Posted: 29 Jan 2015 06:09 PM PST
The debate over
Islamic terrorism has shifted so far from reality that it has now become an
argument between the administration, which insists that there is nothing
Islamic about ISIS, and critics who contend that a minority of Islamic
extremists are the ones causing all the problems.
But
what makes an Islamic radical, extremist? Where is the line between ordinary
Muslim practice and its extremist dark side? It can’t be beheading people in
public.
Saudi Arabia just did that and was praised for its progressiveness by the UN
Secretary General, had flags flown at half-staff in the honor of its deceased
tyrant in the UK and that same tyrant was honored by Obama, in preference to
such minor events as the Paris Unity March and the Auschwitz commemoration.
It can’t be terrorism either. Not when the US funds the PLO and three
successive administrations invested massive amounts of political capital into
turning the terrorist group into a state. While the US and the EU fund the
Palestinian Authority’s homicidal kleptocracy; its media urges stabbing Jews.
Clearly that’s not Islamic extremism either. At least it’s not too extreme
for Obama.
And there are few Islamic terrorist groups that don’t have friends in high places
in the Muslim world.
If blowing up civilians in Allah’s name isn’t extreme, what do our radicals
have to do to get really radical?
Sex slavery? The Saudis only abolished it in 1962; officially. Unofficially
it continues. Every few years a Saudi bigwig gets busted for it abroad. The
third in line for the Saudi throne was the son of a “slave girl”.
Ethnic cleansing? Genocide? The “moderate” Islamists we backed in Syria,
Libya and Egypt have been busy doing it with the weapons and support that we
gave them. So that can’t be extreme either.
If terrorism, ethnic cleansing, sex slavery and beheading are just the
behavior of moderate Muslims, what does a Jihadist have to do to be
officially extreme? What is it that makes ISIS extreme?
From a Muslim perspective, ISIS is radical because it declared a Caliphate
and is casual about declaring other Muslims infidels. That’s a serious issue
for Muslims and when we distinguish between radicals and moderates based not
on their treatment of people, but their treatment of Muslims, we define
radicalism from the perspective of Islamic supremacism, rather than our own
American values.
The position that the Muslim Brotherhood is moderate and Al Qaeda is extreme
because the Brotherhood kills Christians and Jews while Al Qaeda kills
Muslims is Islamic Supremacism. The idea of the moderate Muslim places the
lives of Muslims over those of every other human being on earth.
Our Countering Violent Extremism program emphasizes the centrality of Islamic
legal authority as the best means of fighting Islamic terrorists. Our
ideological warfare slams terrorists for not accepting the proper Islamic
chain of command. Our solution to Islamic terrorism is a call for Sharia
submission.
That’s not an American position. It’s an Islamic position and it puts us in
the strange position of arguing Islamic legalism with Islamic terrorists. Our
politicians, generals and cops insist that the Islamic terrorists we’re
dealing with know nothing about Islam because that is what their Saudi
liaisons told them to say.
It’s as if we were fighting Marxist terrorist groups by reproving them for
not accepting the authority of the USSR or the Fourth International. It’s not
only stupid of us to nitpick another ideology’s fine points, especially when
our leaders don’t know what they’re talking about, but our path to victory
involves uniting our enemies behind one central theocracy. That’s even worse
than arming and training them, which we’re also doing (but only for the
moderate genocidal terrorists, not the extremists).
Our government’s definition of moderate often hinges on a
willingness to negotiate regardless of the results. The moderate Taliban were
the ones willing to talk us. They just weren’t willing to make a deal. Iran’s
new government is moderate because it engages in aimless negotiations while
pushing its nuclear program forward and issuing violent threats, instead of
just pushing and threatening without the negotiations. Nothing has come of
the negotiations, but the very willingness to negotiate is moderate.
The Saudis would talk to us all day long while they continued sponsoring
terrorists and setting up terror mosques in the West. That made them
moderates. Qatar keeps talking to us while arming terrorists and propping up
the Muslim Brotherhood. So they too are moderate. The Muslim Brotherhood
talked to us even while its thugs burned churches, tortured protesters and
worked with terrorist groups in the Sinai.
A radical terrorist will kill you. A moderate terrorist will talk to you and
then kill someone else. And you’ll ignore it because the conversation is a
sign that they’re willing to pretend to be reasonable.
That’s more than Secretary of State Kerry is willing to be.
Kerry views accusations of extremism as already too extreme. ISIS, he
insists, are nihilists and anarchists.
Nihilism is the exact opposite of the highly structured Islamic system of the
Caliphate. It might be a more accurate description of Kerry. But as
irrational as Kerry’s claims might be, they have a source. The Saudis and the
Muslim Brotherhood successfully sold the Western security establishment on
the idea that the only way to defeat Islamic terrorism was by denying any
Islamic links to its actions.
This was like an arsonist convincing the fire department that the best way to
fight fires was to pretend that they happened randomly on their own.
Victory through denial demands that we pretend that Islamic terrorism has
nothing to do with Islam. It’s a wholly irrational position, but the
alternative of a tiny minority of extremists is nearly as irrational.
If ISIS is extreme and Islam is moderate, what did ISIS do that Mohammed did
not?
The answers usually have a whole lot to do with the internal structures of Islam
and very little to do with such pragmatic things as not raping women or not
killing non-Muslims.
Early on we decided to take sides between Islamic dictators and Islamic
terrorists, deeming the former moderate and the latter extremists. But the
dictators were backing their own terrorists. And when it came to human
rights, there wasn’t all that much of a difference between the two.
It made sense for us to put down Islamic terrorists because they often
represented a more direct threat, but allowing the Islamic dictators to
convince us that they and the terrorists followed two different brands of
Islam and that the only solution to Islamic terrorism lay in their theocracy
was foolish of us.
The Islamic terrorist group is more mobile, more agile and more willing to
take risks. It plays the short game and so its violent actions are more
apparent in the short term. The Islamic dictatorship takes the longer view
and its long game, such as immigration, is harder to spot, but much more
destructive.
ISIS
and the Saudis differ in their tactics, but there was very little in the way
of differences when it came to how they saw us and non-Muslims in general.
The Soviet Union was not moderate because it chose to defer a nuclear
confrontation and because it was forced to come to the negotiating table. It
was still playing a long game that it never got a chance to finish. The
Saudis are not moderate. They are playing the long game. We can’t win the War
on Terror through their theocracy. That way lies a real Caliphate.
Our problem is not the Islamic radical, but the inherent radicalism of Islam.
Islam is a radical religion. It radicalizes those who follow it. Every
atrocity we associate with Islamic radicals is already in Islam. The Koran is
not the solution to Islamic radicalism, it is the cause.
Our enemy is not radicalism, but a hostile civilization bearing grudges and
ambitions.
We aren’t fighting nihilists or radicals. We are at war with the inheritors
of an old empire seeking to reestablish its supremacy not only in the
hinterlands of the east, but in the megalopolises of the west.
Daniel Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger
and a Shillman Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
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