Needed: A new policy on Islam
BY PATRICK J. BUCHANAN
06/23/06 "WorldNet"
-- -- In 1938, the year of Anschluss and
Munich, a perceptive British Catholic looked beyond the
continent over which war clouds hung and saw another cloud
forming.
"It has always seemed to me ... probable," wrote Hilaire Belloc,
"that there would be a resurrection of Islam and that our sons
or our grandsons would see the renewal of that tremendous
struggle between the Christian culture and what has been for
more than a thousand years its greatest opponent."
Belloc was prophetic. Even as Christianity seems to be dying in
Europe, Islam is rising to shake the 21st century as it did so
many previous centuries.
Indeed, as one watches U.S. Armed Forces struggle against Sunni
insurgents, Shia militias and jihadists in Iraq, and a resurgent
Taliban, all invoking Allah, Victor Hugo's words return to mind:
No army is so powerful as an idea whose time has come.
The idea for which many of our adversaries fight is a compelling
one. They believe there is but one God, Allah, that Muhammad is
his prophet, that Islam, or submission to the Quran, is the only
path to paradise and that a godly society should be governed
according to the Shariah, the law of Islam. Having tried other
ways and failed, they are coming home to Islam.
What idea do we have to offer? Americans believe that freedom
comports with human dignity, that only a democratic and
free-market system can ensure the good life for all, as it has
done in the West and is doing in Asia.
From Ataturk on, millions of Islamic peoples have embraced this
Western alternative. But today, tens of millions of Muslims
appear to be rejecting it, returning to their roots in a more
pure Islam.
Indeed, the endurance of the Islamic faith is astonishing.
Islam survived two centuries of defeats and humiliations of the
Ottoman Empire and Ataturk's abolition of the caliphate. It
endured generations of Western rule. It outlasted the
pro-Western monarchs in Egypt, Iraq, Libya, Ethiopia and Iran.
Islam easily fended off communism, survived the rout of
Nasserism in 1967 and has proven more enduring than the
nationalism of Arafat or Saddam. Now, it is resisting the
world's last superpower.
What occasioned this column was a jolting report in the June 20
Washington Times, by James Brandon, alerting us to a new front.
"Arrests Spark Fear of Armed Islamist Takeover" headlined the
story about the arrest, since May, of 500 militants who had
allegedly plotted the overthrow of the king of Morocco and
establishment of an Islamic state that would sever all ties to
the infidel West – to end the poverty and corruption they blame
on the West.
The arrests raised fears that Al Adl wa al Ihsane, or Justice
and Charity, was preparing to take up arms to fulfill the
predictions of the group's mystics that the monarchy would fall
in 2006. Though illegal, Al Adl wa al Ihsane is Morocco's
largest Islamic movement, which boycotts elections, but has
hundreds of thousands of followers and has taken over the
universities and is radicalizing the young.
Its founder is Sheik Abdessalam Yassine, who has declared its
purpose is to reunite mosque and state: "Politics and
spirituality have been kept apart by the Arab elites. And we
have been able to reconnect these two aspects of Islam – and
that is why people fear us."
And, one might add, why people embrace them.
If Morocco is now in play in the struggle between militant Islam
and the West, how looks the correlation of forces in June 2006?
Islamists are taking over in Somalia. They are in power in
Sudan. The Muslim Brotherhood won 60 percent of the races it
contested in Egypt. Hezbollah swept the board in southern
Lebanon. Hamas seized power from Fatah on the West Bank and
Gaza. The Shia parties, which hearken to Ayatollah Sistani,
brushed aside our favorites, Chalabi and Iyad Allawi, in the
Iraqi elections. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is the most admired Iranian
leader since Khomeini. In Afghanistan, the Taliban is staging a
comeback.
This has all happened in the last year. And where are we
winning?
What is the appeal of militant Islam? It is, first, its message:
As all else has failed us, why not live the faith and law God
gave us?
Second, it is the Muslim rage at the present condition where
pro-Western regimes are seen as corruptly enriching themselves,
while the poor suffer.
Third, it is a vast U.S. presence that Islamic peoples are
taught is designed to steal their God-given resources and assist
the Israelis in humiliating them and persecuting the
Palestinians.
Lastly, Islamic militants are gaining credibility because they
show a willingness to share the poverty of the poor and fight
the Americans.
What America needs to understand is something unusual for us:
From Morocco to Pakistan, we are no longer seen by the majority
as the good guys.
If Islamic rule is an idea taking hold among the Islamic masses,
how does even the best army on earth stop it? Do we not need a
new policy?
© 2006 Creators Syndicate Inc.
Click on "comments" below to read or post comments -
Click Here For Comment Policy
Are Comments Offensive? Unsuitable? Email us