FORT HOOD AND THE MAKING OF AN AMERICAN TERRORIST
Much has been written already about what happened at Fort Hood last week but precious little as to why it happened. To understand why it happened it may be useful to start by reminding ourselves again that the mass murder at Fort Hood was the first act of suicide terrorism on American soil by a homegrown Islamic extremist.
To come to this conclusion we do not need to know what motivated Major Malik Nidal Hasan, but only that he was a Moslem and that he was on a suicide mission. There is no doubt about the former and little doubt that somebody embarked on mass murder in a military base had much hope of coming out alive.
The real question then, is not what made Major Hasan commit mass murder, but how he became a terrorist. It is a question of seminal relevance given the strong probability that homegrown terrorism might well be a greater threat to homeland security in the future than foreign jihadists.
To understand the nature of the problem a quick look at the origins and evolution of Islamic extremism in America and its sponsors is essential.