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Is that it is impossible to negotiate with terrorists. Therefore, to the Administration, and to an American public spoon-fed news by the corporate behemoths of CNN and FOX, any response to terrorism that is not by military force or some equivalent is seen as giving into terrorism. Thus, the defeat of the Popular Party and the victory of the Socialists after the bombings in Madrid demonstrate that the Spaniards and the Europeans want to give into the demands of the terrorists, which is unacceptable, because negotiation with terrorists is unacceptable.
The problem with this mindset and the theory that underlies it is that not only is it possible to negotiate with terrorists, it might very well be the best option. The general consensus is that Spain was targeted by Muslim terrorists possibly linked to al Qaeda because the government of Jose Maria Aznar and his Popular Party backed the American invasion and occupation of Iraq, despite the fact that, according to some polls, 90% of the Spanish people opposed the war. The Socialists ran on a platform whose foreign policy was far less lock-step with the United States as Aznar's was. If elected, the Socialists promised to end their support for the invasion of Iraq and withdraw the Spanish troops Aznar sent there, unless the United States handed over control to the United Nations. Prior to the Madrid attacks, the Popular Party led the Socialists by a comfortable margin; on the first Sunday after the attacks, the Spanish people elected the Socialists. Seeing the horror and devastation in Madrid, the citizens became painfully aware of the fact that Aznar's support for the war in order to protect Spain and the world from danger might very well have had the opposite effect, and chose to replace his government with one that took a different approach to terrorism.
Certainly, this will not guarantee an end to terrorism on Spanish soil; the persistence of ETA virtually guarantees it will continue. However, the removal of Aznar and the Popular Party could make Spain less of a target for outside terrorist organizations like al Qaeda. That is the art of negotiation: give the terrorists something they want and perhaps you might be safer. The United States is too far gone to realize this. The ideas that fuel Islamic terrorism cannot be killed. You can stack up the bodies of dead al Qaeda members as high as you like and hang Osama bin Laden from the highest tree, but terrorism will continue. The best bet is to let law enforcement deal with it, and, above all, listen to them, as that is what they want. Open negotiation could lead to a peaceful solution and a sort of ceasefire between the Western democracies and the Middle Eastern terror organizations. It is admittedly a gamble, but at this point, it's the best bet.
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