Massacre in Pakistan: A Teachable Moment for the West

Posted By Barry Rubin On May 13, 2011 

There's something particularly poignant about news that at least 80 people
were killed in Charsadda, Pakistan, by a Taliban attack on a police training
center there. It isn't that the event was so unique - except for one feature
- but it is a suitable symbol of the situation in the Muslim-majority world
today and how messed up is the Western perception of that part of the world.

The unique aspect is that the attackers said they are taking revenge for the
killing of Usama bin Ladin by the United States.

And so as Americans cheer, 80 Pakistani families are in mourning. Let me
quickly add that I do not blame the United States for this new mass murder.
The crime is on the terrorists' head. Nor do I believe the United States
should not have killed bin Ladin. Not at all.

But this is a teachable moment, so let's summarize the lessons.

-Terrorism goes on. The death of one man or even of one organization won't
end it.

-Pakistan, albeit not to its credit, had nothing to do with the killing. In
fact, major elements in the government protected bin Ladin while even more
of the regime opposed the U.S. attack. Terrorists don't kill people because
their victims are "guilty" nor do they need a "good reason" for murder.
Their reason is the attempt to stage a revolutionary transformation of their
society which they believe is mandated by the will of God and also would
give them wealth and power.

-If the United States had not killed bin Ladin on that particular day, in
that place, or in that way, the Charsadda attack would have happened anyway.
Thus, terrorists use specific events as excuses to do what they would have
done anyway.

-The main cause of terrorism is not America (or Israel, or any other
country) killing terrorists but revolutionary Islamism's attempts to seize
state power or attempts of those revolutionary Islamists (and their allies)
already in power (see Iran, Syria, Hamas in Gaza, Hizballah in Lebanon, and
perhaps soon the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt?) to overthrow neighbors.

-These policemen were targets not because they were oppressive instruments
of capitalism or imperialism but because the revolutionaries want to destroy
order so they can operate in a situation of anarchy which they hope to
replace with their own rule.

-Most of the victims of terrorism are Muslim but those who proclaim their
love of Muslims and of Third World people (the Western left and most Muslim
activists there) couldn't care less about these thousands of killings. Their
only interest is to blame them on America, Israel, the West, or
Islamophobia. In fact, they attempt to interfere with the battle against the
terrorists and revolutionary Islamists, thus leading to the deaths of more
Muslims.

-Revolutionary Islamism uses terrorism because it is a reflection of the
movement's ultimate totalitarian and repressive aims.

-If revolutionary Islamism was just a heretical caricature of Islam then no
Muslims would follow it. Why did millions of Iranians support the Islamic
Republic? Why has Hezbollah come to dominate the Lebanese Shia community?
Why will millions of Egyptians vote for Muslim Brotherhood candidates? The
reason is that revolutionary Islamism is a "legitimate" interpretation of
Islam based on its texts and traditions. But it is not the only, or "best,"
or most beneficial (for Muslims and others) interpretation. To deny that
Islamism is derived from Islam won't convince any Muslims because they know
better. This is a battle over politics and interpretation, not
"Islamophobia," a concept largely created by Islamists for their own
benefit.

-Relatively moderate Arab governments are not just using the threat of
revolutionary Islamism to stay in power (although they do that also) but as
a reflection of a very real danger to their countries and societies.
Whatever one thinks of the Mubarak regime, a Brotherhood regime would be
worse. In contrast, it is ridiculous to protect the Assad regime in Syria
because it is an ally of revolutionary Islamists, helping them to murder
people in Iraq, Israel, Jordan, and Lebanon.

-Any true friend of Muslims would want the revolutionary Islamists defeated
and the regimes supporting them overthrown. Such a person would join the
fight against not only al-Qaida but also Hamas, Hizballah, Iran, the Muslim
Brotherhood, Syria, and the Taliban.

-Most of the obsessive demonization of Israel today does not spring from
some humanitarian impulse but is orchestrated by revolutionary Islamists and
their Western allies (witting or otherwise) to commit genocide on Israeli
Jews, expel or oppress Palestinian Christians, and impose a totalitarian
state on Palestinians.

-Until Western leaders understand the above principles, their policies will
not only fail, they will be counterproductive for the interests of both
their own countries and millions of Muslims, who do not want to be ruled by
revolutionary Islamism.

Now here's an interesting question. Suppose the above list of propositions
was submitted to leading politicians, policymakers, journalists, and
academic experts. How many of these points would they accept as obvious and
how many totally reject? If this list were given to average people, how many
of these points would they say that they've never heard expressed by their
mass media or leaders?

  _____  

Article printed from Rubin Reports: http://pajamasmedia.com/barryrubin

URL to article:
http://pajamasmedia.com/barryrubin/2011/05/13/president-obama%e2%80%99s-%e2%
80%9creset%e2%80%9d-of-relations-with-muslims-and-a-massacre-in-pakistan/

 



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