Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/414185/it-doesnt-matter-one-bit-what-obama-thinks-true-islam-andrew-c-mccarthy
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
It Doesn’t Matter One Bit What Obama Thinks ‘True Islam’ Is
by Andrew C. McCarthy February 21, 2015 4:00 AM
There may well be a civil war going on within Islam, but it will be
Muslims, not American politicians, who settle it.
In Egypt, the president is Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, a pious Muslim.
Having
grown up in the world’s center of sharia scholarship and closely studied
the subject, he has courageously proclaimed that Islam desperately
needs a “religious revolution.”
In the United States, the president is Barack Obama, a non-Muslim. His
childhood experience of Islam, which ended when he was just ten,
occurred in Indonesia — the world’s most populous Muslim country, but a
non-Arabic one where the teaching and practice of Islam is very
different from what it is in the Middle East.
While Sisi sees a dangerous flaw in Islam, Obama believes America needs
to be “fundamentally transformed” but Islam is fine as is. You see the
problem, no?
Said problem was very much on display this week at the president’s
“summit” on “countering violent extremism,” the administration’s
euphemism for confronting violent jihad. The latter phrase is verboten
because Obama will not concede the close nexus between Islam and modern
terrorism.
In reality, the summit had so little to do with confronting terrorism
that the president did not invite the FBI director — you know, the head
of the agency to which federal law assigns primary responsibility for
terrorism investigations.
The summit was really about advancing the “social justice” agenda of
“progressive” politics. The president and his underlings somehow reason
that the answer to the barbarity of ISIS and al-Qaeda is to “empower
local communities” here and abroad. Apparently, if the community
organizers rouse the rabble to demand that government address
“injustice” and Muslim “grievances,” the alienation that purportedly
drives young Muslims into the jihadists’ arms will abate. This is the
strategic political aspect of the Left’s denial of terrorism’s
ideological roots: If terrorism is not caused by Islamic supremacism,
then it must be caused by something else . . . and that something
somehow always manages to be a government policy opposed by the Left:
insufficient income redistribution, running Gitmo, our alliance with
Israel, surveillance of radical mosques, etc.
Smearing your political
opponents as the root cause of mass-murder attacks — it’s a very nice
weapon to have in one’s demagogic arsenal.
To the extent the summit dealt with Islam, it was to play the
counterproductive game of defining the “true” Islam in order to
discredit the Islamic State and al-Qaeda as purveyors of a “false” or
“perverted” Islam. To try to pull this off, Obama relied on the bag of
tricks toted by his “moderate Islamist” allies (who also turn out to be
reliable progressives).
In his summit speech, Obama made the concession — which was almost
shocking coming from him — that ISIS and al-Qaeda terrorists “do draw”
from “Islamic texts.” He mocked them, however, for doing so
“selectively.” The clear suggestion was that the terrorists deceive when
they assert that Islamic scripture commands Muslims to, for example,
“strike terror into the hearts” of non-believers, decapitate them
(“smite their necks”), or enslave them. He intimated that there must be
some balancing scriptures, some other side of the story nullifying these
belligerent commands.
But then, almost in the next breath, the president engaged in the same
bowdlerizing of Islamic teaching of which he had just accused our
enemies. We should, he said, be listening to, instead of the terrorists,
“Muslim clerics and scholars” who “push back on this twisted
interpretation” and assure us “that the Koran says, ‘Whoever kills an
innocent, it is as if he has killed all mankind.’”
The Koran does indeed say that, in Sura 5:32.
Yet, in the very next
verse, conveniently omitted by Obama (5:33), it goes on to say:
The punishment of those who wage war against Allah and His
Messenger, and strive with might and main for mischief through the land,
is: execution, or crucifixion, or the cutting off of hands and feet
from opposite sides, or exile from the land: That is their disgrace in
this world, and a heavy punishment is theirs in the hereafter.
That puts a somewhat different cast on the whole “whoever kills an
innocent” theme, wouldn’t you say?
Which leads us to Obama’s other rhetorical chicanery. When he speaks of
Islam, Obama not only takes scripture out of context; he also renders it
as if there were a universal understanding of words like “innocent.”
Yet when we read the above two verses together, and put them in the
broader context of Islamic doctrine, we see that Islam can convey a
notion of who is an “innocent” that is very different from the one we
Westerners are likely to have. To be “innocent,” in this context, one
must accept Islam and submit to its law.
The same is true of “injustice,” another word the president often
invokes when discussing Islam. The true Islam, we are to believe, is
just like progressivism: a tireless quest for “justice.” But just as the
Left’s idea of justice differs from the average person’s, so does
Islam’s. For the Islamist, justice equals sharia, and injustice is the
absence or transgression of sharia. So, while this could well have been
inadvertent, Obama’s claim that injustice drives young Muslims to join
terrorist groups is exactly what the terrorists themselves would say —
for the imperative to impose sharia is their rationale for committing
terrorism.
Obama’s seeming inability to grapple with the Islamic roots of terrorism
may not be fully explained by his coziness with Islamists. In a 2005
essay, Cardinal George Pell, the former Australian archbishop (he now
runs the Vatican’s secretariat for the economy), observed that in
Indonesia, Islam has been has been tempered by indigenous animism,
Hinduism, Buddhism, and a pacific strain of Islamic Sufism. Cardinal
Pell described the resulting brand as “syncretistic, moderate and with a
strong mystical leaning.”
As I recounted in The Grand Jihad, that cannot be said for all of
Indonesian Islam: There is also plenty of fundamentalism, sharia
supremacism, and persecution of religious minorities, particularly of
Ahmadi Muslims who reject violent jihad. Still, the practice of Islam in
much of the country where the president spent some of his formative
years is relatively moderate.
Things are different in the cradle of Islam, the Arab Middle East. That
was the upshot of President Sisi’s impassioned speech in January. In
calling for a religious revolution, he admonished the scholars of
al-Azhar — who seemed cool to the warning — that terrorists in the
Middle East were relying on a “corpus of texts and ideas that we have
sacralized over the years, to the point that departing from them has
become almost impossible” even though it “is antagonizing the entire
world.”
Sisi is right, of course. How refreshing, how urgently necessary, for
him to face the problem honestly.
Nevertheless, our challenge is a
different one from Sisi’s and Islam’s. It is preserving our own national
security, not avoiding antagonism.
It is thus foolish for the Obama administration — as it was for the Bush
and Clinton administrations, and as it is for Republican as well as
Democratic leaders in Washington — to become enmeshed in the futile
effort to define the “true” Islam. There probably is not one. Even
though the scriptures are troublesome and unvarying, the practice of
Islam — the interpretation of and degree of adherence to those
scriptures — varies widely around the world.
There is also likely to be continuing upheaval as reformers square off
with fundamentalists, so the “true” Islam could change. Moreover, our
politicians are elected by an overwhelmingly (probably over 97 percent)
non-Muslim country. Muslims by and large do not care what nonbelievers
think the essence of Islam is. And if it were not for terrorism, most of
us would neither give Islam a second thought nor care what Muslims
thought about America and its Judeo-Christian roots.
(How much time do
you spend wondering what Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei believes is the
“true” Christianity?)
We can sincerely hope that President Sisi and other reformers bring
about a long-overdue Islamic Reformation. We can sincerely hope that
they discredit and marginalize the sharia supremacism of ISIS and
al-Qaeda.
But whether the Islam of the jihadists is “true” or “false” is
irrelevant to us. What matters about sharia supremacism is that many
millions of Muslims believe in it. It is a mainstream interpretation of
Islam that has undeniable scriptural roots and inevitably breeds violent
jihadists.
We must protect the United States regardless of whether they are right
and regardless of how Islam’s internal strife is resolved – if it ever
is.
— Andrew C. McCarthy is a policy fellow at the National Review
Institute. His latest book is Faithless Execution: Building the
Political Case for Obama’s Impeachment.
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/414185/it-doesnt-matter-one-bit-what-obama-thinks-true-islam-andrew-c-mccarthy
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/414185/it-doesnt-matter-one-bit-what-obama-thinks-true-islam-andrew-c-mccarthy
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