Roof, Dear and Tashfeen Malik:
‘Self-Radicalized,’ ‘Terrorism,’ ‘Lone Wolf’ and Double Standards
By Juan Cole
December 06, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Federal officials
are now investigating the San Bernardin0 massacre as an “act of
terrorism” rather than just workplace violence.
But when
Dylann Roof allegedly shot nine persons dead at the Emanuel
African Methodist Episcopal Church on June 17, 2015, there was
strong resistance on the part of officials to speaking of that as
terrorism.
Likewise,
Alleged Planned Parenthood shooter Robert Dear was not called a
terrorist by politicians on the right despite his clearly political
goals.
What is the difference between these three?
Malik, Roof and Dear became radicals through their
own reading and research rather than from having obvious
organizational links. All three seem to be, in the official
parlance, “lone wolves” who “self-radicalized.”
One part of terrorism is apparently conceived of
in official US discourse on these things as organizational. It is
early days in the investigation of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik,
but while Malik may have made a hasty Facebook declaration of
loyalty to Daesh (ISIS, ISIL) commander Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi during
her horrid shooting spree, so far it does not appear that there was
any element of command and control in either the case of Roof or of
Malik/Farook.
Does it matter what the target is? Timothy McVeigh
blew up the Federal building in Oklahoma City to target the Federal
government, given his white supremacist ideology. Dear targeted
Planned Parenthood in an obvious attempt to change public policy.
Since Malik and her husband just shot up a meal for employees at a
center for taking care of challenged folks, rather than choosing
some more significant target with actual political implications. Can
their action be seen at the moment as primarily as terroristic? Back
in the 1990s the phrase “going postal” emerged from a rash of
incidents of workplace rage and violence (there were 20 instances
such violence between 1986 and 1997, in which employees shoot down
more than 40 individuals. They look much more like they went postal
than that they were trying to bring down the Federal government.
Does organization matter? In counter-terrorism,
you always seek to disrupt the enemy’s command and control
abilities. The San Bernardino killers, as things now stand, did not
partake of any formal structune within Daesh that day. Nor does Roof
appear to have a strong organizational context in, e.g., the Ku Klux
Klan such that anyone gave him an order to kill African-Americans in
their church. Dear was also a loner.
In fact, a major US newspaper called Dear a
“gentle loner.” Hmmm.
Where persons do not have a witting relationship
with a terrorist group, officials refer to them as
‘self-radicalized.’ All three, Dear, Malik and Roof were obviously
self-radicalized (at the least) and developed a vague identification
with movements they felt represented their grievances over identity
politics.
If Tashfeen Malik, the female shooter, actually
swore allegiance via Facebook to Daesh (ISIS, ISIL) leader “”Abu
Bakr al-Baghdadi,” then her motives in the shootings were political.
But her target was not political. Roof’s target was more obviously
political than a facility for treating challenged people–
>he killed a sitting state senator, which is almost never
mentioned by the US press. Dear’s target was also political– he
wanted to overturn the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision.
So is a vague organizational affiliation more
important in determining whether a killing is terrorism, or is the
character of the target more important?
When Roof first went before a judge, the judge
observed that Roof’s family were
also “victims.” Has any US official said that about the families
of Malik and Farook?
How useful is the language of ‘lone wolves’ and
‘self-radicalization’? Police work and counter-terrorism has to
focus on organizations and you could seldom forestall someone from
essential going postal.
I don’t have answers. I do know that Malik, Dear
and Roof engaged in murder and violence because of their ideologies,
all (as far as we now know) lacked the element of organizational
command and control, and only one of them killed a sitting state
senator. Yet
Roof was not charged with terrorism. One of the reasons was that
white supremacist organizations, in material support of which he may
have acted, are not typically designated “terrorists” by the US
government.
Is there a
double standard in our public discourse here?
Juan Cole is Richard P. Mitchell Collegiate
Professor of History at the University of Michigan.
http://www.juancole.com/