Obama's Bow to the Muslim World, Round II

Posted By Bruce Thornton On May 24, 2011 @ 12:41 am In Daily
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In September 1938 English Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, explaining why
he was flying to Germany a third time in order to make peace with Germany,
recited the old nursery rhyme: "If at first you don't succeed, try, try, try
again." Cynical wags in the Foreign Office, who knew Chamberlain was in fact
appeasing Hitler by surrendering Czechoslovakia to him, quickly began
circulating another version of the saying: "If at first you don't concede,
fly, fly, fly again."

President Obama's new "outreach" to the Muslim world reminds me of
Chamberlain's serial efforts to appease a Germany bent on aggression and
conquest. First there was the Cairo speech in June 2009, which was supposed
to be a "new beginning" for U.S. relations with Muslims, but in fact simply
indulged the same old bad habits of Western self-doubt and historical guilt.
Thus Obama attributed the "tension" between the West and Islam to a
"colonialism that denied rights and opportunities to many Muslims, and a
Cold war in which Muslim-majority countries were too often treated as
proxies without regard to their own aspirations."  Next came the videotaped
New Year's greetings to Iran, and the multiple letters to the Iranian
"Supreme Leader" Ali Khamenei requesting "co-operation in regional and
bilateral relations." These outreaches were followed by Khameini's
announcement that "the path of Iran's nuclear progress could not be
blocked," and by the brutal crackdown that summer on the demonstrators
protesting the tyranny of the mullahcracy. Meanwhile Iran continues its
support of terrorists murdering our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Obama also extended the hand of friendship to Syria's Bashar al Assad,
sending an ambassador back to Damascus despite that country's close ties to
Iran and Hezbollah, its assassination of Lebanese former prime minister
Rafiq Hariri, and its support given to terrorists by facilitating their
travel into Iraq and Afghanistan. Assad reciprocated by hosting a confab
with Hezbollah's Hassan Nasrallah and Iran's genocidal Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
And like his Iranian buddies, Assad has responded to the current
demonstrations against his regime by killing about a thousand protestors.
Nor has Obama's abandonment of Egypt's Hosni Mubarak worked any magic in
changing the Egyptians into liberal democrats or even making them like us
more. The jihadist Muslim Brotherhood daily grows more powerful, attacks on
Christian Copts, abetted at times by the military, are proliferating, the
border with Gaza is open, and more and more Egyptians are calling for
trashing the peace treaty with Israel. Unsurprisingly, according to a May
Pew Research survey, only 20% of Egyptians view the United States favorably,
and only 35% have "a lot" or "some confidence" in Obama's leadership.

In short, every time Obama has offered his hand to Muslims in friendship,
the less he and America are liked, and the less events trend in directions
favorable to our national interests. Now comes another effort, the recent
May 19 address to the Muslim world that attempted to take account of the
demonstrations and protests roiling the Middle East, and to outline
America's response. And like those previous efforts, this one will do little
to change either perceptions or events, for it is predicated on the same
dubious assumptions and misapprehensions that have compromised our reactions
to the Muslim world. 

The main thrust of Obama's speech in the main reprises the same Bush
Doctrine that the president and his party spent years attacking. The
problems of the Muslim Middle East, in this view, result from a lack of
political and economic "self-determination" and "universal rights" that
prevents people from enjoying freedom and prosperity. Tyrannical rulers and
jihadist outfits alike exploit this frustration and despair, attempting "to
direct their people's grievances elsewhere," as Obama puts it, blaming the
West, colonialism, and Israel for all that ails the Middle East. The
solution, then, is for the United States "to promote reform across the
region, and to support transitions to democracy" so that people can obtain
"a set of universal rights" including "free speech; the freedom of peaceful
assembly; freedom of religion; equality for men and women under the rule of
law; and the right to choose your own leaders." In addition, economic reform
will be supported through efforts "to build networks of entrepreneurs, and
expand exchanges in education; to foster cooperation in science and
technology, and combat disease." More practically, this means encouraging
the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to provide funds, asking
Congress to create Enterprise funds for investment, and forgiving $1 billion
in Egyptian debt, with promises of access to $1 billion more.

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Lurking behind all this rhetoric, however, is a flawed assumption--that
everybody in the world is just like us and wants the same things we want.
This Western article of faith arose in the 19th Century, when increasing
global trade, European colonial penetration and global dominance, and
world-shrinking technologies like the telegraph and steamship seemingly were
creating a global "harmony of interests" based on a universal rational human
nature. Peace, freedom, and prosperity are the deepest desires of all
humans, previously unrealized because of persisting religious or tribal
superstitions, irrational ethnic and nationalist loyalties, oppressive
governments, a lack of education, and poverty. Remove those impediments and
the whole world would enter the paradise of peace and plenty. However, as
the nightmare history of the 20th Century shows--with its some 200 million
slaughtered by war, genocide, ethnic cleansing, and political murder--human
beings may want peace and prosperity, but they want other things as well,
some of them dark and violent and not to be appeased with material bribes or
concessions.

Our struggle against Islamic jihad has been compromised by this same
mistaken assumption. By locating the origins of jihadist terror in the
material and political conditions of the Middle East, we have ignored the
spiritual roots of jihadism in traditional Islamic theology, and its
certainty of Muslim superiority and right to dominate others. This mistake
has been obvious in the commentary on the so-called "Arab Spring" that
Obama's speech basically recycles. Too many have celebrated the uprisings as
efforts to achieve the freedom, prosperity, human rights, and other goods we
possess. No doubt some Muslims do want these things. But as the behavior of
the new regime in Egypt suggests, perhaps even more want something else in
addition to less oppression and corruption and more economic opportunity--to
create an Islamic government that institutes an illiberal shari'a law and
battles more directly against the enemies of Islam such as Israel. These
Western idealizers enthusing over the demand for "freedom" need to ask the
most important question--freedom to do what? Be like us, or be good Muslims?
But what if being good Muslims means rejecting foundational democratic
principles such as political freedom and human rights?

Chamberlain's mistake was to think that Germany just wanted to bring home
its people who had been unjustly stranded outside of the motherland by the
unjust Versailles Treaty. Heal that wound, and the Germans would get back to
seeking prosperity and peace with its neighbors. Of course, the majority of
Germans wanted something more sinister, a racial empire that dominated its
neighbors, and were willing to kill and die and murder to achieve it. That
mistaken assumption about German intentions led to the diplomatic disaster
of Munich and the following inferno of global war. So too our serial efforts
at "outreach," and our continuous offerings of material incentives and goods
like the freedom that we prize, blind us to the spiritual imperatives
motivating millions of people in the Muslim world.

It's time we stopped reacting to a world we have created from our own
wish-fulfilling assumptions and delusions, and start heeding the wisdom of
scripture: By their fruits ye shall know them. We have rescued Muslims from
murderous thugs in Bosnia, Kosovo, Kuwait, Iraq, and Afghanistan; we have
transferred billions and billions to Muslim nations, including the terrorist
PLO; we have spent our blood and treasure to create for Muslims in Iraq and
Afghanistan the freedom and self-determination Obama's speech proclaims we
support and Muslims desire; we have done all this, yet outside Indonesia and
Lebanon, not even 1 in 5 Muslims like us. Maybe it's time to rethink our
assumptions.

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Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article:
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/05/24/obamas-bow-to-the-muslim-world-round-ii/

 



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