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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]
The
Islamic States of America?
Erosion from within…
[Daniel Pipes] 9/24/04
The hardest
thing for Westerners to understand is not that a war with militant
Islam is underway but that the nature of the
enemy's ultimate goal. That goal is to apply the Islamic law
(the Shari’a) globally. In U.S. terms, it intends to replace
the Constitution with the Qur'an.
This aspiration
is so remote and far-fetched to many non-Muslims, it elicits
more
guffaws than apprehension. Of course, that used
to be the same reaction in Europe, and now it's become widely
accepted that, in Bernard Lewis' words, "Europe
will be Islamic by the end of the century."
Because of
the American skepticism about Islamist goals, I postponed publishing
an
article on this subject until immediately after
9/11, when I expected receptivity to the subject would be greater
(it was published in November 2001 as "The Danger Within:
Militant Islam in America").
I argued there that
The Muslim
population in this country is not like any other group,
for it includes within it a substantial
body of people - many
times more numerous than the agents of Osama bin Ladin
- who share with the suicide hijackers a hatred of the United
States
and the desire, ultimately, to transform it into a nation
living under the strictures of militant Islam.
The receptivity
indeed was greater, but still the idea of an
Islamist takeover remains unrecognized in establishment
circles - the U.S. government, the old media, the universities,
the
mainline churches.
Therefore,
reading "A
rare look at secretive Brotherhood in America," in
the Chicago Tribune on Sept. 19 caused me to startle. It's a
long analysis that draws on an exclusive interview with Ahmed
Elkadi, the Muslim Brotherhood leader in the United States during
1984-94, plus other interviews and documentation. In it, the
authors (Noreen S. Ahmed-Ullah, Sam Roe, and Laurie Cohen) warily
but emphatically acknowledge the Islamists' goal of turning the
United States into an Islamic state.
Over the
last 40 years, small groups of devout Muslim men have gathered
in homes in U.S. cities
to pray, memorize the Koran
and discuss events of the day. But they also addressed their
ultimate goal, one so controversial that it is a key reason
they have operated in secrecy: to create Muslim states overseas
and,
they hope, someday in America as well.
Brotherhood
members emphasize that they follow the laws of the nations
in which they operate. They stress that they do not believe
in overthrowing the U.S. government, but rather that they
want
as many people as possible to convert to Islam so that one
day - perhaps generations from now - a majority of Americans
will
support a society governed by Islamic law.
This Brotherhood
approach is in keeping with my observation that the greater
Islamist threat to the West is not violence - flattening
buildings, bombing railroad stations and nightclubs, seizing
theaters and schools - but the peaceful, legal growth of
power through education, the law, the media, and the political
system.
The Tribune article explains how, when recruiting new members, the organization
does not reveal its identity but invites candidates
to small prayer meetings where the prayer leaders focus on the
primary goal of the Brotherhood, namely "setting up the
rule of God upon the Earth" (i.e., achieving Islamic hegemony).
Elkadi describes the organization's strategic, long-term approach: "First
you change the person, then the family, then the community, then
the nation."
His wife
Iman is no less explicit; all who are associated with the Brotherhood,
she says, have the same goal, which is "to
educate everyone about Islam and to follow the teachings of Islam
with the hope of establishing an Islamic state."
In addition
to Elkadi, the article features information from Mustafa Saied
(about
whose Muslim Brotherhood experiences the
Wall Street Journal devoted a feature
story in December
2003,
without mentioning the organization's Islamist goals). Saied,
the Tribune informs us, says
he found
out that the U.S. Brotherhood had a plan for achieving
Islamic rule in America: It would
convert Americans to Islam
and elect like-minded Muslims to political office. "They're
very smart. Everyone else is gullible," Saied says. "If
the Brotherhood puts up somebody for an election, Muslims
would vote for him not knowing he was with the Brotherhood."
Citing
documents and interviews, the Tribune team notes that
the secretive Brotherhood, in an effort to acquire more influence,
went above ground in Illinois in 1993, incorporating
itself
as the Muslim American Society. The MAS, headquartered
in Alexandria,
Va. and claiming 53 chapters across the United States
engages in a number of activities. These include summer camps,
a large annual conference, websites, and the Islamic
American
University,
a mainly correspondence school in suburban Detroit that
trains teachers and imams.
Of course,
the MAS denies any intent to take over the country. One of
its top officials, Shaker Elsayed, insists that
MAS does
not believe in creating an Islamic state in America
but supports the establishment of Islamic governments in Muslim
lands. The group's goal in the United States, he says, "is
to serve and develop the Muslim community and help Muslims
to be the best citizens they can be of this country." That
includes preserving the Muslim identity, particularly among
youths.
Notwithstanding
this denial, the Tribune finds MAS goals to be clear enough:
Part
of the Chicago chapter's Web site is devoted to teens.
It includes reading materials that say Muslims have a duty
to help
form Islamic governments worldwide and should be prepared
to take up arms to do so. One passage states that "until
the nations of the world have functionally Islamic
governments, every individual who is careless or lazy
in working for Islam
is sinful." Another one says that
Western secularism and materialism are evil and that
Muslims should "pursue this evil force to its
own lands" and "invade
its Western heartland." [links added by me,
DP]
In suburban
Rosemont, Ill., several thousand people attended MAS' annual
conference
in 2002 at the village's convention center.
One speaker said, "We may all feel emotionally attached
to the goal of an Islamic state" in America, but it would
have to wait because of the modest Muslim population. "We
mustn't cross hurdles we can't jump yet."
These revelations
are particularly striking, coming as they do just days after
a Washington Post article titled "In
Search Of Friends Among The Foes," which
reports how some U.S. diplomats and intelligence officials
believe the Muslim Brotherhood's influence "offers an
opportunity for political engagement that could help isolate
violent jihadists." Graham
Fuller is quoted saying
that "It is the preeminent movement in the Muslim
world. It's something we can work with." Demonizing the
Brotherhood, he warns, "would be foolhardy in the extreme." Other
analysts, such as Reuel Gerecht,
Edward Djerejian, and Leslie Campbell, are quoted as
being in agreement with this outlook.
But it is a deeply wrong and dangerous approach. Even if the
Muslim Brotherhood is not specifically associated with violence
in the United States (as it has been in other countries, including
Egypt and Syria), it is deeply hostile to the United States and
must be treated as one vital component of the enemy's assault
force.CRO
This piece first appeared at FrontPage Magazine
copyright
2004 Daniel Pipes
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