I haven't had time to be around much lately, and won't be able to contribute much to this discussion in the next few weeks (should it survive that long), but I've been mulling over some troubling ideas the last several days.
Let's take a few items as self-evident, even even axiomatic:
Thoughts?
Let's take a few items as self-evident, even even axiomatic:
- Whether violent Islamists represent a majority of Muslims worldwide, or whether they are a minority, no one doubts they represent a powerful force within Islam.
- The governments of most Muslim nations, especially in the middle east, are either unable or unwilling (or both) to control the Islamists in their midst, particularly when the Islamists' rage is directed at the west. In many cases, those governments actively support Islamist terrorist groups.
- By contrast, any voices of moderation in those middle eastern Muslim countries are suppressed, either by Islamist violence, or by the governments, or both.
- Since the Muslim moderates in those countries have virtually no chance of coming to power, facing as they do the dual obstacles of repressive government and murderous Islamists, there is no hope of peaceful and democratic change to the status quo in those countries.
- There is nothing the west can do to change any of this by any peaceful means. Whatever democracy now existing in the Muslim middle east is fragile, and has been imposed by force of foreign arms.
- Violent Islam, even if a numeric minority, has cowed the populations of its Muslim nations, in much the same way a few thousand Bolsheviks cowed the population of all of Russia almost a hundred years ago. It has been attempting to do the same in Europe, and is making significant inroads, often with the connivance of its Muslim sponsor governments.
- Violent Islam's fury, never far below the surface, erupts at the slightest provocation (viz. the cartoons eruption), which reminds one of Voltaire's observation that, "To the wicked, everything is pretext." This fury is not amenable to compromise, and it appears western institutions are more willing to compromise on free speech than the Islamists are on cartoons (no major US newspapers have printed the cartoons).
- Nothing so far seems to be discouraging violent Islam from trying to spread its influence throughout the world. People observe that there has been no attack on US soil since September 11, 2001, but that is because of US vigilance, not because of Islamist lack of will. Whether the response to violent Islam and its government sponsors has been timid (a la Europe) or stronger (a la the US), the threat remains. Violent Islam has considered the west the enemy to be overcome, long before the west recognized the threat. This attitude long predates Gulf War II, September 11, 2001, or Gulf War I, and will survive even if Iraq succeeds in overcoming the Islamist insurrection in its midst.
Thoughts?