Monday, November 9, 2009 - 2:27 PM
Since the Ft Hood atrocity, I've seen a meme going around that it somehow exposed a contradiction between "political correctness" and "security." The avoidance of Nidal Hassan's religion out of fear of offending anyone, goes the argument, created the conditions which allowed him to go undetected and unsanctioned in the months and years leading up to his rampage. American security, therefore, demands dropping the "political correctness" of avoiding a confrontation with Islamist ideas and asking the "tough questions" about Islam as a religion and the loyalty of Muslim-Americans.
This framing of the issue is almost 100% wrong. There is a connection between what these critics are calling "political correctness" and national security, but it runs in the opposite direction. The real linkage is that there is a strong security imperative to prevent the consolidation of a narrative in which America is engaged in a clash of civilizations with Islam, and instead to nurture a narrative in which al-Qaeda and its affiliates represent a marginal fringe to be jointly combatted. Fortunately, American leaders -- from the Obama administration through General George Casey and top counter-terrorism officials -- understand this and have been acting appropriately.
It's worth walking through the connection once again, because how America responds to Ft. Hood really is important in the wider attempt to change the nature of its engagement with Muslim publics across the world. Get the response right, as the administration thus far has done, and they show that things really have changed. Get it wrong, as its critics demand, and the world could tumble back down into the 'clash of civilizations' trap which al-Qaeda so dearly wants and which the improved American approach of the last couple of years has increasingly denied it.
The grand strategy of al-Qaeda and its affiliated ideologues is, and has always been, to generate a clash of civilizations between Islam and the West which does not currently exist. Their great challenge is that the vast majority of Muslims reject their theology, ideology, strategy and tactics. That's especially true of American Muslims. They therefore feel the need to change the environment in which Muslims live in order to change their calculations about the appropriateness of extremist identities and ideologies and actions.
Terrorism is a means towards that end. The object is to create a violent, polarized environment in which Muslims are forced to embrace a narrow, extreme version of Muslim identity. They want Muslims to accept a master narrative in which the Islamic umma is existentially threatened by Western aggression, and the only theologically and strategically appropriate individual response is to join the jihad in the path of god (as they have defined it).
They recognize that most Muslims won't embrace this radical conception of their identity just through messaging, internet rhetoric, or preaching. To make inroads with mainstream Muslim communities, they need to change the context in which they live -- to render their status quo unacceptable and to make their narrative resonate. And for that to happen, they need a lot of help -- for the targeted governments to take inflammatory measures against their Muslim populations, for the non-Muslim citizens in the targeted countries to discriminate against them, and for the media to fan the flames of hatred and mistrust.
Understanding this strategy points towards some fairly obvious guidelines for judging various responses. Al-Qaeda and its affiliated ideologues don't just want their targets to overreact with blanket crackdowns on the mainstream Muslim community -- they are counting on it. They want to create a homogenous, undifferentiated Islam on whose behalf they speak and a coherent master narrative which justifies and validates their actions. American reactions which feed AQ's master narrative, lump together disparate Muslim movements, and tar a wide range of Muslims with the AQ brush therefore serve al-Qaeda's strategy. Responses which disrupt AQ's narrative, disaggregate the Muslim world and relegate AQ to a marginal fringe frustrate its strategy.
A lot of people -- some well-meaning, some clowns or worse -- evidently want the American response to the Ft. Hood shootings to revive the post-9/11 "war of ideas" and "clash of civilizations" anti-Islamic discourse. It's a jihad, they shout, demanding careful scrutiny of the loyalty of American Muslims. That's what they seem to mean by the demand to throw away "political correctness" and confront the ideological menace. The overall effect of their recommendations, however, would be to revive the flagging al-Qaeda brand and to greatly strengthen the appeal of its narrative. And that's exactly what we should not want.
I don't think it's going to happen. President Obama and his national security team clearly rejects such strategic misconceptions. They understand the importance of combining effective police work and international cooperation with a carefully calibrated rhetoric and strategic communications campaign. Americans have learned a lot since 9/11. And if the careful police work and investigation uncovers real ties to al-Qaeda, then I expect they will pursue those leads and carry out the appropriate response quietly and efficiently --- but without inflaming public hostilities, scoring cheap political points, or fueling the al-Qaeda narrative.
Thanks.
I hate it when people start talking about memes.
Obviously, it's shorthand; it allows the quick summary and caricaturization of arguments with which one wants to disagree, perhaps especially if one wants to disagree at great length. It's also hard to refute, because someone, somewhere is bound to have said something like the meme, whether that someone represents a significant body of opinion or not.
In this case, reality is that the Army promoted and planned to deploy an officer who held to radical Islamist beliefs and ended up gunning down his fellow soldiers. The Army is duty-bound to examine how this happened, and the possibility that it ignored warning signs because it didn't want to appear to be discriminating against a Muslim must be considered. If Muslims in Saudi Arabia or Pakistan take this the wrong way we'll just have to deal with it, because nothing like the Ft. Hood shootings can happen again.
Now, I can't speak for Rush Limbaugh (because I work, and don't listen to the radio on the job) or for Sen. Lieberman (because getting more public attention for Sen. Lieberman is a lot lower on my priority list than it is on his). I can't say whether what they are saying about this incident is much different than what they would be saying anyway. But that may not matter, because the meme is out there.
The tagline for this post currently on the front page reads: "Political correctness isn't to blame for the Ft. Hood massacre?" Question mark. The only sensible way to read that is as an incredulous, "Political correctness isn't to blame for the Ft. Hood massacre? Of course it is!" I challenge anyone to provide a sensical way that that can be read other than that. This is attached to a Marc Lynch piece the point of which is clearly none other than, "Political correctness isn't to blame for the Ft. Hood massacre." This discrepancy ought to be utterly unacceptable to Marc, and is unacceptable to readers, who just a week or two ago had to endure a similar distortion-by-tagline when the editors linked to Tom Ricks' supportive mention of Obama's visit to Dover with "Obama has no idea what war is."
Ricks was commendable in his quick response to the issue. Will Lynch make a similar stand? I encourage all FP's writers to make clear to the editors that this has to stop.
Who Is Agitating for a Clash of Civilizations and Why?
Haven't neoconservatives and their political allies, for decades, been even more active and conspicuous in promoting the Clash of Civilizations (World War IV, the Long War, etc.) than al-Qaeda? Some names come quickly to mind:
Bernard Lewis
Charles Krauthammer
Daniel Pipes
David Horowitz
Dore Gold
Jamie Glazov
John Hagee
Joseph Lieberman
Melanie Phillips
Meyrav Wurmser
Michael Ledeen
Michael Savage
Norman Podhoretz
Pamela Geller
Richard Perle
Robert Spencer
Steven Emerson
Sometimes their inciting and incendiary rhetoric passes over into the most extreme forms of hate speech (Pamela Geller of Atlas Shrugs is perhaps the most notorious example).
The key question for foreign policy realists: what would be the consequences for the American interest of becoming mired down in an endless global holy war against more than a billion Muslims? Such a foolhardy crusade would make the Vietnam and Iraq Wars combined look like a garden party, and greatly benefit the strategic interests of America's most formidable economic competitors: China, India, Russia, Europe, etc. Who is agitating for the Clash of Civilizations and why? Most of the ringleaders of the movement can be fairly characterized as pro-Israel activists or militants -- they make little effort to hide their agenda.
This feels like a simplification...
For a good look at al-Qaida's objectives and psychology, I'd recommend reading Norman Cigar's translation of abd al-Aziz al-Muqrin's _A Practical Course for Guerilla War_, published with introduction and other al-Qaida documents as _al-Qa'ida's Doctrine for Insurgency_, http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1597972533. To speak of their perspective as that of a clash of civilizations is true as far as it goes, but not comprehensive.
I would also advise reading H. John Poole's _Tequila Junction_ (http://www.amazon.com/dp/0963869515) and _Militant Tricks_ (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0963869582). Poole believes that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan ultimately trace back to China, which is using Iran as a proxy in the region; and he backs this up with extensive open-source intelligence.
This sounds like a conspiracy theory, but it derives fairly naturally from classical Chinese stratagems (most famously codified by Sun Tzu) as motivated by fear of the fate of Nicolae Ceau?escu (and I seem to remember ForeignPolicy.com mentioning that Kim Jong Il has circulated a video of Ceau?escu's execution among his senior officials).
And even if China doesn't have any connection with Iraq and/or Afghanistan, the list of the organizations for which al-Qaida acts as a front or an umbrella, in _Militant Tricks_, is well worth seeing. There are some names familiar from other contexts in there...
* Edit: forgot to mention: on the shooting itself, not sending Muslims to fight other Muslims on behalf of a non-Muslim power is little else but common sense. The Quran specifies that provided he continues to hate those he lives among, a Muslim seeking to avoid persecution and death may do anything against other Muslims except kill them personally.
I don't believe that every Muslim in United States service is cultivating a burning hatred of the US, but this principle is active in a different form -- a folk belief that killing a fellow-Muslim is apostasy.
Twice now this has cued Muslim soldiers turning on their colleagues (once with the 101st Airborne early in the invasion of Iraq, and again at Fort Hood); twice is too many times, indicating that individual Muslims should only be obliged to potentially kill other Muslims if the military can be completely confident that in their crises of faith, they will choose Uncle Sam over Allah... and if the military is also sure that it wants to force crises of faith in the first place.
Clash of Civilizations Propaganda Outlets
Their verbal firepower and influence vastly exceed that of al-Qaeda. They seem to be deliberately trying to provoke a global conflagration between "the West" and Islam:
1. AEI (American Enterprise Institute)
2. American Thinker
3. Atlas Shrugs
4. Commentary
5. CSP (Center for Security Policy)
6. CUFI (Christians United for Israel)
7. David Horowitz Freedom Center
8. FDD (Foundation for the Defense of Democracies)
9. Fox News
10. FPI (Foreign Policy Initiative)
11. Free Republic
12. Frontpage Magazine
13. Israel National News
14. Israpundit
15. Jewish World Review
16. Jihad Watch
17. JINSA (Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs)
18. MEMRI (Middle East Media Research Institute)
19. National Review
20. Newsmax
21. One Jerusalem
22. Wall Street Journal
23. Washington Post
24. Weekly Standard
25. WINEP (Washington Institute for Near East Policy)
26. Worldnetdaily
27. ZOA (Zionist Organization of America)
There are many more. The two major political factions in play: neoconservatives and Christian Zionists.
Personally, I think the poor fellow went berserk. All I can say is if he was so distressed about deployment to Afghanistan, someone in military mental health should have bought a clue. We must hope his assignment wasn't some sort of punishment and that he wasn't being asked to work in, er, special ops.
However, undeniably, when revealed relations are concerned, people can go bonkers (Branch Davidians, Jews for Jesus, People's Temple), hear voices or otherwise adopt extreme behaviors. We all recall the grenade rolling incident at
Camp Pennsylvania, Kuwait, in March 2003.
George W. Bush's War Against Gog and Magog
Regarding the role of religious extremism in the American government and military, consider this:
Chirac recounts that the American leader appealed to their “common faith” (Christianity) and told him: “Gog and Magog are at work in the Middle East.... The biblical prophecies are being fulfilled.... This confrontation is willed by God, who wants to use this conflict to erase his people’s enemies before a New Age begins.”
This bizarre episode occurred while the White House was assembling its “coalition of the willing” to unleash the Iraq invasion. Chirac says he was boggled by Bush’s call and “wondered how someone could be so superficial and fanatical in their beliefs.”
How many Americans and Iraqis died because Bush went on a religious rampage in the Mideast?
Christian Zionist Incitement Against Islam
There it is:
ROBERTSON: That is the ultimate aim. And they talk about infidels and all this, but the truth is that’s what the game is. So you are dealing with not a religion. You’re dealing with a political system. And I think we should treat it as such and treat its adherences as such as we would members of the Communist Party or members of some fascist group.
This hate rhetoric is reminiscent of Nazi attacks on Judaism and Jews. Religious extremists like Robertson are deliberately trying to provoke Armageddon: rational calculations of the American interest matter not a whit to them. They are literally trying to blow up the world.
What THIS Administration Must Do
Marc,
You are spot on re playing into the AQ narrative. POTUS must go beyond denial of Islam's culpability. He needs to spell out the cause and effect situation you explained. The line to the anti-Islam crowd, especially those in the media, should be this: "You most certainly have the right to say anything you want to, but you must also understand that words have consequences. If you really want to help prevent terrorism, not make it worse, think again before you choose what you wish to say about Muslims, especially your fellow Americans." Throw the onus back on the bigots who float around in the mainstream media.
Another Irony: At a time when it would be helpful for both Muslim Americans who might feel conflicted and those who are suspicious of their Muslim fellow citizens, we still have not granted a visa to Tariq Ramadan [to my knowledge], who is the most charismatic and compelling speaker who can forcefully explain Why Muslims not just can but MUST support their country [meaning a non-Muslim majority state]. He has a very cogent argument based on Islamic doctrine.
I had to watch a couple of segments on Hannity and O'Reilly last night to see the pin-heads spin on the graves of the Ft. Hood victims. They didn't disappoint. I heard Bernie Goldberg say "I told you so, political-correctness will destroy this country!" I tried to find the video, but was stopped dead by the Line of the Night on the Factor's home page:
"Media that use tragedy to ram home political points are despicable." Bill O'Reilly
The stupid, it burns!
Rather than show PC-ness is rampant in our military, Major Hasan's case illustrates a different point. The warning signs had to be ignored, because if he got a discharge, it would be an admission that we are at war with Muslims. Hasan had advocated letting Muslims out of their service commitments because they would be forced to kill other Muslims. Any capitulation at all to his position, including not deploying him to Afghanistan or Iraq, would be damning.
Using the definition of political correctness above you might have a point, but that is not the relevant definition for this situation. The army had clear indications that the gunman was a wingnut (his postings on the internet and other evidence). The army didn't do anything about it because he was an islamic wingnut and acknowledging that a muslim can be a wingnut is "politically incorrect". That version of "political correctness" interfered with the army's ability to deal with a wingnut. The answer is not to start evaluating Muslims, it is to evaluate mental fitness uniformly, and understand why mental fitness was not dealt with in this case. The reason it was not done in this case is a particular variety of "political correctness".
I wonder whether anyone on this thread has read Huntington's book Clash of Civilizations.
Huntington was not a neocon. He thought it was foolish to think the US could remake the Islamic or Chinese civilizations to its liking. He thought the effort to do so was dangerous and would produce needless conflict. Part of the Clash reads like a direct rebuttal of Bush's second inaugural speech.
"prevent the consolidation of a narrative in which America is engaged in a clash of civilizations with Islam,"
Isn't it too late to prevent this narrative with over 100,000 US soldiers in Iraq and tens of thousands in Afghanistan who also fire missiles into Pakistan. Do you think that you can to reduce the number of Muslims who believe this narrative by not subjecting US Muslim soldiers to scrutiny? Why would this make any difference when the US is still fighting Muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan?
We don't know all the facts about Hassan but I bet it will turn out that army personnel avoided doing anything about his warning signs because they feared being accused of being prejudiced.
It is reported that Hassan suggested that Muslim soldiers be able to claim conscientious objector status when asked to fight fellow Muslims. This makes sense to me.
Aren't you just so civil and smart?
The funny thing about this post is that it is followed by several comments that purport to agree with Lynch, but simply demonize the right wing. Then there are some who disagree with Lynch for reasons other than the straw man that he erects.
I am content to wait for the facts.
Marc Lynch has apparently not read the Quran, or if he has, thinks it is archaic allegory.
He reminds me of the drunk who looked for his keys under the lamp post rather than where he dropped them because "the light is better here".
Hate Speech in the Abrahamic Tradition
One can easily uncover torrents of hate speech in the holy writings of all three major branches of the Abrahamic tradition. The Old Testament God is frequently intolerant, vindictive, violent and genocidal.
This is correct and important but too broad at the same time.
I agree with the thrust here, but I think it is important to be clear about what it is responding to. Marc tackles the suggestion that we have a political correctness problem in the media and society at large that fails to communicate the true conflict between Islam and the West and its values. He's obviously right to resist that. But that view, at least that I have seen, is less common than the more narrow charge that political correctness within the military establishment, and more narrowly the officer ranks of the medical corps, prevented proper actions to respond to MAJ Hasan's troubling behavior from well before the shooting in a timely way. That to my mind is both a more serious and realistic charge, AND, at least on what we know so far, equally false. It's important that Marc tackle those arguments he is most qualified to refute, and the broader charge is probably that for him. It is also important, though, that experts in military culture step forward (if they are of such a view) to counter those, like FP's own Tom Ricks, who are asserting that political correctness run amok in the officer corps of the U.S. military is central to the problem that allowed MAj Hasan's actions.
I really don't know much about political correctness in the US military, nor much about the internal procedures of the US armed services, but I know that the essence of any military organisation in the world, is discipline and following hierarchical orders.
When an individual joins his/her country's own army on their own volition and volutarily, then they expect automatically to fight his/her own country's enemies; under the conditions of war, irrespective of race, religion or origin of that enemy. No country, in the world, offers a list of multiple choice to its soldiers, to pick and choose from, whom they wish to fight and whom they object to fighting.
The soldier's own country's enemies are just that, and they may not be his/her personal enemies. Therefore, if an individual cannot uphold the obligation of fighting for his/her own country; irrespective of whom the enemy happens to be, then, they either shouldn't join up, or dismissed immediately once their intentions and objections have become clear.
khairi janbek.paris/france
The Complex and Enigmatic Traits of Hasan Nidal ...
American army needs diversity as a strategic and calculated step. It is not for any kind of love for Islam. When you fight with Islamists, like in Iraq and Afghanistan, you need some people who can share a common thread during a battle or in its aftermath: say during a debriefing of an enemy combatant. Playing a good cop, bad cop game ... during such episodes. While Nidal's actions are condemnable to say the least, a cause and effect analysis of another incident in Orlando, Florida, says what! People can go berserk, no matter what their religion, when they feel belittled and betrayed for some reasons. Has anybody talked about the faith practiced by Rodrigues, the latest American fratricide committer? Similar cases in Texas, and at other places in USA, like Oklahoma bombing for instance, have taken place, and no one has ever talked about "their' faith. One should hold judgment, until a far reaching alarming warning signs of dissent are seen among any given group of individuals, who do not agree with a war continuum by USA. The foot soldiers are tired now, and they need some rest. About Hasan, this is surprisingly a case of human resources management failure. Motivation to do his job was lacking: he was getting disenchanted, and at this point in time, he needed to be relieved of his duties, as an unwilling soldier is nothing else than a danger to his own comrades! People like him should be let gone .... with the first hint of a deep dissent to the military objectives. One needs to scrutinize as to what took place during his morning shopping and the afternoon hours that he went berserk! Also, it needs to be closely investigated as to how many people he was able to personally shoot before collapsing. It is highly improbable that he fired as many as 32+13= 45 shots! These many would probably not fit in common US pistol magazines ... Looks like in the ensuing confusion some friendly firing took place .. The nature of wounds would speak for themselves. It is amazing to see as to how little US forces have learned even after being the most experienced fighters in the world since world war II. They have been in every pie. Arab Israeli wars, Lebanon civil war, Iranian operations post 1979 revolution, Iraq 1991, Afghanistan 1998, Afghanistan 2002, Iraq 2003, Grenada incursion, Bosnian battles, Afghanistan Russian battles over a very long period from 1979 to 1989, the Korean war, to name a few. Still the psychological effects of war both on its own military personnel and on its own enemies and the world at large have not been analyzed in sufficient detail. Hasan Nidal's shout of Allah o Akbar should not be taken as a Jihadist's battle cry! It is a very common sentence, if you will, used by a common Muslim during his daily chores, just saying a praise to Allah. Like one says, oh my gosh, or Jesus Christ in amazement or in excitement. This is just one of those Islamic values that could be misinterpreted in the background of this horrible incident. Also it needs to be seen that Hasan was a true Loner. No girl friends, no love life. Most probably he was not even a gay, as is suggested by some. A pious Muslim does live 'clean' and a true 'virgin' until he is religiously allowed after a solemnized marriage. He probably loved his car more than anything, as he got it scraped by a war and 'crusade' veteran. This is one thing very difficult to understand in a heavily sexually oriented society. So what was his motivating factor to carry on in a tough military life, or the social life itself! Not to shoot his comrades one day to get 72 virgins in Paradise - for sure. This is a more complex medico-socio-psycho and 'environmental hostility' episode, that probably could never be fully understood, especially when an anti-Islam media drive persists since 9/11. That is a quality of human beings: Un-predictability. His backlash in revenge (supposedly) is what can be attributed to the basic human nature (jungle laws oriented), and not to a religious indoctrination. Let the American dream live on. When wars are over one day, all would be quite on the western front! "Insha Allah, Allah o Akbar." Live and let live. Let the world issues where drastic violations of human rights are taking place be resolved without blood letting. Do we need to name those places? Darfur, Palestine, Kashmir, Burma,,,,, and the cruel American isolation policies towards Cuba!!! There must be more ... you name them.
A backlash against Muslims stereotyping them all as disloyal is counterproductive in the war against al Qaeda. But how do we target radical Islamists in our country and especially those who are trying to gain access to our political, military and economic infrastructure? The fact that we ignored the warning signs Major Hasan was sending out is very troubling for me as an Army Major who is committed to defending our constitution. It shows that we are very vulnerable to infiltration by radical Islamists. One or two people with access to our food and water supplies or transportation and energy infrastructure could cause a massive disruption to fragile U.S. economic and political infrastructure. They have the potential to cause catastrophic failure that would pale in comparison to the 9/11 attacks.
We must take an honest and critical look at the facts and assumptions surrounding Islamist terrorism and what happened at Ft. Hood. Dr. Lynch makes the argument that the vast majority of Muslims reject the theology and ideology of al-Qaeda and other radical Islamists. However it seems that no one wants to criticize the validity of that assumption. There are many counter arguments that claim the radical Islamist theology is closer to the fundamental doctrines of Islam than more moderate or liberal interpretations. All of the mainstream schools of Islamic jurisprudence require Islam to be dominant over other religions and extol the virtues of spreading Islam through violent Jihad. This challenges the assumption that Islam is a religion of “peace” that has been “hijacked” by extremists. I believe it is the liberal Islamists who are trying to “reform” the core doctrines of Islam. What is going on in Islam right now is similar to the reformation that Christianity when through 400 years ago.
The U.S. strategy should defiantly avoid turning this into a clash between Christianity and Islam because this would play directly into al Qaeda’s strategy and is not true. However we need to recognize the religious motivations of extremists and protect ourselves from infiltration. We should frame the problem as a clash between the liberal reformist and the ultra-conservative elements of Islam.
Major Rob Hafen
Student, Command and General Staff College
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas
Marc Lynch is associate professor of political science and international affairs at George Washington University.
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