Anat Berko
Special to IPT News
September 24, 2013
http://www.investigativeproject.org/4170/the-only-commonality-is-mass-killing
Aaron Alexis murdered 12 people and injured at least eight more at
the Washington, D.C. Navy Yard before he was shot and killed by law
enforcement professionals. It is tempting to compare Alexis to a suicide
bomber, especially now that we have heard rumors he opened a website
under the name "Mohammed Salem." However, clear thinking demands that
temptation be resisted. Let me explain why.
As an Israeli criminologist who has studied suicide bombers for
almost two decades—making extensive observations of and conducting
numerous interviews with those who failed, as well as with those who
dispatch the bombers, with family members of suicide bombers and
decision makers and elites in their society— I can say with confidence
that the differences between mass killers in the West such as Adam Lanza
at Sandy Hook, Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris at Columbine, and yes,
Aaron Alexis at the D.C. Navy Yard, and suicide bombers are categorical
and insurmountable.
After the Sandy Hook tragedy, Eric Lankford, an American criminal
justice professor, sought to show that America's lone shooters have more
in common with suicide bombers than is commonly believed. But his op-ed
piece, "What Drives Suicidal Mass Killers" (New York Times,
12/19/12), is fundamentally flawed. America has certainly suffered
enough with the recent Sandy Hook, Aurora and other tragedies, but clear
thinking demands we realize that even if someone is characterized as a "shaheed"
(a martyr for the sake of Allah, including suicide bombers), the
differences between mass killers in the West and suicide bombers are
categorical and insurmountable.
The overriding distinction between the two is their native cultures:
the suicide bomber's education and attack preparations are diametrically
opposed to that of mass killers, as is their socialization. Suicide
bombers are radical Islam's celebrated heroes, its darlings, whose acts
are viewed by the larger culture as exemplary and heroic; in contrast,
the West's mass killers are aberrant individuals isolated from their
resolutely life-affirming culture.
Specifically and most importantly, Western culture in general, and
American culture in particular, cherishes life. American children are
raised in the belief in life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness; they
are raised to embrace life and respect the lives of others. Clearly
there are a disturbed few who kill others, but those are not the heroes
of the American people: their murders and subsequent own deaths do not
bring honor to their families or elevate them in their society's
collective memory.
But that is exactly what does happen in radical Islamist culture. In Gaza, for example, children collect cards of shaheeds,
the same way American children collect baseball cards. It is absurd to
think that anyone would propose National Park Stadium be renamed Aaron
Alexis Stadium, and the absurdity illustrates and emphasizes the
difference between American mass killers and Muslim suicide bombers
whose names emblazon schools, sports teams, stadiums and public squares.
The Western mass killer's acts are motivated by individual pathology
rather than by collective ethos. The individual's aberrant thoughts
trigger the plan for a mass killing. The suicide bomber is not driven by
psychological pain, although he is selected because others see him as
weak or vulnerable. A culture that celebrates death and declares to the
West that "we love death as you love life" is the petri dish in which suicide bombers develop.
Another distinction is that suicide bombers are not lone gunmen,
instead, they are merely tools in a comprehensive, well-advertised
terrorist production, manipulated to achieve political goals. To
understand the significance of the difference, try to imagine Dylan
Klebold or Eric Harris as inanimate objects whose owner chooses not only
the location of the killings, but also the date, the weapons and even
the victims. The suicide bombers' locations are chosen by others to
ensure that the greatest possible damage will be inflicted; the bombers
usually have little or no advance notice. A suicide bomber, in contrast
to Adam Lanza, will never embark on his mission by first killing his own
mother—the most significant and beloved person in his life.
The mass killers choose their victims, the locations and the timing
of their deeds, usually planning their acts meticulously over a long
period of time. For the suicide bomber, his body is the murder weapon.
His death is the only way to achieve his true goal: to enter paradise
physically, where 72 virgins and the rivers of wine await him, and
spiritually, by bringing honor to himself and his family. All this is
possible only if his corporeal being merges with the bomb fragments to
bring death to others, an ideal far removed from Western moral
conceptions of life and afterlife.
A Western mass killer's death is not a precondition for the mass
murder; the deaths of those they have selected is what matters. The
suicide bomber, however, is on a mission aimed at propelling himself
toward a better future in the afterlife, where he will be able to enjoy
everything he was unable to enjoy or achieve while living. America's
mass killers have no future: they will be vilified and not celebrated,
and in contrast to radical Islamic culture, their families will suffer
ignominy and isolation. We have already heard the anguish suffered by
Aaron Alexis's mother, who, in a public statement,
expressed deep sorrow over the pain caused by her son. She also said
she was glad her son was in a place now where he can no longer do any
harm to anyone.
The West's mass killers have no recruiters, handlers or dispatchers,
all of whom are essential in a world where suicide bombers are the
logical means to achieve the collective end. In the United States,
anywhere and at any time, the question, "What do you want to be when you
grow up?" does not elicit the answer, "A mass killer (or suicide
bomber)." However, the Gazan child for example, will not answer
"fireman," "policeman," or even "I'm going to work in an office like
Daddy." The virtually guaranteed answer is "shaheed," and his mother will likely cheer.
Radical Islam's suicide bomber is the manipulated tool of an aberrant
death-glorifying culture, while the West's mass killer is an aberrant
member of a robust, life-affirming culture. There are similarities
between the two, but it is a mistake to put them on the same level. To
blur the distinction is to insult America.
Anat Berko, Ph.D, a Lt. Col. (Res) in the Israel Defense Forces,
conducts research for the National Security Council, and is a research
fellow at the International Policy Institute for Counter-Terrorism at
the Interdisciplinary Center in Israel. She was a visiting professor at
George Washington University and has written two books about suicide
bombers, "The Path to Paradise," and the recently released, "The Smarter Bomb: Women and Children as Suicide Bombers" (Rowman & Littlefield)
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