threat posed by militant Islamic terrorism. Again and again,
he has said it: Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists. This
was the firm foundation of the Bush Doctrine - no quarter for terrorists, no
place, no how. And no exceptions for the Palestinian Authority.
We have structured our law around it. Numerous people have been prosecuted
under beefed up laws that forbid providing any kind of material support to
terrorist organizations. In case after case, those defendants plead the same
thing - what we might now call the "McClellan Defense": "Sure the government
might say they're a terrorist organization, and sure they might mass-murder
civilians, but they do a lot of good, too. They run charities. They run
social service organizations. They have a lot of good business people who
talk about improving the quality of life. I was only contributing to this
happy-face side of the house, not the bad terrorists."
The defense gets laughed out of court, because most people are not fools. As
a practical matter, people know dollars are fungible. If you give money to a
terrorist organization - like the $350 million McClellan indicates we are
thinking about giving to a Hamas-dominated PA - you don't control it; the
terrorists do, and they decide whether to channel it to healthcare or
bomb-building.
More importantly, as a behavioral incentive, people understand and endorse
what antiterror law seeks to achieve. If an organization practices the
savagery of terrorism, if it seeks political accommodation by murdering its
way to the bargaining table, it must forfeit any right to be heard or,
bluntly, to exist. No matter how many hospitals and charities it runs. No
matter how many nice men in nice suits it trots out to prattle about social
justice. End of story.
President Bush has always seen the likes of Hamas as Hamas - i.e., as thugs,
not businessmen. It was because of this that he was preferable to Senator
Kerry, who saw terrorism as a problem to be managed in conjunction with the
international community and its nuanced view of the world's Hamases as
"political resistance movements" that, alas, occasionally strap explosives
to adolescent suicide bombers - a somewhat less-than-nuanced way of killing
lots of civilians.
It was because President Bush insisted, as a premise of his "roadmap" for
Middle East peace, that terrorism be halted and terror groups be disarmed,
that he was preferable to President Clinton, who labored eight long years
trying to groom an incorrigible terrorist, Yassir Arafat, into a statesman -
in a "peace process" that bred the Intifada and an ever-rising death count.
If McClellan is to be taken seriously, it seems we are back to nuance and
grooming. Is he to be taken seriously?
- Andrew C. McCarthy, who led the 1995 terrorism prosecution against Sheik
Omar Abdel Rahman and eleven others, is a senior fellow at the Foundation
for the Defense of Democracies.

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