Making a tough call on Christmas
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JOSEPH N. BELL
A funny thing happened on our way to Paris on Christmas Day. We
didn’t go.
Our bags were packed and stacked beside the front door. Our
wallets were bulging with Euros. And our hearts were settled around a
fireplace in Provence, sharing a glass of wine and good talk with our
dear friends who live there.
That’s when we heard the first report on television that Air
France was canceling a group of flights to and from Los Angeles
because they were targeted for skyjacking by Al Qaeda. One of the
flight numbers was ours.
There was no point in being angry with the Air France agent I
finally got through to on the phone, but I suspect I was. He
confirmed the cancellation and said the earliest they could get us
out of Los Angeles on Air France was three days later. Maybe. And
other options were even worse. And so we agonized against a backdrop
of ominous warnings on the news and finally, reluctantly, painfully
let go of the trip we’d been so looking forward to for several
months.
As we huddled morosely around the TV set, listening to a cacophony
of reports feeding the speculation that the terrorists who engineered
the destruction on Sept. 11, 2001, were planning a repeat performance
over the Christmas holidays, our decision to abandon the trip seemed
the only rational option left to us.
We were committed to our return date, which would have left us
ridiculously little time in France, much of it in a state of
exhaustion. Then, there was no certainty that the new flight we were
offered or the return flight already booked would operate on schedule
-- or at all. And the Los Angeles airport was a zoo, requiring
several extra hours to negotiate the roadblocks there to be certain
of making a scheduled flight.
But the most important deterrent for me was a look at the odds.
Since I started playing poker for pennies in the seventh grade, I’ve
been conscious of odds. I don’t believe in determinism in human
affairs.
Being in the wrong place at the wrong time is cosmic rotten luck.
But bucking substantial odds unnecessarily is bad judgment. And the
odds against flying abroad over the Christmas holidays grew
appreciably larger with every new warning from the people charged
with our security.
I hold a lot of reservations about the accuracy of our
intelligence. This is the same bunch who brushed off early signals of
what was to happen on Sept. 11, 2001, and then told us that Iraq was
loaded with weapons of mass destruction and Saddam Hussein was in bed
with Al Qaeda. Some of the evidence for the security warnings
described in the news over the holidays struck me as reaching into
the stratosphere -- especially checking the names on flight manifests
to see if any of them rang an Al Qaeda bell.
These terrorists may be consummately evil, but they aren’t stupid
enough to use recognizable names on a passenger list. As a result, a
lot of people with Arabic names traveling to visit their families
spent a lot of hours in airport interrogation rooms.
But these are excessive times, subject to excessive measures. The
problem is deciding when the measures are so excessive that they
serve the interests of the terrorists by eating away unnecessarily at
our personal freedoms, which are our greatest strengths.
We’ll probably never know if these holiday fears were real or if
the terrorists were floating them to muck up our Christmas. All I
know for sure is that the people in charge of such matters in both
France and the U.S. decided the threats were real enough to cancel
our flight -- and, thereby, our trip.
That gave me a lot of time to think on these matters, especially
on Christmas Eve, when I was helping fill bags of sand to hold the
luminarias with which we greet Christmas visitors to our
neighborhood. It occurred to me as I did this mindless work that the
passengers who were killed on the four flights on that fateful
September day and those who lost their lives in the Twin Towers were
likely engaged in similar menial tasks the day before with no
foreboding of what was to happen to them. That reflection gave the
warnings that accompanied the cancellation of our flight a special
urgency. If the people who died had been warned, most of them would
probably be alive today. Thus for us to ignore the warnings we were
receiving seemed a bad reading of the odds.
But we couldn’t sit home and brood about what we were missing, so
we took another trip, a car trip, with good friends Joe and Mary
Robinson of Newport Beach, who were going to accompany us to France.
We drove to San Francisco and the Napa Valley wine country and had a
fine time once we let go of France. The wind and driving rain we
encountered felt benign against the daily newspaper reports about
more canceled flights and chaotic airports. And we got to watch the
Rose Bowl game, which is about the only thing I would have missed in
France.
In retrospect, now that it has touched me directly, I have a great
deal more awareness that a small group of determined terrorists with
a contempt for human life -- including their own -- can dictate the
terms of the way we live and force us to adjust to them. As the
British transport secretary told a Los Angeles Times reporter, “I
think the threat we now face is likely to endure for many years.”
So we have to learn how to deal with it. Anger and increasingly
restrictive security aren’t nearly enough. We also need to identify
root causes and address them in equal partnership with the other
nations of our world threatened by terrorists. The events of the past
few weeks should make it clear to us that fighting terrorism, not
preemptive wars, are where our national focus belongs, and we must
return there as soon as possible. Working in concert with other
threatened nations, we may well be able to isolate the terrorists to
the point where they have nowhere to turn for haven or support.
Meanwhile, we can try to reduce the odds in our own thinking that
allow fear to dictate our travel decisions. I like the passenger
interviewed at LAX during the holidays who said, “I travel quite a
bit, and I refuse to be terrorized by it. There’s nothing I’m going
to change unless there’s a clear and present danger to me or my
family.”
On Christmas Day on Air France, that was the decision we faced.
Maybe we should have toughed it out, but the odds suggested
otherwise. Next time will be a whole new ball game.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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