Britain has been
in denial about the Islamist threat. Time to face it down
How many ignored
warnings does it take? That is one question that should hang over Britain after
the horror of the daytime murder of a British soldier on the streets of south
London. On Wednesday afternoon, Drummer Lee Rigby was killed in Woolwich by two
men wielding large knives and shouting "Allahu akbar"—God is great.
Islamists have
been saying for years they would do this. They have planned to do it. And now
they have done it.
The attack itself
is not surprising. What is surprising is that British society remains so
utterly unwilling not just to deal with this threat, but even to admit its
existence. Politicians have called the Woolwich killing
"unforgivable" and "barbarous." But expressions of anger
should not really be enough.
Attempts to attack
military targets in Britain go back to before the millennium and even before,
it is important to note, the war on terror. In 1998 Amer Mirza, a member of the
now-banned extremist group al Muhajiroun, attempted to petrol-bomb British army
barracks. In 2007, a cell of Muslim men was found guilty of plotting to kidnap
and behead a British soldier in Birmingham. The plan had been to take the
soldier to a lock-up garage and cut off his head "like a pig." They
wanted to film this act on camera and send it around the world to cause maximum
terror.
In 2009, al
Muhajiroun protested at a homecoming parade in Luton for British troops
returning from Afghanistan. Carrying banners saying "go to hell,"
"butchers" and "terrorists," the group was protected by
British police officers from an increasingly irate crowd of locals. The
resulting outrage toward the police gave rise to the deeply troubling English
Defence League, a street protest movement that often turns violent.












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