Daniel Pipes
Cross-posted from National Review Online, The Corner
Cross-posted from National Review Online, The Corner
Andrew C. McCarthy, former U.S. prosecutor.
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I wrote there that while Islamism – the radical utopian movement
aspiring to a consistent and global application of Islamic law under the
rule of a caliph – remains in large part violent and tyrannical,
developments in several countries suggest the slight possibility that
this ideology will evolve in a more benign and decent direction. To
which, Andy responded with three main observations, which I shall
briefly answer:
1. Andy observes: "Western democracy is regressing away from a
culture of individual liberty protected by limited government. If it now
seems conceivable that Islamism could democratize, it can only be owing
to modern democracy's accommodation of more centralized and intrusive
government."
I reply: Indeed, democracy is a flexible concept and recent developments have mostly been negative; think of the pseudo-democratic nature of the European Union. But I am not so much talking about a debased form of democracy as an evolution toward something civilized; I am not being technical about democracy but political about freedom and the rule of law.
2. Andy disagrees with my statement that "Islamism has
significantly evolved over the past 13 years," moving away from violence
in favor of working within the system. He finds that Islamism has not
"materially changed at all" but there is simply more awareness today of
non-terrorist Islamists.
I reply: I knew 13 years ago of non-violent Islamists; indeed, this was implicit in my 2001 assertion that while "peaceable in appearance, … they all must be considered potential killers." I now find that "these words ring archaic" because I now recognize that some Islamists are not potential killers. Some of them are truly political with no intention to use force. Andy has not come to this conclusion but I suspect he eventually will.
3. Andy takes up a topic I did not discuss, namely the policy
implications of the possible decency of Islamism. He argues there are no
implications, stating that there is no worse choice than to "see a
small ray of hope that Islamism could improve as a rationale for further
collaboration and concessions to Islamists. Islamism is the ideology of
our enemies and … needs to be defeated, not brought around."
I reply: We agree. My seeing "a small ray of hope" does not mean Western states should go haring after Islamist movements, hoping they will moderate. No, this is indeed the ideology of our enemies that needs to be defeated and marginalized, as were fascism and communism in earlier eras.
(May 24, 2014)
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