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The West’s declaration
of war on political Islam
Much has
been made of George W. Bush’s throwaway characterization
of the US’s "war on terrorism" as a ‘crusade’.
To be fair, he was probably using the word in the sense
of a determined, even zealous, pursuit of a cause, rather
than in any specifically anti-Islamic sense; it is unlikely
that he knew the origin of the word when he used it,
although he has undoubtedly been told since. To balance
that single careless comment, Bush can boast of numerous
statements in praise of Islam; indeed, he even visited
a mosque in Washington to reassure Muslims that he knows
Islam is a civilized, peace-loving religion, and that
the US has nothing against it. At the same time Bush
has repeatedly said that, in the US’s war against terrorism,
people must be with the US or be counted as against
it.
If all
the US’s propaganda about itself, its values, its democracy,
its promotion of freedom, human rights, justice and
the rule of law, and its desire to establish all these
in the world, were true, Bush’s comments on Islam and
his ultimatum to Muslims would merely be arrogant. This,
however, can safely be dismissed. So how do we take
Bush’s us-or-them stance? Taken with all his comments
in praise of Muslims and Islam, the message is clear:
we don’t mind Muslims provided that they are willing
to support us in our war against terrorism; otherwise
their version of Islam is the ‘extremist’ one, the one
we are determined to eradicate, and they can expect
no mercy. It is, in other words, a declaration of war
on any form of Islam that refuses to accept Western
political, economic and cultural hegemony, and refuses
to bow down before Western power.
This is
not new, of course; the west has long been at war with
all anti-western political movements, in Muslim countries,
Latin America, southeast Asia or elsewhere. The ‘coalition
against terrorism’ that Bush has brought together includes
some of the most terrorist regimes in the world, including
Russia, China, India, Israel, Britain and of course
the US itself. What they all have in common is that
they are perfectly willing to join in a war against
political Islamic movements, many being individually
involved in struggles against Islam, in Palestine, Kashmir,
Chechnya and elsewhere. Numerous Muslim regimes are
also part of the coalition, openly or not, having been
bribed, threatened or blackmailed into it.
What is
new is the brazenness and intensity with which this
war will be fought from now on. The West’s claims to
represent civil and human rights have long rung hollow,
but the pretence has been set aside in relatively few
cases, that of Shaikh Umar Abdur-Rahman being the most
obvious. From now on we can expect many more such cases
in Western countries, as well as assassinations and
disappearances of Islamic movement leaders, and the
general toleration of brutal repression of all forms
of political Islamic activism on a far greater scale
all over the world. What Islamic movement activists
in countries such as Algeria, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and
Iraq are used to will soon become equally familiar to
Muslims elsewhere, including Western countries.
The dangers
and difficulties facing Western Muslims as the Ummah’s
struggle for independence from Western hegemony becomes
more open have often been discussed in these pages.
We will now be expected to be more loyal than the loyallest
non-Muslims, and continually to demonstrate our acceptance
of Western values. Those who comply will be accepted
as ‘good’ Muslims, and promoted and rewarded for helping
to maintain the West’s claim not to be anti-Islamic.
Among other things, they will be recognised as the ‘legitimate’
leaders of the community, and provided with resources
with which to establish their positions and buy the
community off. Those Muslims who criticise the West’s
role in the world, meanwhile, and on speaking up for
Islamic movements that the West takes as enemies, can
expect to have many problems, even if they say and do
no more than non-Muslim Western dissidents.
There
are already signs that many Muslim organizations and
‘leaders’ will decide to be ‘good Muslims’. In Britain,
the five Muslims in Parliament (three in the House of
Lords and two in the House of Commons) have all supported
the West’s ‘war’ in Afghanistan; all, coincidentally
or not, are members of the ruling Labour Party. Few
organizations have had the courage to condemn the war
as strongly as they did the attacks on the US. As the
West’s war on Islam intensifies, more and more Muslims
are going to feel the pressure. The prospects of many
holding out and continuing to serve the movement are
not good.
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