A Devil Theory of Islam 

by Edward W. Said

This article appeared in the August 12, 1996 edition of The Nation.
July 25, 2000


Judith Miller is a New York Times reporter much in evidence on talk 
shows and seminars on the Middle East. She trades in "the Islamic 
threat" -- her particular mission has been to advance the millennial 
thesis that militant Islam is a danger to the West. The search for a 
post-Soviet foreign devil has come to rest, as it did beginning in 
the eighth century for European Christendom, on Islam, a religion 
whose physical proximity and unstilled challenge to the West seem as 
diabolical and violent now as they did then. Never mind that most 
Islamic countries today are too poverty-stricken, tyrannical and 
hopelessly inept militarily as well as scientifically to be much of a 
threat to anyone except their own citizens; and never mind that the 
most powerful of them -- like Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan and Pa 
kistan -- are totally within the U.S. orbit. What matters 
to "experts" like Miller, Samuel Huntington, Martin Kramer, Bernard 
Lewis, Daniel Pipes, Steven Emerson and Barry Rubin, plus a whole 
battery of Israeli academics, is to make sure that the "threat" is 
kept before our eyes, the better to excoriate Islam for terror, 
despotism and violence, while assuring themselves profitable 
consultancies, frequent TV appearances and book contracts. The 
Islamic threat is made to seem disproportionately fearsome, lending 
support to the thesis (which is an interesting parallel to anti-
Semitic paranoia) that there is a worldwide conspiracy behind every 
explosion. 

Political Islam has generally been a failure wherever it has tried to 
take state power. Iran is a possible exception, but neither Sudan, 
already an Islamic state, nor Algeria, riven by the contest between 
Islamic groups and a brutal soldiery, has done anything but make 
itself poorer and more marginal on the world stage. Lurking beneath 
the discourse of Islamic peril in the West is, however, some measure 
of truth, which is that appeals to Islam among Muslims have fueled 
resistance (in the style of what Eric Hobsbawm has called primitive, 
pre-industrial rebellion) to the Pax Americana-Israelica throughout 
the Middle East. Yet neither Hezbollah nor Hamas has presented a 
serious obstacle to the ongoing steamroller of the anything-but-peace 
process. Most Arab Muslims today are too discouraged and humiliated, 
and also too anesthetized by uncertainty and their incompetent and 
crude dictatorships, to support anything like a vast Islamic campaign 
against the West. Besides, the elites are for the most part in 
cahoots with the regimes, supporting martial law and other extralegal 
measures against "extremists." So why, then, the accents of alarm and 
fear in most discussions of Islam? Of course there have been suicide 
bombings and outrageous acts of terrorism, but have they accomplished 
anything except to strengthen the hand of Israel and the United 
States and their client regimes in the Muslim world? 

The answer, I think, is that books like Miller's are symptomatic 
because they are weapons in the contest to subordinate, beat down, 
compel and defeat any Arab or Muslim resistance to U.S.-Israeli 
dominance. Moreover, by surreptitiously justifying a policy of single-
minded obduracy that links Islamism to a strategically important, oil-
rich part of the world, the anti-Islam campaign virtually eliminates 
the possibility of equal dialogue between Islam and the Arabs, and 
the West or Israel. To demonize and dehumanize a whole culture on the 
ground that it is (in Lewis's sneering phrase) enraged at modernity 
is to turn Muslims into the objects of a therapeutic, punitive 
attention. I do not want to be misunderstood here: The manipulation 
of Islam, or for that matter Christianity or Judaism, for retrograde 
political purposes is catastrophically bad and must be opposed, not 
just in Saudi Arabia, the West Bank and Gaza, Pakistan, Sudan, 
Algeria and Tunisia but also in Israel, among the right-wing 
Christians in Lebanon (for whom Miller shows an unseemly sympathy) 
and wherever theocratic tendencies appear. And I do not at all 
believe that all the ills of Muslim countries are due to Zionism and 
imperialism. But this is very far from saying that Israel and the 
United States, and their intellectual flacks, have not played a 
combative, even incendiary role in stigmatizing and heaping invidious 
abuse on an abstraction called "Islam," deliberately in order to stir 
up feelings of anger and fear about Islam among Americans and 
Europeans, who are also enjoined to see in Israel a secular, liberal 
alternative. Miller says unctuously at the beginning of her book that 
right-wing Judaism in Israel is "the subject of another book." It is 
actually very much part of the book that she has written, except that 
she has willfully suppressed it in order to go after "Islam." 

Writing about any other part of the world, Miller would be considered 
woefully unqualified. She tells us that she has been involved with 
the Middle East for twenty-five years, yet she has little knowledge 
of either Arabic or Persian. It would be impossible to be taken 
seriously as a reporter or expert on Russia, France, Germany or Latin 
America, perhaps even China or Japan, without knowing the requisite 
languages, but for "Islam," linguistic knowledge is unnecessary since 
what one is dealing with is considered to be a psychological 
deformation, not a "real" culture or religion. 

What of her political and historical information? Each of the ten 
country chapters (Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Sudan) begins with an anecdote 
and moves immediately to a potted history that reflects not much more 
than the work of a name-dropping college sophomore. Cobbled up out of 
various, not always reliable authorities (her pages of footnotes are 
tainted by her ignorance, whether because she can only cite the 
sources she already knows she wants in English, or because she quotes 
only authorities whose views correspond to hers, thereby closing out 
an entire library by Muslims, Arabs and non-Orientalist scholars), 
these histories are meant principally to display her command of the 
material, but actually expose her lamentable prejudices and failures 
of comprehension. In the Saudi Arabia chapter, for instance, she 
informs us in a note that her "favorite" source on the Prophet 
Mohammed is the French Orientalist Maxime Rodinson, a redoubtable 
Marxist scholar whose biography of the Prophet is written with a 
bracing combination of anti-clerical irony and enormous erudition. 
What Miller gets from this in her short summary of Mohammed's life 
and ideas is that there is something inherently risible, if not 
contemptible, about the man whom Rodinson says was a combination of 
Charlemagne and Jesus Christ; for whereas Rodinson understands what 
that means, Miller tells us (irrelevantly) that she is not convinced. 
For her, Mohammed is the begetter of an anti-Jewish religion, one 
laced with violence and paranoia. She does not directly quote one 
Muslim source on Mohammed; just imagine a book published in the 
United States on Jesus or Moses that makes no use of a single 
Christian or Judaic authority. 

Most of Miller's book is made up not of argument and ideas but of 
endless interviews with what seems to be a slew of pathetic, 
unconvincing, self-serving scoundrels and their occasional critics. 
Once past her little histories we are adrift in boring, unstructured 
meanderings. Here's a typical sentence of insubstantial 
generalization: "And Syrians, mindful of their country's chaotic 
history" (of what country on earth is this not also true?) "found the 
prospect of a return to anarchy or yet another prolonged, bloody 
power struggle -- " (is this uniquely true of Syria as a postcolonial 
state, or is it true of a hundred others in Asia, Africa, Latin 
America?) "and perhaps even the triumph of militant Islam in the most 
secular" (with what thermometer did she get that reading?) "of all 
Arab states -- alarming." Leave aside the abominable diction and jaw-
shattering jargon of the writing. What you have is not an idea at all 
but a series of clichés mixed with unverifiable assertions that 
reflect the "thought" of "Syrians" much less than they do Miller's. 

Miller gilds her paper-thin descriptions with the phrase "my friend," 
which she uses to convince her reader that she really knows the 
people and consequently what she is talking about. I counted 247 uses 
of the phrase before I stopped about halfway through the book. This 
technique produces extraordinary distortions in the form of long 
digressions that testify to an Islamic mindset, even as they obscure 
or ignore more or at least equally relevant material like local 
politics, the functioning of secular institutions and the active 
intellectual contest taking place between Islamists and nationalist 
opponents. She seems never to have heard of Arkoun, or Jabri, or 
Tarabishi, or Adonis, or Hanafi or Djeit, whose theses are hotly 
debated all over the Islamic world. 

This appalling failure of analysis is especially true in the chapter 
on Israel (mistitled, since it is all about Palestine), where she 
ignores the changes caused by the intifada and the prolonged effect 
of the three-decade Israeli occupation, and conveys no sense of the 
abominations wrought on the lives of ordinary Palestinians by the 
Oslo accords and Yasir Arafat's one-man rule. Although Miller is 
obsessed with Hamas, she is clearly unable to connect it with the 
sorry state of affairs in territories run brutally by Israel for all 
these years. She never mentions, for instance, that the only 
Palestinian university not established with Palestinian funds is 
Gaza's Islamic (Hamas) University, started by Israel to undermine the 
P.L.O. during the intifada. She records Mohammed's depredations 
against the Jews but has little to say about Israeli beliefs, 
statements and laws against "non-Jews," often rabbinically sanctioned 
practices of deportation, killing, house demolition, land 
confiscation, annexation and what Sara Roy has called systematic 
economic de-development. If in her breathlessly excitable way Miller 
sprinkles around a few of these facts, nowhere does she accord them 
the weight and influence as causes of Islamist passion that they 
undoubtedly have. 

Maddeningly, she informs us of everyone's religion -- such and so is 
Christian, or Muslim Sunni, Muslim Shiite, etc. Even so, she is not 
always accurate, managing to produce some howlers. She speaks of 
Hisham Sharabi as a friend but misidentifies him as a Christian; he 
is Sunni Muslim. Badr el Haj is described as Muslim whereas he is 
Maronite Christian. These lapses wouldn't be so bad were she not bent 
on revealing her intimacy with so many people. And then there is her 
bad faith in not identifying her own religious background or 
political predilections. Are we meant to assume that her religion 
(which I don't think is Islam or Hinduism) is irrelevant? 

She is embarrassingly forthcoming, however, about her reactions to 
people and power and certain events. She is "grief-stricken" when 
King Hussein of Jordan is diagnosed with cancer, although she 
scarcely seems to mind that he runs a police state whose many victims 
have been tortured, unfairly imprisoned, done away with. One realizes 
of course that what counts here is her hobnobbing with the little 
King, but some accurate sense of the "modern" kingdom he rules would 
have been in order. Her eyes "filled with tears -- of rage" as she 
espies evidence of desecration of a Lebanese Christian mosaic, but 
she doesn't bother to mention other desecrations in Israel -- for 
example, of Muslim graveyards -- and hundreds of exterminated 
villages in Syria, Lebanon, Palestine. Her real contempt and disdain 
come out in passages like the following, in which she imputes 
thoughts and wishes to a middle-class Syrian woman whose daughter has 
just become an Islamist: 

She would never have any of the things a middle-class Syrian mother 
yearned for: no grand wedding party and traditional white dress with 
diamond tiara for her daughter, no silver-framed photos of the happy 
wedding couple in tuxedo and bridal gown on the coffee table and 
fireplace mantel, no belly dancers wriggling on a stage and champagne 
that flowed till dawn. Perhaps Nadine's friends, too, had daughters 
or sons who had rejected them, who secretly despised them for the 
compromises they had made to win the favor of Assad's cruel and 
soulless regime. For if the daughter of such pillars of the Damascene 
bourgeoisie could succumb to the power of Islam, who was immune?

Such snide accounts trivialize and cheapen the people whose houses 
and privacy she has invaded. 

Given her willingness to undercut even her friendly sources, the most 
interesting question about Miller's book is why she wrote it at all. 
Certainly not out of affection. Consider, for instance, that she 
admits she fears and dislikes Lebanon, hates Syria, laughs at Libya, 
dismisses Sudan, feels sorry for and a little alarmed by Egypt and is 
repulsed by Saudi Arabia. She is relentlessly concerned only with the 
dangers of organized Islamic militancy, which I would hazard a guess 
accounts for less than 5 percent of the billion-strong Islamic world. 
She supports the violent suppression of Islamists (but not torture 
and other "illegal means" used in that suppression; she misses the 
contradiction in her position), has no qualms about the absence of 
democratic practices or legal procedures in Palestine, Egypt or 
Jordan so long as Islamists are the target and, in one especially 
nauseating scene, she actually participates in the prison 
interrogation of an alleged Muslim terrorist by Israeli policemen, 
whose systematic use of torture and other questionable procedures 
(undercover assassinations, middle-of-the-night arrests, house 
demolitions) she politely overlooks as she gets to ask the handcuffed 
man a few questions of her own. 

Perhaps Miller's most consistent failing as a journalist is that she 
only makes connections and offers analyses of matters that suit her 
thesis about the militant, hateful quality of the Arab world. I have 
little quarrel with the general view that the Arab world is in a 
dreadful state, and have said so repeatedly for the past three 
decades. But she barely registers the existence of a determined anti-
Arab and anti-Islamic U.S. policy. She plays fast and loose with 
fact. Take Lebanon: She refers to Bashir Gemayel's assassination in 
1982 and gives the impression that he was elected by a popular 
landslide. She does not even allude to the fact that he was brought 
to power while the Israeli army was in West Beirut, just before the 
Sabra and Shatila camp massacres, and that for years, according to 
Israeli sources like Uri Lubrani, Gemayel was the Mossad's man in 
Lebanon. That he was a self-proclaimed killer and a thug is also 
finessed, as is the fact that Lebanon's current power structure is 
chock-full of people like Elie Hobeika, who was charged directly for 
the camp massacres. Miller cites instances of Arab anti-Semitism but 
doesn't even touch on the matter of Israeli leaders like Begin, 
Shamir, Eitan and, more recently, Ehud Barak (idolized by Amy Wilentz 
in The New Yorker) referring to Palestinians as two-legged beasts, 
grasshoppers, cockroaches and mosquitoes. These leaders have used 
planes and tanks to treat Palestinians accordingly. As for the facts 
of Israel's wars against civilians -- the protracted, consistent and 
systematic campaign against prisoners of war and refugee camp 
dwellers, the village destructions and bombings of hospitals and 
schools, the deliberate creation of hundreds of thousands of 
refugees -- all these are buried in reams of prattle. Miller disdains 
facts; she prefers quoting interminable talk as a way of turning 
Arabs into deserving victims of Israeli terror and U.S. support of 
it. She perfectly exemplifies The New York Times's current Middle 
East coverage, now at its lowest ebb. 

In her lame conclusion Miller admits that her scolding may have been 
a little too harsh. She then puts it all down to her "love" of the 
region and its people. I cannot honestly think of a thing that she 
loves: not the conformism of Arab society she talks about, or the 
ostentatious culinary display she says that the Arabs confuse with 
hospitality, or the languages she hasn't learned, or the people she 
makes fun of or the history and culture of a place that to her is one 
long tale of unintelligible sound and fury. She cannot enter into the 
life of the place, listen to its conversations directly, read its 
novels and plays on her own (as opposed to making friends with their 
authors), enjoy the energy and refinements of its social life or see 
its landscapes. But this is the price of being a Times reporter in an 
age of sullen "expertise" and instant position-taking. You wouldn't 
know from Miller's book that there is any inter-Arab conflict in 
interpretations and representations of the Middle East and Islam and 
that, given her choice of sources, she is deeply partisan: an enemy 
of Arab nationalism, which she declares dead numerous times in the 
book; a supporter of U.S. policy; and a committed foe of any 
Palestinian nationalism that doesn't conform to the bantustans being 
set up according to the Oslo accords. Miller, in short, is a shallow, 
opinionated journalist whose gigantic book is too long for what it 
ends up saying, and far too short on reflection, considered analysis, 
structure and facts. Poor Muslims and Arabs who may have trusted her; 
they should have known better than to mistake an insinuated guest for 
a friend.

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