The
Free Congress Commentary
McVeigh’s Ultimate Defeat
By
Paul M. Weyrich
June 12, 2001
As
Timothy McVeigh went to meet his maker he said he was bloodied
but unbowed. In his mind he was a prisoner of war who died for
a noble cause. He was justly angry about what the federal
government did to innocent women and children at WACO. So he
decided it was up to him to strike back. He picked the
federal building in Oklahoma City because it was a
command post of sorts for the federal government out West.
Whether
he acted more or less alone, with some assist from Terry
Nichols, is now something we will never really know for sure.
Conspiracy theorists will insist forever that he could not
have carried out that extensive of a bombing operation without
involving many other people. Some believe the government
itself, knowing what McVeigh was up to, assisted in the
operation in order to make the carnage worse. If that were the
case, it would be a massive conspiracy which after six years
would be awfully hard to cover up.
There
are those on the far right who still justify what McVeigh did.
Not that they approve of the deaths of the innocent children
at the day care center. But they insist that the federal
government has waged war on its own citizens at WACO and Ruby
Ridge and once having embarked down that path the federal
government should have understood it would pay a steep price
for what was done there.
The
problem is that the people who paid the price had nothing to
do with WACO and Ruby Ridge. They were innocent by-standers
who got caught up in a war over which they had no control or
authority.
The
terrible damage McVeigh did went beyond the l63 who died and
the hundreds who were injured because he determined he would
seek revenge.
Beyond
the horror and carnage inflicted on Oklahoma City, McVeigh did
great damage to the movement he professed to be a part of. The
anti-government mood was really gaining strength in the
country. The l994 elections swept into office some of the most
determined reformers ever in modern times. These reformers
were just beginning to flex their muscles is the l04th
Congress and they had the public behind them when the bombing
occurred. That bombing completely tore the heart out of the
anti-government movement in the country. It enabled President
Clinton, who had been on the ropes, to make a come back. It
put the forces of less government completely on the defensive
lest somehow they be linked to Oklahoma City.
The
anti-government forces have never regained the momentum they
had before the bombing occurred. Only God knows how far things
might have gone had this man-made act of vengeance not
interfered with the political forces which had been building
for years.
McVeigh
may have thought he was getting even for his side. In fact, he
ended up setting his cause back so far that it may never ever
recover again. It is not for nothing that Scripture says
"Vengeance is mine, sayeth the Lord". McVeigh may
think he went to his grave unbowed but in fact he was
defeated, having been the principal reason the forces of less
government have lost the greatest war of the 20th Century and
have yet to regroup for the 2lst Century. They say he was
bright. Yet it is clear he never understood any of this.
Paul
Weyrich is president of the Free
Congress Foundation.