What's new

The Region: The Oslo Syndrome

silko

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Mar 20, 2011
Messages
2,249
Reaction score
0
The Region: The Oslo Syndrome

Many Europeans will accept terrorism against Israelis or even Americans; very few will applaud terrorism against fellow Europeans.

One of the most sensitive aspects of the murderous terrorist attack in Norway by a right-wing gunman is this irony: The youth camp he attacked was engaged in what was essentially (though the campers didn’t see it that way, no doubt) a pro-terrorist program.

The camp, run by Norway’s left-wing party, was lobbying for breaking the blockade of the terrorist Hamas regime in the Gaza Strip, and for immediate recognition of a Palestinian state, without that entity needing to do anything that would prevent it from being used as a terrorist base against Israel. They were justifying forces that had committed terrorism against Israelis, killing thousands of people like themselves.

Even to mention this irony is dangerous, since it might be taken to imply that the victims “had it coming.” The victims never deserve to be murdered by terrorists, even victims who think other victims “had it coming.” This is in no way a justification of that horrendous terrorist act. It’s the exact opposite: a vital but forgotten lesson arising from it that can and should save lives.

Call it the Oslo Syndrome.

The Stockholm Syndrome is named after an incident in which hostages taken by a terrorist group became supporters of that group. A combination of intimidation (persuade these people that we’re friends or they’ll kill us); human psychology (get to know someone and hear their sad (whether or not true) story and sympathy arises); and ideology (having, or thinking you have, common ideas and interests).

Then there was the Oslo Process, the 1993-2000 effort to make peace between Israel and the Palestinians. In retrospect, it can be read as an attempt to solve a conflict by offering a great deal to those who rejected the offers, believing they could achieve total victory through tactics including terrorism.

Many in the West – especially Norway – think it only failed because not enough was offered.

The Oslo Syndrome encompasses all these things, but goes a step further, for the most dangerous thing you can do about terrorism is to make it appear politically successful. For terrorism is not an ideology or a movement, but merely a tactic: to murder noncombatants deliberately for political ends.

If you do this, will others (including the victims) be so terrorized as to give you whatever you want? Will they ignore the moral implications and support you nonetheless? Can you make the argument that you are so oppressed as to justify terrorism, as the ambassador of Norway implied is true against Israel after the killings in the summer camp? Is it possible to engage in terrorism, yet convince much of the world that your victims are the real terrorists? IF YOU can answer any of these questions with a “yes,” then terrorism may be for you. Of course, not every worldview or movement would use it, but for those who do it is a very practical issue – whether using terrorism is likely to result in being reviled and killed or being celebrated internationally and receiving large amounts of money.

The Oslo Syndrome can be defined as the opposite of the Stockholm Syndrome.

Instead of being a target of terrorism and then changing to support the terrorists’ side, it means – individually, as part of a movement, or as an entire country – supporting the terrorists’ side, then being victims of terrorism.

Here are four cases of terrorism being perceived as a failure and dying out: – The idea that terrorism works originated with Gracchus Babeuf, a French revolutionary journalist who coined the word in 1793.

A few months later, his comrade, Pierre- Paul Royer-Collard, called terrorism “The only way to arouse the people and force them to save themselves” – exactly what today’s terrorists think. Babeuf was executed, though, and that idea went out of fashion for decades.

– Late nineteenth and early twentieth century leftist or nationalist terrorism, engaging in bombings and murders in Europe and a bit in North America.

– Latin American terrorism of the 1960s and 1970s, which failed to achieve revolution and was subsequently repressed.

– European terrorism of the 1970s and 1980s, which mobilized little sympathy.

In contrast, Middle Eastern terrorism (Palestinian, radical nationalist or Islamist) enjoyed much local support and political success even in the West. Shortly after the September 11 attacks, an aide to Osama bin Ladin, Abu Ubeid al-Qurashi, recalled how Palestinian terrorism inspired the assault “thousands of young Palestinians” joined the PLO.

Yasser Arafat spent decades as a terrorist, and was applauded at the UN –after a speech in which he threatened more murder – then spent decades more as a terrorist, afterward becoming a virtual head of state and winning the Nobel Peace Prize.

Why should others not dream that the road to victory is paved with the corpses of murdered civilians? IF TERRORIST murders by Hamas and Islamists did not stop well-intentioned future leaders of Norway from considering them heroic underdogs, an evil local man could think his act of terrorism would gain sympathy and change Europe’s politics.

After all, it has already changed the Middle East, and even been sanctified by Western media, intellectuals and governments.

When Norway’s ambassador to Israel tries to distinguish between “bad” terrorism in Norway and “understandable” terrorism against Israelis, that opens the door to a man who thinks his country is “occupied” by leftists and Muslims.

In this sense, the most important thing about the Norway terrorist is not that he is right-wing or anti-Islam, The most important thing is that he believed terrorism would work on behalf of his cause.

Had he held all of the same beliefs but didn’t think murder was a good tactic, nobody would be dead from his actions.

Of course, he was mentally unbalanced, but had a material basis for his imaginings.

What he didn’t understand is that many Europeans will accept terrorism against Israelis or even Americans; very few will applaud terrorism against fellow Europeans.

Nevertheless, many people gave him the idea that terrorism would change minds, and bring victory. They weren’t those whose blogs he quoted a few times in a 1,500-page manifesto, and who explicitly rejected violence. It was the successful terrorists and their Western enablers who gave him the tactic he implemented.

The Region: The Oslo Syndrome - JPost - Opinion - Columnists
 
what a baboon!

i am going to quote two of the replies to this article.

and then you can decide it for your self what you would stay with.

"It is interesting see a so called "expert" and political commentator be so ignorant to the nature of the Norwegian political landscape. It is clearly reflected in your above blog post that you base your opinons or rather vauge assumptions on myths and what seems like hear say from different sources rather than fact. For one, Arbeidepartiet or the labour party if you wish which youth organization was targeted in these atrocities is not especially leftist. I would say they are oriented more towards the center of the political landscape with a slight leftist sway.
Now, I will agree that the youth organization in question is more leftist than the party itself. But to say that they support terrorism because some of them support the idea of a Palestine state is absolutely ludicrous not to mention extremely offensive.There are parties in Norway that are way more extreme in this regard to both sides, and I still wouldn't call them terrosists.

To call somebody terrorists or supporters of terrorism because they raise political questions in a fair and non violent way is absurd, and a dangerous threat to democracy. You can not silence a legit opinion with slander and by putting them in the same category as those who murder innocent people as it goes against all the values of the western democracy.
And just to add, I am not a leftist, so you can give up on calling me a terrorist, cause I do not fit into your stereotypical views of people. I think that like most political matters the matter of a Palestine state vs protecting the life and well being of Israeli's is not black or white but rather full of gray areas in which both sides have legit points. If you try to paint the world in black and white you will soon find that it leads to extreme and dangerous retoric, spouted by both sides (left and right) and eventually destroying what we are trying to protect rather than to seek a sustainable balance for all of human kind."


"As a Norwegian following the events in Oslo on the 22nd from Ramallah and later in the week Tel Aviv, I find Israeli reactions interesting.

Your conjecture that many Europeans "accept" terrorism against Israelis or Americans are numbers picked from your own imagination. Show me some hard facts supporting that conjecture. As one of many who have actually been to Utøya, holding lectures and discussing politics, I can assure you terrorism and violence against civilians, of any kind, has an extremely low standing among kids like those at Utøya and among Norwegians in general.

I think you must be conflating support of armed resistance to occupation with terrorism. What is what in Israel and Palestine is an interesting discussion point, but lending support to Palestinian demands is not intellectually or factually equivalent to supporting terrorism. If you believe the two are equivalent, I think you must be bamboozled by your own rhetorics."
 
And the article is int he Jerusalem post.... So So not surprising. Israel yet again painting everything and everyone supporting the Palestenians as terrorists.
 
And the article is int he Jerusalem post.... So So not surprising. Israel yet again painting everything and everyone supporting the Palestenians as terrorists.

what is more funnier is that they pay him to talk good about israel. bet he would sell his soul to hamas if they payed him to. what a baboon!
 
LoL I just read the comments from Israelis in that article and I could not stop laughing. LoL to them an Arab means a dangerous pre-historic life form that is out to drink their blood just out of pure anger and hatred....

Yeah to them we go "balrgh balrgh balrgh balrgh kill israelis and jews blargh blargh blargh massacre terrorize blargh blargh blargh"
 
What a pathetic piece! I must say, the writer is a Terrorist sympathizer himself!
 
You have to be an Israeli jerk to stab Europeans in the back like this.:woot:

Jerusalempost.:frown:
 
Back
Top Bottom