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THE BIGGEST THREAT TO THE WEST IS WITHIN ITSELF, NOT ISLAM
What is blindingly obvious to the outside world {the majority}, yet remains an act of courage to express in the US.
The biggest threat to the West lies within itself, not with Islam
Our leaders have so little respect for democracy’s freedoms as to suspend them at the bang of a bombSimon Jenkins
I remember as a small boy going from door to door in our village collecting money for a missionary ship, the John Williams. It was taking God to the heathen of the East Indies, a distant realm to which the Good Lord, despite His all-seeing wisdom, had carelessly (and I thought excitingly) denied His presence. It never occurred to me that the natives might adhere to some other faith. I saw them waiting eagerly on the beach for the Bible to be carried ashore, wondering only why the Royal Mail was so slow.
Last week a 29-page letter to the Pope was issued from a galaxy of 138 Muslim leaders designed to refute any such exclusive creed. It pleaded for better understanding between Christians and Muslims, based on a shared monotheism and the affinity between the Bible and the Koran. Both contained commandments to love a single god and to love one’s neighbour. The archaic language boiled down to hoping that the two religions might respect each other because “the future of the world depends on peace between Muslims and Christians”.
The letter is certainly an advance on the first missive to Nicephorus, a 9th-century prince of Rome, from Harun al-Rashid, a Muslim caliph.
Addressing “thou Roman dog”, Rashid wrote, “I have read thy letter, O thou son of an unbelieving mother. Thou shalt not hear, thou shalt behold, my reply.” He proceeded to massacre half Byzantium.
Rashid’s successors are more circumspect. They implicitly rebut George Bush’s “He who is not with us is against us” speech after 9/11. “Islam is not against the Christians,” the letter declares, “so long as they do not wage war against Muslims on account of their religion, oppress them and drive them out of their homes.” Nor is this debate “simply a matter for polite ecumenical dialogue between leaders”. The “eternal souls” of those who “relish conflict and destruction” are at stake, not to mention “the survival of the world”.
Coming at the end of Ramadan, the letter is impressive. The signatories embrace a global range of grand muftis, imams, sheikhs and scholars from all denominations of Islam, with a wide span of theological influence. The appeal to religious tolerance at a time of tension between Islam and the West is welcome. But what the letter means needs deconstruction.
Religious leaders like to claim headlines by subjecting politics to a downpour of platitude. The letter makes no mention of (monotheistic) Jews, let alone Hindus and Buddhists. It merely invites the Pope, the Archbishop of Canterbury and others to acknowledge what the archbishop calls “their common scriptural foundations . . . as a basis for justice and peace in the world”. Two religions that embrace “half of humanity” should stand together or, by implication, there will be war.
Such an implication is grandiose, dangerous and wrong. It implies that the Muslim world has a politico-military power that is in some sense equal and opposite to that of Christianity. This elevates the so-called jihadist tendency within Islam to a status that it does not have and should never think it has. It suggests Islam has sufficient power to confront and possibly undermine the West. It implies a balance of power parallel with a balance of theological interpretation.
Such an implication feeds a no less dangerous paranoia in the West. By stating that the “survival of the world” might turn on a struggle between Islam and Christianity, the letter reinforces the militarist fantasies of neoconservatives who see the world as just such a struggle. It is a paranoia which, since 9/11, has driven the “war on terror” and fomented the tension and antagonism to the West to which the scholars’ letter is so vacuous a response.
The chief threat to world security at present lies in the capacity of tiny groups of political Islamists to goad the West into a rolling military retaliation. Extremists on each side feed off the others’ frenzied scenarios so as to garner money and political support for their respective armies of the night. Each sees the other as a cosmic menace and abandons communal tolerance and peaceful diplomacy to counter it. The authors of this letter would be better employed vetting their own blood-curdling mullahs and madrasahs than in writing platitudes to the Pope.
I am proud to be a cheerleader for western values. I see the West – proxy for the letter’s “Christians” – as powerful without precedent. The American-European economic and political axis is unconquerable. For all its occasional and manifold lapses, capitalist democracy has been tested and not found wanting. Other societies such as Russia, China and India all measure themselves against the West’s success and seek in varying degrees to emulate it. To this extent Francis Fukuyama was right to call the end of the cold war “the end of history”.
The Muslim world is more detached. Its religious habits scare nervous westerners into seeing it as a shrouded, black-clad menace. It is a less ordered society and more capable of perpetrating, or at least excusing, outrages against western targets. But these outrages are of frustration rather than conquest. While they can kill people and destroy property, they do not “threaten the West”, let alone undermine western values. If any Muslim state were rash enough to declare a war of aggression against Europe or America, of which there is no sign, it would be beaten.
There is no Saladin or Tamerlane riding out of the desert to subject the West to a new caliphate. There is rather a job for the police, local and international, one at which they seem reasonably competent. America and Britain, for example, have each seen just one successful attack by Muslim terrorists in the past decade. While other attacks have been forestalled, we would be mad to see them as constituting a war of civilisations and religions.
There may be young Muslims and their teachers with a vested interest in talking up such a war. There are those in the West with the same interest, such as the booming armaments and security industries with their think tanks and lobbyists.
Such vested interests need to be exposed as such. To portray Islam as a whole as a concerted threat to western security, and to imply that the West’s democratic institutions and freedoms are not proof against that threat, is absurd and close to treason. Then to demand that western freedoms be dismantled and stored away for the duration of a “war on terror” is to wave the flag of surrender.
This defeatism led the American Congress to allow its president to authorise torture and detention without trial in what Senator Robert Byrd called “the slow unravelling of the people’s liberties”. It enabled a British Home Office to curb free speech and habeas corpus. It arms police, fortifies buildings and impedes the free movement of citizens. It makes every Christian suspicious of every Muslim.
This poison has not been generated by the teaching of Sayyid Qutb and his Al-Qaeda fanatics, but in the overreaction to them. After sowing their mayhem they, and not Afghanistan and Iraq, should have been targeted and eliminated. The belligerence and ineptitude of western policy over the past decade has turned nobodies into heroes of the Muslim world. The most incompetent period of western diplomacy since the 1930s has left the West hated and cities everywhere at the mercy of any Muslim misfit with a sack of explosive.
When Thomas Paine told America that “we have it in our power to begin the world over again”, he meant by example, not military conquest. His utopianism was a brave, confident and open-hearted one. That of his successors is sinking into the opposite, a fearful, besieged, security-obsessed wimpishness, in which Muslims rightly feel threatened by the arbitrary violence of the American right.
It is ironic that defeat in the cold war should have led Russia to the exuberant self-confidence of Vladimir Putin’s Moscow, while victory has plunged the West into a loss of nerve. In both Washington and London are leaders who have so little confidence in democracy as to regard it as vulnerable to a few madmen, and who have so little respect for democracy’s freedoms as to suspend them at the bang of a bomb.
I believe in the robustness of the democracies created in the West over the past half-century. I am not sure that our leaders do.
mailto:simon.jenkins@sunday-times.co.uk
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (4)
at 09:51 on October 14th, 2007
The AA,
You are correct. The West looks upon its place in the world different then any other member of the world community. Most countries are interested in the security of their regions, economic stablility and participation in world trade to the fullest extent possible.
The West, however, views itself in the light of world dominance. Imagine, being in charge of the whole world, setting yourself as "the" world gate keeper.
One of the first neccessities of a position of world dominance, is that a country must then become dominant in matters of economics, politics and world trade. Further, to command and protect it all(we have to protect our interest in the region), a standing military becomes necessary. With a military which stands ready for deployment any where in the world, a world intelligence agency must also be in place to keep a finger on the pulse of regions thousands of miles away. With the presence of an intelligence agency, there will be political strife, upheaval and contrieved corruption.
Wedded to all of this is the very courious activity of making China the dominant manufacturer and producer of goods in the world. For during the time of war, it is nations such of this whose manufacturing plants are re-equipped for armourment and turned into a war machine. What nations would surrender the strenght of its manufacturing capability and weaken their position in the event of conflict? This same nation holds the majority of United States(the West) debt, thus could negatively impact and weaken the US economy at any time!
What is the real agenda? Who are really the allies and who are the enemies disguised as allies? Yes, as it relates to the West, the enemy my very be US.
at 12:31 on October 14th, 2007
at 13:49 on October 14th, 2007
It is typically an ultimate show of arrogance and lack of objectivity that allow so many writers to refer to " the West" or "Western civilization" as being all people and countries left of Istanbul, being majority Christian and Capitalist! This imagined homogenity is illusory, dangerous and ultimately exists only in the mind of lesser lights like Bush and Brown. The West is not and never has been " at war" with Islam, Communism or any other "ism" since " the West" or traditionally the Greco/Roman tradition is a small part of a vast, heterogenic cultural mosaic which is as far more diverse and polylinguistic than almost any other state in the restof the world.
The much maligned French, who out of Gallic chagrin and stubbornness, insist on differing from theNeo-con vision of this diatribe, are basically the tip of the iceberg, representing in their own self-serving and chauvinistic way the vast multitude of dissent and resistance to the " Big Mac" political and socio-cultural diet politicians of all stripes and convictions try to force feed us. I am obviously NOT an American but know them well and respect their love of personal and political freedoms, their decency and humaness, their willingness to back a Just Cause to the bitter end and their innate sense of fairness. I am convinced that Americans, and all the other nations that make up the Western mosaic are not united in any world view, religious commonality or even fundamental ,core values other than their desire, like the rest of the world, to live in peace and prosperity, security, and stability..........all that has been ripped from since the end of WW2 by the political-military alliance of the rich and powerful.
I agree, we are NOT at war with Islam, and they do not represent any real threat to our core values, anymore than the Pope does or for that matter, Madonna! However, the power brokers worldwide, dance to a tune we are not priviledged to hear...its orchestra is money and power, its rythmn is the creaton of pseudo-enemies like " The Terrorists, " Commies", "Liberals", " Zionists", etc.etc. and its bandleader(s) are the self-appointed "defenders of " Western Civilization"....Bush and company!
The simplest paradign to use as a test of the truth of this pseudo-conflict is to ask " What would we do without enemies?" If one reflects over the last 100 years or so, one realizes that there never has been a time when " the enemy" didn't exist, real or imagined. Imperialism at the start of the century, Facism in the middle stages, Communism (and socialism in the US) over the last 40 years and finally " Fundamentalism or Liberalism" up to today. What will be next? Once these menaces disappeared(as will the last one soon enough) who will be sent off the bench into the political game? Sinoism, Catholicism, regionalism, environmentalism,...you name it, leaders WILL find another pseudo-enemy and rally us, their troops, to do battle with this henious and unrelenting scourge. As long as these imagined enemies fufill the two crucial criteria our leaders rely on to frighten us into obedience; being a perceived but NOT a real threat and generating more power and money for themselves, then all will be business as usual. I am aware that Facism was a REAL threat to Europe but Communism is non-existant, replaced by a subtle form of unadulterated and rabid capitalism hidden under a fading and chipped veneer of Marxism that not even the most idiotic and fanatical moron seriously adheres to.
Our elected leaders no longer (and possibly never) represent us, the majority of occidental citizens. The iceberg has to flip, with the people dictating their will to the ir leaders and censoring them when they stray from our needs and wishes. The tail has to be stopped from wagging the dog...civil democracy has to be restored, the rule of law and common sense has to stamp out the neo-con, religious right fundamentalism enslaving the US and other democracies. Of the people, by the people and for the people must now truly be implemented and cherished.
at 05:27 on October 16th, 2007
Thank you for your contribution weedonald. I would like to think so. But the British government ignored the over 1 million protesting British people and nearly killed the BBC in the process along with Dr. David Kelly. The soporific response of the British people was to vote the government back into office. No such apathy existed in Spain after the Madrid bombings where the people engaged in their young democracy.