Finding Moderate Muslims
Friday, July 14, 2006
By: Tashbih Sayyed
Just as US President George W. Bush has devoted considerable time
and energy since 9/11 to build relationships with moderate Muslims,
British Prime Minister Tony Blair has also found himself seeking
assistance from moderate British Muslims following last year's 7/7
London attacks to challenge the extremist Islamist ideology that
is responsible for a seemingly never ending Islamist terrorism. Blair
and Bush both would like moderate Muslims to use their unique insight
and access to do more to undermine the extremists' methods and false
sense of grievance about the West Blair has insisted that government
alone could not eliminate extremism, that only the Islamic community
could accomplish this goal.
Both Bush and Blair obviously place much faith in moderate Muslims,
but without any clear understanding of who these people really are.
Without first establishing what makes a moderate Muslim, relying
too much on easy answers is a recipe for certain disaster.
Who is a moderate Muslim?
Muslims who oppose theocracy, who seek democracy, who want equal
rights for women and an end to child labor, honor killings, and
child marriages are moderates. But there is much more to the
concept than just these basics. Before enlisting an apparently
moderate Muslim group in the war on Islamist terror, we must
know a bit more. Do they believe that non-Muslims are inherently
inferior? Do they consider religious or national identity pre-eminent?
What do they believe about Jews and Israel? How do they characterize
Arab terrorism in Israel? What is their opinion about Osama bin
Laden's long list of grievances? Do they consider the war on
terror a war on Islam?
Today in the United States, almost all of the Islamic organizations,
groups, and parties that claim to be moderate have also been known
to encourage anti-Americanism. A majority of the moderate Muslims
find it very difficult to disagree with the Al-Qaeda manifesto.
Even secular Muslims have been found to be sympathetic to many
of the causes advanced by political Islam.
For example, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR),
which has established itself as a moderate Islamic group, has remained
on the wrong side in the war on terrorism. It called on Los Angeles-based
KCOP Television, Inc., channel 13, to remove billboards that featured
a picture of Osama bin Laden with the headline "the sworn
enemy." CAIR has denied bin Laden's responsibility for the
East African embassy bombings and did not want to accept that bin
Laden had anything to do with the attacks on America.
According to scholars and observers, "CAIR consistently defends
other militant Islamic terrorists too. The conviction of the perpetrators
of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing it deemed 'a travesty of
justice'." According to FBI's former chief of counter terrorism,
Steven Pomerantz, "CAIR, its leaders, and its activities effectively
give aid to international terrorist groups. CAIR has been known
to work against those Muslims who support US foreign policy and
condemn Arab terrorism in the Jewish lands. CAIR has defamed moderate
Muslims who reject its extremist agenda, leading to death threats
against them.
"Moderate" Muslims may give their own reasons to be
serving the cause of jihad. They may not like to be fettered by
the rigid interpretations of their religion, but they definitely
do not agree with the US policies toward Muslim countries. This
is not a religious issue, they insist, but a question of Muslim
dignity and self-respect.
The reason for such brazen anti-Americanism is very simple. Most
of the "moderate" Islamic organizations in the US, UK
and Europe are front groups for Wahhabi jihadism and the Muslim
Brotherhood of Egypt or funded by Saudi Arabian and other Arab
sources. This helps them advocate the case of Wahhabism and the
Muslim Brotherhood, insisting that both of these movements are
in essence represent moderation in Islam.
Trusting blindly "moderate" Muslims has already hurt
the cause of our war on terror. "Moderate" leaders like
Yasser Arafat and Saddam Hussein had our support but did their
best to hurt our interests. Similarly, today we support leaders
like Hosni Mubarak and General Pervez Musharraf, who appear to
be moderate. But none of them have been able to advocate our case
convincingly to their peoples. The reason is simple. They do not
support us out of shared values, but for reasons of self-interest
and pragmatism.
The United States needs not only moderate Muslim allies, but those
who accept the truth that all human beings are created equal. Only
someone who believes in a democracy that does not exclude anyone,
that does not discriminate against its citizens because of their
faith is a real moderate.
No one who believes in others' inferiority can be a moderate.
An anti-Semite individual such as former Malaysian Prime Minister
Mahathir Muhammed can never be a moderate. Despite his other actions,
Mahathir Muhammed's statements like "But today the Jews rule
the world by proxy. They get others to fight and die for them," are
enough to belie his claims of moderation. The West considers Egyptian
president, Hosni Mubarak, a moderate. But the transmission and
propagation of the notorious anti-Semitic hoax, The Protocols of
the Elders of Zion, under his rule confirmed his anti-Semitism
and undermined his image of moderation.
Many British Muslim leaders, toward whom Mr. Blair is now looking
for help, are part of this Islamist phenomenon. They betrayed their
feelings by not blaming the 7/7 terrorists un-conditionally and
without any reservations. They sincerely believe that the UK's
participation in the wars against Afghanistan and Iraq has been
a key contributory factor in the radicalization of some young Muslims
and they demanded a public inquiry to discover the factors behind
Britain's growing extremism.
Aslam Beg is a Pakistani retired general. He is also considered
a moderate and holds a position of influence in Pakistan's government.
He believes that terrorists are freedom fighters of a "Muslim
world facing unprecedented oppression and injustice". He has
also called the Bush-Blair strategy to combat global terrorism "a
declaration of total war on freedom movements" that will disproportionately
target Muslims.
To win the war on terror, the West must find a way to support,
cultivate, and empower those Muslim voices which have established
themselves as honest and sincere Americans and supporters of this
war on Islamist terror. We must be extremely cautious when we endorse
individuals and groups as moderates without first confirming their
true motivations and beliefs. Without fully understanding their
agenda, the war on terror will only be harmed.
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