I had expected to move today
to issues other than the Boston terror attack. Barry Rubin,
however, has written an excellent piece on this subject -- "Who Will
Keep More Muslim Teenagers from Becoming the Next Boston
Terrorists?" I begin with this.
Since writing last, I've had
correspondence with a couple of my readers regarding the concept of Islamists,
jidhadists, radical Muslims vs. Muslims. They both objected, each in his
own way, to my making a differentiation between the radicals and moderate
Muslims, whom they claim do not exist, as Islam is a violent religion.
Period.
Two readers out of thousands is a
very small percentage. But it occurs to me that there may be other readers who
did not write but entertain similar thoughts. And so I think it important
to visit the issue here.
Not for a moment do I delude
myself about the fact that radical Islam is predominant today. For the sake of
the Western world, the danger it presents must be named, confronted and
battled. I'm not shy about this. What is more, I know very well
indeed that there are Muslims in the West who profess moderation but are fronts
for the radical agenda. (CAIR in the US is a prime example.) I
myself have argued with naive but well meaning people who were too eager to
embrace such fronts, taking their declarations of moderation at face
value.
What is more, I know about Islamic
teachings regarding the infidel. And believe me, I do not take them
lightly. How many times in the course of my work have I encountered the hadith
(teaching): "and the tree would say: Muslim, or the servant of Allah, there is a
Jew behind me; come and kill him."
~~~~~~~~~~
And yet, I also know Muslims who
are moderate. Muslims who can be trusted. Muslims who do not
internalize messages from their religion about killing non-believers and are not
out to establish a world-wide caliphate. I can identify only a small
number, but they are there. In many cases overwhelmed or threatened
by the radicals, they
maintain a low profile.
~~~~~~~~~~
I think it's important that the
differentiation be made. First, because if we imagine we must do battle with the
whole Islamic world, we are lost; to be effective we must focus on the true
danger. And then, because it does injustice to those moderates who would
live quietly.
Barry Rubin makes the
differentiation: He argues that it's important to "wage a real and
serious battle within Islam." He makes the case for countering the radical
messages and talks in concrete terms about what needs to be done.
"...one could argue that there is
no moderate—or at least no non-violent, non-revolutionary– Islam that can be
developed. But that simply isn’t true. The works and the moderate
individuals exist, but they are not given support, even in Western countries,
nor do they have the resources to wage the battle. Everyone who
ignorantly drones on about Islam being inevitably radical doesn’t know how hard
Islamists have had to work for forty years or more to create what exists
now, nor how many people who are Muslims oppose this movement in Iran,
Arabic-speaking countries, Turkey, and other places..." (Emphasis added
here and below)
"...in a bizarre manner Western
societies favor the radicals, giving them good press and praise.
"...moderate Muslims are penalized
and ignored.
"...the ability to critique precisely what is radical in Islam and what is wrong with Islamism is handicapped by the successful effort to brand any attempts at making such distinctions as 'Islamophobia' instead of a sensible fear of revolutionary Islamism.
"This, then, is the dilemma and why young people like the Tsarnaev brothers will be indoctrinated with extremist Islam with almost no alternative offered on the other side. If groups that are Muslim Brotherhood fronts are going to be treated by the American establishment as examples of normative, moderate Islam, what space is there for any real moderate Islam?
"If the enemy is not going to be defined as radical Islam or Islamism or some other phrase that identifies the issue, then how can anyone campaign against such doctrines?
"The West has paralyzed itself, and, ironically, the first people who are going to suffer are Muslims who are not Islamists and not radicals..."
http://www.gloria-center.org/2013/04/whos-going-to-try-to-keep-more-teenage-muslims-from-becoming-the-next-boston-marathon-terrorists-nobody/
"...the ability to critique precisely what is radical in Islam and what is wrong with Islamism is handicapped by the successful effort to brand any attempts at making such distinctions as 'Islamophobia' instead of a sensible fear of revolutionary Islamism.
"This, then, is the dilemma and why young people like the Tsarnaev brothers will be indoctrinated with extremist Islam with almost no alternative offered on the other side. If groups that are Muslim Brotherhood fronts are going to be treated by the American establishment as examples of normative, moderate Islam, what space is there for any real moderate Islam?
"If the enemy is not going to be defined as radical Islam or Islamism or some other phrase that identifies the issue, then how can anyone campaign against such doctrines?
"The West has paralyzed itself, and, ironically, the first people who are going to suffer are Muslims who are not Islamists and not radicals..."
http://www.gloria-center.org/2013/04/whos-going-to-try-to-keep-more-teenage-muslims-from-becoming-the-next-boston-marathon-terrorists-nobody/
~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Mukasey, in his piece --
"Make No Mistake, It Was Jihad" --- in the Wall Street
Journal makes a similar point:
"At the behest of such Muslim
Brotherhood-affiliated groups as the Council on American Islamic Relations
[that's CAIR] and the Islamic Society of North America, and other
self-proclaimed spokesmen for American Muslims, the FBI has bowdlerized its
training materials to exclude references to militant Islamism."
This mindset is what led the jihad
attack by Nidal Hasan at Fort Hood to be identified as "workplace
violence...recall that the Army chief of staff at the time said the most tragic
result of Fort Hood would be if it interfered with the Army's diversity
program."
"...There are Muslim organizations
in this country, such as the American Islamic Forum for Democracy, headed by Dr.
Zuhdi Jasser, that speak out bravely against that totalitarian ideology [the
anti-American Brotherhood ideology that Mukasey describes]. They receive
no shout-out at presidential speeches; no outreach is extended to them.
(Emphasis added)
So there you have it.
A moderate Muslim group that indeed does exist but is sidelined while
the "sensitivities" of radical groups are responded to in a fashion that makes
the differentiation impossible.
Mukasey makes yet other
significant points. We waited for President Obama to say the "t" word --
terrorism -- he points out. And indeed while he was reluctant at first, it
wasn't long until he did. However, there was then "his vague musing on
Friday about some unspecified agenda of the perpetrators, when by then there was
no mystery: the agenda was jihad." [There were, declared the
president, "many unanswered questions" about what drove the suspects to
violence.]
And so, still, an unwillingness to
tie radical Islam to the violence. "We have heard not a word from those sources
[who wield executive power] suggesting any need to understand and confront a
totalitarian ideology that has existed since at least the founding of the Muslim
Brotherhood in the 1920s."
"Tamerlan Tsarnaev is the
fifth person since 9/11 who has participated in terror attacks after questioning
by the FBI." (Emphasis added)
~~~~~~~~~~
As a journalist, I
exercise a self-restraint: In order to maintain
a professional standard, I avoid inappropriate terminology. But
I must say that Secretary of State John Kerry is trying that
self-restraint. This is
with regard to his comment, while in Turkey, on the Mavi Marmara
incident:
“I know it’s an emotional issue
with some people. I particularly say to the families of people who were lost in
the incident we understand these tragedies completely and we sympathize with
them.”
“I mean, I have just been through
the week of Boston and I have deep feelings for what happens when you have
violence and something happens and you lose people that are near and dear to
you. It affects a community, it affects a country. We’re very sensitive to
that.”
Mind-blowing, is it not? The
people killed on the Mavi Mamara by Israeli commandos had terrorist
associations and had deliberately and viciously attacked the Israelis, who
then responded in self-defense. While those killed in Boston were
innocents, whose lives were taken by terrorists.
And here Kerry is, empathizing
with the families of terror-connected people. What an insult to
Israel!
He was, it seems clear, attempting
to play up to the Turks.
Although some see it this
way, I doubt that he was consciously trying to undercut Israel --
he hadn't thought that hard, or that deep. Besides, it would make
little sense to undercut Israel when Hagel was in Jerusalem doing the
opposite (see below).
His statement was made at a time
when an Israeli delegation had come to negotiate compensation to be paid to
Turkey for the lives of those killed on the Mavi Marmara, with Turkey demanding
one million dollars for each of the nine dead, while Israel was offering
one-tenth of that. Was he consciously attempting to "help" up the
compensation terms -- trying to show the Turks that he was their good
buddy?
Reassuring, is it not, to
know that US foreign affairs are being handled by such an astute
individual?
~~~~~~~~~~
One of the reasons Kerry was
attempting to play to the Turks is because he was hoping to influence a
decision Turkish PM Erdogan had made, to visit Gaza next month. This visit
is considered potentially counterproductive to "jumpstarting the peace
process," and is being opposed by the PA's Abbas.
The response to this request by
Kerry? Said Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc, who also serves as the
government's spokesman:
"Mr. Kerry's statement ... from a diplomatic perspective
was objectionable, wrong and was incorrect.
"Only the Turkish government decides when and where the
prime minister or any other Turkish official travels. An experienced foreign
minister would not have done this. A foreign minister cannot and should not
directly express to the media his personal opinions about our prime minister's
visit."
"An experienced foreign minister would not have done
this." Kerry is over his head. And the Turks pull no
punches.
~~~~~~~~~~
Says commentator Ruthie Blum:
"Islamists view bowing down as a sign of weakness, and America keeps
showing them that they are right to hold this view."
Blum further suggests that the Israeli response to all of this may be
tempered by the need for Turkish airspace in the event of an attack on
Iran. In addition to which, attacking Kerry while Hagel was making nice
here would likely not have been prudent. This entire situation is fraught with
layer upon layer of complexity.
~~~~~~~~~~
Erdogan is eager to go to Gaza at the time originally scheduled --
late May, after visiting the White House --because it will be the third
anniversary of the Mavi Marmara incident. That ship, after all, had as its
mission the breaking of the Israeli naval blockade of Gaza.
~~~~~~~~~~
As to the compensation
negotiations, the Israeli delegation -- headed by Security Council Head
Ya'akov Amidror -- left Turkey last night saying things had gone well. A
joint text has been prepared but not yet released; the amount of compensation,
which will be arrived at by a mutually agreed-up mechanism, has not yet been
determined.
Families of the nine who had been
killed are telling a different story, however. They say that their
government didn't consult them when agreeing to these negotiations. They
don't want compensation, which would not do justice to the memories of their
"martyrs." They want the end of the blockade of Gaza, which is what their
loved ones gave their lives for. And they intend to continue to pursue
legal proceedings against the Israeli military leaders who were
involved.
~~~~~~~~~~
While Kerry had gone to Turkey,
Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel was here in Israel the last couple of
days. What we are seeing seems a startling change in Hagel from
what he has reflected in the past. I would say he's doing his job as he
should -- taking orders from the commander-in-chief and representing a new
US policy -- or what appears to be a new policy.
Previously, the US had put
considerable pressure on Israel not to attack Iran, and had sent high level
personnel here to dissuade us from considering military action.
Now, on coming to Israel,
Hagel said: “Israel is a sovereign nation...Israel will make the decision that
Israel must make to protect itself, to defend itself.”
What is more, he signed on the
dotted line with Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon for a deal that will not only
give Israel a qualitative military edge in the region, but will accord Israel
the right to buy armaments that were not available outside of the US until now
-- rendering an Israeli attack on Iran more feasible.
The two held a press conference
yesterday (see picture), and from Ya'alon's body language we might guess that
things went well.
Credit:
WordJewishCongress
~~~~~~~~~~
Hagel also met privately with PM
Netanyahu this morning. At their press conference, Netanyahu thanked the
Secretary for US support, saying:
"Iran's attempt to arm itself with
nuclear weapons...is a challenge that Israel cannot accept, and as you and
President Obama have repeatedly said, Israel must be able to defend itself, by
itself, against any threat."
In his response, Hagel
said:
"Israel is a model for the
world."
Whoa. Absolutely true, but
this from Hagel? Is the world listening? And more to the point, what
is Hagel about here?
Credit:
ktvu
~~~~~~~~~~
The new US policy? What it
seems to be is this:
Obama now
recognizes that negotiations (diplomacy) alone will not move Iran and that
Netanyahu is right about the need for a credible military threat. But
rather than making such a threat itself, the US is threatening Iran via
Israel. What is more, the US seems to be working to ensure that
if the threat does not work and an attack on Iran is necessary, that attack --
by Israel, not the US -- will be successful.
Thus acknowledgement of Israel's
"right" to attack in self-defense -- a right we've always had but which until
now Obama sought to curtail. And provision of cutting edge armaments
-- previously unavailable -- that can make a difference.
~~~~~~~~~~
However, there is a "but..." here.
A difference of opinion between Israel and the US regarding the
right time to attack still exists. Dore Gold, president of the Jerusalem
Center of Public Affairs, spelled it out thus:
"It's all about timetables. If you say [as Israel does -- this is
Netanyahu's red line] the goal is to halt Iran in the enrichment phase, you
don't have much time. If you are waiting for Iran to weaponize [the position the
Obama administration has taken] maybe you can give it another year or
more."
And so we still must ask if those cutting edge armaments Israel will
receive from the US will arrive in time for action to be taken in the enrichment
phase? Or is Israel's ability to act with greater effectiveness going to
be curtailed until a later time?
What is more, as the NYTimes reported (emphasis added):
"...what the Israelis wanted most was a
weapons system that is missing from the package: a giant bunker-busting bomb
designed to penetrate earth and reinforced concrete to destroy deeply buried
sites. According to both American and Israeli analysts, it is the only
weapon that would have a chance of destroying the Iranian nuclear fuel
enrichment center at Fordow, which is buried more than 200 feet under a mountain
outside the holy city of Qum.
"The weapon, called a Massive Ordnance Penetrator,
weighs about 30,000 pounds — so much that Israel does not have any aircraft
capable of carrying it. To do so, they would need a B-2 bomber, the stealth
aircraft that the United States flew nonstop recently from Missouri to the
Korean Peninsula to underscore to North Korea that it could reach their nuclear
sites.
"The Obama administration has been reluctant to even discuss selling such capability to the Israelis..."
http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/04/22/17866116-no-bunker-buster-bomb-in-israels-us-arms-deal?lite
I've had my eye on those bunker busters for some time, and raised the issue of whether they would be provided to Israel when I wrote about this latest armaments deal.
Now I ask: What is Obama really all about?
"The Obama administration has been reluctant to even discuss selling such capability to the Israelis..."
http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/04/22/17866116-no-bunker-buster-bomb-in-israels-us-arms-deal?lite
I've had my eye on those bunker busters for some time, and raised the issue of whether they would be provided to Israel when I wrote about this latest armaments deal.
Now I ask: What is Obama really all about?
~~~~~~~~~~
Head of IDF Military Intelligence, Research Branch, Brig. Gen. ltay Baron,
says that Assad's troops have used lethal chemical weapons -- mostly sarin gas
-- against armed rebels in the past weeks and is continuing to do so. The
US and other nations are still saying they need to confirm this.
Baron, in a briefing to the Institute for National Security Studies in
Tel Aviv, said that the lack of an "appropriate international response" to the
Syrian regime's use of chemical weapons was "very worrying" and might give
Assad the impression (dare I say the correct impression?) that there will be no
consequences for what he's doing.
Obama had said that use of WMD by Assad would be crossing a red line.
Perhaps this position motivates the reluctance to acknowledge the
evidence as firm.
Baron further said that 1,000 people were being killed in Syria every week.
"There are more than 1000 tons of chemical weapons in Syria, plus missiles with
warheads. It is a massive arsenal. The regime has already made use of some of
these weapons...."
Baron noted, as did IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz recently, that Russia is
exceedingly heavily involved in shoring up Assad. Gantz called this
"strange."
To be watched very very closely indeed. This is going on at
our periphery and it's a question of when and how the IDF will be
involved.
~~~~~~~~~~
©
Arlene Kushner. This material is produced by Arlene Kushner,
functioning as an independent journalist. Permission is granted for it to be
reproduced only
with
proper attribution.
If
it is reproduced and emphasis is added, the fact that it has been added must be
noted.
This material
is transmitted by Arlene only to persons who have requested it or agreed to
receive it. If you are on the list and wish to be removed, contact Arlene and
include your name in the text of the
message.
No comments:
Post a Comment