From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Sun Aug 11 2002 - 20:25:10 MDT
Aim the War on Terror at 
Militant Islam
by Daniel Pipes
Los Angeles Times
January 6, 2002
Whom are we fighting? Two main culprits have emerged since 
Sept. 11: terrorism and Islam. The truth, more subtle, lies between 
the two--a terroristic version of Islam.
* Terrorism. The establishment--politicians, academics, religious 
leaders, journalists, along with many Muslims--says terrorism is 
the enemy. It is carried out by "evildoers" who have nothing to do 
with Islam but adhere to some murky cult of terrorism.
Secretary of State Colin Powell summarized this view by 
declaring that the acts of Sept. 11 "should not be seen as 
something done by Arabs or Islamics; it is something that was 
done by terrorists." Pretending that the enemy is "terrorism" 
unconnected to Islam is appealing because it finesses some 
delicate questions about Islam, thereby making it easier to build 
an international coalition or minimize domestic repercussions.
But it makes no sense at all. The Taliban government, Al Qaeda, 
Osama bin Laden, John Walker Lindh, Richard Reid and Zacarias 
Moussaoui--all are fervent Muslims acting on behalf of their 
religion.
More, they have found wide support across the Muslim world 
(remember those huge demonstrations waving pictures of Bin 
Laden in September?). Terrorists they are, to be sure, but terrorists 
with a specific set of beliefs.
Blaming "terrorism" means ignoring those beliefs--at great cost. If 
the enemy consists of terrorists "motivated by hate," as President 
Bush put it, what can one do other than kill them?
Hate lacks an ideology or intellectual framework that one can 
refute. The West is left with nothing but guns to protect itself 
from the next assault. There can be no strategy for victory, only 
tactics to stave off harm.
* Islam. The Western "street" prefers to see the problem lying 
with the Islamic religion. In this view, Arabs and Muslims have 
been the leading enemy of Christians for more than a millennium, 
remain so now and will long continue to fill this role.
This enmity stems from the Koran itself and so is immutable, say 
spokesmen for this argument, who tend to be political 
conservatives or evangelicals. This too does not hold. If Muslims 
by nature are hostile, how does one explain Turkey, with its 
militantly secular culture and abiding good relations with the 
West?
If all Muslims accept Koranic precepts, how does this account for 
the tens of thousands of Algerians who lost their lives resisting 
Islamic rule?
And if Islam is the problem, then there is no possible strategy for 
winning. It implies that the billion or so Muslims--including 
millions living in the West--are immutable enemies. They can 
only be converted from Islam or quarantined, two thoroughly 
unrealistic programs.
Insisting on Islam as the enemy means a permanent clash of 
civilizations that cannot be won.
Fingering terrorism or Islam, in short, neither explains the current 
problem nor offers a solution.
There is third way of approaching the question, which satisfies 
both these requirements.
Islam itself--the centuries-old faith--is not the issue but one 
extremist variant of it is. Militant Islam derives from Islam but is 
a misanthropic, misogynist, triumphalist, millennarian, anti-
modern, anti-Christian, anti-Semitic, terroristic, jihadistic and 
suicidal version of it.
Fortunately, it appeals to only about 10% to 15% of Muslims, 
meaning that a substantial majority would prefer a more moderate 
version.
This implies a simple and effective strategy: weaken militant 
Islam around the world and strengthen the moderate alternatives 
to it. Fight it militarily, diplomatically, legally, intellectually and 
religiously. Fight it in Afghanistan, in Saudi Arabia, in the United 
States--in fact, everywhere.
Moderate Muslims will be key allies in this fight. Yes, they are 
weak and intimidated these days, but they are crucial if the 
Muslim world is to leave its current bout of radicalism.
Once the U.S. government helps them, they can emerge as a 
formidable force. (By analogy, remember how the Northern 
Alliance seemed hapless just a few months ago? Now it is running 
Afghanistan.)
Only by focusing on militant Islam can Americans both protect 
themselves from their most determined enemy and eventually 
defeat it.
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