Why did the
most powerful military nation on Earth freak out over a 19-year-old idiot in a
backward baseball cap?
by Sean Collins
by Sean Collins
Soon after the bombs exploded at the Boston Marathon, pundits on the left
and right started speculating about the culprits. Both projected their
prejudices and fantasies, in the hope that the identity of the attacker would
in itself discredit their political opponents. As it happens, both got it
wrong.
Liberals
were hoping the bombers would turn out to be right-wing, Tea Party-loving
nutcases. Dina Temple-Raston of National Public Radio ventured: ‘April is a big month for
anti-government, and right-wing, individuals. There’s the Columbine
anniversary. There’s Hitler’s birthday. There’s the Oklahoma City bombing.
There’s the assault on the Branch Davidian compound in Waco.’ David Sirota in Salon blurted out: ‘Let’s hope the Boston Marathon bomber
is a white American.’ Sirota turned out to be correct – the bombers were white
(Caucasians, literally) and Americans (one a naturalised citizen, the other a
long-time resident) – but clearly not in the way he and other liberals had
hoped for.
Conservatives
had also leapt to a conclusion – that the perpetrators were Islamic terrorists.
The day after the bombs went off, the Wall
Street Journal referenced the
botched car-bombing attempt by Faisal Shahzad in New York’s Times Square in
2010, and warned: ‘The Boston bombing is above all a reminder of the continuing
need for heightened defences against terror threats. As the years since 9/11
without a successful homeland attack increased, the temptation was to forget
how vulnerable the US is, and to conclude that the worst is over.’ Did
conservatives guess correctly? Well, many thought so when it was revealed that
the bombers, the Tsarnaev brothers, were Muslims, but two brothers with a
family background in Chechnya certainly wasn’t expected or predicted in
advance.
Emboldened
by discovering the bombers’ ties with Islam, conservatives have been the most
vocal in the aftermath of last Friday’s manhunt, eagerly slotting the bombers
into an old motif: the global war against Islamist terrorism. Michael Mukasey,
former attorney general under George W Bush, announced: ‘Make no mistake, it was jihad.’
Republican congressmen Peter King and Lindsey Graham rushed to claim that the
Tsarnaevs are ‘enemy combatants’ (who can be denied legal rights), rather than
common criminals.
But the
evidence that the Tsarnaevs are soldiers in a war is lacking, to put it mildly.
They are Muslims, their family is ethnically Chechnyan, and they watched and
posted a few jihadist videos. The older one, Tamerlan, spent six months
overseas in 2012, and was considered suspicious by Russian intelligence and America’s
FBI. That’s about it. No evidence of being part of a coordinated effort, nor of
having membership in a group like al-Qaeda. It seems pretty clear that the
Tsarnaevs were the ones who were responsible for setting the bombs off, and
represent no one but themselves.
Slap the
label ‘global terrorism’ on a violent act, and all sorts of fearful images and
associations are generated, but the reality of the Tsarnaevs was much more
mundane. How can anyone take the two brothers as serious ‘combatants’? Their
bomb was crude (gunpowder and metal parts in a pressure cooker), the target
site was ‘soft’ and not terribly spectacular in symbolic value, and the number
killed by the bombs (three), while deeply tragic, was not exceptional when comparedwith death rates in American cities like
Chicago, which averaged about three homicides every two days last year.
The
brothers’ amateurism was revealed during the events of Thursday evening, when
they bragged to the owner of the car they hijacked: ‘Did you hear about the
Boston explosion? I did that.’ They then stole $45 from the driver and, failing
to get cash out of his ATM (and getting caught on the bank camera in the
process), robbed a small convenience store. Then, following a shootout with
police, one brother drove over the other’s body as he escaped. Not exactly the
most organised or well-funded of global conspiracies.



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