Commentary
 
 
 
Muslims and Terror: The Real Story 
 
02.01.15 - 12:00 AM | _by Joshua Muravchik_ 
(https://www.commentarymagazine.com/pods-author/joshua-muravchik)  
 

 
January’s murderous attacks in Paris on the satirical magazine Charlie  
Hebdo and the kosher supermarket Hyper Cacher evoked not only fear,  
indignation, and defiance from Western leaders and publics, but also a second  
stream 
of reactions: anxious assertions that the killings bore no relation to  
Islam and expressions of worry that the Muslim identity of the killers would  
stoke the flames of “Islamophobia.” 
French President François Hollande declared that “these terrorists, these  
fanatics have nothing to do with the Islamic religion.” German Chancellor 
Angela  Merkel echoed him, saying that the perpetrators “have nothing to do 
with Islam.”  Secretary of State John Kerry opined that “the biggest mistake 
we could make  would be to blame Muslims for crimes…that their faith utterly 
rejects.”  President Obama’s spokesman, Josh Earnest, evinced reluctance 
to conclude that  the Paris gunmen even believed they were acting for Islam. 
On the evening of the  first attack, he declared that despite the 
perpetrators’ widely reported cries  of “Allahu Akbar” and “we have avenged the 
Prophet,” the White House “was still  trying to figure out exactly…what their 
motivations were.” And at a subsequent  briefing he would go only so far as 
to acknowledge that having committed an act  of terrorism, “they later tried 
to justify that act of terrorism by invoking the  religion of Islam,” as if 
they might have contrived the invocation merely as a  post-hoc 
rationalization. 
A week after the attacks, Hollande declared an “implacable struggle against 
 racism, anti-Semitism, and Islamophobia.” This, according to French news  
reports, was the first time he had used the latter term, which is more 
freighted  in French discourse. He repeated it more than once over the next 
days, 
whereas  previously he had used only the more anodyne expression, “
anti-Muslim.” In the  British press, according to a roundup by Brendon O’Neill, 
the 
Guardian  warned against “Islamophobes seizing this atrocity to advance 
their hatred,”  while the Financial Times saw a threat to Europe in the form of 
 “Islamophobic extremists.” There was more along these lines. 
In the United States, New York Times editorials reverted to this  subject 
again and again. “This is…no time for peddlers of xenophobia to try to  
smear all Muslims with a terrorist brush,” it declaimed immediately after the  
first attack. Four days later, with four Jewish victims at the kosher market  
having been added to the original death toll at Charlie, the  Times opined, 
“Perhaps the greatest danger in the wake of the massacres  is that more 
Europeans will come to the conclusion that all Muslim immigrants on  the 
Continent are carriers of a great and mortal threat.” Two days after that,  the 
sole editorial during this period to lament anti-Semitism contained the  
reminder that “there have been more than 50 anti-Muslim episodes across  France…
French Muslims, too, are afraid.” A few days later, the editorialists  
returned to this theme: 
French Muslims, who are as scared of terrorists as everybody else, also  
have to fear anti-Islam prejudice and attacks. There were 60 recorded threats  
and attacks against Muslims during the six days following the Jan. 7 attack 
 onCharlie Hebdo. There is a real danger the right-wing National Front  
will seek political advantage by fueling anti-Muslim hysteria.
Is it true that the Paris attacks have nothing to do with Islam and that “
the  greatest danger” embedded in them is the dread specter of Islamophobia? 
It is  easy to understand why Western leaders propound the former thesis. In 
Obama’s  case, it might be attributed to his solicitousness toward Islam. (“
The future  must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Islam,” he 
solemnized before  the United Nations in 2012.) But in fact, his 
predecessor, George W. Bush, made  similar statements after the attacks of 
September 
11, 2001. Islam’s “teachings  are good and peaceful,” he said. “The 
terrorists are traitors to their own  faith.” 
In the aftermath of those attacks, the State Department under Colin Powell  
fell over itself trying to demonstrate that the Muslim world rejected 
al-Qaeda  and its actions. For example, the department ballyhooed some 
pronouncements  against “terrorism” by the renowned Sheik Yussuf al-Qaradawi. 
Apparently no one  at State knew what the sheikh’s many followers in the Arab 
world 
did: He  advocated “martyrdom operations,” that is, suicide bombings, 
aimed at Israelis,  which in his lexicon did not constitute “terrorism.” And he 
was soon to adopt a  similar stance regarding Americans in Iraq. 
Powell’s team got itself into this pickle for much the same reason that  
Western leaders today hasten to pronounce about what is or is not Islamic, a  
question one might think best left to those who study or at least practice 
the  religion. That is, they understand that the most decisive way purveyors 
of  extremism and violence can be defeated, and perhaps the only way the 
threat they  pose can be rendered negligible, would be their utter repudiation 
by the  umma, the community of Muslim believers, itself. And conversely, the 
 danger we face will be multiplied many times over if a genuine “clash of  
civilizations” ensues in which the extremists can win recognition as the  
defenders of the faith. 
So when these Westerners insist that the terrorists are not authentically  
Muslim, they are trying to display their own respect for Islam in a way they 
 hope will be convincing to the mass of that faith’s adherents and will 
help  distance those adherents from the terrorists. 
But is what they say true? And is saying it likely to achieve the intended  
aims? 
Muslim scripture is ambiguous. The Koran is not organized as a logical  
treatise any more than is the Bible. It is sprinkled with “sword verses” as 
well  as “peace verses,” and the proper interpretation or application of 
these verses  has always been a subject of debate among believers and Islamic 
scholars. Great  value is often attached to emulating Muhammad, who is not 
regarded as in any  sense supernatural but rather as the greatest of human 
beings. He did kind and  peaceful things but he also was a conqueror. As Obama 
recently reminded  Americans, “people [have] committed terrible deeds in the 
name of Christ,” but  Christ himself counseled turning the other cheek; not 
so the Prophet of  Islam. 
Certainly, contrary to Josh Earnest, the Paris killers Cherif and Said  
Kouachi and Amedy Coulibaly believed they were fulfilling the strictures of  
their faith, and they were prepared not only to kill but also to die in doing  
so. Neither can it be said, alas, that they were merely one (or three) of a 
 kind, like the home-grown American terrorists who blew up the federal 
building  in Oklahoma City in 1995. Of the 51 organizations listed by the State 
Department  as “foreign terrorist organizations,” 38 are predominantly 
Muslim, mostly  Islamist in ideology. 
Their works are evident daily all around us. At nearly the same moment as 
the  first Paris attack, in Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, a car bomb, presumably 
set by  Houthis who are waging a war that is at once ethnic and religious, 
killed 37 and  injured another 66, according to the BBC. Also that day, Iraqi 
News  reported that the Islamic State publicly executed 20 men and three 
female  lawyers in Mosul, the men for various alleged offenses and the women 
apparently  merely for being who they were. At the same time, Iraq’s minister 
of human  rights reported the discovery of mass graves in the area containing 
the remains  of 320 other Islamic State victims, including children, 
apparently of the Yazidi  sect. Also that day in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, the 
Associated Press reported  that a Taliban car bomb killed a judge and injured 
his 
two daughters, and six  men on a construction crew in Baghlan province were 
mowed down. The next day in  Libya, the Islamic State issued a claim to 
have executed two Tunisian  journalists who, they alleged, worked for “a 
satellite channel that fights  religion,” while the group’s Syrian members 
beheaded an imam in Hassakeh for  “insulting God” and threw another man to his 
death from a rooftop in Aleppo for  being gay, according to the London-based 
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.  While all this was going on, the Muslim 
terror group Boko Haram was slaughtering  an estimated 2,000 residents of 
the village of Baga, Nigeria, and then released  a video in which a man 
purporting to be the group’s leader, Abubakar Shekau,  crowed: “We indeed 
killed 
them, as our Lord instructed us in His Book…We will  not stop. This is not 
much. You’ll see.” 
The website TheReligionOfPeace.com monitors such terror attacks and lists  
25,000 of them (in which at least one person was killed) since 9/11. The 
site is  openly hostile to Islam, so it is not a respectable source. But I have 
Googled  numerous incidents on its list, and in each case my search 
produced multiple  accounts from Western or other neutral news organizations 
that 
corroborated the  listing. The BBC, working in cooperation with King’s 
College, conducted a count  of “jihadist violence” for the single month of 
November 2014. While the website  I’ve mentioned listed 284 incidents killing 
2,515 people, the BBC counted 664  incidents, killing 5,042. “Jihadist 
violence,”
 the BBC’s category, is broader  than “terror attacks,” the website’s 
term, since the former includes killings of  combatants by other combatants, 
not properly labeled “terrorism.” Still, the  BBC’s numbers, which are twice 
as large as those of TheReligionOfPeace.com, make  the latter’s seem 
plausible. 
Of course, even 25,000 atrocities need bespeak only the depredations of 
some  hundreds of thousands or a few million individuals out of a worldwide 
Muslim  population of a billion-plus. It raises the question, “What do Muslims 
in  general think of terrorism?” 
President Obama recently said that “99.9 percent of Muslims…are looking 
for  the same things we are looking for—order, peace, prosperity” and “don’t 
even  recognize radical [interpretations] as being Islam.” Alas, opinion 
surveys tell  us a more equivocal story. To be sure, all opinion polls show 
that most Muslims  reject such murderous acts as those of the Islamic State or 
of the Kouachis and  Coulibaly. But the minorities who do not reject 
terrorism are not  negligible. 
A Gallup poll in nine predominantly Muslim countries taken months after 
9/11  found that pluralities or bare majorities in most of these countries 
judged the  attacks to be “totally unjustifiable.” In Kuwait, however, a mere 
decade after  its national independence had been restored by American arms, 
only 26 percent  found 9/11 “totally unjustifiable,” while two other 
governments closely allied  to the United States, those of Jordan and Saudi 
Arabia, 
refused Gallup  permission to ask their citizens this particular question 
(although not others),  presumably for fear of what it might reveal. Further 
dampening whatever  satisfaction could be taken from the main results were 
the responses to a  question about the U.S. attack on Afghanistan to root out 
al-Qaeda once its  government had refused an ultimatum to do so itself. 
Respondents judged this  U.S. action to be “totally unjustifiable” in far 
larger proportions than said  the same about the 9/11 assault that provoked it. 
And to make the picture still  cloudier, overwhelming majorities denied that 
Arabs had been involved in the  9/11 atrocity (presumably believing that 
the CIA or the Mossad had done it),  although Osama bin Laden had already 
released a video claiming credit. 
The Pew Research Center has taken numerous polls since then of citizens in  
Muslim-majority countries and occasionally of Muslims in other countries. A 
key  question asks whether “suicide bombings and other forms of violence 
against  civilian targets” are justified “often,” “sometimes,” “rarely,” or 
“never.” In  most cases at least a plurality of respondents answer “never,”
 but a significant  segment of the populations chooses one of the other 
responses. For example, in  2014 in the largest Arab country, Egypt, only 38 
percent said such violence was  “never” justified, while 24 percent approved 
of it “often” or “sometimes.”  Another 35 percent chose “rarely.” In some 
discourse, “rarely” can be a  euphemism for “never.” But in this case, 
the option “never” was always offered,  so respondents who instead chose “
rarely” must have meant something else. On its  face, this would seem to mean 
they believe that violence aimed at civilians is  generally a bad thing, but 
not always. If this group is added to those who say  “often” or “sometimes,”
 then in most years including the most recent survey,  most Egyptians—a 
total of 59 percent in 2014—believe terrorism is justified at  least once in a 
while. 
The same is true for Lebanon’s Muslim population, of whom 29 percent say  “
often” or “sometimes” and another 25 percent say “rarely,” for a total of 
54  percent, while those choosing “never” made up 45 percent. In the 
Palestinian  territories, the share saying “never” to violence against 
civilians 
rose in 2014  to 32 percent while 59 percent chose one of the other three 
options. (These  results, although tilted in favor of violence, are so much 
less so than in the  previous four Pew surveys of Palestinians as to suggest 
some kind of anomaly in  the 2014 survey. In all the previous surveys, 
whopping majorities approved  violence against civilians “often” or “sometimes” 
while fewer than 20 percent  answered “never.”) In Jordan, a majority once 
approved of such violence and only  11 percent said it was “never” 
justifiable, but this was back in 2005 just  before jihadists blew up three 
hotels 
in Amman. The following year’s survey  revealed a sharp drop in support for 
anti-civilian attacks, and this new  attitude has endured since. In 2014, 44 
percent of Jordanians answered “often”  or “sometimes” or “rarely,” 
while 55 percent said “never.” 
Jordan was not the only country in which support for suicide bombings and 
the  like diminished following domestic terror incidents. In Pakistan, a 
decade ago  there were more respondents who thought these acts “often” or “
sometimes”  justified than those who thought them “never” justified; but in 
recent years,  with many horrific attacks on mosques, schools, and markets, 
majorities upwards  of 80 percent have responded “never.” In Nigeria in 2010, 
before the resurgence  of Boko Haram, 51 percent responded “often,” “
sometimes,” or “rarely,” and only  a plurality of 44 percent said “never.” Now, 
in 2014, the number who accepted  such violence had fallen to 26 percent, 
while those who said “never” made up a  clear majority, at 61 percent. 
Tunisia, where a process of reform and  democratization has been punctuated by 
acts of extremist violence, recorded the  strongest consensus (90 percent in 
2014) of any Muslim country surveyed by Pew  that such acts are “never” 
justified. 
One country in which the trend has gone in the opposite direction is 
Turkey,  perhaps due to the influence of its increasingly shrill Islamist 
government.  Such responses were once minuscule in number, but in 2014, 29 
percent 
of Turks  found violence against civilians at least occasionally justified, 
while the  proportion answering “never,” which had once been in the 80-plus 
range, was down  to 58 percent, a majority but no longer overwhelming. 
In the other 10 African and Asian countries surveyed by Pew, the share of  
respondents clearly rejecting attacks on civilians ranged from overwhelming 
in  Uzbekistan (78 percent “never”) to a weak minority in Bangladesh (33 
percent  “never”). In most cases, about 20 percent said attacks on civilians 
were “often”  or “sometimes” justified, with another roughly 15 percent 
saying “rarely.” In  other words, about one-third of respondents decline to 
categorically eschew such  acts. 
The findings are not much different among Muslims living in the four 
European  countries that Pew included in its surveys. Of these, only in Germany 
did an  overwhelming majority of Muslims rule out violence against civilians. 
In France,  Spain, and the United Kingdom, Pew found that 15 to 16 percent 
of Muslims  endorsed violence against civilians “often” or “sometimes.” In 
France, another  19 percent gave the answer “rarely.” In other words, more 
than one-third of  France’s Muslims support such acts at least on occasion, 
as do about one-quarter  of those in Spain and the UK. 
In sum, while the predominant view among the world’s Muslims, insofar as we 
 can learn from these polls, rejects terrorism, a significant minority does 
not.  If, on the whole, say, 20 percent of Muslims, a conservative estimate 
of the  average of these numbers, support terror “often” or “sometimes,” 
that amounts to  300 million people; and if, say, another 15 percent support 
it “rarely,” then  the total base of support for at least occasional 
terror acts comes to 500  million. There is little comfort to be found in such 
figures. 
They also make nonsense of the claim that it is unfair to speak of Islamic  
violence or terrorism and not of Christian or Jewish violence or terrorism, 
even  though occasional terrible acts are committed in the names of the 
latter two  faiths. The obvious answer is that there are no Christian or Jewish 
analogues to  the Islamic State; the numbers of such outrages are an 
infinitesimal fraction of  those committed by Muslims; and there is no 
equivalent 
base of support in the  respective religious communities. 
Studying these data, one wonders what respondents who chose the option of  “
rarely” have in mind. One of the Pew surveys asked a question not asked in 
the  others, and it may give us a glimpse into the answer, bringing into 
view another  important aspect of the issue of Islamic terrorism: its relation 
to Israel. 
In 2004, during the Palestinian intifada, in addition to its usual question 
 about violence against civilians, which was asked in the abstract and 
specified  no venue, Pew also asked: “What about suicide bombing carried out by 
 
Palestinians against Israeli citizens? Do you personally believe that this 
is  justifiable or not justifiable?” Only two options were offered for 
answering  this question: “justifiable” or “not justifiable.” In Turkey and 
Pakistan, the  percentage of respondents that found Palestinian suicide bombing 
“justifiable”  was exactly or almost exactly equal to the combined total 
that, in  response to the first question, chose “often,” “sometimes,” or “
rarely.” In  other words, countenancing violence against Israeli civilians 
was apparently  what was on the minds of respondents who said they supported 
violence against  civilians “rarely” rather than “never.” 
The parallel numbers in Morocco were even more remarkable. There, the  
proportion who found Palestinian bombings “justifiable,” 74 percent, was far  
larger than the combined total who, in answer to the first question, replied  
“often,” “sometimes,” or “rarely.” In other words, a great many of the 
Moroccans  (about half) who said that they “never” supported violence 
against civilians  turned around moments later and endorsed Palestinian 
violence 
against Israeli  civilians. If all these polls suggest that Muslim attitudes 
toward terrorism are  often equivocal, the case of Israel compounds the 
problem. For many Arabs and  Muslims, Israelis are always fair game. 
The Muslim states have long insisted that violence against Israelis, no  
matter what its nature, cannot by definition constitute terrorism. They argue  
that terrorism must be defined by its goals rather than the nature of the 
act, a  position that was spelled out by none other than Yasir Arafat in his 
famous 1974  address to the UN General Assembly. “The difference between the 
revolutionary  and the terrorist lies in the reason for which each fights,” 
he said. “Whoever  stands by a just cause…cannot possibly be called [a] 
terrorist.” 
This directly contradicted the stance of UN Secretary General U Thant, who  
had asserted in response to a Palestinian airplane hijacking in 1970 that “
a  criminal act is judged by its criminal character and not for its 
political  significance.” But Arafat’s position has prevailed over U Thant’s in 
UN 
bodies  thanks to the united, adamant stance of the Muslim states. Just a 
week after  Arafat’s appearance, the General Assembly endorsed “the right of 
the Palestinian  people to regain its rights by all means,” and a subsequent 
reiteration dotted  the i, affirming “the legitimacy of the struggle of 
peoples against  foreign occupation by all available means, including armed 
struggle.” Since the  Palestinians were engaged neither in conventional nor 
even, for the most part,  guerrilla warfare with Israel, “armed struggle,” as 
all parties understood, was  a euphemism for the Palestinians’ campaign of 
bombings and murders aimed at  civilian targets. 
The UN periodically reaffirmed this endorsement until the attacks of 9/11  
brought new urgency to the issue of terrorism and prompted Secretary General 
 Kofi Annan to issue a statement that echoed U Thant’s. “The right to 
resist  occupation…cannot include the right to deliberately kill or maim 
civilians,” he  said, and he urged the adoption of a general treaty against 
terrorism. But the  Islamic Conference would have none of it, insisting, as the 
Washington Post reported, “that anti-Israeli militants be exempted.” The 
Pakistani  ambassador explained the reasoning of the Islamic states: “We ought 
not, in our  desire to confront terrorism, erode the principle of the 
legitimacy of national  resistance that we have upheld for 50 years.” Thus 
Annan’s 
efforts were  thwarted, and in 2011, on the tenth anniversary of 9/11, his 
successor, Ban Ki  Moon, lamented that the UN still had not been able to 
adopt a treaty against  terrorism. 
In other words the Muslim states have often denounced “terrorism,” but 
only  by defining that term to exclude any and all attacks against Israel and  
miscellaneous other depredations, such as against Americans in Iraq, 
undertaken  in the name of “national resistance.” To countenance terror in some 
cases is to  countenance terror, period. Who, after all, would support terror 
on behalf of  causes that he opposes? Just as the only meaningful test of 
support for free  speech is support for speech with which one does not agree, 
so the only  meaningful measure of opposition to terrorism is to condemn it 
even if carried  out in the service of a cause of which one approves. 
This the Muslim world remains reluctant to do. Palestine is its signature  
cause. Although the Palestinians did not invent terror, it was Fatah and 
kindred  Palestinian groups that in the 1970s, with their attacks on airplanes, 
ships,  trains, embassies, and even the Olympic Games, made terrorism the 
scourge of  international life that it is today and inspired others to 
emulate their deeds.  Yet how many Muslim voices can be heard anywhere decrying 
Palestinian  terror? Even the Palestinian Authority of President Mahmoud 
Abbas, which has  repeatedly renounced terrorism, continues to honor 
child-murderers and pay  stipends to imprisoned terrorists and the families of 
deceased 
terrorists. Its  official news agency described last summer’s killers of 
three Israeli teens as  “martyrs.” This past November, when four rabbis were 
hacked to death in prayer  in Jerusalem, Abbas condemned the deed, but that 
same day, as Palestinian Media  Watch has documented, Fatah’s Facebook page 
signaled to the Palestinians that he  did not really mean it. It posted a 
clip from a television interview with one of  Arafat’s bodyguards describing 
how Arafat sometimes bowed to foreign pressure to  condemn terror attacks but 
would do so insincerely because, the guard explained,  Islam allows lying 
under such circumstances. Any viewer would grasp the  implication that Abbas 
was acting in the same manner as his predecessor. 
Aside from playing semantic games with the word terrorism, there is  
another reason that helps to explain why the world’s Muslim governments 
maintain  
a strong front in defense of terrorism even while surveys, like Pew’s, 
suggest  that most Muslims reject violence against civilians. The political 
dynamics of  any community are shaped only in part by the proportion of people 
who believe  one thing or another. They are also shaped by the intensity with 
which views are  held. A huge advantage accrues to those who, in Yeats’s 
line, “are full of  passionate intensity.” Today, in the Muslim world, the 
passionate ones are the  Islamists. 
Their allure was evidenced a decade ago by Saad Edin Ibrahim, once the most 
 celebrated of Egypt’s political prisoners. Married to an American and 
carrying  dual citizenship, Ibrahim, a sociologist who currently holds a chair 
at Drew  University, is the doyen of Arab liberals. Yet in 2006 he traveled 
to Lebanon to  meet with Hezbollah’s chief, Hassan Nasrallah, and then wrote: 
Mainstream Islamists with broad support, with developed civic dispositions, 
 and with services to provide are the most likely actors in building a new  
Middle East. In fact, they are already doing so through the Justice and  
Development Party (AKP) in Turkey, the similarly named PJD in Morocco, the  
Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, Hamas in Palestine, and, yes, Hezbollah in  
Lebanon.
When, in these pages, I criticized Ibrahim for these words,_1_ 
(https://www.commentarymagazine.com/articles/muslims-and-terror-the-real-story/#1)
  I 
held up Ayman Nour, who had been the leading  alternative to Hosni Mubarak in 
Egypt’s 2005 presidential election, as a true  liberal. But soon Nour 
followed Ibrahim into the embrace of the Islamists. The  outcome of Egypt’s 
(and 
Tunisia’s) 2011 elections following the Arab Spring in a  sense vindicated 
the intuition of both these men that the liberal camp was so  weak they would 
do better to place their hopes in the Muslim Brotherhood. 
Following its victory, however, the Muslim Brotherhood badly overplayed its 
 hand in Egypt and has been dealt a severe setback. While the army has 
regained  power there, the liberal camp shows no new signs of life. If any 
political  forces have benefitted from the Brotherhood’s defeat, they are the 
more extreme  Islamists: Salafis allied with the new government of Abdel Fattah 
el-Sisi, and  more extreme jihadist sects that have managed to hasten the 
tempo of guerrilla  and terror attacks in Egypt. The military may be back in 
the saddle, but on the  political front the action remains mostly with the 
Islamists in Egypt and most  other Arab states as well as in Iran, Turkey, 
and across the Muslim world. 
The rise of the Islamic State, or ISIS, is one manifestation of this. 
Hussein  Ibish, a Lebanese-American commentator and a leader of the American 
Task 
Force  on Palestine, put it: 
The grimmest truth about ISIS and other ultra-radical extremist groups is  
that, in addition to their extreme brutality, they have coherent, albeit  
despicable, narratives, ideologies and agendas… ISIS fighters could certainly  
tell you what, exactly, they think they are fighting for and why… 
Mainstream  Arab societies look on in horror but have few compelling narratives 
to 
counter  ISIS’s propaganda… The alternative Arab visions…remain largely 
repressed,  scattered, unorganized, marginal, and hence ineffective.
He offered this observation in the course of commenting on a remarkable cri 
 de coeur published in Politico in September by Hisham Melhem, the  
Washington bureau chief of the satellite channel Al-Arabiya and columnist for  
the 
Lebanese newspaper An Nahar—a highly respected journalist who was  chosen to 
be the first newsman to interview President Obama days after he took  
office. “Arab civilization, such as we knew it, is all but gone,” wrote Melhem. 
 
“The Arab world today is more violent, unstable, fragmented, and driven by  
extremism…than at any time since the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.” He 
added:  “The Islamic State[’s] roots run deep in the badlands of a tormented 
Arab  world.” 
While his focus was on the Arabs, Melhem indicated that the problem he saw  
encompassed the wider Islamic world: 
And let’s face the grim truth: There is no evidence whatever that Islam in  
its various political forms is compatible with modern democracy. From  
Afghanistan under the Taliban to Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, and from Iran to  
Sudan, there is no Islamist entity that can be said to be  democratic.
The élan of the extremists may account for some curious poll data reported 
in  2009 by David Pollock, an expert on Middle East public opinion at the 
Washington  Institute for Near East Policy. Citing a survey of Egyptians and 
Saudis taken by  a reputable agency, Pollock noted: 
Both in Egypt and in Saudi Arabia, 75 percent of the public voiced an  
unfavorable opinion of al-Qaeda; only 20 percent expressed even a “somewhat  
favorable” view. But when asked to estimate the views of other Muslims, nearly  
half—44 percent in Egypt and 48 percent in Saudi Arabia—said that “al-Qaeda
’s  message appeals” to them.
Conceivably some respondents were concealing their own affinity with 
al-Qaeda  by attributing it to others, but a simpler explanation for these 
incongruous  results is that the outspokenness or dynamism exhibited by 
al-Qaeda 
sympathizers  led their countrymen to overestimate their prevalence. 
Likewise, this dynamic may explain the anomaly that support for the Islamic 
 State, as measured in polls of the surrounding countries, is extremely 
low, but  nonetheless it has attracted tens of thousands of volunteers and has 
had  considerable success on the ground. In a September interview, U.S. 
Director of  National Intelligence James Clapper confessed: “We didn’t…predict 
the will to  fight…[I]n Vietnam…we underestimated the Viet Cong…In this 
case we  underestimated ISIL.” In November, Peter Bergen, CNN’s national 
security  analyst, reported the following: 
In the many media stories about the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, much  
of the focus has rightly been on the thousands of foreign fighters ISIS has  
attracted, its brutal tactics and its robust social-media presence. But an  
arguably even more important development has not received the attention it  
deserves: the group’s widening influence across the Muslim world, driven by 
 the numerous terrorist and insurgent organizations that have recently 
sworn  loyalty to it. In the past six months, ISIS has drawn into its fold some 
dozen  groups from Algeria to Pakistan. Al-Qaeda, in contrast, had been in 
existence  for a decade before it recruited its first affiliate.
Of course, in attributing the Muslim world’s equivocations about terrorism 
in  some degree to the influence of Islamism, I do not mean to suggest that 
all  Islamists are violent. Melhem summarizes the situation in this passage: 
Yes, it is misleading to lump…all Islamist groups together…As terrorist  
organizations, al-Qaeda and Islamic State are different from the Muslim  
Brotherhood [,which] renounced violence years ago, although it did dabble with  
violence in the past. Nonetheless, most of these groups do belong to the 
same  family tree—and all of them stem from the Arabs’ civilizational  ills.
Whatever the deepest source of those civilizational ills, the despair or  
grievance at the heart of Islamism, of whatever stripe, is expressed in terms 
of  competition and conflict with the West. The Muslim Brotherhood, 
granddaddy of  them all, was founded in 1928 by Hassan al-Banna when, according 
to 
his own  account, six men who had been moved by his lectures came and said 
to him: 
We know not the practical way to reach the glory of Islam and to serve the  
welfare of Muslims. We are weary of this life of humiliation and 
restriction.  Lo, we see that the Arabs and the Muslims have no status and no 
dignity. 
They  are not more than mere hirelings belonging to the foreigners…We are 
unable to  perceive the road to action as you perceive it, or to know the 
path to the  service of the fatherland, the religion, and the umma as you know  
it.
Al-Banna’s teaching stressed the necessity of violent jihad: “He who dies 
and  has not fought… has died a jahilliya [unenlightened or un-Islamic]  
death.” 
After engaging in low-level violence over its early decades, and losing out 
 to successive regimes, the Brotherhood foreswore violence within Egypt. 
Outside  is a different matter, as General Guide Muhammad Mahdi Akef explained 
when U.S  forces were fighting in Iraq: 
The Muslim Brotherhood movement condemns all bombings in the independent  
Arab and Muslim countries. But the bombings in Palestine and Iraq are a  
[religious] obligation. This is because these two countries are occupied  
countries, and the occupier must be expelled in every way possible. Thus, the  
movement supports martyrdom operations in Palestine and Iraq in order to expel  
the Zionists and the Americans.
Hamas, which is the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, says in 
its  charter not only that “the land of Palestine is an Islamic Waqf [Trust] 
upon all  Muslim generations till the day of Resurrection” but also that “
the same goes  for all the lands accessed and consecrated by Muslims at the 
time of  conquering.” 
While the Muslim Brotherhood is one example of moderate Islamism, a still  
greater one is the AKP of Turkey. But it has become increasingly autocratic 
in  its rule, scornful of the West, anti-Semitic in its rage at Israel, and 
is  serving as the principal diplomatic sponsor of Hamas. In other words, 
even  Islamist groups that avoid violence themselves support it on the part of 
other  Islamists. It goes without saying that the more extreme Islamist 
groups burn  even brighter in their rage at the West and in the lengths to 
which they are  prepared to go to express it. 
This rage was plainly evident in the responses to the Paris massacres. In  
Tehran, protestors encouraged by the government massed outside the French  
embassy, chanting “death to Charlie” and “death to France.” Turkish  
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan hinted that French intelligence might have been  
complicit in the attack and warned: “We must be aware of [the West’s] plots  
against the Muslim world.” 
The Islamists in general draw strength from a sentiment of sullen  
defensiveness more widely evident in the Muslim world. This was exemplified by 
a  
furious war of emails that broke out among editors and reporters at 
Al-Jazeera,  mostly pitting Arab against Western staff. Said one of the former: 
“I 
guess if  you insult 1.5 billion people, chances are one or two of them will 
kill you.”  And the French Jewish intellectual Michel Gurfinkiel reported that 
in France  itself: 
Most imams issued perfunctory condemnation of terrorism, but were clearly  
unenthusiastic about Charlie Hebdo’s right to make fun of every  religion, 
including Islam…More ominously, one-minute silence ceremonies at  school were 
met with hostility and scorn by Muslim children and teenagers…Two  hundred 
such instances were reported; thousands of cases went unreported,  according 
to teachers’ sources.
Much has already been written about Europe’s burgeoning and poorly 
integrated  Muslim populations. In Western Europe, France is home to the 
largest 
number, and  there is anecdotal evidence that parts of it seethe with 
hostility. In 2001,  when France hosted an Algerian soccer team in a match 
staged by 
diplomats as a  demonstration of friendship, it had to be canceled midway 
when fans, who  appeared to be French of North African descent, charged the 
field, having  earlier booed the national anthem and thrown debris at the two 
French ministers  present. In 2005, riots tore through the banlieues, 
suburbs where Muslims live,  lasting three weeks. And in 2012, Christopher 
Caldwell reports, rioting broke  out in Lyon when a bomber was arrested. Many 
of 
these suburbs have been called  “no-go zones,” although in January that term 
came in for ridicule when some  conservative commentators said these were 
formal areas outside national  sovereignty. This was an exaggeration, but the 
neighborhoods referred to this  way are, as international journalist David 
Rieff described in the New York  Times Magazine in 2007, intimidating to 
non-Muslims, even police. A few  years ago, I strolled a few blocks from my ho
tel on Place de la République, the  center of January’s “Je Suis Charlie” 
march, and during the hour of  midday prayers, a street was blocked by a few 
hundred male worshippers who  filled it with their prayer rugs, appropriating 
it without official sanction, as  far as I could tell. 
A particular focus of Muslim hostility in France and other European 
countries  is on Jews. The neo-Nazi French “comedian,” Dieudonne M’Bala M’Bala, 
who is not  himself Muslim but aims in large measure to appeal to a Muslim 
audience,  responded to the “Je Suis Charlie” slogan on Facebook with the 
taunt  “Je Suis Charlie Coulibaly,” which seemed calculated to suggest that he 
 identified with both the provocative magazine,Charlie Hebdo, and the  
killer of Jews at Hyper Cacher. This was, of course, not the first killing of  
French Jews by angry Muslims. In 2006, a gang of Muslim youths kidnapped Ilan 
 Halimi in one of the banlieues and tortured him to death over three weeks. 
In  2012, a teacher and three children at a Jewish school in Toulouse were 
mowed  down. In 2014, there were no killings, but there were many assaults 
on  individuals identifiable as Jews and desecrations of Jewish sites, 
punctuated by  riots during the Gaza war in which Jews were besieged in two 
Paris 
synagogues by  a mob “with murder on its mind,” according to witnesses 
quoted in news reports.  Jews attest that one can no longer safely roam Paris 
or 
its Metro or many other  French cities while wearing a kippah. The natural 
outcome of all this was  twofold: a survey showing that the vast majority of 
French Jews were considering  emigration and a great outpouring of concern 
by the New York Times and  others about…Islamophobia. 
Islamophobia is a term first put into currency in 1997 in a report  of the 
Runnymede Trust, a left-of-center think tank in the UK. It then was given  a 
kind of official international consecration by the 2001 UN conference on  
racism at Durban. That conference devolved from an exercise on racism to an  
exercise in racism, more particularly anti-Semitism, prompting the U.S.  
delegation to walk out. While the session of government representatives singled 
 out Israel for unique criticism, the officially sanctioned session of NGOs 
 convened in parallel became a circus of Jew-baiting. According to an 
account by  two officials of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, “copies of Mein Kampf 
and  The Protocols of the Elders of Zion were widely distributed by Muslim  
activists, while a mob marched on Durban’s Jewish community center shouting,  
‘Hitler should have finished the job.’” When some representatives 
succeeded in  getting the official declaration to include a reference to 
anti-Semitism, this  was counterbalanced by the addition of “Islamophobia.” 
Then in 
2007, the  Organization of the Islamic Conference (now Organization of Islamic 
Cooperation)  created the Islamophobia Observatory, based in Saudi Arabia— 
which, in the words  of Muslim author Asra Q. Nomani, “tries to silence 
debate on extremist ideology  in order to protect the image of Islam.” 
Islamophobia is an odd term. The staffers of Charlie Hebdo  were not the 
first to be murdered for offending Islamic sensibilities. Salman  Rushdie, 
Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Flemming Rose (who published the famous Danish  cartoons in 
2006), and others are stalked by fatwas commanding their deaths.  Israel lives 
under the specter of an Iranian nuclear bomb in the hands of a  government 
pledged to wipe it off the map. Jihadist groups wage war on “Zionists  and 
Crusaders.” And Islamism, in its various forms, proclaims the goal of world  
domination, if not now then eventually. In short, there are many people who 
have  real reason to fear violence aimed at them from within the Muslim 
world and in  the name of Islam. Of course the overwhelming majority of victims 
of Muslim  violence are Muslims, so clearly none of this justifies fear, and 
even less so  hatred, directed toward Muslims in general or any other 
expression of prejudice  or discrimination. 
But how big a problem is Islamophobia? The British writer Brendan O’Neill  
notes that a widely forecast upsurge in crimes against Muslims following the 
 2007 British Underground bombings never materialized. “Islamophobia is a 
myth,”  he says. This brought a rejoinder from Conor Friedersdorf in the  
Atlantic who turned the focus to the U.S.: “My belief that Muslims are  at 
special risk…is grounded in the fact that after the September 11 terrorist  
attacks…hate crimes against Muslim Americans spiked dramatically.” They did, 
but  Friedersdorf offered no numbers. According to federal statistics, “hate 
crimes”  aimed at Muslims spiked—to almost half the number aimed at Jews. 
Before 9/11  such crimes against Muslims were fewer than against any other 
religious group  covered in the reports—Jews, Catholics, or Protestants. A year 
after the  “spike,” hate crimes aimed at Muslims fell, not all the way 
back to their  pre-9/11 level, but to one-sixth as many as were aimed at Jews. 
This, in a  country where, I believe, most Jews feel they do not experience 
much hatred. 
Nonetheless, Hussein Ibish argues that there must be some term to 
stigmatize  “hate speech—which targets real people … compromising or 
threatening 
their  ability to function as equals to all others in society.” Fair enough. 
And Ibish  further argues thatIslamophobia is the term we have. That may be 
true,  but if so, it is important that it not be used, as Asra Nomani says it 
is, to  silence debate. Also, that it not serve to distort priorities. At a 
moment when  the principle of free speech and the ability of Jews to live in 
Europe as Jews  are under serious threat, threats that could set back the 
progress of liberal  civilization perhaps irreparably, the issue of the 
moment is not,  contrary to New York Times or Guardian editorialists,  
Islamophobia. And finally, the term or concept of Islamophobia should not be  
used to 
compound a debilitating falsehood. 
By this I mean the falsehood pronounced by Hollande and Merkel and Kerry 
and  Obama’s spokesman that jihadist violence has “nothing to do with Islam.” 
I have  already presented abundant evidence that this claim is false. Let 
me explain why  I believe it is likely also to prove self-defeating. 
There are voices in the Muslim world beckoning Islam to confront its faults 
 and errors and achieve a better understanding of itself so that it might 
move  forward from an era of stagnation and live in harmony with the rest of 
the  world. Melhem’s has been the most eloquent such voice, but it is far 
from the  only one. Nomani’s is another, as is Ibish’s. I could name many 
more. The  London-based international Arabic newspapers, for example, have run 
several such  columns. 
The most remarkable and important voice now is that of Egypt’s President  
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. True, his rule thus far has been repressive, some say 
more  repressive than the old regime of Mubarak, and not only of the 
Islamists but  also of secular liberals. Nonetheless, he delivered a speech on 
December 28 of  historic importance. He spoke at Al-Azhar University, the 
world’s 
preeminent  center of Sunni learning, to a large body of clerics and 
religious scholars, and  he summoned them to transform the faith. The message, 
although already reported,  is so important as to justify quoting at length: 
I would like to reiterate that we are not doing enough with regard to true  
religious discourse. The problem has never been with our faith. Perhaps the 
 problem lies in ideology, and this ideology is sanctified among us… 
We must take a long, hard look at the situation we are in. It is  
inconceivable that the ideology we sanctify should make our entire nation a  
source 
of concern, danger, killing, and destruction all over the world…I am  
referring not to “religion,” but to “ideology”—the body of ideas and texts  
that 
we have sanctified in the course of centuries, to the point that  
challenging them has become very difficult. 
It has reached the point that [this ideology] is hostile to the entire  
world. Is it conceivable that 1.6 billion [Muslims] would kill the world’s  
population of seven billion, so that they could live [on their own]? This is  
inconceivable. I say these things here, at Al-Azhar, before religious clerics 
 and scholars. May Allah bear witness on Judgment Day to the truth of your  
intentions, regarding what I say to you today. You cannot see things 
clearly  when you are locked [in this ideology]. You must emerge from it and 
look 
from  outside, in order to get closer to a truly enlightened ideology. You 
must  oppose it with resolve. Let me say it again: We need to revolutionize 
our  religion… 
The world in its entirety awaits your words, because the Islamic nation is  
being torn apart, destroyed, and is heading to perdition. We ourselves are  
bringing it to perdition. (Translation by MEMRI.)
Even for a man in Sisi’s position these are brave words, and he repeated 
many  of the same thoughts a month later at the World Economic Forum at Davos, 
while  Kerry droned on about “blam[ing] Muslims for crimes…their faith 
utterly  rejects.” It is to be hoped that Sisi’s words will stimulate more 
debate within  the Muslim world. He will be countered not only by would-be 
assassins, although  there will be no shortage of those, but also by many 
voices 
of sullen  defensiveness and deep denial that will insist that if there are 
any problems,  they are all the fault of the West or the Zionists. 
True, it is not easy to figure out what, besides preserving our own 
strength  while affirming our desire for peace and friendship, non-Muslims can 
do 
to  encourage and support those seeking to reform the “religious discourse” 
of the  Muslim world. But surely for us to make the point, in the face of 
yet another  brutal Islamist depredation, that, as far as we can see, nothing 
is amiss in  Islam will only lend confirmation to the deniers and will 
sooner undermine than  help the reformers. 
 
____________________________________
Footnotes

_1_ 
(https://www.commentarymagazine.com/article/muslims-and-terror-the-real-story-1/#ref1)
  “In  Search of Moderate Muslims,” February 2008 
 
About the Author
Joshua Muravchik, a longtime  contributor, is a fellow at Johns Hopkins 
University’s School of Advanced  International Studies. His most recent book is 
Making David into Goliath:  How the World Turned Against Israel.


 

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