Have to admit there’s a certain bitter irony in today’ s headlines
in France about an Islamic terrorist network being rounded up in Strasbourg,
Paris, Nice and Cannes, at the same time as the TV news shows French forces
beginning their withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Why the irony? Because while France has spent billions of
Euros over the past ten years to battle the threat of radical Islam in Central
Asia, they find once again the threat is homegrown, fostered in their own
schools, decaying neighborhoods and prisons.
As I’ve
written in previous blogs, It’s got much more to do with economic
stagnation, bleak job outlooks, mounting food prices—in short, increasingly
bitter frustration, particularly in the poorer suburbs of cities like Paris and
Marseille.
Anger is particularly high among second and third generation
Muslim youth. France’s population of 5 million Muslims is Europe’s largest,
and, partially because of the woeful economic situation in this country, France
has had a difficult time absorbing them.
Some of those outraged young people have turned to criminal
activities—from petty to violent. And one of the major areas where their conversion
to violent jihad takes place is not so much in Central Asia’s barren hinterlands,
but in overcrowded French prisons.
Further, a number of those for who have espoused jihad, were
not born Muslims at all, but are recent converts—also proselytized in French prisons.
That’s exactly the background
of Jérémie Louis-Sidney, the 33 year old member of the terrorist gang who was
gunned down after shooting at police attempting
to arrest him last Saturday in
Strasbourg.
It’s the background of many—perhaps all- of the 12 supposed
members of the “terrorist” ring currently being questioned by French police.
Bottom line, forget humanitarian interests. From the coldly
pragmatic view of defeating radical Islam, the French would have been—and still
would be--much better off deploying the billions of Euros they’ve squandered sending
troops, planes and ships to Central Asia, deploying those funds back home where
they really might make a difference.
It goes without saying, that so would the United States.
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