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![]() Obama and Jihad and how not to fight terrorism
In Mumbai President Obama was asked by an Indian student for his “take or opinion on jihad”. He began his answer with the observation that “the phrase jihad has a lot of meanings within Islam and is subject to a lot of different interpretations”.
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Wednesday, November 10,2010 14:52 | |||||||
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In Mumbai President Obama was asked by an Indian student for his “take or opinion on jihad”. He began his answer with the observation that “the phrase jihad has a lot of meanings within Islam and is subject to a lot of different interpretations”. In its report of the discussion, the New York Times noted that Obama “carefully avoided saying that he was opposed to jihad”. (I ask: How could he be opposed if he is aware of its two real and true meanings in Islam? The greater jihad is the inner struggle for self-improvement to become a good Muslim. The lesser jihad is struggle against oppression – oppression as in Israel’s occupation and treatment of the Palestinians, for example.) Part of the answer is not the way President George “Dubya” Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair set about doing it, a counter-productive way with bombs and bullets. Today there are few if any real experts who would deny that Bush’s and Blair’s approach to counter-terrorism made the two of them the best recruiting sergeants for violent Islamic fundamentalism in all of its forms and franchises. (In the past I have imagined Osama Bin Laden on his knees giving thanks to his God for the folly of the Bush-and-Blair approach).
I go on to say there are many case studies to support this analysis. In Northern Ireland, for example, the British Army did not defeat Provisional IRA terrorism. The terrorists called off their campaign when they had no choice – because the Catholic host community would not cover and support them any longer. And that happened only because the British government summoned up the will, about half a century later than it should have done, to risk the wrath of militant Protestantism by insisting that the legitimate grievances of the Catholics of Northern Ireland be addressed. It follows that the only effective way to defeat Arab and other Muslim terrorism is by addressing the legitimate grievances of its host communities. What are those grievances? The list is quite long but at the top of it is the double standard of Western foreign policy as manifest in its refusal to call and hold Israel to account for its defiance of international law, while at the same time making demands, often backed with punishment including war, for Arab and other Muslim regimes to act in accordance with international law.
For a while it seemed that Prime Minister Blair was taking the Foreign Office’s advice. But he subsequently demonstrated his total contempt for it and his absolute rejection of it. He said, “Muslims have a completely false sense of grievance against the West.”
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tags: Obama / Jihad / Terrorism / Extremists / Muslim Terrorists / Mossad / Religious War
Posted in Obama |
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