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Beslan Massacre — 8 September 2004 |
Unspeakable has become a term devalued by overuse to describe people or actions we don�t like.
That is a shame, because it leaves me searching for an appropriate description for the terrorist school murders in Russia.
We need new language to describe the new depths the terrorists have plumbed.
The indiscriminate murder of civilians by blowing up aircraft or collapsing skyscrapers is not enough. The mass hostage taking, torture and ultimate murder of children must now be added to the lexicon of terrorism�s methods.
Given that these terrorists spent several days with the children they murdered, who can now doubt that if they had the capability to use mass murder weapons on �anonymous� victims in a far flung country they would?
I have just been invited to take part in a debate at Exeter University against the motion �The war on terror is an error.� I relish the opportunity because the motion�s wording is so flawed. The war on terror is not an error it is a fact. We don�t have a choice. The terrorists have declared war on us. Not a war in the conventional sense, but a war nonetheless, in which they use all means.
We can and must debate how the war should be conducted. We must minimise the support terrorists receive by trying to address genuine grievance and injustice. But surely the only response to the horror of Beslan is a grim but determined resolution.
I am not an expert on Chechnya. Moscow may well have made mistakes in the province, but nothing can excuse what happened last week and it will not further any cause.
There is still a strong body of opinion in this country and elsewhere that we can opt out of the war on terrorism. If we keep our heads down and lead a quiet life they will leave us alone.
I wonder how many more unspeakable atrocities it will take before those who make that argument realise that we are all in this together.
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