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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]
Two
Opposite Responses to Terrorism
Nepal and
France...
[Daniel Pipes] 9/16/04
Two terrorist
dramas began in Iraq on the same day, Aug. 19, 2004, when jihadists
separately seized 12 Nepalese workers
and 2 French reporters. Although their fates may end differently – the
former were murdered and the latter remain alive in captivity – it
is striking how similarly impotent both victim populations
felt and how differently they responded.
In the Nepalese case, a group of cooks, janitors, laundry attendants,
and other laborers had just crossed the border from Jordan into
Iraq when it was kidnapped by Ansar al-Sunna, a violent Islamist
group. On Aug. 31, an Islamist website showed
a four-minute video of their executions.
Nepalese responded to this atrocity by venting
their anger by assaulting the Muslim minority in Nepal. Hundreds
of infuriated
young men surrounded Katmandu's one mosque on Aug. 31 and heaved
rocks at it. Violence escalated the next day, with five
thousand demonstrators taking to the street, yelling slogans like "We
want revenge," "Punish the Muslims," and "Down
with Islam." Some attacked the mosque, broke into it, ransacked
it, and set fire to it. Hundreds of Korans were thrown onto the
street, and some were burned.
Rioters also looted other identifiably Muslim targets in the
capital city, including embassies and airline bureaus belonging
to Muslim-majority countries. A Muslim-owned television station
and the homes of individual Muslims came under attack. Mobs even
sacked the agencies that recruit Nepalese to work in the Middle
East.
The violence ended when armored cars and army trucks enforced
a shoot-on-sight curfew, leaving two protesters dead and 50 injured,
plus 33 police, and doing an estimated US$20
million in property damage.
Thus did a frustrated, enraged, and powerless people overwhelm
their authorities and target close-by innocents.
The French response could not have been more different. Threats
to murder the two reporters met with a massive governmental effort
to save their lives, not by targeting French Muslims but by cultivating
them. Paris strenuously pushed local Islamists to condemn the
kidnappings, hoping that their voice would convince the terrorists
to release the two men.
In the process, Islamic organizations effectively
took charge of the country's foreign policy, issuing statements
and acting
as though they represented the national population. Bertrand
Badie of l'Institut d'études politiques in Paris complains that French Muslims became "a sort of substitute for the
French foreign ministry."
Likewise on the international level, Paris called in chits for
having stood with the Arabs against Israel and with Saddam Hussein
against the U.S.-led coalition. French diplomats openly sought
the support of terrorist groups such as Hamas and Palestinian
Islamic Jihad.
These efforts culminated thirty years of French
appeasement and, in the scathing
analysis of Norbert Lipszyc, "constituted
a major victory for Islamists and terrorists." Lipszyc sees
France acting like a dhimmi (a Christian or Jew who accepts Muslim
sovereignty and in return is tolerated and protected). "France
has publicly confirmed that its dhimmi status, its readiness
to submit to Islamist overlords. In return, these have declared
that France, dhimmi that it is, deserves protection from terrorist
acts."
If the hostages are released, the policy of appeasement
at home and abroad will seemingly have been vindicated. But
at what a
price! As Tony Parkinson writes in Melbourne's Age newspaper, "No
democracy should have to jump through these hoops to keep innocent
people alive." And jumping those hoops has deep implications.
The historian Bat Ye'or, the first person to
comprehend the gradual process of Europe accepting the dhimmi status, observes that this fundamental shift began with the Arab-Israeli war of
1973, when the continent began moving "into the Arab-Islamic
sphere of influence, thus breaking the traditional trans-Atlantic
solidarity."
Bat Ye'or points to Euro-Arab collaboration now
being near-ubiquitous; it is "political, economic, religious and in the transfer
of technologies, education, universities, radio, television,
press, publishers, and writers unions." She envisions this
shift ending in "Eurabia," or Europe under the thumb
of Arabia.
Returning to recent events: the abhorrent Nepalese
violence reflected an instinct for self-preservation – hit me and
I will hit you back. In contrast, the sophisticated French reaction
was supine – hit me and I will beg you to stop. If history
is a guide, the Nepalese thereby made a repetition of atrocities
against themselves less likely. And the French made such a repetition
more likely. CRO
This piece
first appeared in The New York Sun
copyright
2004 Daniel Pipes
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