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A New Day In U.S.
Foreign Policy: Obama Embraces 'Moderate' Islamists
BY PETE HOEKSTRA
Shillman Senior Fellow, Investigative Project
on Terrorism
October 13, 2015
http://dailycaller.com/2015/10/13/a-new-day-in-u-s-foreign-policy-obama-embraces-moderate-islamists/
Note: This article
originally was published by The
Daily Caller
Soon after assuming office, President Obama began
reaching out to Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, and — as noted by former UK
ambassador Charles Crawford — his Cairo speech capped this new approach:
"On June 4, 2009, Obama delivered a speech to the Muslim world in Cairo
in which he declared that 'America and Islam are not exclusive.'" What
this really meant, Crawford paraphrased was: "Under my restrained
leadership the United States will respect and accept conservative forms of
Islam. Even if Islamism gets too aggressive we don't plan to do much about
it. And we may not be too active in supporting Muslim liberal trends either.
Steady as she goes. And by the way I do hope you have noticed that I am
not G. W. Bush."
This was the
backdrop to American support of the "rebels" against [Libyan
dictator Muammar] Gaddafi. Though Obama waited until hundreds of U.S.
diplomats and civilians had been evacuated on February 25, 2011, to impose
unilateral sanctions and explicitly call for Gaddafi to step down, it is now
clear that Obama's goal from the start was that the Libyan rebellion fully
succeed.
What is striking is
that this required direct cooperation with a force counting among its number
countless Salafi-jihadist veterans of the global Al Qaeda network, with American
policymakers seemingly content to buy jihadists' assurances that they would
pursue jihad solely in their homeland, afterward laying down their arms.
In brief, for the
first time, American policymakers willingly made the distinction between
"good" jihadists — those entitled to the support indispensable to
their fight — and "bad" jihadists, who even now were regular
targets of American drone attacks in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of course,
ideologically, and in their ultimate goals (notwithstanding professions to
the contrary), the "good" and "bad" jihadists were close
to identical. And both the "good" and bad" were well aware,
even if the Americans were not, that according to their interpretation of the
Qur'an, lying to infidels in the service of the cause was not merely
permissible, but in fact encouraged.
Yet in Obama's
worldview, America was engaged not in "a boundless 'global war on
terror,' but rather [in] … a series of persistent targeted efforts to
dismantle specific networks of violent extremists that threaten
America," as the president himself put it. Thus, it was essential to
make a "distinction between the capacity and reach of a bin Laden and a
network that is actively planning major terrorist plots against the homeland
versus jihadists who are engaged in various local power struggles and
disputes, often sectarian."
It was such thinking
that led the Obama administration to seek direct talks with Mullah Omar and
the Afghani Taliban in 2011 and, even more astonishing in retrospect, to
reach out to the Islamic Front in Syria, the coalition of Salafi-jihadist
militias that in December 2013 would metastasize into ISIS.
Although early in
his presidency Obama signaled his greater acceptance of radical jihadism by
siding with the Iranian regime over pro-democracy protestors during the Green
Revolution, as well as with Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood — both in 2009 — the
full extent of the transformation of American engagement with the Islamists
only became fully apparent in Libya. Indeed, Libya ought to have put this
policy of wishful thinking to the test — and then to an end. For in Libya,
where many supposed U.S. allies made only the thinnest pretense at political
moderation or at readiness to embrace democratic norms, the consequences were
all too quickly apparent.
Still, even with the
evidence before them, Obama's team characteristically remained obdurate,
maintaining that their approach was isolating the real foe. "Al Qaeda
seeks to portray America as an enemy of the world's Muslims," John O.
Brennan, assistant to the president for homeland security and
counterterrorism, explained in June 2011, midway through the Libyan civil
war. But, he said, America's action on behalf of the "rebels" had
made it "clear that the United States is not, and never will be, at war
with Islam," thereby eroding "the ability of Al Qaeda and its
network to inspire people." Without any precondition, jihadists were
welcomed into America's coalition for the first time.
Pete Hoekstra is the former Chairman of the U.S. House
Intelligence Committee and currently the Shillman Senior Fellow with the
Investigative Project on Terrorism. This piece has been excerpted from his
new book, Architects of Disaster: The Destruction
of Libya, published by Calamo Press. (c) Pete Hoekstra 2015. All rights
reserved. |
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Thursday, October 22, 2015
Daily Caller Runs Excerpt of Hoekstra's "Architects of Disaster"
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