If we keep excusing Islam and apologizing for Islamic terrorists, they will
win.

Bruce


>From the New York Times --
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/08/opinion/08friedman.html?hp

Op-Ed Columnist
If It's a Muslim Problem, It Needs a Muslim Solution
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

Yesterday's bombings in downtown London are profoundly
disturbing. In part, that is because a bombing in our mother
country and closest ally, England, is almost like a bombing in
our own country. In part, it's because one assault may have
involved a suicide bomber, bringing this terrible jihadist
weapon into the heart of a major Western capital. That would
be deeply troubling because open societies depend on trust -
on trusting that the person sitting next to you on the bus or
subway is not wearing dynamite.

The attacks are also deeply disturbing because when jihadist
bombers take their madness into the heart of our open
societies, our societies are never again quite as open.
Indeed, we all just lost a little freedom yesterday.

But maybe the most important aspect of the London bombings is
this: When jihadist-style bombings happen in Riyadh, that is a
Muslim-Muslim problem. That is a police problem for Saudi
Arabia. But when Al-Qaeda-like bombings come to the London
Underground, that becomes a civilizational problem. Every
Muslim living in a Western society suddenly becomes a suspect,
becomes a potential walking bomb. And when that happens, it
means Western countries are going to be tempted to crack down
even harder on their own Muslim populations.

That, too, is deeply troubling. The more Western societies -
particularly the big European societies, which have much
larger Muslim populations than America - look on their own
Muslims with suspicion, the more internal tensions this
creates, and the more alienated their already alienated Muslim
youth become. This is exactly what Osama bin Laden dreamed of
with 9/11: to create a great gulf between the Muslim world and
the globalizing West.

So this is a critical moment. We must do all we can to limit
the civilizational fallout from this bombing. But this is not
going to be easy. Why? Because unlike after 9/11, there is no
obvious, easy target to retaliate against for bombings like
those in London. There are no obvious terrorist headquarters
and training camps in Afghanistan that we can hit with cruise
missiles. The Al Qaeda threat has metastasized and become
franchised. It is no longer vertical, something that we can
punch in the face. It is now horizontal, flat and widely
distributed, operating through the Internet and tiny cells.

Because there is no obvious target to retaliate against, and
because there are not enough police to police every opening in
an open society, either the Muslim world begins to really
restrain, inhibit and denounce its own extremists - if it
turns out that they are behind the London bombings - or the
West is going to do it for them. And the West will do it in a
rough, crude way - by simply shutting them out, denying them
visas and making every Muslim in its midst guilty until proven
innocent.

And because I think that would be a disaster, it is essential
that the Muslim world wake up to the fact that it has a
jihadist death cult in its midst. If it does not fight that
death cult, that cancer, within its own body politic, it is
going to infect Muslim-Western relations everywhere. Only the
Muslim world can root out that death cult. It takes a village.

What do I mean? I mean that the greatest restraint on human
behavior is never a policeman or a border guard. The greatest
restraint on human behavior is what a culture and a religion
deem shameful. It is what the village and its religious and
political elders say is wrong or not allowed. Many people said
Palestinian suicide bombing was the spontaneous reaction of
frustrated Palestinian youth. But when Palestinians decided
that it was in their interest to have a cease-fire with
Israel, those bombings stopped cold. The village said enough
was enough.

The Muslim village has been derelict in condemning the madness
of jihadist attacks. When Salman Rushdie wrote a controversial
novel involving the prophet Muhammad, he was sentenced to
death by the leader of Iran. To this day - to this day - no
major Muslim cleric or religious body has ever issued a fatwa
condemning Osama bin Laden.

Some Muslim leaders have taken up this challenge. This past
week in Jordan, King Abdullah II hosted an impressive
conference in Amman for moderate Muslim thinkers and clerics
who want to take back their faith from those who have tried to
hijack it. But this has to go further and wider.

The double-decker buses of London and the subways of Paris, as
well as the covered markets of Riyadh, Bali and Cairo, will
never be secure as long as the Muslim village and elders do
not take on, delegitimize, condemn and isolate the extremists
in their midst.

Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
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