No question: The news that the number of terrorist attacks rose
significantly last year seems startling. In fact, the number went
way up -- from 208 "significant" attacks in America or on Americans
worldwide in 2003 to 651 in 2004.
But this piece of information is sorely in need of some
context.
Every year since 1995, State Department officials have issued a
"Patterns of Global Terrorism" report. In their 2004 report (which
covers 2003), they claimed that terror attacks went down slightly,
from 198 in 2002 to 190 in 2003. Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif.,
sensing a chance to make some political hay, labeled the decrease
suspicious. State Department officials blamed it on a clerical
error and altered the report to show 205 terror attacks in 2002 and
208 in 2003.
The matter probably would have been forgotten, but in this year's
report, which covers incidents in 2004, State initially included no
numbers at all. Officials explained that the method for reporting
incidents had changed, so year-to-year comparisons were
meaningless. This time it was Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., who
challenged the State Department.
So State belatedly supplied the numbers: 651, which, Rep. Waxman
said, "undermine administration claims of success in the war on
terror."
Or do they?
Problem is, the numbers don't tell the whole story. Professor
Audrey Cronin, a noted terrorism expert with the Congressional
Research Service, notes that the number of international incidents
during most of the 1990s was half that of the 1980s. Between 1996,
when al Qaeda got into the terrorism business, and 9/11, many
analysts looked at those declining numbers and concluded that
terrorism was waning. Others, inside and outside of government,
continued to ignore the numbers and warn of increasing danger from
terrorism. The day after 9/11, of course, everyone realized that
the second group had been correct.
Measuring success or failure by the number of attacks alone made
little sense then and even less now. Consider Iraq. More than 200
of those 651 attacks took place there. Does that mean we're losing
the war on terror? No, it means the United States freed 25 million
people, and some of the Baathists who kept them terrorized don't
appreciate our efforts. They want to be in charge again, and our
soldiers -- and, eventually, Iraq's own -- stand in their
way.
Let's face it: If you take the fight to the enemy, as we've done in
the war on terrorism, you have to expect the enemy to attack you
more furiously. He's facing a mortal threat, and he's
desperate.
And given that the Iraqi people enjoy being free of the Baathists,
and that the latter have yet to come to terms with this, the
attacks might continue for some time. What matters is that the
Baathists won't regain power and, more importantly, that they won't
regain power because the rest of the Iraqi people are united in
opposition to them.
States with long histories of suffering through terrorist
campaigns, such as Britain, Germany, India, Italy, Spain and
Israel, understand how attacks escalate in the face of a tough
fight, so they aren't surprised by it. They also understand that
countries can survive and even thrive in the face of terror.
If the number of attacks doesn't present an accurate measure of
success in the war on terrorism, which numbers do? Consider
these:
-
Number of Taliban-style states created since 9/11: 0
-
Number of countries that have recognized al Qaeda: 0
-
Number of nations that have adopted "state-sponsored" terrorism as an official policy: 0
-
Number of states that have voluntarily given-up weapons of mass destruction programs since 9/11: 1
-
Number of transnational nuclear smuggling networks broken-up since 9/11: 1
-
Number of Middle Eastern states that have moved closer to democracy: 5
But we understood the war would be long and progress would be steady but uneven. Sixty years later, that's still the right formula.
James Jay Carafano, Ph.D., is a senior research fellow for defense and homeland security at The Heritage Foundation (heritage.org) and co-author of " Winning the Long War: Lessons from the Cold War for Defeating Terrorism and Preserving Liberty."
Distributed nationally on the Knight-Ridder Tribune wire