I understand that and do see the difference, even though ISIS has not yet exported its terror to the West. There is another difference though and that is in numbers. The number of Australian fighters in Bosnia was upwards of 10 times the number claimed to be "fighting" for ISIS.Mugwump wrote:Agree with much of that, but there was no history of Bosnian terrorists causing events like 9/11, nor was the grievance of Bosnians, Serbs etc against the fundamental principles of Western culture. Islamic terrorism has been indiscriminate for a long time, and apt to be pointed at our society.AN_Inkling wrote:I agree that the overblown language is unhelpful, as is the overfocus on the threat. According to ASIO there are 60 Australians fighting in this conflict. 60. This is somehow a major threat to our safety when hundreds, even thousands, of Australians fighting in Bosnia was not. The atrocities committed in that war were no less grave. Is the possibility that some of this violence could be brought home greater in the case of ISIS? Maybe, but I've not seen any direct threat from ISIS to Australia.
Our overreaction to these kind of events makes us look hypocritical and only helps to foster the very extremism we are trying to stamp out. I see that there is a difference, but it would surely be difficult for those more invested to fully process that Israel's killing of civilians is fine, not a problem, but when Muslims kill it's "barbaric" and "evil". Some here have bemoaned the effectiveness of the "Palestinian propaganda". That's rot. Turn it around: 2,000 dead Israelis at the hands of Hamas and only 60 dead Palestinians and the media reaction would be many magnitudes greater. No journalist would be losing their job over criticising Hamas, that's for sure.
The threat this posed to Australia was in continued ethnic hostility when these fighters returned. There was definitely some unease in the general community over this, not particularly over fighters (I do not remember this ever being raised as much of an issue) but over Bosnians, Serbs, Croats in general. Given the much larger numbers, even without mentioning the migrating fighters or non fighters, this fear seems more logical than the fear of Australian ISIS combatants.
I guess I just get nervous whenever a terrorism threat is overstated. The chance of bad anti-freedom laws to be passed in this environment rapidly approaches 1 as the rhetoric ramps up.