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August 15, 2021

Has Anyone Told the Terrorists That the War on Terror is Over?

I don’t know about you, but I’m relieved that the War on Terror is finally over.  All those travel restrictions, security shakedowns, toothpaste confiscations and coded-color warnings.  And the nerve-wracking hesitations about getting too close to iconic landmarks: Statue of Liberty, Washington Monument, Sears (now Willis) Tower, and the Space Needle.

We can now concentrate on more immediate survivalist concerns, like distinguishing between an N95 and KN95 mask.  Yes, the CDC, the Biden administration and local authorities are still introducing mixed-messaging about mask-wearing and viral loads, but at least super-spreaders aren’t wearing suicide vests.

Not yet anyway.

Until just the past few days, it was possible to delude oneself into forgetting why the United States invaded Afghanistan.  The country was a haven for al-Qaeda, the terrorist group responsible for 9/11, and the Taliban was its faithful Islamic terrorists in arms.

The United States began to withdraw from Afghanistan in early July.  Almost immediately, the Taliban mounted a blistering campaign to recapture control over the country.  Within the past few weeks alone, the Taliban has retaken multiple cities. As I write this, it is encircling the capital of Kabul. It had already secured the vast expanse of rural districts throughout the country.  Afghanistan’s security forces, despite all that American training, are woefully overmatched.

We come upon the 20th anniversary of 9/11 with these worsening conditions requiring U.S. troops to double back to evacuate its embassy and remaining civilians. It’s worth remembering that while arguably forgotten, the War on Terror never concluded with a declared winner.  Global terror outfits did not suddenly empty their backpacks—scattering nails, ball-bearings and detonation devices—and fill them with books.  The United States never set the terms for surrender because it was a war without end.  We simply allowed complacency to reshuffle our priorities.

Much has happened in the intervening two decades since jetliners crashed into the World Trade Center causing two skyscrapers to fall from the sky.  Over the next several years other foreign cities became targets: Madrid, Glasgow, London, Bali, Paris, Brussels, Nice, and Copenhagen. For many, the Boston Marathon Bombing was just a one-off secondary attack never to repeat itself.  We let down of our guard, on Patriot’s Day, of all days.

Meanwhile, America’s attention gravitated to other problems, each terrifying in their own right: a financial crisis in 2008; the Iran nuclear threat and Nuclear Deal in 2015; a pandemic and two Senate Impeachment trials in 2020; a border crisis to our south, right now.  The news cycles of each day never failed to disappoint in their variety and commotion.  Terrorism began to feel like a faraway bad dream, more trivia question than immediate peril.

But the actual terrorists had their own dreams, all culminating in caliphates.  They think in terms of centuries, not news cycles.  While we drifted, they remained wide awake.  How else to explain the speed with which the Taliban reconquered the country and freed 5,000 al-Qaeda operatives from prison?

Terrorists think in terms of centuries, not news cycles.  While we drifted, they remained wide awake.  How else to explain the speed with which the Taliban reconquered the country and freed 5,000 al-Qaeda operatives from prison?

Meanwhile, while our sworn enemies joyously rearm, we’re fighting over pronoun usage, bathroom protocols, signature verification on election ballots, mask-wearing and whether our democratic ally, Israel, is really an Apartheid state.  President Biden has repeatedly stated that the biggest crisis America faces today is white supremacy.

Seriously?  Where are these white supremacist factions taking control of American cities like the Taliban has already done in Afghanistan?

The United States withdrew from Afghanistan under cover of night without leaving a note or forwarding address. All that wasted blood and treasure, and the weaponry we left behind for Afghan security forces, which barely fired a shot before handing all that hardware over to terrorists who will undoubtedly deploy it against us.  And, of course, our humiliation in negotiating a “peaceful transfer of power” only to be reminded, as if further reminders were necessary, that terrorists are not statesmen.  The Taliban, like its sadistic fellow travelers, are not dealmakers acting in good faith and following the rules of diplomacy. They are theocratic thugs.

The Taliban, like its sadistic fellow travelers, are not dealmakers acting in good faith and following the rules of diplomacy.  They are theocratic thugs.

President Biden’s foreign policy experts, not unlike the Obama administration, love to imagine terrorists as statesmen.  Just speak to them as if they are fellow Ivy League academics in the faculty lounge.  President Obama had such faith in his charisma and Iran’s intentions.  I am quite certain that the Taliban tittered with laughter while the Biden administration tweeted its diplomatic achievement.

The consequences of this faulty thinking, and the revival of global terror, is grave.  Afghanistan will once again return to the Stone Age—and I am not talking about its mountainous terrain.  Strict Islamist adherence to Sharia law means that women will stop learning how to read– but who can concentrate on literacy when beheadings and stoning can happen at any moment?  And God help any homosexual or Christian who happens to be out and about in Kabul.

American feminists, for some reason, never seem to care about their Muslim sisters.  The LGBTQ community ignores the gruesome sight of gays being torched and thrown from rooftops or hung from cranes.  Even PETA looks the other way.  In Lawrence Wright’s, “The Looming Tower,” he conveyed a chilling anecdote about the Taliban killing all the animals in the Kabul Zoo, except for a lion, who one barbarian blinded with a grenade, and a bear whose nose he had cut off.

The Taliban follows the same Islamist playbook as al-Qaeda, ISIS, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah, and Boko Haram. We may have forgotten them, but they remained fixated on us.  They were merely taking a timeout, hiding in plain sight. Now they will all feel emboldened by the Taliban’s bold return to its theocratic home turf.  And, Iran, the chief sponsor of these practitioners of terrorism, is readying itself to sucker the Biden administration into yet another one-sided nuclear fiasco that will endanger the United States and Israel.

As a new generation of terror masterminds plan unimagined mischief of the murderous kind, it’s not clear whether the United States is prepared.  Are we even tracking them anymore?  We faltered once, and that fateful mistake ended horribly for runners and spectators at the finish line of the Boston Marathon.

Now we’re acting as though the War on Terror itself had long crossed the finish line, signaling the cessation of hostilities.  But did anyone bother to tell the terrorists?


Thane Rosenbaum is a novelist, essayist, law professor and Distinguished University Professor at Touro College, where he directs the Forum on Life, Culture & Society. He is the legal analyst for CBS News Radio. His most recent book is titled “Saving Free Speech … From Itself.”

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Why Jews Should Proselytize

If you were to ask me, “What would you do if you had a billion dollars to spend on a Jewish media campaign?” you might guess that I’d spend it on a billion dollars’ worth of advertising for Israel, since advertising to defend the Jewish state is a key priority of my organization.

But that’s not where I would put all the funds.

Instead, I would take out billboards on all the highways in America quoting from Ethics of our Fathers, the Talmud and Jewish wisdom on how to parent effectively, sustain an erotically fulfilling marriage, overcome anxiety and depression, and live a meaning-filled life. In other words, I would leverage universal Jewish values and wisdom to teach Americans how to master their lives. I would make Judaism a light to the nations. I would make the Jewish faith a source of inspiration and life-mastery for all Americans.

Let me explain.

One of the destructive beliefs in the Jewish community—more pronounced now given the rise of antisemitism—is that non-Jews are innately antisemitic. That they hate us deep in their gut. That we can make no positive impact on their lives because they naturally detest us, and we should therefore not even attempt to impart Jewish teachings to the world because the world wants to kill us.

In one of his last public speeches before his passing in 2016, Elie Wiesel, my hero and mentor, quoted the Talmud to me that “it is an undeniable axiom that Esau (the non-Jewish nations) hates Jacob (the Jews).” But Elie Wiesel was also revered in every nation on earth, including those, like France, that are not known for great sympathy for the Jewish people and where Wiesel received the Legion of Honor, France’s highest honor.

I find it strange that many Jews who reject the idea of systemic racism in America still believe that the world is systemically antisemitic.

I believe the opposite. While many may hate us, the world has generally been electrified by Jewish ideas like monotheism, the Ten Commandments, human dignity, and the Sabbath. It’s just that we Jews have never attempted to impart our teachings directly to the world, preferring insularity instead. This is why people like St. Paul, the foremost disseminator of Christian ideas, stepped into the gap to offer the world a form of “Judaism Light,” which became Christianity. Yes, we Jews are not a proselytizing faith. But that’s because we don’t believe we must “upgrade” our status to Jewish in order to achieve salvation. Rather we believe you’re special just the way you were born.

But what shame we did not convert the world, not to Jewish practice, but to a Jewish belief system—a Jewish values system that was always designed to be universal in nature.

But the good news is that it’s not too late. With the decline of religion in the West and the rise of anxiety, depression and general unhappiness, modern men and women are looking for spiritual fulfillment and purpose. Judaism, with its emphasis on community, family and ethical living is uniquely suited to cater to this deep-seated Western longing.

In light of this, imagine a national media campaign that shares the riches of Jewish wisdom with the masses. We can teach a generation obsessed with popularity on social media that “the more one pursues a name, the more one loses that name,” a fact evidenced by soaring rates of depression among millennials who daily fabricate stories on social media about how wonderful their lives are, even when they feel broken. We can teach sexually-famished marriages how to have greater erotic fulfillment. We can educate teenagers on how to be liberated from narcissism by contributing to a community, something I did with Chabad every Friday as we gave out Sabbath candles to passersby and connected them with tradition through tefillin. And we can teach a culture addicted to electronic devices how to regain their freedom by turning off all this garbage on the Sabbath.

It isn’t only people’s daily lives that will be enriched. By making Judaism a light to America, we will also protect Israel in a manner that is much more effective and long-term than is currently being practiced.

By making Judaism a light to America, we will also protect Israel in a manner that is much more effective and long-term than is currently being practiced.

The Talmud says there are two paths in life: the short-longer way, and the long-shorter way. The same is true of Israel defense. An example of the short-longer way is when we react hysterically to every non-violent attack against Israel, like the boycott of Ben & Jerry’s, for instance. The long-shorter way, on the other hand, is when we make Israel an essential light to the entire world, and the world comes to its defense in return.

Notice how revered the Dalai Lama is in the West. And notice that he faces the same odds as Israel. Here is a nation of six million Tibetan Buddhists up against the Chinese nation of 1.4 billion with the second largest economy in the world. Yet the Dalai Lama has strong Western support. Why? Because the West feels he has contributed something indelible to their lives. He has given many in the West a soul after they lost it to mammon. So they fight his battles for him not simply as a mark of gratitude, but because he is essential to their spiritual fulfillment.

Likewise, the world Jewish community in general, and Israel in particular, should become essential to the world by disseminating Jewish teachings about how to gain mastery over life. Israel should not only be talking about its tremendous advances in cybersecurity, but also about how they are the first in the world to offer a third vaccination against COVID-19 because of their tremendous emphasis on the infinite value of life. Jewish values are the reason that Israel is flourishing today, with its focus on the universal Jewish values of education, illumination, robust self-defense, and high birth rate, and respect for the equality and dignity of minorities, all part of the application of the infinite value of every human life.

If we make Judaism, the Jewish people and Israel a light unto the nations, then many in the world who are currently indifferent to our plight will rise to our defense, and not because they pity us because of the Holocaust.

I recognize, of course, that we have to defend ourselves, even as we create more allies who join the battle. This is the one great failing of the Dalai Lama, an otherwise great man. He never understood that one’s defense cannot simply be farmed out to allies. Tibet has largely ceased to exist as a nation, given that it is oppressed by China, even as the Dalai Lama has become a global spiritual beacon.

Israel has chosen to take a different direction, building an army to defend itself against its genocidal enemies. But the heroic IDF is not enough. We need an army of eloquent Jewish spokespeople in the media who not only engage in hasbarah but who also can effectively impart Jewish wisdom to the masses, thereby making our people an essential light to human civilization.

I love Israel with all my heart. But the parts of it that I so cherish, like its humane army, its democracy, and its care for its Arab citizens, are all based on eternal Jewish values that declare that every human being is created in the image of God, and that we must therefore love our neighbor as ourselves.

Right now I don’t have a billion dollars. Who knows maybe one day I might, God willing, and you can all help by buying a billion copies of my books. But rather than spend it, like Jeff Bezos, for an hour in space, I would rather spend it helping to create heaven here on earth.


Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, “America’s Rabbi,” has just published “Holocaust Holiday: One Family’s Descent into Genocide Memory Hell.” Follow him on Instagram and Twitter @RabbiShmuley.

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