Le Nouveau Normal

The Toulouse shootings are macabre and tragic, but in the end a banal and fading version of extremism.

BY JUSTIN VAÏSSE | MARCH 22, 2012

The recent terrorist shootings in France are notable only for their gruesome details. On March 19, Mohamed Merah stopped in front of a Jewish school in Toulouse and shot a rabbi and three children, even chasing a little girl and grabbing her by the hair to lodge a bullet in her head. Four days earlier, he had murdered two French paratroopers of Arab origin at gunpoint and injured a third, of Caribbean origin -- continuing a spree that began with the killing of another paratrooper four days earlier. Had he not been identified by the police on March 20, he would have been on his way to kill policemen in Toulouse the next day.

On March 22, the gruesome story came to its inevitable conclusion when French security forces stormed Merah's apartment, and the man leapt out his window, guns ablaze, and fell to his death.

But let's not jump to conclusions: The shootings reveal exactly nothing new about global terrorism nor French society -- they simply confirm that even the strongest anti-terrorism apparatuses have lapses. Although often targeted, France had seen no major attack materialize on its soil since 1996 (it has suffered, however, various terrorist attacks abroad). And there should be no crowing about a new wave of xenophobia or race crime: Anti-Semitism in France has steadily declined in recent decades, and anti-Semitic acts, which had brutally increased in the first half of the 2000s, have subsided.

The sociological profile of Mohamed Merah is a sad copy of that of his jihadist predecessors of decades past, from  Herve Djamel Loiseau to Zacarias Moussaoui: It includes social relegation, identity troubles, and a feeling of injustice, mixed with petty crime, Islamist radicalization (not in a regular French mosque but while serving time in prison), then travel to Afghanistan and Pakistan. These are not deeply religious men, but rather actors crazed by a desire to take destiny into their own hands and live a more fulfilling life by appointing themselves defenders of victimized Muslims.

While claiming to act in the name of al Qaeda -- the extent of his ties to the network is still unclear, and it appears he acted alone in France -- Merah articulated the usual jihadist justifications for his actions: the French military presence in Afghanistan, the headscarf and burqa bans, and the occupation of Palestine. But as late as 2010, he was still trying to enlist in the French armed forces, and was rejected by the Foreign Legion. Other details of his killings (he apparently caught his killings on video by a camera attached to his gear) hint at how similar his profile is to deranged serial killers or teenagers engaging in shooting sprees.

Such terrorist attacks by "lone wolves" are very hard to prevent, and others will occur in the United States, as in Europe. At the very moment when they seem to proliferate, however, the context which produced them is fading away. It is not just that al Qaeda was already discredited when Osama bin Laden was killed and that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are coming to a close. More importantly, the Arab Spring has disorganized the terrorist networks, bringing a handful of Westerners to the training camps of Afghanistan and Pakistan, and it has reintegrated most Islamists -- even the Salafists -- into the political game, thereby isolating the jihadists further. It has also shown a different path to popular empowerment and dignity.

Toulouse, in other words, appears like the annual update to a bound encyclopedia subscription -- an  insert to an era that is already passing.

Hadrei Haredim via Getty Images

 SUBJECTS: TERRORISM, EUROPE
 

Justin Vaïsse is director of research of the Center on the U.S. and Europe at the Brookings Institution and the co-author with Jonathan Laurence of Integrating Islam: Political and Religious Challenges in Contemporary France.

HARRY KHAN

4:40 PM ET

March 22, 2012

one eyed journalist

I wish you would have turned your head and written a few lines about the women and children brutally murdered and their bodies burnt by American soldiers in Afghanistan.

 

KTS10110

6:04 PM ET

March 22, 2012

Where is the Islamic outrage?

They get enraged by a cartoon yet they couldn't care less when a muslim murders children? There is no justification for this. The poster above is just another pathetic example of Islamic double standards. He says nothing about the crime itself yet he attempts to justify it as if he supports the murder of children who had nothing to do with events in Palestine or Afghanistan. Western countries need to take a nice long look at their immigration policies.

 

FREETHINKER12

9:36 AM ET

March 23, 2012

not let muslims in the

not let muslims in the country because of a crazed gunmen? You are a racist. I can only imagine your reaction if someone advocated restricting jewish immigration because of the bernie madoffs of this world.

Funny cuz most muslims in france are semites, making you an anti semite as well

 

MICHAELGERALDPDEALINO

8:05 PM ET

March 22, 2012

Blaze of Idiocy

The idiot chose to literally go down in a blaze of idiocy. To the idiot poser khan above: I am not an American, but if you want Afghanistan to return to the days of the Taliban and have your women and minorities persecuted and mercilessly shot in football stadiums, I think the US should grant that wish. What a pathetic country.

 

CHRISAK

9:35 PM ET

March 22, 2012

I wonder if this changes Sarkozy's game...

I wish you had told us more about the fact that Sarkozy has called for criminalizing the mere act of simply looking at jihadist websites too frequently... How is that possible in France again?!

 

COUNTCHOCULA1011

11:12 PM ET

March 22, 2012

You're assuming the French have an American form of free speech.

The French have never practiced free speech in the way us Americans have generally envisioned it. For example, you can be arrested, fined, and imprisoned in France for denying the Holocaust or various other genocides (although I am pretty sure you can still deny the French government's genocide against the Algerians). There are also hate speech laws which criminalize homophobic speech, antisemitic speech, as well as generally racist speech. This is why right-wing groups in France usually never mention race, but they do mention culture. It's coded language.

The French have never practiced true freedom of speech. They just like to say they do so they can do what the French do best: act smug.

 

LECIAT

8:58 AM ET

March 23, 2012

lone wolf

"While claiming to act in the name of al Qaeda -- the extent of his ties to the network is still unclear"

al qaeda commanded their followers to engage in "lone wolf" jihad so all these lone wolves are following the dictates of al qaeda.

 

LECIAT

8:59 AM ET

March 23, 2012

Your submission has triggered the spam filter and will not be ac

what triggered the spam filer? the use of the word insanity? because the only sentence i left out was about the insanity of the lone wolf and al qaeda

 

LECIAT

9:02 AM ET

March 23, 2012

frances new normal

so france and the rest of the world must accept that we will be blown up from time to time by radical islamist? how bout, YOU accept this and the rest of us will fight for the right to live in a world without radical islamist

 

FREETHINKER12

9:38 AM ET

March 23, 2012

if they can live with the

if they can live with the economy wrecking that zionist engage in every few decades they can deal with a lone nut gun man

 

SPOOD

3:43 PM ET

March 23, 2012

If you can live with the idea...

that anti-semtic rants are usually a sign of idiocy.

 

FREETHINKER12

4:26 PM ET

March 23, 2012

are you speaking about what

are you speaking about what leciat said?????

you do know this lone wolf was a semite. All i did was mention khazars not semites

 

PULLER58

10:52 AM ET

March 23, 2012

And if he's not alone?

The assumption that this a "lone wolf" smacks of either a naive belief or calculated opinion making...

 

LUPE IGLEHART

5:02 AM ET

April 20, 2012

Le Nouveau Normal-Love of the Land

In my opinion, Many must have been reminded of the treatment of Jews under the Third Reich. Shortly after the attack on a Jewish school in the southern French city of Toulouse on Monday, school principals in the city walked into classrooms and asked the Jewish pupils to come forward. "We ask you to leave the class and join the other Jewish children, who are in a locked and safe location." It was intended as a precaution in response to a request from the Jewish community. But it also highlights the degree to which many Jews in France feel that they are a threatened and increasingly excluded minority. Every year, these feelings prompt thousands to take a dramatic decision, namely, to pack their belongings and move to a crisis zone: Israel. They feel safer there. Five years ago, Linda moved from Paris to Canada and then to the Israeli port city of Ashdod. Only a week ago, she, her husband and their two sons faced a hail of rockets from the Gaza Strip. Nevertheless, Linda, who doesn't want to be identified by her last name, is delighted to be living in France no longer. "It's much safer here than in France," she says.