U.S. needs confidence boost

Which will it be: victim or victory for the United States of America?

Our leaders tell us nearly every day that another attack by terrorists possibly with nuclear, biological or chemical weapons is imminent. The message seems to be, “get your affairs in order, make sure your will is up to date and prepare to meet thy God.”

Instead of our leaders sending that message to us, how about them sending the message to our enemies in a package more powerful than rhetoric? Whatever happened to the confidence represented by the World War I song, “Over There” (“The Yanks are coming, the Yanks are coming… and we won’t come back till it’s over, over there.”)? Who has more to fear, them or us? Do we have more to fear than fear, itself?

“The Sum of All Fears,” now playing in a not so nuclear-free zone theater near you, is a film about neo-Nazis (a politically correct choice of a hate group selected to offend hardly anyone), who blow up Baltimore, of all places. In the film, Americans are again at the mercy of crazed hate-mongers. We are portrayed as powerless to do anything about them. Viagra is often prescribed for physical impotence. What’s the cure for political and military impotence? It is victory!

In his remarks last Saturday to graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, President Bush may have signaled the beginning of the end of this victim attitude. Halfway through his speech, he said: “our security will require all Americans to be forward-looking and resolute, to be ready for pre-emptive action when necessary to defend our liberty and to defend our lives.” (italics mine)

Pre-emptive action, not reaction, is what’s needed. The president said we must uncover terror cells in 60 or more countries. Let’s start with one cell in one country, besides Afghanistan. Villagers in some backward country that harbors terrorists should wake up one morning and notice the terrorists among them are dead or missing. People like Saddam Hussein, not Americans, should start each day looking in the mirror and wondering if today is their last day on Earth.

Authorities should recruit responsible Arab-Americans and freedom-loving Muslims to help in the effort. They would prove that they put America and freedom before anything else if they were seen turning in those who are plotting against the United States.

We’ve had enough warnings. Besides, what can we do? Remain vigilant? What does that mean? Is a terrorist likely to leave a briefcase nuke at a bus stop?

It’s time to go on the offensive. President Bush correctly told the West Point graduating class, “We cannot defend America and our friends by hoping for the best. We cannot put our faith in the word of tyrants, who solemnly sign nonproliferation treaties, and then systematically break them. If we wait for threats to fully materialize, we will have waited too long.”

America needs a morale boost like Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle’s air raid on Japan, which restored America’s confidence 60 years ago. Militarily, the attack was not fully successful, but the United States struck a psychological blow from which Japan never recovered. The Doolittle raid literally changed the course and most likely the outcome of World War II.

Despite the exercise of our power in Afghanistan, the United States appears at the mercy of those who hate us. The FBI and CIA have been exposed as incompetent. The stock market lacks confidence. Is there something proportional to the Doolittle raid the administration could come up with to reverse course and boost morale?

Let’s stop waiting for terrorists to do us harm and start doing them harm. We shouldn’t be thinking about deterrence. We should be planning to wipe them out, starting now, and then start planning the victory parades.