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Friday, May 9, 2014

The Moral and Practical Failures of Libertarianism and Small Government Conservatism

By that measure, Somalia should be the wealthiest nation on the planet and Sweden the poorest.


by AL CARROLL
In economics, both orthodox Communism and Libertarianism are equally wrong, callous, and dangerous examples of ideological blindness, a set of principles taken to an extreme that caused many people to die. Both are more alike than either set of fanatics (as both set of true believers are) would want to admit. Both fall back on the same defense of “there has never been a true or pure form”of their system. Both systems clearly failed. Communism only lasted 70 years in the first nation to have it, and killed tens of millions with purely man made famines and extreme repression. Libertarianism and its influence on US conservatism takes the greatest share of blame for extreme economic inequality, the Great Recession, and most financial elite crime waves of the past 30 years.
The question then becomes, to what degree should there be a mixed system? The slogans of libertarians and many conservatives that “government is the problem” or “regulation doesn’t work” are easily proven wrong, and fairly foolish falsehoods. This article argues some basic humanitarian principles should be applied to economics and the human and humane spheres or politics, ones so obvious it seems absurd to have to make them explicit:
1. Helping people obviously helps people more than not helping them.
2. Watching out for and preventing or stopping abuse and harm is obviously better than not watching and not stopping abuse and harm, or even refusing to look and denying harm exists.
3. Generosity and selflessness are obviously better than stinginess and selfishness,
4. Democratic control obviously is better than elite control.
And yet, in a nation that prides itself on democracy and equality, one finds many defenders of elitism and inequality among some conservatives, most libertarians, and especially objectivists. In a capitalist nation, one that often worships economic success above morality, one can find religious defenses of amorality going back pretty far.
The overturning or limiting of anti poverty, banking, public health, environmental, labor, and safety laws since the 1980s and the blocking of gun control, done for conservative ideological reasons or to benefit large corporations, resulted in huge losses of American lives. Those presidents partly responsible include not only Reagan, Bush Sr., and GW Bush, but also Clinton.
The body count from anti government dogma far exceeds all wars in American history:
Up to 875,000 preventable deaths per year, or over one third of all deaths in the US.
At least 26,000 preventable deaths from poor healthcare or lack of healthcare each year.
A heavily disputed number of preventable deaths from lack of effective gun control includes both murders and a far higher number of gun suicides. The number of deaths prevented by guns is much smaller, and exaggerated by industry lobbyists by as much as a hundredfold. Part of the reason for disputes about how many lives may be saved by gun control is the NRA successfully blocks government health research on firearms deaths.
An unknown number of earlier deaths from increased poverty because of financial deregulation, causing the Great Recession of 2007-2012, thedot.com collapse of the 1990s, the savings and loan scandal of the 1980s, and the housing market collapse, the banking and mortgage crisis, the insurance industry crisis, and the Worldcom and Enron scandals in the 2000s.
The country’s turn to the right is often blamed, but this is too broad a claim. There are many cases of conservative support for government regulation of personal freedom. Some conservatives favor regulation of everything people do below the waist, except with the money in their wallet.
Corporations pushing for deregulation for their own profit or from ideological blindness that imagine regulation costs profits is often blamed. But the US is almost unique in this mindset among business elites. Most nations have corporate elites that accept government roles, often working with them as partners. In every other nation except for Britain, modern industry was developed by the government. It’s worth noting, most of the more successful economies today are mixed.
The National Rifle Association, which does not represent most gun owners, or even their own membership, is often blamed for blocking efforts to prevent gun deaths. Most NRA members favor background checks and bans on assault weapons. The NRA actually represents gun manufacturers, and thus promotes conspiracy theories about gun confiscation that do not exist. These theories sell more guns to the paranoid and the gullible. But still, the NRA’s hostility is only part of the Libertarian mindset, and is relatively recent. The younger readers might be surprised to know that the NRA did not get involved in politics until the 1970s, and into the late 80s endorsed some forms of gun control.
Libertarians and especially the Ayn Rand cult of Objectivism rightly should get most of the blame for small government ideology’s influence. Except for the Federal Reserve, neither group had much influence until after the 2008 elections, when they were promoted by Republican leadership. Both groups prove to be enormously self destructive for conservatism because of their uncompromising ideological blindness, fighting within the Republican Party as much as against their political opponents.
Calvinism and its belief in predestination may be the ultimate reason for small government ideology’s success in the US. America was colonized predominantly by Protestants, many of them believers in predestination. Predestination divides humanity into saints and sinners, those destined to go to heaven and those bound for hell. How does one tell the saints from the sinners? The saints have money. Sinners are poor because of their sin. Seriously, this is what some churches taught, and one can see variations of this belief today every time there is a rant scapegoating those on welfare. A belief that equates wealth with “natural virtue” and poverty with sin inevitably fails  to punish the wealthy for their crimes, and leads to a culture of lawlessness among financial elites.
Besides Calvinism’s corrosive influence, there were men like William Graham Sumner, who proclaimed, “A drunkard in the gutter is where he ought to be.” Some churches began preaching prosperity theology in the twentieth century, turning Christian belief on its head. The Cold War and hysteria over Communism showed US elites completely misreading the level of threat it actually posed. From American Indians to early Mormons to socialists to hippies, American elites have always demonized anyone who does not worship at the altar of wealth.
Ayn Rand was probably the most extreme example of sociopathic belief when it comes to the worship of wealth. A refugee from Communism and a self hating Jew named Alisa Rosenbaum, Rand wrote several bloated novels that enamored a small but devoted cult, and literally no one else. A pop philosopher who had no effect on the philosophy field, and an awful novelist who had no admirers in literary circles, Rand’s appeal is to very sheltered well off individuals with a fantasy image of themselves as persecuted.
The simplest way to describe her sociopathy is to describe her novels. Her hero was a rapist and terrorist who bombed public housing, made painfully bad 30 page speeches, demonized all religion and compassion, and deluded himself into thinking society would collapse without elites. Rand gloried over the mass of humanity starving until they, from her point of view, “learned their lesson” and sunk back into subservience, recognizing they existed only to serve elites.
The strongest criticism one can make of the more libertarian version of conservatism is quite simply, it is un-Christian. Rand was just the most extreme example of that, even influencing the Satanic Church. Some conservative followers abandon Christian beliefs for conservatism. Conservative Christians, as their self chosen label indicates, put conservatism before Christianity. They are CINOs, or Christians In Name Only. For who would Jesus let go hungry? Who would Jesus let die from lack of healthcare? How many would Jesus let be shot in bar brawls or school shootings?
The most malignant form of conservatives do stand proudly for literally letting people die on the street. They insist the mythical “free market” is absolute, arguing against all evidence that neither regulation nor government can ever work. Some critics have recently taken to calling them anarchists as an insult. But anarchists are populists, not elitists. A more accurate label is free market fundamentalists, for the market is certainly their religion far more than any church.
Their belief comes from faith, not evidence. To claim regulation never works? Which one, of the many? The clearest evidence of some regulation working is as obvious as the traffic light keeping you from being hit by another car, or the airplane you fly in not crashing because of air traffic controllers. To claim government never works? All of it? The clearest evidence of a government somewhat working is that it has not been replaced or collapsed.
Regulation can easily be largely trivial in the supposed harm it causes, deregulation often inherently destructive. Regulation can be either good or bad depending on how structured, but demonization of the term is simply a ruse to get the public to hate government, which in practical terms means the public is being taught to hate democracy, and thus distrust themselves. Such a practice serves elite needs, for it means the public will either stop caring about democracy, or distrust those who care.
Deregulation can often kill, lead to greater poverty and hardship, lead to higher death rates from preventable disease, crime, preventable deaths from workplace accidents, higher child death rates, and  earlier deaths for senior citizens. Here is where ideology must confront reality. So called “dependence on government” may be argued to be morally right, or harmful. But to call it “dependence” is itself a twisting of reality. We all depend on government for a wide range of things, from police to hospitals to fire protection to retirement to defense against (largely imaginary) foreign invasions. Interdependence is a good thing, for it binds a society together. What libertarians imagine is independence is isolation.
Only the most fanatically libertarians would claim we would be better off with private fire departments for example, especially since we know from bitter experience in the past they were incredibly incompetent and corrupt. Even libertarian icon Milton Friedman did not call for a privatized military, and we also know from bitter experience how poorly mercenaries worked in Iraq. To falsely claim that “dependence on government” is a bad thing, one has to  pretend that in a democracy the mass of ordinary people are separate from their government when they are one and the same.
A look at the realities not blinded by politics shows that fiscal austerity often kills. A supposedly freer society, one without a social safety net, clearly leads to many more deaths. A libertarian or conservative may argue that such freedom is desirable. But they also need to be able to defend their own moral callousness in defending sending the most vulnerable to early deaths.
Poverty is the most reliable predictor of early death. Even conservatives and libertarians are fond of pointing this out. However, based on their ideology, they assume deregulation leads to greater prosperity economically. By that measure, Somalia should be the wealthiest nation on the planet and Sweden the poorest. But this is virtually the opposite of reality.
Poverty rates can and have been dramatically reduced by governments. The War on Poverty dramatically reduced poverty under Johnson and Nixon, and other regulations saved many by making the air and water cleaner. Every country in Scandinavia has little poverty precisely because of government intervention. The Bolivarian nations of Latin America also have a record where poverty has been cut by more than half and extreme poverty by even more. We also know that government healthcare does work, has worked in every nation that has it better than capitalism possibly could. It is just a shame that instead so far all we have is corporate welfare for insurance companies, a plan designed by conservative Republicans.
Government intervention also stops financial crashes. Canada has never had a banking crash, compared to the US, which had sixteen financial collapses. Even within the US, one can point to North Dakota. North Dakota has a state run bank, which free market fundamentalists would no doubt label, somewhat correctly, socialist. The state bank began during the Great Depression, and the state can claim its bank as a reason they did far better than the rest of the US during the Great Recession. It is also important to note, very few credit unions failed, while many for profit banks did.
Yet even the blindness on limiting the everyday brutalities of capitalism cannot compare to the blindness and lack of understanding on the history of firearms in US history. There are perfectly valid reasons for gun ownership, such as hunting. Even self-defense can be a valid argument, but not for blind unthinking gun worship. Guns rights defenders should not argue from ignorance of the cause they believe in, or from irrational conspiracy theories. No one, virtually no major organization or political leader seeks to ban all guns. Gun groups have put their cause in the bizarre situation of even defending wife beaters’ alleged “right” to have a gun. Such an approach will backfire, leading to stricter regulation down the line.
What role did presidents play in deregulation, in letting each of these series of laws loosen and large numbers of deaths result? Which were the most ideologically blind? The list of blame includes both parties:
Reagan spent most of his career, for almost 30 years before he became president, as a corporate shill for deregulation. When his movie career died, he was a spokesman for General Electric. In the 1960s he gave a series of notorious speeches as a shill for the American Medical Association, claiming if Medicare became law, Americans would tell their children “what it once was like in America when men were free.” For welfare, Reagan invented two notorious race baiting lies. The first was a Black “welfare queen” who supposedly lived in luxury stealing hundreds of thousands. The woman actually stole $8,000. The second was a speech about “young bucks” (a derogatory term for young Blacks) buying steaks on welfare.
Reagan ended the successful War on Poverty programs of both Johnson and Nixon. He cut taxes for the very wealthy. The greater inequality we have today, at its most unequal since the Great Depression, began under Reagan. He gutted financial regulation, leading directly to the Savings and Loan Scandal that cost $160 billion.
Reagan and Bush Sr. both practiced high deficit spending deliberately. The anti poverty programs were too popular to entirely end, and both wanted both low taxes on wealthy elites and the highest defense spending seen since World War II. Deficit spending was a tactic to limit anti poverty programs. The end of the Cold War brought a slightly smaller military, but not a smaller deficit.
Clinton was every bit as much a conservative on economic issues as Reagan and Bush.  Clinton’s deregulation led directly to the Great Recession and financial scandals of the 2000s. He repealed Glass-Steagal, an act that had regulated banks since the Great Depression. He signed other laws that allowed credit default swaps and gave banks looser rules in lending to low income areas. Clinton also took a leading role in cutting public assistance, adding to human misery.
GW Bush pulled FBI agents off investigating insider trading and financial fraud in order to track down terrorists’ financial networks. Wanting to do the latter is certainly understandable and the right thing to do, except that in his own words, he did not care about tracking down Bin Laden.
Under Obama, there has been more of a mixed picture. Unlike Roosevelt, Obama did not jail or even try to charge lawless financial elites. Both GW Bush and Obama bailed out banks, insurance companies, and in Obama’s case, also the auto industry. The many Americans who lost their homes or most of their home’s value were not bailed out, though some got limited help. (Racists such as Rush Limbaugh chose to blame the victims, mostly minority and lower income.) Obama did provide some relief for student loans, did get the tax rate raised slightly for the wealthiest, and at this writing is trying to raise the minimum wage. But none of the underlying problems with the financial system were solved. There is no reason another crash may not happen again five to fifteen years from now.
The biggest change recently is that, thanks to the Occupy movement, the public recognizes inequality. The public realizes elites are preaching class warfare of the well off against everyone else. Mitt Romney, running for president in 2012, notoriously said, “There are 47 percent…dependent upon government, who believe that they are victims, who believe the government has a responsibility to care for them….My job is not to worry about those people.” (Bolding is mine.) The comment, recorded at a secretive meeting of financial elites, likely cost him the election, as it should have.
It is difficult to think of a more un-Christian sentiment, to boldly proclaim you are not your brother’s keeper and hold the poorer half of the nation in contempt. That is the ultimate moral argument against Libertarianism. “What would Jesus do?” says the popular evangelical slogan. Jesus would never have been a libertarian, nor preached small government or free market fundamentalism.
Al Carroll is Assistant Professor of History at Northern Virginia Community College, a former Fulbright Scholar, and the author of Presidents’ Body Counts: The Twelve Worst and Four Best American Presidents Based on How Many Lived or Died Because of Their Actions. More information is at http://alcarroll.com.

Police nab member of Somalia terror group



Bukit Aman Special Branch Counter Terrorism Unit officers detaining the 34-year-old Somalian man, believed to be a member of Al-Shabaab terrorist group.
BY FARIK ZOLKEPLI

KUALA LUMPUR: Members of a Somalian terrorist group known as Al-Shabaab have been entering Malaysia pretending to be private college students and tourists.
The Bukit Aman Special Branch Counter Terrorism Unit has been tracking six Al-Shabaab members who entered the country in the past few weeks, according to sources.
They said the group planned to set up a base in Malaysia to hide their members from the authorities.
Some of the members had left the country but police were monitoring those still here, the sources said.
They added that Al-Shabaab had no links with the militants arrested in Selangor and Kedah recently.
Police achieved a breakthrough when they arrested a 34-year-old Somalian man, wanted by Interpol for alleged terror links, in Selangor yesterday.
“More arrests are expected soon. The police have to act fast before this terrorist group gains a foothold in the country,” one source said.
Deputy Inspector-General of Police Datuk Seri Mohd Bakri Zinin said the man, who was detained at about 4pm, was believed to be involved with the Al-Shabaab terrorist faction.
“He was previously charged with being involved in terror activities in East Africa and was listed in Interpol’s Red Notice (meaning he is being sought to be extradited to his country of origin).
“We are investigating his activities in Malaysia to uncover Al-Shabaab’s network whose members might be hiding or planning action that can threaten the country’s safety,” he said in a statement.
The man is being investigated under the Security Offences (Special Measures) Act 2012.
It is learned that police are still searching for a weapon cache the man may have.
According to the US National Counter Terrorism Centre (http://www.nctc.gov/site/groups/al_shabaab.html), the Harakat Shabaab al-Mujahidin – commonly known as Al-Shabaab – is the militant wing of the Somali Council of Islamic Courts that took over most of southern Somalia in the second half of 2006.
Despite the group’s defeat by Somali and Ethiopian forces in 2007, Al-Shabaab – which is clan-based – has continued its violent insurgency in southern and central Somalia.
The group has exerted temporary and, at times, sustained control over strategic locations in those areas, using guerilla warfare and terrorist tactics.
Source: thestar.com.my

Thursday, May 8, 2014

US Congressman welcomes California vote supporting Karabakh independence




US House of Representatives member Adam Schiff welcomed Monday’s vote by the California State Assembly Rules Committee, which approved a resolution supporting Nagorno-Karabakh Republic’s (NKR), or Artsakh’s, right to self-determination and independence, Asbarez reported.

“I have long supported a right of self-determination for the people of Nagorno-Karabakh and applaud the State Assembly Rules Committee for its passage of a resolution affirming the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“I welcome the expression of support for the right of the people of Artsakh to choose their own destiny, independent from Azeri coercion, and urge the Assembly to pass the resolution without delay,” said Schiff in a statement.

As reported earlier, the California State Assembly Rules Committee on Monday cast a historic vote supporting and encouraging Artsakh’s continuing efforts to develop as a free and independent nation, and urging the President and Congress of the United States to support the self-determination and democratic independence of the Nagorno-KarabakhRepublic.

As a result, California may join the US States of Rhode Island, Maine, Massachusetts, and Louisiana, which already have recognized Nagorno-Karabakh’s independence.

Africa Should Not Follow China's Model, Beijing's Ambassador Says




Pete Guest, Contributor

“I travelled to African countries 30 years ago, and I can see the difference,” says Zhong Jianhua, the special representative of the Chinese government in Africa. “Thirty years ago, you went to an African market and you’d see what they produce is what they’d brought from the village, brought from the fields or brought from the sea. Nothing was industrialized or produced in factories at all.”

Zhong is China’s top diplomat in Africa, responsible for everything from its mediation efforts in conflicts in Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, through to its expanding commercial relationships with emerging powerhouses, such as Nigeria. Africa, he says, should not look to copy China’s development, but instead find their own routes out of poverty.
Today, market stalls across sub-Saharan Africa are laden with manufactured goods. Most of it, though, is stamped “Made in China”. Sino-African trade and investment is now worth around $200 billion. In the most part, unrefined commodities leave Africa for China, manufactured goods come back. This structure mirrors that of the old colonial powers’ relationship with the continent, creating a dependence on raw exports, preventing industrialization and cementing a reliance on expensive imports.
2013_EXPERT_CONSULTATION_Zhong_JianhuaZhong Jianhua (Photo credit: Africa Progress Panel)
China expects to redress this balance, Zhong says. Investments in export processing zones, vehicle assembly plants and textile factories make up the next wave of Chinese commercial expansion. Higher wages, an ageing population and a desire in Beijing to reorient the export-driven economy to one based on domestic consumption are driving a search for new emerging markets by China’s corporates.
“Whether you have a government policy or not, they don’t listen to you,” Zhong admits. “They go after profit, not government policy. Of course we encourage it.
Just as China benefitted from offshoring following its economic liberalization under Deng Xiaoping, Africa is profiting from the development of the Chinese economy.
“The other Asian economies, like Singapore, Japan, they shifted some industry into China. Now it’s our opportunity to shift some industry into Africa and to create this huge market. More than one billion people,” Zhong says.
“When they want to have a better house, that means the materials for building becomes a huge market. When they want to buy a car, that means that automobiles are a huge market. People here want to improve their lives, for us, it’s a huge demand.
The Chinese premier Li Keqiang toured the continent in May, following the president, Xi Xinping, who came last year. Both promised billions in fresh lending and investment as Beijing keeps up more than a decade of concerted diplomatic and commercial courtship of sub-Saharan Africa.
Although, as Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton made several visible attempts to reignite American interest in Africa, the Obama administration has been accused of continuing the Bush government’s focus on the humanitarian and security aspects of its relationship with the continent. Support for the French intervention in Mali and the Ugandan army’s hunt for the Lords Resistance Army, as well as the overt backing of the African Union’s military push in Somalia, has left America looking like the policeman to China’s banker.
Commercial programs are underway. The multi-billion dollar “Power Africa” initiative, which uses US development finance to backstop investments by American corporates into electrification, is a direct challenge to the US corporate sector to compete in Africa.
Japan has been ramping up its interests in the continent. Prime MinisterShinzo Abe made his first official visit to Africa in 2014, having announced $32 billion in public and private sector lending and investment the previous year. India’s diplomatic approach has often been incoherent and lacking in an obvious strategy, but the country’s businesses and Diaspora are expanding across multiple countries and sectors. Brazil, like China, has peddled a narrative of shared development as it invests in the mining and agriculture sectors.
After the proxy battles that were fought in Africa during the Cold War, many African scholars and politicians are understandably wary of the idea of competition between global powers in their backyard. However, the rapid development of the Chinese economy and its state-led, market-oriented model has given policymakers a compelling alternative to the free market ideologies of the Washington Consensus.
Zhong says that the Chinese economy has been built on a desire to improve the livelihood of the country’s people—a practical approach to achieving results, rather than an ideology.
“We are Chinese,” he says. “This means we follow Deng Xiaoping’s doctrine. His philosophy is that it doesn’t matter if the cat is white or black, as long as it catches a mouse. When we began our reform, we didn’t even know what the model was. We created the things that were good for the Chinese.”
Attempts to copy the Chinese model in Africa are “doomed to fail”, he says. “We know that each country’s model has to be unique, with its own traditions and cultures and ways of living. It can only solve its only problems its own way. If you only try to copy the Chinese model, you will not be successful.”
Zhong is also quick to head off talk that China sees its interests in Africa as competitive with other powers—even though its representatives have, in the recent past, talked tough over moves by Japan to expand its influence in the continent.
When Abe’s visited Ethiopia, Xie Xiaoyan, the Chinese ambassador to the African Union, called the Japanese prime minister “the biggest troublemaker in Asia”, and said that Japan’s activities in Africa to be part of a strategy to contain China’s expansion.
Zhong is more conciliatory. “There is, whether you’re willing or not, some kind of competition. But you must bear in mind: This is Africa. You are Chinese, he is American. You do not come here to compete in somebody else’s house. Who are you? You are the guest,” he says.
“If you are welcomed by the host, good luck. If you are not welcomed by the host, bad luck. But there is no room for two guests to fight each other in somebody else’s house.”
Source: forbes.com

Experts Warn More European Muslim Youth Are Radicalizing




In Europe, a PBS
BY: ABIGAIL R. ESMAN
So violent, so bloodthirsty, is the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), a Syria-based jihadist group, that even al-Qaida will have nothing to do with them.
But young European Muslims will – and do.
Earlier this month, German authorities arrested two men, one Turkish and one German, on suspicion that they were connected to ISIL, also known as ISIS. A woman with German-Polish dual-nationality was also arrested for allegedly paying €4,800 to ISIL to facilitate their work. According to Die Welte, police also searched the homes of several other Germans believed to have joined or be planning to join the terrorist group.
On Wednesday, Dutch authorities reported that two men with Netherlands passports had committed suicide attacks in recent weeks – one in Iraq, the other in Syria. A third Dutch Muslim was caught by the Syrian Secret Service reportedly carrying Sarin gas.
They are not alone. Among Western Muslims who have gone to Syria to fight, roughly two-thirds have joined ISIL or the al-Qaida-affiliated Al Nusra Front, according to a report by the International Centre for the Study of Radicalization in London. In fact, Al-Monitor estimates that "European jihadists in Syria are more numerous than official statistics indicate. Indeed, they point to the existence of entire French-speaking and German-speaking brigades in the Aleppo region." Others, like the Dutch suicide bombers, venture elsewhere – mostly to Somalia and Iraq.
More are likely to follow: throughout Europe, officials are again sounding alarms about radicalization among Muslim youth. As has long been the case, many of them are radicalizing through the Internet, thanks to various extremist web sites and YouTube videos, several featuring U.S. and European preachers. Others are being led by imams at their local mosques, and, in the UK, by schools.
In the Netherlands, for instance, a February report from the office of the National Coordinator for Counter-Terrorism and Security reaffirmed the country's "high-risk" status, largely a result of Dutch Muslims returning from the Syrian front. Many of these youths – men and, increasingly, women – have taken on a recruiting role on jihadist forum online, and have become emboldened in their public statements and activities, including public statements of support for the ISIL and al-Nusra. Moreover, noted the report, a Dutch-language jihadist manifesto appeared online in October, titled "De Banier" ("The Banner") which "brings the ideas of a global jihad directly into the spotlights for the Dutch-speaking public. The booklet provides a strongly anti-Western pamphlet, and can be used as an instrument to support the jihadist narrative."
In addition, Carmen Becker of Radboud University in the Netherlands has found that many Dutch imams promote Salafism – a fundamentalist strain of Islam which seeks a return to the Caliphate and the strictest forms of the religion. In Europe, a PBS "Frontline" report notes, Salafism, which rejects Western notions of a separation between church and state, has also become nearly synonymous with violent jihad, as its practitioners encourage violence and terrorism in order to achieve their objectives.
Deepening the problem is the fact that Europe's Salafists and other pro-jihadist Muslims, especially youth, attempt to "intimidate" those within the Muslim community who speak against joining the Syrian rebels, the Dutch National Coordinator for Counterterrorism and Security report said. The situation has become so incendiary that debates on Islam and democracy or the situation in Syria "are practically impossible" without security present.
The Dutch counterterrorism office estimates that there are around 3,000 Salafist youth in the Netherlands; but University of Amsterdam researcher Ineke Roux, takes a more ominous view, describing about 80,000 as "susceptible."
Most of these are second- and third-generation boys – young men born and raised in the Netherlands who therefore should, theoretically, hold Dutch – Western – values. That they do not, and that their numbers are increasing, has national security officials deeply worried.
Similar numbers can be found across the EU. In 2013, France counted about 13,000 Salafists in its Muslim population, Germany around 4,500. And in the UK, the numbers are growing by the day.
For jihadi recruiters and those working to spread the Salafist and other extremist messages, the war in Syria provides a perfect narrative, the connection they exploit to reach out to and radicalize Western Muslim youth even in their homelands – whether they actually go fight or not.
Much of that recruiting is done on the Internet. As Dutch national daily Trouw noted in a discussion of Carmen Becker's research:
"Who tells them what pure Islam [Salafism] looks like? And how you should incorporate these things into your life? The questions are heavily discussed in fora and chat-rooms, and the youths listen to young Dutch imams, some of them converts, who give sermons and lectures online. 'During the sessions they are warm and friendly; they give their mobile phone numbers and answer question patiently,' [Carmen] Becker says."
According to Trouw, the discussions center on how to live in a Western society as a "pure" Muslim, including such questions as "how can we establish Sharia in the West?"
But the Internet is not the only source. New tools also appear to be emerging, such as an alleged plot described by the Guardian as aiming to "'overthrow' teachers and governors in secular state schools in the city and run them on strict Islamic principles." The allegations come as the result of the discovery early in March of the so-called "Operation Trojan Horse" dossier, which the Guardian says "offers a five-step plan to take over schools in communities with large Muslim populations with the help of what it calls 'hardline' parents who follow the strict Salafi branch of Islam." More than 25 schools are said to be involved.
Though some have called the Salafist-led "Operation Trojan Horse" a hoax, most believe the situation is quite real – and evidence of a deeper problem. As Charles Moore pointed out in the Telegraph, "The schools in question are mainstream, secular, taxpayer-funded state schools, but even asking about them provokes outrage. It is alleged, for instance, that at Park View, speeches in favour of the now-dead al-Qaeda ideologue of terrorism, Anwar al-Awlaki, have been made. Yet there is tremendous institutional resistance to investigating."
It is striking that these events come in the wake of recent efforts to clamp down on homeschooling in the UK, after evidence emerged that many Muslim children were being radicalized at home. That discovery last month led London Mayor Boris Johnson to describe radicalization as "a form of child abuse," and to call for the children of radical Muslims to be placed in State care.
While perhaps not an ideal suggestion, the proposal highlights the challenges that Europe's lawmakers now face: as the threats and means of radicalization in the West become clearer, solutions remain elusive. In the Netherlands, for instance, youth considered likely to travel to Syria have had their requests for passports (or passport renewals) denied.
But the truth is that it's easy enough to enter Turkey (and from there, cross into Syria) with a standard European ID card, and many of these youth have Turkish or Moroccan passports, anyway.
Other proposed solutions have obviously been equally unsuccessful. As long ago as 2005, author Gilles Keppel told "Frontline":
"They are against European democracy. They would rather build citadels of jihad within Europe out of which to reach out not only to the young, deprived people of Muslim descent who live in European suburbs, but also to reach out to what is happening in the Middle East. And this is the major battle."
It is, it seems, a battle we will continue fighting for a long time to come. (IPT News)
Abigail R. Esman, the author, most recently, of Radical State: How Jihad Is Winning Over Democracy in the West (Praeger, 2010), is a freelance writer based in New York and the Netherlands.
Source: jewishvoiceny.com

Imam Pushing to Sanitize 9/11 Museum's Al-Qaida Film Slurs Jews





by STEVE EMERSON

A Muslim religious leader who helped spearhead a push to get the National September 11 Memorial Museum to censor references to Islam in a short film about al-Qaida has said Jews "killed the Prophets and Messengers" and are a "cancer ... in every generation as they get in power."

Mustafa Elazabawy, imam at Masjid Manhattan, made the remarks in a December 2008 khutbah, or sermon, called "Children of Israel." A recording of the sermon remains on the mosque's website.

Elazabawy wrote a letter to museum leadership last month, complaining that the 6-minute film about al-Qaida's rise "would greatly offend our local Muslim believers as well as any foreign Muslim visitor to the museum," if it is not changed. 

"Unsophisticated visitors who do not understand the difference between Al Qaeda and Muslims may come away with a prejudiced view of Islam, leading to antagonism and even confrontation toward Muslim believers near the site."

He also joined in a follow-up complaint sent to museum Director Alice Greenwald on behalf of New York Disaster Interfaith Services' advisory group. Critics have taken issue with the film's references to "jihad" and the hijackers' Islamist ideology. "If generalized labels are needed, we suggest using specific terms such as "Al Qaeda-inspired terrorism," the letter from the Interfaith Services group said.

Similar complaints were issued by Islamist groups such as the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC).

The museum is scheduled to open in two weeks. Thus far, officials have indicated they do not plan to make changes to the film.

Elazabawy's demands for interfaith sensitivity were absent during the 2008 sermon, which came during Israel's Operation Cast Lead incursion into Gaza aimed at curbing Hamas rocket-fire toward civilian communities in Israel. He emphasized a series of Quranic verses depicting Jews as mischievous and corrupt.

"And after the mischievement (sic), they will seem arrogant," Elazabawy explained after reading one verse. "'We are the powerful. We are the most powerful people. We could defeat whomever we need.' Arrogance actually came from the shaytan [devil] all the time."

Later, he seemed to blame Jews for the war in Afghanistan.

"What they did, if you remember my brothers, the war in Afghanistan, behind that, the war is exactly the state of violence. They went in that land after Allah give the victory for the people of Afghanistan against Russia, they came because they don't want anybody to have power, except them ... and they bring all their allies to Iraq to finish Iraq, return Iraq, 100 years back. Why? Because Iraq used to be number four in power. They don't want anybody in power. And they use the hypocrites of the Muslims to help them, and the Muslim follow them, because they control the money, they control the weapons, they do everything."
Jews were spreading mischief in Egypt, Sudan and Somalia, he said.

"They are cancer in everywhere, in every generation as they get in power. People turn their face, and they know they are tyrants, they know they are oppressors. They know that they kill the children of Muslim[s] all the time. But everybody permits it because they controlling the money and the position in the whole entire world."

At another point, Elazabawy said it wasn't Jews that he opposed, but "the state of violence ... that will kill even the Yahud [Jew]."

The rare Jews Elazabawy embraces are radical orthodox Jews who see Zionism, the belief in a Jewish homeland, as sacrilegious. Two months after delivering this sermon, Elazabawy joined Rabbi Yisroel Dovid Weiss at a City College panel discussion in New York. Weiss leads Neturei Karta, which opposes Israel's existence.

Zionism, Weiss said that night, "is rooted in blasphemy, in, in a rebellion against God. But the whole concept of having a piece of land happens to be, in the teachings of the Torah, forbidden."

Weiss must have felt he was in good company with the panelist to his right, Elazabawy, to whom he makes brief reference, as a fellow anti-Zionist. According to Weiss, Jews and Muslims have almost always lived in harmony:

"It was mentioned that the Jews, Muslim people... these are people, we have been living together truly for hundreds and hundreds of years," Weiss said. "This was prior to any human rights, before there was a United Nations, before any human rights were there to protect, there was no protection - except of course, God the Almighty. And we were able to coexist, live in harmony, in every single Muslim country, in every single Arab country, we were able to coexist, and there was, without any police protection."

Elazabawy does not object. So even though Elazabawy has said Jews are a "cancer" in every generation and have "killed the Prophets and the Messengers," Weiss and Elazabawy manage to bond over their shared antipathy toward the Jewish state.
In his khutbah two months earlier, however, Elazabawy said Jews rejected the prophet "because he came from the Arab and he did not come from them, what they said? They declare a war from the first day and hatred against Islam."

And in a world in which baseless anti-Semitic conspiracy theories like the Protocols of the Elders of Zion continue to circulate, Elazabawy told worshipers a story so grotesque it cannot be found on Internet trash sites.

During the Six Day War, then-Israeli military leaders Menachem Begin and Ariel Sharon would butcher pregnant Palestinian women for sport, Elazabawy said:
"They kill our children. It's halal [kosher] for them. It is a hero. It is a victory ... Begin and Sharon in 1967, they used to bring the Palestinian women, pregnant Palestinian women. They used to bet between both of them is it son or girl, boy or girl, between Sharon and Begin. And then after all what they did, they killed with a knife, and they opened the belly of the woman to find out if there is a boy or there is a girl. If they found it's a boy, they killed the boy and they leave it exactly the same what Pharaoh did with them before.
It is a disgusting canard. Had it any legitimacy, it would be widely reported and invoked incessantly. But Elazabawy wasn't interested in facts that day. And this is the faith leader who is admonishing the National September 11 Memorial Museum about language in a film about al-Qaida that is accurate.

 FamilySecurityMatters.org Contributor Steve Emerson is an internationally recognized expert on terrorism and national security and the author of five books on these subjects, most recently "Jihad Incorporated: A Guide to Militant Islam in the US." Steve also writes for the Counterterrorism Blog and he is the CEO of the Investigative Project on Terrorism


Source: familysecuritymatters.org 

The challenge of Islam: David Selbourne

The author was asked by John Kerry to write a briefing paper on the Islamist threat. He explains here what he told the US secretary of state and why he feels progressives have allowed themselves to be silenced by frightened self-censorship and the stifling of debate. Read Mona Siddiqui’s response to the piece, The Arabisation of Islam, here.
Everyday terror: the bomb-making factory set up by 7/7 bombers in a council flat bedroom in Leeds. Photo: July 7 Inquests/PA




The In Anemas gas plant, Algeria, seen from the air. It was attacked by Islamists in January 2013.

 
A beheading in Woolwich, a suicide bomb in Beijing, a blown-up marathon in Boston, a shooting in the head of a young Pakistani girl seeking education, a destroyed shopping mall in Nairobi – and so it continues, in the name of Islam, from south London to Timbuktu. It is time to take stock, especially on the left, since these things are part of the world’s daily round.
Leave aside the parrot-cry of “Islamophobia” for a moment. I will return to it. Leave aside, too, the pretences that it is all beyond comprehension. “Progressives” might ask instead: what do Kabul, Karachi, Kashmir, Kunming and a Kansas airport have in common? Is it that they all begin with “K”? Yes. But all of them have been sites of recent Islamist or, in the case of Kansas, of wannabe-Islamist, attacks; at Wichita Airport planned by a Muslim convert ready to blow himself up, and others, “in support of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula”. “We cannot stop lone wolves,” a British counterterrorism expert told us after Woolwich. Are they “lone”? Of course not.
A gas facility in southern Algeria, a hospital in Yemen, an Egyptian police convoy in the Sinai – it’s complex all right – a New Year’s party in the southern Philippines, a railway station in the Caucasus, a bus terminal in Nigeria’s capital, and on and on, have all been hit by jihadis, with hostages taken, suicide belts detonated, cars and trucks exploded, and bodies blown to bits. And Flight MH370? Perhaps. In other places – in Red Square and Times Square, in Jakarta and New Delhi, in Amman and who-knows-where in Britain – attacks have been thwarted. But in 2013 some 18 countries got it in the neck (so to speak) from Islam’s holy warriors.
There are battlefields and battlefields in this conflict. Some are theatres of actual or potential civil war, most often when Sunnis and Shias are at each other’s throats on behalf, respectively, of Saudi Arabia and Iran. Other battlefields are in failed or failing Muslim states, others again where the “infidel” has unwisely intruded upon and assaulted Muslim lands. At the same time, weapons and warriors are in constant movement in Islam’s cause across dis­solving national boundaries, many of them of western colonialism’s creation. And in India, with its 175 million Muslims, their mujahedin will be in action soon enough if Hindu nationalists come to power this month.
Jihadist groups, from Pakistan to the Philippines, also fight each other. But for the most part they are consolidating and expanding – often as affiliates of al-Qaeda – in the Arabian Peninsula, in the Maghreb, in Somalia and Kenya, in Iraq and Syria, in Gaza, in Bangladesh and in south-east Asia. There are separatist or secessionist Islamic insurgencies, too, from Russia’s Caucasus to north-west China, in southern Thailand, in Burma, in northern Nigeria and in divided Kashmir.
Warriors for Islam, believing that they are under “infidel” threat, today range an increasingly frontier-less world. That’s “globalisation” too. A car-bombing in New York – which failed – was planned by a Pakistani-American trained in a tribal area of northern Waziristan. Many would-be warriors from western countries learned their skills from Taliban instructors, going on to fight in Iraq as they now fight in Syria. There, ubiquitous “Bearers of the Sword” and “Defenders of the Faith” from Britain and France, Saudi Arabia and Morocco, Indonesia and Kazakhstan, and even Uighurs from Chinese Xinjiang, are to be found armed to the teeth in the battle against Assad while being trained for future combat in their countries of origin.
In the Islamist merry-go-round, jihadis from Libya – after the country’s collapse – went on to Syria, Tunisian holy warriors crossed into Mali, Egyptian and Canadian Muslim fighters were among the attackers on the refinery in Algeria, and Somalis from Minnesota have returned home to join al-Shabab, the al-Qaeda affiliate that carried out the Kenyan mall attack. Ugandan Islamists are in eastern Congo, and a Malaysian army captain was linked to two of the 9/11 hijackers. Beat this? No.
It is not “Islamophobia” that registers these facts. Instead, there is an objective historical need, and duty, to record radical Islam’s many-sided and determined advance upon the “infidel” world. Most still do not know what manner of force – the millions of peaceful Muslims notwithstanding – has struck it. And, with its own arms and ethics, it will continue to do so, perhaps till kingdom come.
Here US and western defeats in Afghanistan and Iraq – what else were they? – weigh heavily in the scale of things. In Afghanistan, despite the loss of many thousands of lives and at a cost of hundreds of billions of dollars, with huge waste and corruption by military contractors and with reliance on unsavoury local satraps, the Taliban remain active throughout the land. Even the US-trained Afghan army is riddled with their supporters. Yet American illusion has seen victory in the coming retreat, and in defeat a “mission accomplished”, in David Cameron’s absurd judgement.
Meanwhile, Afghanistan, set to recover from yet another western incursion into its land, has entered a long-term security pact with Iran. Similarly in Iraq, years of death and destruction and billions in reconstruction grants mostly lost to local and US corruption have left no stable government nor a reliable western ally. Instead, there is an intensifying Shia-Sunni civil war, with thousands of dead in 2013, while al-Qaeda insurgents have reconquered areas in western Iraq previously “captured” – another illusion – by US marines.
The complexities (and double-games) of the Islamic world are a labyrinth for the “infidel”. It is a labyrinth that western reason, such as it now is, has never mastered, and that it cannot master now with hellfire missiles and unmanned drones.
After all, the political wing of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood calls itself the “Freedom and Justice” party – well, yes and no, and it certainly offers little freedom or justice to women. Again, some of the Gulf monarchies, Saudi Arabia included, pose as western allies and host US air and naval bases but give covert support to selected jihadist groups. And what does the western illus­ionist make of the fact that 15 of the 19 9/11 hijackers were Saudis, and are said to have had covert financial and logistical support from Saudi diplomats and intelligence officials?
The labyrinth of nuclear-armed Pakistan is denser. Struggling with its own jihadist insurgency in the tribal belt bordering Afghanistan, it is attempting peace talks with the Pakistani Taliban, yet there is growing Islamist radicalism in the ranks of the Pakistani army itself. The Pakistani intelligence agencies also play their own games – and are accused of sheltering some of the Afghan Taliban – while Pakistan’s parliament condemned the US raid that killed Osama Bin Laden. In this labyrinth, there are other elements that will for ever be beyond US and western mastery now; the influence of China – the main source of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons – is growing in the region.
There is little in all this for “progressives” to cheer. Yet the left continues covertly to celebrate US foreign policy blunders and defeats, while the naive see jihadists as a minority of “fanatics”. It is not so simple. To add to the confusion, President Obama’s stances, however well intentioned, have made their own contribution to the Islamic renaissance. Or as he expressed it in a speech in Cairo in June 2009, America and Islam “share common principles . . . of justice and progress, tolerance” – tolerance? – “and the dignity of all human beings”.
Everyday terror: the bomb-making factory set up by 7/7 bombers in a council flat bedroom in Leeds. Photo: July 7 Inquests/PA

The west and the US, frightened by their defeats in Afghanistan and Iraq, have lost their way in Assad’s Syria. Here the Muslim labyrinth is particularly dense. For Syria is an Iranian client state, backed by Russia and even North Korea, which is trying to fight off al-Qaeda-linked holy warriors from every corner of the Muslim (and non-Muslim) world, while a political alliance opposed to Bashar al-Assad tries to make its voice heard amid the carnage.
All the while, less-than-notable “world statesmen” have dithered over what aid to give to the anti-Assad forces, and wavered over whether to launch a military strike against Syria’s ruler. Between them, they have surrendered influence (as in Egypt) to Russia, able by skilful manoeuvre simultaneously to support Assad while moving to relieve him of his chemical weapons. As the Syrian civil war deepens, with over 150,000 dead and more than two million refugees, there have even been incoherent western attempts to treat secretly both with Assad over security co-operation and with the jihadist gangs, as heads roll in radical Islamic style and peace talks fail.
Wearied or sickened by all this? Yes. But it is the fate of the impotent western powers that is being determined by it. For the “jihad” is advancing in Syria to the eastern Mediterranean seaboard, while the muez­zin’s call to an increasingly ardent faith grows more insistent throughout the Islamic world.
In Shia Iran, memories of the historic Persian empire are quickening as Tehran’s foes flail around in the face of its ayatollahs’ ambitions and wiles. Above all, Iran has got the west on the ropes with its nuclear programme. The interim “freeze” to its uranium enrichment activities was not what it seemed; on Iranian TV on 21 February Behrouz Kamalvandi, of the national Atomic Energy Organisation, declared that the country’s nuclear commitments were “temporary and non-obligatory”. Iran still has a stockpile of enriched uranium, and still has tens of thousands of centrifuges, with nuclear research continuing, including on new advanced centrifuges. A “freeze” on further enrichment up to weapons grade, and a “downgrading” of some of its existing stockpile to less potent levels, were more tokens than substance. It left Iran usefully on the cusp of producing a nuclear weapon within a very short time, if (or when) it chooses, while it can continue to develop and test ballistic missiles.
It was also, yet again, a “deal” obtained from western weakness, not strength. After all, the alternative was an attack on Iran’s nuclear installations, some now buried too deep for aerial assault, and a new war to be lost after those in Afghanistan and Iraq.
In Iran, the “deal” was rightly hailed by the regime as “a victory over the west”. Or as Iran’s “moderate” president, Hassan Rowhani put it on Twitter on 14 January, “the world powers surrendered to the Iranian nation’s will”. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country’s “supreme leader”, did not hide the Iranian position. “I am in favour of showing a champion’s leniency,” he declared of the western willingness to compromise with Iran as the Pax Americana wanes in the world.
Nothing could have been lamer than US Secretary of State John Kerry’s assertion during the negotiations that the Iranians had a “choice”: to treat with the world, or to “leave themselves more isolated”. Instead, the US was once more acting in fear and in the impotent name of “outreach” to a foe. But Iran will never be the “strategic partner”of the US as some wishful thinkers hope.
With more than 500 executions, including for “waging war on God”, since the “moderate” Rowhani came to office – more per capita, one might say, than any other country – with its new pact with Afghanistan, its joint naval manoeuvres with Pakistan, its growing influence in Iraq, its behind-the-scenes accords with Russia, its improving relations with Islamising Turkey (and even with Jordan and Morocco), its dominance over Damascus, its ambitions to rule the Gulf and with two warships despatched in January to the Atlantic, Iran’s present course is clear. Moreover, the true secret of the nuclear “deal” was that Iran does not yet need a nuclear weapon, but it did urgently need sanctions relief. With its Revolutionary Guard shipping arms to Hezbollah in Lebanon and to Hamas in Gaza, it will move on to nuclear weapons in its own good time.
As for Israel, its mere existence, threatened by both Shia and Sunni jihadists, is ready-made to serve radical Islam’s cause. Neither Israel’s belligerence on the one hand nor its seeming desire for a political settlement on the other can abate the proclaimed intent of Hamas, which is funded not only by Iran but also by Turkey and others, to “eliminate” it. Such intransigence is matched by insensate Israeli colonisation, giving further aid to the jihadis’ cause. At the same time, the truth of the Jews’ multi-millennial association – long pre-dating the existence of Islam – with Jerusalem and the “land of Israel” is flatly denied, with Palestinian militants laying claim to the same land as “our land by right”.
Nothing, it seems, can halt the will among some for the extinction of Israel, while Iran’s Khamenei could describe it in November 2013 as the “rabid dog” of the region.
A “Jewish state” is also seen by the holy warrior (and others) as by definition “racist”; with some reason in the case of Jewish zealots. Yet some of us take the notion of a theocratic “Muslim state” governed by Islamic sharia – there are many such states – in our stride. With Israeli security and Palestinian aspiration seemingly irreconcilable, this conflict appears beyond resolution, whether by John Kerry or by any other representative of America’s fading imperium.
After the publication in the US in 2005 of my book The Losing Battle With Islam, Kerry rang me to discuss the arguments in it. When he became secretary of state I told him (with some presumption) that the non-Muslim world is too unaware of what is afoot, hobbled by its wishful thinking and lack of knowledge, and whistling in the dark. In a position paper I wrote for him, I set out a list of the failures that the west, and especially the US, has on its hands. Among them are the failure to recognise the ambition of radical Islam; the failure to condemn the silence of most Muslims at the crimes committed in their names; the failure to respond adequately to the persecution of Christians in many Muslim lands; the failure to grasp the nature of the non-military skills that are being deployed against the non-Muslim world – skills of manoeuvre, skills in deceiving the gullible, skills in making temporary truces in order to gain time (as in Iran); and, perhaps above all, the failure to realise the scale and speed of Islam’s advance.
“If things continue like this,” I told friend Kerry, “the history of our age may one day be written under a caliphate’s supervision.” I added brashly: “Get your aides to read the Quran. Keep political correctors at bay,” and “stop looking for the emergence of Jeffersonian democracies in Muslim lands”. “It has gotten me thinking,” he replied; and after further exchanges, “I agree with a great deal of what you’ve said.”
But in the rising swirl of events, the secretary of state can no more control the incoming tide than could Canute. In perpetual motion, Kerry is disabled by the chaos of indecision and interference in Obama’s White House. He is handicapped by having to make near-simultaneous moves on dozens of Muslim chessboards against generally more cunning opponents.
In the chaos, and like others in the US administration, Kerry called for Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak to step down and thus helped open the way for the Muslim Brotherhood before complaining that it had “stolen” the Egyptian election (by ballot-rigging and intimidation). Naivety, masquerading as diplomacy, also led him to compliment Pakistan for its help in tracking down al-Qaeda’s leader. Yet Bin Laden had been protected for years by Pakistan’s own security apparatus. Kerry even “pleaded” with the Iranians to sign up to a nuclear deal.
The word “plead” tells us all we need to know about America’s failing powers. But Kerry has also been buffeted to and fro by vacillation in the White House, excluded from its inner councils – an alternative state department of the mediocre whom Obama prefers to have around him – and has been briefed against to the US press.
His is an unenviable position, despite appearances. For the US to be without a coherent foreign policy strategy in the face of the complexities of the Islamic world’s advance is no surprise. But for it to be quite so disabled points to an unusual degree of confusion in high places.
In August 2013 a White House spokesman declared that al-Qaeda was “severely diminished”. A mere two months later, the director of the FBI announced that “the threat posed by al-Qaeda has become hydra-headed”. Which? And as the Pax Americana recedes into the past, there is always an ostrich – in this case, Obama’s lightweight national security adviser, Susan Rice – to tell the American public that “US leadership”, as it grows frailer and as cuts to its military bite deeper, will “continue to be unrivalled”, and that the US “will remain the most influential, powerful and important country in the world”. Really?
But at the heart of US weakness is Obama himself. In foreign fields, his strategies – in so far as they can be identified – have been dithering, improvised and uncertain. He deserves a measure of sympathy: today’s Islam is the most redoubtable adversary to the American imperium it has ever faced, the challenge of the Comintern included.
In many of its theatres, the complexities, skills and deceits of the Muslim world would have bewildered a Machiavelli. In others, American wishful thinking can reach comic levels. When Bin Laden was killed in May 2011 al-Qaeda, declared Obama, was now a “shadow of its former self”, near “decapacitated”. In May 2012, similar illusions told him that the Taliban’s momentum had been “broken”; in November last year, that Iran’s “most likely paths to a bomb” had been “cut off” or (in faux-macho style) “rolled back”. And so on.
It is the wishful thinking of a man who is a non-belligerent at heart. In normal times this is a virtue. But these are not normal times: the US is playing a decreasingly significant role in the world’s conflicts, even as Islamist ambition and reach – despite the internecine hatreds in Muslim ranks – break new bounds.
This ambition grows more confident by the day, taking reverses in its stride. In the face of Obama’s risk-aversion (or idleness), Islamists make no bones about their aspiration for “mastership of the world”, as Mohamed Badie, the Muslim Brotherhood leader, put it in December 2011. Muslim (and not merely Islamist) disdain for “the west” is also growing; in July 2012, the speaker of the Iranian parliament des­cribed it as a “dark spot in the present era”.
Such confidence, or arrogance, is easily understood. For these are times in which conversions to Islam in western countries are accelerating. Today, one-quarter of humanity is Muslim. It is a proportion that is rising steadily, making possible a Muslim majority in Russia, for example, by the century’s end. To the marginalised and lost in free societies, Islam increasingly offers an identity, an ethic, and a home. In the eyes of the Muslim Brotherhood, America “does not champion moral and human values” and “cannot lead humanity”. Agree or not, it is clear that “freedom ’n’ liberty”, especially in the form of the “free market” with its crazed impulse to endless “growth”, will turn out one day to have been no match for the faith. Tony Blair’s anxious speech to Bloomberg the other day suggests that the big corporate interests that he represents are beginning to be aware of it.
To the aid of Islam has also come the betrayal by much of today’s left of its notionally humane principles, as Christians are assaulted and murdered (shades of what was done to the Jews in the 1930s) and their churches desecrated and destroyed from Egypt to the Central African Republic, from Iran to Indonesia, and from Pakistan to Nigeria. Islam can kill its own apostates, too; in many Muslim countries denies reciprocity to other faiths in rights of worship; and seeks to prevent reasoned discussion about its beliefs by attempted resort to blasphemy laws.
So where is the old left’s centuries-long espousal of free speech and free thought? Where is the spirit of Tom Paine? The answer is simple. It has been curbed by frightened self-censorship and by the stifling of debate, in a betrayal of the principles for which “progressives” were once prepared to go to the stake. And just as some Jews are too quick to call anti-Zionists “anti-Semites”,
so some leftists are too quick to tar critics of Islam as “Islamophobes”.
To add to such falsehoods come the illusionists of every stripe, with their unknowing, simplistic or false descriptions of Islam as a “religion of peace”. Even today’s Pope – as the Christian faithful were being harried, persecuted or put to the sword in Nigeria, Syria, Iraq and beyond – told the world in November 2013 that “authentic Islam and the proper reading of the Quran are opposed to every form of violence”. But read the text yourself, and you will see that jihadists can find plenty justification for the acts they commit, even if most Muslims are pacific.
Karl Marx was wiser than the Pope. In March 1854, he wrote that for “Islamism” – the word was already in use – “the Infidel is the enemy” and that the Quran “treats all foreigners as foes”.
The present renaissance of Islam, additionally provoked, as ever, by western aggressions against its lands, is an old story of swift movement and conquest, as in the 7th century. Is something like it stirring again? Perhaps; you decide. In 50 years’ time the world will know for sure.
David Selbourne is a political philosopher and commentator. “The Losing Battle With Islam” is published by Prometheus Books
Source: newstatesman.com