Contributors
Daniel Pipes- Contributor
Daniel
Pipes is director of the Middle
East Forum, a member of the
presidentially-appointed board of the U.S.
Institute of Peace,
and a prize-winning columnist for the New York Sun and The
Jerusalem Post. His most recent book, Miniatures:
Views of Islamic and Middle Eastern Politics (Transaction
Publishers) appeared in late 2003. His website, DanielPipes.org,
the single most accessed source of information specifically
on
the Middle East and Islam, offers an archive and a chance
to sign-up to receive his new materials as they appear. [go
to Pipes index]
The
Triumph Of the 9/11 Commission
Calling the enemy by its true name…
[Daniel Pipes] 7/29/04
Finally,
an official body of the American government has come out and
said what
needs to be said: that the enemy is "Islamist
terrorism…not just ‘terrorism‚' some generic
evil." The 9/11
Commission in its final
report even declares
that Islamist terrorism is the "catastrophic threat" facing
America.
As Thomas Donnelly
points out in The New York Sun, the commission has called the
enemy "by its true name, something that politically
correct Americans have trouble facing."
Why does it matter
that the Islamist dimension of terrorism must be specified?
Simple. Just as a physician must identify
a disease to treat it, so a strategist must name an enemy to
defeat it. The great failing in the American war effort since
September 2001 has been the reluctance to name the enemy. So
long as the anodyne, euphemistic, and inaccurate term "war
on terror" remains the official nomenclature, that war will
not be won.
Better is to call
it a "war on Islamist terrorism." Better
yet would be "war on Islamism," looking beyond terror
to the totalitarian ideology that lies behind it.
Significantly, the
same day that the 9/11 report was published, July 22, President
Bush for the first time used the term "Islamic
militants" in a speech, bringing him closer than ever before
to pointing to the Islamist threat.
The report of the
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States
has other good value. It paints an accurate
picture of Islamist views, describing these as a "hostility
toward us and our values [that] is limitless." Equally useful
is the description of the Islamist goal being "to rid the
world of religious and political pluralism."
In contrast to those
analysts who wishfully dismiss the Islamists as a few fanatics,
the 9/11 commission acknowledges their true
importance, noting that Osama bin Laden's message "has attracted
active support from thousands of disaffected young Muslims and
resonates powerfully with a far larger number who do not actively
support his methods."The Islamist outlook represents not
a hijacking of Islam, as is often but wrongly claimed; rather
it emerges from a "long tradition of extreme intolerance" within
Islam, one going back centuries and in recent times associated
with Wahhabism, the Muslim Brethren, and the Egyptian writer
Sayyid Qutb.
The commission then does something almost unheard of in American
government circles: It offers a goal for the war now under way,
namely the isolation or destruction of Islamism.
And, after nearly
three years, how fares the war? The commission carefully distinguishes
between the enemy's twofold nature: "al
Qaeda, a stateless network of terrorists" and the "radical
ideological movement in the Islamic world." It correctly
finds the first weakened, yet posing "a grave threat." The
second is the greater concern, however, for it is still gathering
and "will menace Americans and American interests long after
Usama Bin Ladin and his cohorts are killed or captured." American
strategy, therefore, must be to dismantle Al Qaeda's network
and prevail over "the ideology that gives rise to Islamist
terrorism." In other words, "the United States has
to help defeat an ideology, not just a group of people."
Doing so means nothing
less than changing the way Muslims see themselves, something
Washington can help with but cannot do
on its own: "Tolerance, the rule of law, political and economic
openness, the extension of greater opportunities to women — these
cures must come from within Muslim societies themselves. The
United States must support such developments."
Of course, such an
evolution "will be violently opposed
by Islamist terrorist organizations" and this battle is
the key one, for the clash under way is not one of civilizations
but one "within a civilization," that civilization
being the Islamic one. By definition, Washington is a bystander
to this battle. It "can promote moderation, but cannot ensure
its ascendancy. Only Muslims can do this."
Moderate Muslims who
seek reform, freedom, democracy, and opportunity, the report
goes on, must "reflect upon such basic issues
as the concept of jihad, the position of women, and the place
of non-Muslim minorities," then they need to develop new
Islamic interpretations of these.
The 9/11 commission has fulfilled its mandate in interpreting
the current danger. The Bush administration should now take advantage
of its insights and implement them with dispatch. CRO
This piece
first appeared in the New York Sun
copyright
2004 Daniel Pipes
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