Obama: Freedom or Islam?

White House panders to Muslims instead of pushing American values

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By THE WASHINGTON TIMES
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/staff/the-washington-times/> 

-

The Washington Times

7:51 p.m., Thursday, May 12, 2011

clip_image001PRAYERS: Members of the hard-line group Islam Defenders Front
gather by portraits of Osama bin Laden and President Obama in Jakarta,
Indonesia, during prayers Wednesday for the al Qaeda leader killed by U.S.
forces in Pakistan. Mr. Obama is scheduled to meet Thursday with Sept. 11
families in New York. (Associated Press)

Bottom of Form

President Obama is trying to hit the reset button on his outreach efforts to
the world's Muslims. He would do better to focus on aggressively promoting
freedom rather than pandering to Islam.

The first round of outreach - kicked off by Mr. Obama's June 2009 speech in
Cairo - was a spectacular failure. Opinion polling on sentiment towards the
United States in countries with Muslim majorities showed an initial burst of
enthusiasm, followed in 2010 by a collapse. In some cases, Muslim approval
of America fell to levels lower than during the waning days of the George W.
Bush administration.

Now the White House is using the timing of Osama bin Laden's death to argue
that al Qaeda's violent approach to political change is passe, and that the
popular uprisings sweeping the Middle East represent the wave of the future.
However, al Qaeda already has answered this argument. In the Spring 2011
edition of the terror group's English-language magazine Inspire, the lead
editorial by Yahya Ibrahim notes that a "line that is being pushed by
Western leaders is that because the protests in Egypt and Tunisia were
peaceful, they proved al Qaeda - which calls for armed struggle - to be
wrong. That is another fallacy. Al Qaeda is not against regime changes
through protests but it is against the idea that the change should be only
through peaceful means to the exclusion of the use of force."

Of course, not all change occurring in the Middle East is peaceful. U.S. and
NATO warplanes support armed rebels in Libya, and al Qaeda notes that this
vindicates their views on violence. "If the protesters in Libya did not have
the flexibility to use force when needed," Mr. Ibrahim says, "the uprising
would have been crushed." This point is also being proved in Syria, where
the United States has been deaf to desperate pleas from dissidents being
mowed down by regime troops with the assistance of Iran. No mere speech by
Mr. Obama will bring a springtime of freedom to Damascus.

Mr. Obama's fixation on the means by which change is coming also overlooks
that the substance of the change may be precisely what al Qaeda has always
advocated. The White House has pushed for the participation of
religiously-based parties in Egypt's new government, but if the Muslim
Brotherhood comes to power in Cairo, it will pursue domestic and foreign
policies indistinguishable from those bin Laden deputy Ayman al-Zawahri
would implement if he were in charge. Islamism is the objective, whether
achieved by bombs or ballots.

Mr. Ibrahim says that in al Qaeda's opinion, "the revolutions that are
shaking the thrones of dictators are good for the Muslims, good for the
mujahidin and bad for the imperialists of the West and their henchmen in the
Muslim world." He says the terrorists, "are very optimistic and have great
expectations of what is to come." This optimism is not unfounded. Mr. Obama
should shift his focus from pandering to Muslim sensibilities to helping
shape the outcome of the changes sweeping the Middle East in a way that
reflects American values.

The United States is not at war with Islam, but neither should our nation be
promoting it. America has traditionally advocated the principles of freedom
of conscience and individual liberty, concepts that are in dire need of
support in most Muslim states. Taking an unadulterated stand for freedom in
the Middle East would be the most gutsy move Mr. Obama could make.

C Copyright 2011 The Washington Times, LLC

 



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