World Affairs

Off the Fence

 
 
By  _James  Kirchick_ 
(http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/users/james-kirchick)  on 25 February 2015 

 
Has Chris Matthews joined the ranks of the dreaded  neoconservatives?
 
 
 
Usually the MSNBC host has no time for foreign policy interventionists,  
national security hawks, and the other assorted defense intellectuals crudely  
classified under the “neocon” label. “There’s always a war that the 
neocons are  looking forward to,” he grumbled in 2012. “Neocons,” he said that 
same year in a  discussion of Mitt Romney’s presidential advisers, are “
horrible, dangerous  people.” 
Just five months ago, Matthews lambasted none other than President Obama, 
not  a man usually accused of falling under the spell of neoconservative 
influence,  for his use of the word “homeland,” a term the towheaded pundit 
considered  “totalitarian,” one “used by the neocons,” whom, Matthews said, “
love it.” 
And so imagine my surprise to see Matthews closing out a recent Monday  
evening Hardball broadcast with a robust call for the use of American  
firepower that would have made former Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul 
Wolfowitz  
swoon. Matthews was moved to make this stirring call to arms by the Islamic  
State’s latest act of savagery: the beachside beheadings of 21 Egyptian 
Coptic  Christians in Libya. The gruesome video of this atrocity, expertly 
filmed 
and  edited as usual, ended with the bloody waters of the Mediterranean Sea 
lapping  along the Libyan coastline. “We can’t see people killed like this 
in our face  and simply flip to the sports page or the financial news or 
what’s at the movies  or who’s going to win the Oscars and act like America, 
our country, is not being  morally humiliated,” Matthews intoned, the rising 
anger in his voice a  reflection of wounded national honor; the vow to 
enact justice positively  Churchillian. 
“Because it is,” he continued, “with the lives of at least some of these  
people, who must, in their last minutes, have to be wondering if there’s any 
 chance the people in the United States could be coming to their rescue, 
because  that’s how we were taught that we conduct ourselves. We don’t leave 
people  behind.” Somewhere, John Bolton was twirling his moustache.  
Matthews’s tirade was not just the isolated  ranting of a cable television 
host. His frustration reflects the views of a  growing swath of liberals and 
Democrats fed up with the White House’s  response—or lack thereof—to the 
Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL. The  administration’s tendency to 
obfuscate the nature of the threat we are facing,  refusal to confront the 
problem of radical Islam by its right and proper name,  and inclination to 
draw spurious moral equivalences are being met with fierce  resistance from 
within its own ranks. 
The Matthews tirade was delivered the same night as his famous face-off 
with  State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf, who told an incredulous 
Matthews  that “we cannot kill our way out of this war” and urged that we “
go after the  root causes that lead people to join these groups.” The 
following day, Harf went  on CNN to defend her remarks, saying that it was “too 
nuanced an argument for  some.” 
But if anyone was lacking “nuance” it was Harf. For had she bothered to 
read  the voluminous scholarly literature on terrorism and poverty, she would 
have  discovered that the relationship between the two is reverse. “If there 
is a link  between income level, education, and participation in terrorist 
activities,”  Princeton economist Claude Berrebi wrote in a study of 
Palestinian terrorists,  “it is either very weak or in the opposite direction 
of 
what one intuitively  might have expected.” Ridiculing the administration’s “
nonsense” about  terrorism, the liberal New America Foundation’s Peter 
Bergen—who in 1997  produced the first television interview with Osama bin 
Laden—
wrote that the  question “‘Who becomes a terrorist?’ turns out, in many 
cases, to be much like  asking, ‘Who owns a Volvo?’” 
Take some of the more high-profile terrorists of recent times. Attempted  
underwear bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab descended from a prominent 
Nigerian  family and lived in a London apartment worth 2 million pounds. 
Meanwhile, 
the  arch-terrorist bin Laden was himself the son of a billionaire Saudi 
construction  magnate. Poverty, in other words, doesn’t create terrorism. 
Ideology does. 
Which leads to the second conceptual problem that some liberals are 
beginning  to have with this administration: its reluctance to spotlight the 
ideology we  happen to be confronting. Last week, the White House held a summit 
on 
 “countering violent extremism,” the very name of which presents the 
threat to  the world as some sort of nebulous, ecumenical army of fanatics, 
when, 
in fact,  the people trying to kill us and destroy our way of life are, 
almost entirely,  followers of one faith tradition. 
Ah, but the president and his defenders say: The perpetrators of these 
crimes  are not really “Islamic.” With this deliberate denial of reality, not 
only do  they mask the threat of violent Islamic extremism among other, far 
less  pertinent dangers, they ignore the very Islamic nature of it. Having 
drifted  from their Judeo-Christian moorings (if they ever had them), many 
Western  progressives are poorly equipped to grapple with the religious zeal of 
 Muslims. 
In the cover story of the March _issue_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/toc/2015/03/)  of the  Atlantic, Graeme 
Wood explains how overlooking the 
Islamic character of  the Islamic State backfires, because “pretending that 
it isn’t actually a  religious, millenarian group, with theology that must 
be understood to be  combatted, has already led the United States to 
underestimate it and back  foolish schemes to counter it.” Rather than speak 
honestly about what we’re  dealing with, the White House would rather assuage 
the 
sensitivities of people  like the Muslim Public Affairs Council’s Salam 
Al-Marayati, who, _according  to_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/02/17/muslims-aren-t-the-only-extremists.html?source=TDB&via=FB_Page)
  the 
Daily Beast, “express[ed] concerns that our government needs  to ensure that it 
doesn’t give ‘legitimacy’ to the claims of ISIS and al Qaeda  that they are 
in fact Islamic.” 
As the Princeton scholar Bernard Haykel, the leading authority on ISIS, 
_told  Wood_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/features/archive/2015/02/what-isis-really-wants/384980/)
 , Muslims who talk like this are understandably “‘
embarrassed and  politically correct, with a cotton-candy view of their own 
religion’ that  neglects ‘what their religion has historically and legally 
required.’” ISIS  leaders have not invented out of whole cloth the various 
Koranic edicts to wage  war on infidels and herd non-Muslim women into chattel 
slavery; it’s all there  in the Muslim holy book. The great struggle of our 
time will be whether or not  Islam, as it is widely practiced and understood, 
can achieve a reformation in  the same manner as the other Abrahamic faiths. 
It is for this reason that  denying the religious element of that struggle 
is so counterproductive. 
Unfortunately, the president ranks among those who  make the kind of 
unqualified claims on behalf of the faith that Haykel abjures.  “99.9 percent 
of 
Muslims,” Obama _said_ 
(http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/obama-999-muslims-reject-radical-islam_836303.html)
   recently, “are looking for the same 
things we are looking for—order, peace,  prosperity” and “don’t even 
recognize [radical interpretations] as being Islam.”  That doesn’t square—at 
all—
with the _latest  results_ 
(http://www.pewglobal.org/2014/07/01/concerns-about-islamic-extremism-on-the-rise-in-middle-east/pg-2014-07-01-islamic-extremis
m-10/)  from the Pew Global Attitudes project, which shows that support for 
 suicide bombings and other forms of terrorism, while having fallen 
significantly  since 9/11, is still popular with a disturbingly high number of 
Muslims. As  Joshua Muravchik _observes_ 
(https://www.commentarymagazine.com/article/muslims-and-terror-the-real-story/) 
  in Commentary, if even 20 percent 
of the world’s Islamic population, a  conservative estimate, were to 
support terrorism, that would translate into  about 300 million people. This is 
the pool from which ISIS draws its active, and  passive, support.  
Thankfully, the sensible majority of Americans do not share the views of 
the  administration and its politically correct enforcers. Only last September 
did  more than 50 percent of Americans finally come around to the 
realization that  Islam is more likely to encourage violence than other faiths. 
But 
even then,  that violence can easily be written off as “reactive” conduct in 
response to the  provocations of the Western oppressor, not actions 
undertaken with individual  agency and animated by a murderous ideology. 
“Without 
the war waged by western  powers, including France, to bring to heel and 
reoccupy the Arab and Muslim  world, [the Charlie Hebdo] attacks clearly wouldn’
t have taken  place,” _wrote_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jan/15/paris-warning-no-insulation-wars-arab-muslim-world)
   Seumas Milne 
in the Guardian. 
Arguing that France, and the West in general, are responsible for the  
terrorist acts committed against them, Milne would allow the Islamists—people  
who murder Jews because they’re Jews and gays because they’re gays—dictate 
terms  to the rest of us. And by putting Muslims writ large at the top of 
their victim  totem pole, those Western progressives who fashion themselves 
allies of the  umma are in fact doing it great harm. In validating Osama bin 
Laden’s  claims that the relationship between Muslims and the West is one 
defined by a  set of grievances, and that Muslims are therefore partially 
justified in  committing terrorism to address these grievances (whereas no 
other 
social group  is allowed such dispensation), the Western left demeans and 
belittles Muslims.  Of all the downtrodden and discriminated against, of which 
there are many in  this benighted world, it is only the followers of the 
Islamic faith whom they  excuse as prone to bomb and murder as a means of 
voicing their collective  complaints. 
“What happens there ends up happening here too,” Milne says, arguing that  
continued Western strikes on the Islamic State will only result in more  
terrorist attacks, or “blowback,” in European and maybe even American cities. 
 Should we veil our women and execute our gays, since that, too, is what 
the  Islamic State desires? There is no negotiating with those who kill people 
 because of who they are. I would argue for bombing these barbarians back 
to the  Stone Age, but that would be redundant.  
The last, and perhaps most decisive split to emerge on the left over ISIS  
regards the urge to draw moral equivalencies. Earlier this month, at the  
National Prayer Breakfast, the president _told  us all_ 
(http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2015/02/05/remarks-president-national-prayer-breakfast)
  to get off our collective “high horse” about ISIS because some  European 
kings had ordered the Crusades many hundreds of years ago. More  pressing 
today, there are many on the left who refuse to let any discussion of  
Islamic terrorism persist in which Christian and Jewish terrorism is not  
subjected to the same analytical rigor. 
This is an insult to the intelligence. There is no Christian or Jewish  
equivalent to the Islamic State, to which tens of thousands of people have  
ventured from all corners of the earth, heeding its call to live in a land  
governed by strict sharia law and dedicated to waging war not only on the  
Western world and non-believers, but on any and all Muslims who do not conform  
to its obscurantist dictates. And even long before the establishment of the  
Islamic State, the world was already stuck with some half a dozen or so 
various  Islamic theocracies, of both the Shiite (Iran) and Sunni (Saudi 
Arabia)  variety. 
Writing of the president’s impulse to draw a connection between the 
Christian  crusades of yesteryear and ISIS’s current barbarism, Damon Linker of 
the 
 Week _observed_ 
(http://theweek.com/articles/539699/liberals-missed-true-threat-isis)   that, 
while the “liberal habit of self-criticism” is 
important, “this instinct  can also blind liberals to real and important 
differences, and discourage the  making of relevant, even essential judgments, 
as the 
embrace of humility and  call to refrain from judging others becomes, 
paradoxically, its own source of  pride.” 
Progressives revel in dredging up our iniquities; it is determining whether 
 or not those old vices should prevent us from doing good today that 
separates  the serious liberals from the morally exhibitionist  ones.

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