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What the Oslo Killer "Wanted" Doesn't Matter

By Froma Harrop

"What did the Oslo killer want?" asks one of many irritating headlines over the weekend. The Norwegian terrorist, Anders Behring Breivik, called for a number of societal changes as he massacred his countrymen in a meticulous assault, Foreign Policy reported. But let's skip them and cut to the chase: Breivik was insane.

Moments after the bombs exploded in the Norwegian capital, the instant analysis pointed to Muslim terrorism and asked: What had Norway done to possibly provoke this massacre? Then it was discovered that the maniac resembled not some dark-bearded Islamic fanatic but Thor. Blond mane crashing over his muscled shoulders, Thor was the lightning god of Norse mythology -- and of Marvel comics.

The suspect changed, but not the apparent need to put the rampage into a political frame and ask irrelevant questions. The question isn't what Breivik wants but what he needs, which would appear to be a cell and lots of medication.

The person posing in a frogman suit was a twisted loser on the order of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh. Like another terrorist, "Unabomber" Theodore Kaczynski, he stewed in a paranoid vision of evildoers ascendant.

Most weirdly, Breivik professed to hate radical Islam while diving into the same sort of self-aggrandizing fantasy as the criminals of 9/11. He fancied himself founder of a new Knights Templar, a military order started around 900 years ago to protect Christian pilgrims traveling to the Holy Land from Arab attack. Osama bin Laden's followers sought to restore the lost glory of al-Andalus, 800 years of Muslim rule in Spain that ended five centuries ago.

These people don't know where the video game ends and real life begins. Put them in the same room, and lock the door.

What Breivik is not is a "right-winger" in any conventional sense of the term. Calling this crackpot such puts him on a political spectrum occupied by people arguing about real things in the current century. Even "right-wing extremist" is pushing it. Once you place the likes of Breivik in the political debate, you distort the views of others concerned with similar-sounding issues.

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fharrop@projo.com

Copyright 2011, Creators Syndicate Inc.

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