[The
Orlando attack is already stirring debate on some of
the most visceral fault lines of American politics: terrorism and Islamophobia,
security and civil liberties, gun control and gay rights. But absent guns, those
issues also resonate across the world, especially in many developed countries
wrestling with how to maintain their freedoms in the face of violent attacks on
their values.]
By Jim Yardley
People held an American flag in rainbow colors on Monday in front of the United States Embassy in Credit Kacper Pempel/Reuters |
The
Orlando attack now ranks as the deadliest mass
shooting in United States history. And the horrific slaughter early
Sunday at a gay nightclub has a uniquely American component, again
demonstrating an easy access to assault weapons that stupefies much of the rest
of the world.
But
judging from the initial reaction, the attack in Florida resonated globally on Monday not as an
American anomaly, but because it felt so universal. Orlando now takes a place with Paris , Brussels , Beirut , Bamako , San Bernardino and other cities struck by different
incarnations of terrorism in recent years. Candles were once lit in their honor,
too.
The
Orlando attack is already stirring debate on some of
the most visceral fault lines of American politics: terrorism and Islamophobia,
security and civil liberties, gun control and gay rights. But absent guns, those
issues also resonate across the world, especially in many developed countries
wrestling with how to maintain their freedoms in the face of violent attacks on
their values.
In
an interconnected world, what seemed most relevant was what bound together the
satirists of Charlie Hebdo, the rock music fans at the Bataclan, the tourists
at the Brussels airport and the young people dancing early Sunday at the Pulse
nightclub in Orlando — not what divided them and their societies.
But
that connectedness also meant that Orlando quickly became politicized globally as well
as in the United
States .
One organization campaigning for Britain to leave the European Union in the June 23
national referendum posted a campaign message on Twitter that showed Islamic
State fighters warning of an “Orlando-style atrocity” if Britain remained in the European bloc. The group
deleted the message after the person who posted it was widely condemned.
For
many gays, lesbians and transgender people, the Orlando attack was a searing moment, highlighting
the continued threats they face from an ideologically varied array of sources even
as much of the world grows more inclusive about sexuality.
In
London , Owen Jones, a liberal columnist who is gay,
walked off the set of a Sky News program after arguing with the host on how the
Orlando attack should be defined. Mr. Jones argued
it was both a terrorist attack and an anti-gay hate crime, while the program’s
host sought to make a distinction between the two.
“This
guy, however he dresses up his bigotry and hatred, is someone who hates gays,”
Mr. Jones said of the killer. “If he went into a synagogue and killed innocent
Jewish people, as people have done, disgusting anti-Semitic terrorists, we’d
call it out for what it is.
Messages
on a sidewalk in London on Monday during a vigil in memory of the
victims of the attack in Orlando ,
Fla. Credit Dylan Martinez /Reuters
“This
was a homophobic hate crime as well as terrorism.”
The
day before the Orlando attack, thousands of people took part in gay
pride parades in Croatia and Poland amid concerns about rising right-wing
political trends. In Brazil , a spate of killings of gay and transgender
people has started an intense debate, with some Brazilians arguing that the
rising clout of evangelical Christian legislators is increasing intolerance in
the country.
“These
killings in Orlando were motivated by the most sordid homophobia,”
said Jean Wyllys, an openly gay congressman from Rio de Janeiro .
“This
could have happened to any of us, to me, to a friend, a work colleague, a
neighbor, a cousin. They could be dead if they had been in Orlando enjoying themselves at a club without
harming anyone else.”
Tel
Aviv’s City Hall was bathed in the colors of the rainbow and the American flag
on Sunday night. The town hall in Sydney , Australia , was lit in pink. In Britain , the cities of Blackpool and Liverpool said they would light local landmarks with
rainbow colors on Monday night in memory of the victims.
Even
so, the Orlando killings come as far-right political parties in Europe are
stoking anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim sentiments in a similar vein to Donald J. Trump,
the presumptive Republican presidential nominee in the United States. As Mr. Trump
quickly seized on the massacre to renew his call to view Muslim immigrants as a
threat, some politicians in the European right did the same.
“Uncontrolled
migration, forced resettlement, the inflow of crowds into European society who
not only cannot but do not want to integrate come with enormous dangers,” Mr. Kosa
told a plenary session of the Hungarian Parliament on Monday.
In
recent years, as Europe has struggled to respond to Islamist
terrorism, security in the United States was regarded as more efficient and better
organized. Europe ’s national security agencies were poorly
coordinated and blamed for failing to root out cells of homegrown Islamist
terrorists, especially in France and Belgium .
Now,
after the attacks in Orlando and San Bernardino , Calif. , the United States also seems likely to confront difficult
questions about the government’s ability to track and stop determined killers, especially
those who operate largely on their own, drawing inspiration but not practical
support from groups like the Islamic State. The questions are likely to be
especially pointed for the F.B.I., given that it had twice investigated the Orlando killer, Omar Mateen, for possible terrorist
ties.
For
years, America ’s liberal gun laws, and the unwillingness of
Congress to change them, have mystified people in many other countries.
In
Japan , the American gun issue is treated as a
bizarre aberration, and much of the news media coverage of the Orlando killings focused on the terrorism angle. Only
one person was killed by a gun last year in Japan , according to the National Police Agency, and
there were only eight reported incidents of a gun being fired.
In
China , news of the Orlando shooting came only hours after a man set off
primitive explosives in the check-in area at an airport in Shanghai . Four people were slightly injured, showing
the gulf between the two countries in the lethality of the weapons available to
the public. In China , where ordinary citizens have no access to
firearms, the weapon of choice is often a large kitchen knife.
More
than 300,000 Chinese students are studying at American universities, and the Orlando shooting brought on new concerns from
Chinese parents. Gao Junlan, a lawyer from southwestern China ’s Sichuan Province , was concerned about her daughter, a third-year
chemistry student at the University of Minnesota . Her daughter was at the Shanghai airport when the explosives were detonated
there, waiting to catch a flight to the United States .
“I
think the American government should tighten its gun control,” Ms. Gao said by
telephone. “Yes, it is a free society for people with all religions and beliefs,
but not everyone is capable of controlling their behavior, and the government’s
lax regulation is making killing a lot easier.”