Over two centuries
ago, the United States was dragged into the affairs of the Islamic
world by an escalating series of unprovoked attacks on Americans by
Muslim pirates, the terrorists of the era. These pirates preyed on
unsuspecting trade ships. The hulking merchant vessels of the
period were no match for the Muslim pirate ships, which were built
for speed and lightning strikes. It was simply a fact of life that-
over the centuries-took its toll on countless merchant ships
and their crews.
Contemporary scholars
estimate that over 1 million white Christians from France and Italy
to Spain, Holland, Great Britain, the Americas, and even
Iceland were captured between 1500 and 1800. The bloodcurdling
tales of brutality and horror that awaited Christians unlucky
enough to fall victim to the Barbary Pirates were widely
known, although sometimes wildly exaggerated.
The reality was often
much more prosaic, although no less cruel. After seizing the cargo
and scuttling the vessel, the pirates would strip the crew of
anything deemed remotely valuable. The shaken, naked,
terrified crewmen would then be dragged back to North Africa.
There, they would be imprisoned and enslaved or, if they were
lucky, ransomed back to their sovereign or their family or the
company they worked for.
Often enough, however,
the victims of these maritime hijackings would languish in
fetid prisons, unsure of when, or even if, they would ever be
redeemed. Many perished or simply disappeared in the White Slave
trade. The only other escape was conversion. Embracing
Islam-"turning Turk"-instantly changed one's status and prospects.
Indeed, from time to time, some of these victims would prove rather
able-bodied adventurers and mercenaries, considering their national
identity, their religion, and their foreskins a small price to pay
as compared with life as a Muslim pirate in North
Africa.
Rogue States: The
Maghrib
Known as the Barbary
Pirates, these Muslim terrorists operated under the protection
and sponsorship of rogue Arab states. The Barbary States-
modern-day Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya-are
collectively known to the Arab world as the Maghrib ("Land
of Sunset"), denoting Islam's territorial holdings west of
Egypt.
With the advance of
Mohammed's armies in the Christian Levant in the seventh century,
the Mediterranean was slowly transformed into the
backwater frontier of the battles between Crescent and Cross.
Battles raged on both land and sea, and religious piracy
flourished. It was also a lucrative business, one that yielded
great riches to the pirates and to the regimes that gave them
refuge.
In contemporary terms,
this system of piracy was simply state-sponsored terrorism, an
extortion racket in which the pirates and the petty North African
states were all complicit-as was the Ottoman Empire, to which
three of the four states owed at least nominal
allegiance.
The European states
disapproved of all this, despite their own robust tradition of
piracy and privateering. After all, such practices were
increasingly considered incompatible with a globalized world
that was increasingly dependent on overseas commerce.
Nonetheless, these mercantilist nations remained more or less
content to pay the extortion and appease the pirates, deciding that
it was cheaper and easier than trying to defeat them. Also,
the stronger nations of Europe quickly realized the benefits of
manipulating the pirates to stave off commercial
competition.
Pursuing Peace Through
Appeasement
America's struggle
with the terrorism of Muslim piracy from the Barbary States began
soon after the 13 colonies declared their independence from Britain
in 1776 and continued for roughly four decades.
After the War of
Independence, America lost British protection in the Mediterranean
and began worrying about Barbary depredations. In very short order,
the precariousness of American interests abroad was brought into
sharp focus when the American merchant vessel Betsey was
taken by Morocco in October 1784.
Soon thereafter, two
ships with a combined crew of 24 men fell to the pirates of
Algiers-the Maria of Boston was captured on July 25, 1785,
and five days later the Dauphin of Philadelphia was taken.
The hostage crisis was significant, and Congress became greatly
alarmed. Destitute of finances and military might, however, the
United States pursued a multilateral diplomatic effort at peace.
Consequently, between 1785 and 1793, a total of 13 ships and
119 men were taken by Algiers.
Obviously, the way
forward was deemed to be the pursuit of peace treaties-appeasing
terrorism. In 1792, for instance, Congress hoped for a peace
treaty with Algiers that was to cost upwards of $40,000, with
up to $25,000 to be paid in annual tribute. Ransoming enslaved
Americans, it was thought, would cost an extra $40,000.
Unsurprisingly, these terms were unacceptable to the pirates-why,
after all, should they settle so cheaply?
The peace treaty was
finally concluded with Algiers only in 1796, and the terms
were far from appealing-$642,500 in cash up front, followed by a
pledge of healthy annual tribute and sundry naval stores. The total
cost of this transaction, Congress later determined, was
$992,463.25, or about $14,300,000 in today's terms: By way of
comparison, the entire federal budget for FY 1796 was $5.7
million.
Washington Warns
Congress: Be Ready for War
Then, as would happen
with some frequency, the situation in Barbary changed as new rulers
came to power, resulting in new realities and forcing new deals.
President Washington warned Congress in December 1793: "If we
desire to avoid insult, we must be able to repel it; if we desire
to secure peace…it must be known that we are at all times
ready for war."
Suitably moved, the
House of Representatives on March 10, 1794, passed, and on March 19
the Senate ratified, a bill that gave birth to the United
States Navy. As the legislation states: "Whereas the depredations
committed by Algerine corsairs on the commerce of the United States
render it necessary that a naval force should be provided for
its protection…." Six ships were authorized at a cost of
just under $700,000. Unfortunately, the birth of the U.S. Navy was
no more exempt from the laws of politics than are mortals from the
laws of physics. Thus, in an early example of pork-barrel politics,
the ships were to be built in six different states.
As is the case today,
party politics played a role in devising a national defense policy.
The Federalists, led by John Adams and Alexander Hamilton, were
pro-Navy, while the Democratic Republicans, led by Thomas
Jefferson, were anti-Navy. The pro-Navy party wanted to castigate
the pirates, protect U.S. commerce and foreign interests, and
assert American strength abroad to secure international respect and
influence. Their opponents preferred spending money on westward
expansion rather than on ships and distant enemies in foreign
lands.
This was somewhat
ironic, as Jefferson was otherwise a hawk when it came to the
pirates and had previously argued at great length for a robust
naval and military response. Jefferson even envisioned an
international force, somewhat like what NATO is supposed to be
today, that would be called into being expressly to deal with the
Muslim pirates. No one ever took this idea particularly
seriously.
Before long, however,
national politics gave Jefferson his chance for hawkishness. Soon
after he became President, the situation in Barbary
degenerated.
The Coming of War with
Tripoli
President Adams,
before him, had been constrained by the early peace efforts,
and so was forced to comply with treaty obligations. These included
the establishment of American consulates in the Barbary States and
sending those regimes cash, armaments, warships, and naval supplies
as well as sundry bribes. As the demands of the Barbary
Nations increased, the inevitability of war loomed ever larger.
This was particularly so with the Regency of Tripoli.
In late May 1801,
Jefferson, using his executive powers, sent a squadron under
Commodore Richard Dale to deal with Tripoli's ruler, Pasha Yusuf
Qaramanli. Attempts to pacify him with money and bribes had
already failed. Indeed, unbeknownst to the Administration, a couple
of weeks earlier Qaramanli had beaten Jefferson to the punch.
On Thursday, May 14, 1801, Qaramanli sent word to the American
consulate that he was sending men over to chop down the American
flagpole-the traditional method of declaring war in
Tripoli.
Congress didn't
respond to Qaramanli's actions until February 1802, when it
empowered Jefferson to use the Navy in any way he deemed fit to
protect "the commerce and seamen of the United States against
Tripolitan cruisers." Jefferson's instructions to naval officers
were explicit: "subdue, seize and make prizes of all vessels, goods
and effects belonging to the Dey of Tripoli" and proceed with
whatever measures "the state of war will justify." Note,
however, that war had not been officially declared.
Barbary naval warfare
was to prove as frustrating as the earlier diplomatic dealings with
its perfidious tyrants. So frustrated was Commodore Dale that
upon returning home from the Mediterranean in April 1802, he
resigned his commission and, glad to be rid of the burden of
Barbary, retired to Philadelphia.
Jefferson then sent
another squadron under Commodore Richard Morris. This effort
proved even more ineffectual, however, and Morris demonstrated
a rather thorough incompetence. He was relieved of command in
August 1803. For his exertions, such as they were, Morris was
rewarded with a court of inquiry into his conduct. Adjudged "not
competent to the command of a squadron," Morris was dismissed
from service in the United States Navy.
"The Most Bold and
Daring Act of the Age"
Another squadron was
dispatched under Commodore Edward Preble. Though he too would
end up frustrated, the fighting officer from Maine believed naval
force was the answer to Barbary maritime terrorism and was
determined to chastise Tripoli.
Preble's chief
frustration was the loss, early in his tenure, of the USS
Philadelphia under the command of Captain William Bainbridge.
While chasing a small, insignificant pirate vessel on October 31,
1803, Bainbridge grounded the mighty frigate on an uncharted reef.
This blunder was compounded by the fact that Bainbridge failed to
destroy his personal papers after surrendering and abandoning
his ship-without a fight-just outside of the harbor of
Tripoli.
Consequently, Yusuf
Qaramanli now had a magnificent warship-renamed the "Gift of
Allah" - 307 American hostages, and invaluable intelligence about
the American squadron and Preble's intentions. As the news
quickly spread, American prestige plummeted to new
depths.
While maintaining the
naval blockade of Tripoli, Preble set aside his plans for a robust
campaign and pondered his only two options for the
Philadelphia: to recapture her or destroy her. The
impracticability of retaking the mighty frigate forced the
latter option. The plan called for Lieutenant Stephen Decatur to
sail into the fortified harbor of Tripoli aboard the USS
Intrepid, a captured enemy ketch, and come alongside the
Philadelphia. At his signal, the nighttime raid would
commence and his men, hidden below-deck, would swarm aboard
Philadelphia and burn her.
On the night of
February 16, 1803, the Intrepid came alongside the
Philadelphia. As enemy guards, suddenly suspicious, raised
the alarm, Decatur yelled "Board!" while leaping over the side. His
men rushed the ship and overwhelmed the guards with their sabers
and tomahawks. Combustibles were placed at key spots around the
ship and ignited at Decatur's command. The fire spread rapidly
and uncontrollably.
Just then, the enemy's
gunboats and shore batteries came alive. Waiting until all his
men were safely back aboard the Intrepid, Decatur leapt into
her rigging as she pulled away. The successful 20-minute
mission was over, and Decatur suddenly became an American naval
hero. The mission had been styled "the most bold and daring act of
the age" by Admiral Horatio Nelson. Indeed, Pope Pius VII said the
Americans by this action "had done more for the cause of
Christianity than the most powerful nations of Christendom have
done for ages."
Preble also launched
several attacks against Tripoli, but to no great effect.
Frustrated with the lack of positive results and the growing costs
of the war, Jefferson replaced Preble with Commodore John
Barron.
"General" William
Eaton and the Fall of Derna
In an historic and
unconventional move, Jefferson also sent an odd, obsessed, and
self-destructive man to the Mediterranean to lead what amounted to
the nation's first covert operation. William Eaton, formerly
America's consular agent in Tunis, had developed a pet scheme to
overthrow Yusuf Qaramanli. Named Naval Agent for the Barbary
Regencies in 1804, Eaton, a veteran of the Revolutionary War
and Indian fighter, sailed with Commodore Barron's squadron to
Barbary.
The scheme was
ridiculous. Eaton was to find Yusuf's exiled brother Ahmad, raise
an army, march to Derna (the second largest city in the Regency of
Tripoli), capture it, secure its harbor, foment rebellion, and
then proceed to Benghazi and then on to the city of Tripoli. There,
Yusuf was to be ousted and replaced by the U.S.-friendly
Ahmad.
Eaton had managed to
convince Jefferson that the mission was worth a shot and that it
could be done cheaply. That was more than enough for
Jefferson, but almost from the moment Jefferson gave Eaton the
green light, he started to have his own doubts about it.
The expedition began
on November 26, 1804, when Eaton landed in Alexandria, Egypt.
Accompanying him was a small detachment of United States
Marines led by Lieutenant Neville Presley O'Bannon.
Eaton steamrolled
ahead to Cairo, picking up Ahmad and assorted "warriors," and then
embarked on a roughly 500-mile march westward across the desert.
The newly self-appointed "General" Eaton was able to muster a
roughly 400-man army of European mercenaries and disaffected Arab
fighters. Due principally to religious tension and mistrust, this
motley army nearly collapsed into mutiny and bloodshed at nearly
every turn. The only binding element was Eaton and his
Marines.
William Eaton overcame
odds that might have stopped a saner man. At the fortified city of
Derna, in April 1805, Eaton confronted a force much larger
than his own. His strategy was to lead a charge straight into the
enemy's guns and, with the support of U.S. Navy gunboats
offshore, capture the city. The effort was a smashing success. When
Eaton's Marines flew the Stars and Stripes at Derna, it was the
first time a U.S. flag had been raised in conquest in a foreign
land.
It is this action, and
the valor and conduct of the Marines, that is forevermore enshrined
in the opening lines of the Marine Corps hymn: "From the halls
of Montezuma, to the shores of Tripoli." The action at Derna also
gave us the Mameluke sword that is worn on parade and formal
occasions by Marine commissioned and warrant officers. The sword is
patterned after the sword worn by Ahmad Qaramanli, which he carried
while a refugee with the Mameluke in Egypt. Ahmad presented his
jeweled sword to Lieutenant Neville Presley O'Bannon as a
tribute to the Marine's bravery and valor. It is also the oldest
weapon in continuous use by the United States Armed
Forces.
The fall of Derna
shook Pasha Qaramanli to his core. It also gave Eaton the momentum
he had hoped for. The Pasha envisioned the forthcoming reckoning,
Eaton the vindication and glory.
Unknown to Eaton,
however, Jefferson had authorized U.S. diplomat Tobias Lear to
negotiate a peace treaty at the same time that Eaton was
undertaking his daring and dangerous mission. It was
Jefferson's way of hedging his bets. Whichever effort
succeeded first, the President would be able to declare
victory.
While Eaton planned
his westward advance in his head, an enormously relieved Pasha
Qaramanli was busy cutting a sweet deal to end the conflict and
retain his position. Consul General Tobias Lear negotiated a peace
treaty with Tripoli. The United States agreed to pay $60,000 for
all American prisoners; agreed to withdraw all U.S. forces and
support from Derna; and granted a secret stipulation that the
Pasha be allowed to keep Ahmad's family hostage to prevent future
mischief. The Americans were freed, peace was declared, and Ahmad
Qaramanli was betrayed without a moment's
hesitation.
An Elusive
"Peace"
Jefferson declared
"victory," but the "peace" proved rather political. The Senate
ratified the peace treaty with Tripoli, and it was proclaimed on
April 22, 1806. The Federalists did not manage to derail the peace
treaty, although they did manage to embarrass and, at junctures,
discredit President Thomas Jefferson and forever tarnish the career
of Tobias Lear. Five years later, the now alcoholic, 47-year-old
William Eaton died in anonymity. For what it is worth, Thomas
Jefferson and James Madison saw to it that Lear continued in
government employ until his death. He committed suicide in 1816 and
left no note.
The piracy didn't
actually end there, however. America simply chose to ignore it as
more pressing matters took center stage.
Finally, in 1815,
Barbary piracy once again emerged atop the country's national
priorities. The War of 1812 finally over and the Treaty of Ghent
ratified, President James Madison was at last able to concentrate
on the situation in the Mediterranean. Once again, diplomacy had
failed. Again, bribery had also failed-the money was never
enough.
Unlike Thomas
Jefferson, Madison was eager to pursue the war against the Barbary
terrorism with real gusto. On March 2, 1815, Madison secured a
declaration of war from Congress. He sent two squadrons under
Commodores William Bainbridge and Stephen Decatur to deal with the
Barbary tyrants.
Decatur reached
Barbary first. He quickly defeated the enemy at sea and forced
tough new peace treaties on American terms, "dictated at the mouths
of our cannon." These new terms finally spelled victory. This was
the first time any nation had successfully stood up to the
Barbary Pirates. It was sufficient to ignite the imagination
of the European powers to rise up against Barbary and take
action.
In late August 1816, a
combined British and Dutch fleet under the command of Lord Exmouth
unleashed hell upon Algiers, effectually ending piracy against
most of Europe-excepting France. The French eventually grew tired
of Barbary as well and sent an invasion force in May 1830. France
conquered the city and regency of Algiers and remained there
until they were finally chased out in 1962.
Lessons for the War on
Terrorism
Although there is much
in the history of America's wars with the Barbary pirates that
is of direct relevance to the current global war on terrorism, one
aspect seems particularly instructive to informing our
understanding of contemporary affairs. Very simply put, the Barbary
pirates were committed, militant Muslims who meant to do
exactly what they said.
Take, for example, the
1786 meeting in London of Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and Sidi
Haji Abdul Rahman Adja, the Tripolitan ambassador to Britain. As
American ambassadors to France and Britain, respectively, Jefferson
and Adams met with Ambassador Adja to negotiate a peace treaty and
protect the United States from the threat of Barbary
piracy.
These future United
States Presidents questioned the ambassador as to why his
government was so hostile to the new American republic even though
America had done nothing to provoke any such animosity. Ambassador
Adja answered them, as they reported to the Continental
Congress,
that it was founded on
the Laws of their Prophet, that it was written in their Koran, that
all nations who should not have acknowledged their authority were
sinners, that it was their right and duty to make war upon them
wherever they could be found, and to make slaves of all they could
take as Prisoners, and that every Musselman [Muslim] who should be
slain in Battle was sure to go to Paradise.
Sound
familiar?
Note that America's
Barbary experience took place well before colonialism entered the
lands of Islam, before there were any oil interests dragging the
U.S. into the fray, and long before the founding of the state of
Israel.
America became
entangled in the Islamic world and was dragged into a war with the
Barbary States simply because of the religious obligation within
Islam to bring belief to those who do not share it. This is not
something limited to "radical" or "fundamentalist"
Muslims-which is not to say that such obligations lead inevitably
to physical conflict, at least not in principle. After all,
peaceful proselytizing among various religious groups
continues apace throughout the world; but within the teachings
of Islam, and the history of Muslims, this is a well-established
militant thread.
The Islamic basis for
piracy in the Mediterranean was an old doctrine relating to the
physical or armed jihad, or struggle. To Muslims in the
heyday of Barbary piracy, there were, at least in principle, only
two forces at play in the world: the Dar al-Islam, or House
of Islam, and the Dar al-Harb, or House of War. The House of
Islam meant Muslim governance and the unrivaled authority of the
sharia, Islam's complex system of holy law. The House
of War was simply everything that fell outside of the House of
Islam-that area of the globe not under Muslim authority, where the
infidel ruled. For Muslims, these two houses were perpetually at
war-at least until mankind should finally embrace Allah and his
teachings as revealed through his prophet, Mohammed.
The point of
jihad is not to convert by force, but to remove the
obstacles to the infidels' conversion so that they shall either
convert or become a dhimmi (a non-Muslim who accepts Islamic
dominion) and pay the jizya, or poll tax. The goal is to
bring all of the Dar al-Harb into the peace of the Dar
al-Islam and to eradicate unbelief. The Koran also
promises rewards to those who fight in the jihad: plunder
and glory in this world and the delights of paradise in the
next.
Although the piratical
activities of Barbary genuinely degenerated over the centuries
from pure considerations of the glory of jihad to less
grandiose visions of booty and state revenues, it is important to
remember that the religious foundations of the institution of
piracy remained central. Even after it became commonplace for the
pirate captains or their crews to be renegade Europeans, it was
essential that these former Christians "turn Turk" and convert to
Islam before they could be accorded the honor of engagement in
al-jihad fil-bahr, the holy war at sea.
In fact, the peoples
of Barbary continued to consider the pirates as holy warriors
even after the Barbary rulers began to allow non-religious
commitments to command their strategic use of piracy. The
changes that the religious institution of piracy underwent
were natural, if pathological. Just as the concept of jihad
is invoked by Muslim terrorists today to legitimize suicide
bombings of noncombatants for political gain, so too
al-jihad fil-bahr, the holy war at sea, served as the
cornerstone of the Barbary States' interaction with
Christendom.
The Barbary pirates
were not a "radical" or "fundamentalist" sect that had twisted
religious doctrine for power and politics, or that came to recast
aspects of their faith out of some form of insanity. They were
simply a North African warrior caste involved in an armed
jihad-a mainstream Muslim doctrine. This is how the Muslims
understood Barbary piracy and armed jihad at the time-and,
indeed, how the physical jihad has been understood
since Mohammed revealed it as the prophecy of Allah.
Conclusion
Obviously, and
thankfully, not every Muslim is obligated, or even really inclined,
to take up this jihad. Indeed, many Muslims are loath to
personally embrace this physical struggle. But that does not
mean they are all opposed to such a struggle any more than the
choice of many Westerners not to join the police force or the armed
services means they do not support those institutions.
It is very easy to
chalk it all up to regional squabbles, economic depression,
racism, or post-colonial nationalistic self-determinism. Such
explanations undoubtedly enter into part of the equation: They are
already part of the propaganda that clouds contemporary
analysis. But as Thomas Jefferson and John Adams came to learn back
in 1786, the situation becomes a lot clearer when you listen
to the stated intentions and motivations of the terrorists and take
them at face value.
Joshua E. London is
Deputy Director for Public Affairs with the Union of Orthodox
Jewish Congregations of America and author of Victory in
Tripoli: How America's War with the Barbary Pirates
Established the U.S. Navy and Shaped a Nation
(Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley & Sons, 2005). He has
written on politics and public policy for the American
Spectator, Human Events, National Review Online, and
Details: Promoting Jewish Conservative Values and holds an M.A.
in Social Science from the University of Chicago and a B.A. in
Political Science from the University of California,
Davis.