ZenPundit
Sunday, February 05, 2006
 
FREEDOM OF SPEECH AND JIHADI-SALAFI INTIMIDATION[ Updated]

The UK Spectator which was kind enough to link to Zenpundit today on an unrelated matter has a Telegraph article with the disturbing implication that the Jihadi-Salafi radical movement is succeeding in its campaign of intimidation over the Danish political cartoon to assert sharia precepts and special exceptions for Islam in Western societies. The moral problem is not one of the general population in Western countries but of elite authority which is reacting, Danish and some EU officials excepted, with truckling cowardice and opportunism.

It is manifestly true that the sharia prohibits artistic representations of the Prophet and that the original cartoon was insulting in a rather juvenile way. The sharia however prohibits a lot of things that are normal states of affairs in Denmark, Britain or the United States - or are considered Constitutional rights- and as the body of Muslim religious law, the sharia has absolutely no standing in the secular, liberal democratic West whose populations, while multicultural to be sure, are overwhelmingly Christian. We do not for example, give veto power over our society to Talmudic scholars or the canon law of the Catholic Church, so it might not be a good idea to be backtracking on core Western values in the face of threats from an unrepresentative but violent, totalitarian, minority within a predominantly foreign religion.

The Danish cartoon, however unfairly broadbrush, was aimed at the terroristic activities of these selfsame Salafi radicals and Jihadists, who naturally, are alarmed at being accurately criticized for prostituting one of the world's great religions with their violent brand of extremist politics. Handing this group concessions instead of, say clapping them into the clink for making death threats, sends entirely the wrong message to moderates and secular intellectuals in the Muslim world at large. If the mighty West stammers in the face of relatively minor, semi-disorganized, thuggery from Islamist radicals, how much more important is it for them to keep their own mouths shut ?

The U.S. State Department, while no doubt relieved that for once somebody else's consulates are on fire, has disgracefully undercut the Europeans on free speech in order to try to win brownie points with the Muslim street. I grant you that many FSO's are graduates of Ivy league schools where PC values are put on a far higher moral plane than the Bill of Rights but this move was rather dumb on conventional diplomatic grounds. If helping the Bosnian Muslims, Indonesian Tsunami victims and Pakistani earthquake victims barely made a dent in negative public images Muslims have of America, verbal concessions on a cartoon are not going to do the trick. Indeed, it will only invite the contempt of Jihadi radicals who see it for what it is - a retreat borne out of weakness and lack of confidence in core American values. And in Europe, advocates of a " tough" policy on Islamist extremism can only feel that we have pulled the rug out from under them after years of complaining that the Euros were too weak and vacillating in the face of extremism and terror.

It would have better to simply have said nothing at all. Our governmental elite lacks not only spine but sense.

UPDATE:

Dan and Bill at Duck of Minerva have endorsed raf's post at 'Aqoul for its perceptive observations and distinctions within the MENA world on this issue; I concur, very useful effort on raf's part.

Memorandum has more links to blogs posts and pundits on the cartoon crisis than I can even begin to list. Surf away !

I'll also concede that Dan is correct that American humanitarian aid has helped the American image somewhat in the targeted countries - I was thinking along the lines of Arab public opinion instead of the general Muslim world which is, of course, quite diverse in its interests. Nevertheless, State message was still remarkably boneheaded and inept.
 
Comments:
"If helping the Bosnian Muslims, Indonesian Tsunami victims and Pakistani earthquake victims barely made a dent in negative public images Muslims have of America, verbal concessions on a cartoon are not going to do the trick."

Actually, the last two apparently made an enormous difference in these respective countries.

For some very interesting commentary on the protests, see raf*'s post at the excellent 'Aqoul
 
Frankly, the real reason they are so responsive to these protests is that Danish companies are suffering substantial financial losses due to these cartoons.

Lots of people really don't care about the politics of this GWOT. What they do care about is money and this is costing them a lot.
 
"... the ... reason they are ... responsive to these protests is that Danish companies are suffering ... financial [loss]"

No. It's fear.

And that is well-founded, unfortunately. This may well be the first cartoon-inspired murder:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4683548.stm

Here is one of the most perceptive articles yet to run - it's from one of the Telegraph's best writers, Charles Moore:

http://www.portal.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2006/02/04/do0402.xml

Other voices over here in the UK have been interesting to read, too. John Casey mounted a spirited defence of the notion that publication was bad manners as it touched upon people's notion of "the sacred" in the Sunday Telegraph. (Incidentally, that other well-known Hegelian conservative, Roger Scruton, gave a short quote to the Times (of London) saying much the same.)

I felt, however, that Casey's argument only worked as far as it did because he completely failed to discuss important and pressing aspects of the affair.

Others, such as the pompous Simon Jenkins at the Times, and the leader writer at the Observer (both pieces linked at Spectator), produced unpleasant copy that blended self-satisfaction and cringing servility in a thoroughly distateful manner.
 
Mark

this site has interesting details on black propaganda and the cartoon jihad... it seems the BBC may have used some of the fake cartoons itself though this has not been publicly noted in UK MSM...

http://counterterror.typepad.com/

UK fan
 
"Others, such as the pompous Simon Jenkins at the Times, and the leader writer at the Observer (both pieces linked at Spectator), produced unpleasant copy that blended self-satisfaction and cringing servility in a thoroughly distateful manner."

Belated response from me but...Heh.

I'm glad to hear that the Nation magazine has not cornered the cringing servility market in the English-speaking world. :o)

Will try to get to some of this - still thinking about the earlier Nietzschean comment - when work allows me to catch a breath.
 
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