The
Lies Of Islamophobia: Fanning the Flames, The Crusades
Continue - The Totalitarian Myth
Writers Articles And Opinions
30 November 2010
By John Feffer
The Muslims were bloodthirsty and treacherous. They
conducted a sneak attack against the French army and
slaughtered every single soldier, 20,000 in all. More
than 1,000 years ago, in the mountain passes of Spain,
the Muslim horde cut down the finest soldiers in
Charlemagne’s command, including his brave nephew
Roland. Then, according to the famous poem that
immortalized the tragedy, Charlemagne exacted his
revenge by routing the entire Muslim army.
The Song of Roland, an eleventh century rendering in
verse of an eighth century battle, is a staple of
Western Civilization classes at colleges around the
country. A “masterpiece of epic drama,” in the words
of its renowned translator Dorothy Sayers, it provides
a handy preface for students before they delve into
readings on the Crusades that began in 1095. More
ominously, the poem has schooled generations of
Judeo-Christians to view Muslims as perfidious enemies
who once threatened the very foundations of Western
civilization.
The problem, however, is that the whole epic is built
on a curious falsehood. The army that fell upon Roland
and his Frankish soldiers was not Muslim at all. In
the real battle of 778, the slayers of the Franks were
Christian Basques furious at Charlemagne for pillaging
their city of Pamplona. Not epic at all, the battle
emerged from a parochial dispute in the complex wars
of medieval Spain. Only later, as kings and popes and
knights prepared to do battle in the First Crusade,
did an anonymous bard repurpose the text to serve the
needs of an emerging cross-against-crescent holy war.
Similarly, we think of the Crusades as the archetypal
“clash of civilizations” between the followers of
Jesus and the followers of Mohammed. In the popular
version of those Crusades, the Muslim adversary has,
in fact, replaced a remarkable range of peoples the
Crusaders dealt with as enemies, including Jews killed
in pogroms on the way to the Holy Land, rival
Catholics slaughtered in the Balkans and in
Constantinople, and Christian heretics hunted down in
southern France.
Much later, during the Cold War, mythmakers in
Washington performed a similar act, substituting a
monolithic crew labeled “godless communists” for a
disparate group of anti-imperial nationalists in an
attempt to transform conflicts in remote locations
like Vietnam, Guatemala, and Iran into epic struggles
between the forces of the Free World and the forces of
evil. In recent years, the Bush administration did it
all over again by portraying Arab nationalists as
fiendish Islamic fundamentalist when we invaded Iraq
and prepared to topple the regime in Syria.
Similar mythmaking continues today. The recent surge
of Islamophobia in the United States has drawn
strength from several extraordinary substitutions. A
clearly Christian president has become Muslim in the
minds of a significant number of Americans. The
thoughtful Islamic scholar Tariq Ramadan has become a
closet fundamentalist in the writings of Paul Berman
and others. And an Islamic center in lower Manhattan,
organized by proponents of interfaith dialogue, has
become an extremist “mosque at Ground Zero” in the TV
appearances, political speeches, and Internet
sputterings of a determined clique of right-wing
activists.
This transformation of Islam into a violent caricature
of itself — as if Ann Coulter had suddenly morphed
into the face of Christianity — comes at a somewhat
strange juncture in the United States. Anti-Islamic
rhetoric and hate crimes, which spiked immediately
after September 11, 2001, had been on the wane. No
major terrorist attack had taken place in the U.S. or
Europe since the London bombings in 2005. The current
American president had reached out to the Muslim world
and retired the controversial acronym GWOT, or “Global
War on Terror.”
All the elements seemed in place, in other words, for
us to turn the page on an ugly chapter in our history.
Yet it’s as if we remain fixed in the eleventh century
in a perpetual battle of “us” against “them.” Like the
undead rising from their coffins, our previous
“crusades” never go away. Indeed, we still seem to be
fighting the three great wars of the millennium, even
though two of these conflicts have long been over and
the third has been rhetorically reduced to “overseas
contingency operations.” The Crusades, which finally
petered out in the seventeenth century, continue to
shape our global imagination today. The Cold War ended
in 1991, but key elements of the anti-communism credo
have been awkwardly grafted onto the new Islamist
adversary. And the Global War on Terror, which
President Obama quietly renamed shortly after taking
office, has in fact metastasized into the wars that
his administration continues to prosecute in
Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen, and elsewhere.
Those in Europe and the United States who cheer on
these wars claim that they are issuing a wake-up call
about the continued threat of al-Qaeda, the Taliban,
and other militants who claim the banner of Islam.
However, what really keeps Islamophobes up at night is
not the marginal and backwards-looking Islamic
fundamentalists but rather the growing economic,
political, and global influence of modern, mainstream
Islam. Examples of Islam successfully grappling with
modernity abound, from Turkey’s new foreign policy and
Indonesia’s economic muscle to the Islamic political
parties participating in elections in Lebanon,
Morocco, and Jordan. Instead of providing reassurance,
however, these trends only incite Islamophobes to
intensify their battles to “save” Western
civilization.
As long as our unfinished wars still burn in the
collective consciousness — and still rage in Kabul,
Baghdad, Sana’a, and the Tribal Areas of Pakistan —
Islamophobia will make its impact felt in our media,
politics, and daily life. Only if we decisively end
the millennial Crusades, the half-century Cold War,
and the decade-long War on Terror (under whatever
name) will we overcome the dangerous divide that has
consumed so many lives, wasted so much wealth, and
distorted our very understanding of our Western
selves.
The Crusades Continue
With their irrational fear of spiders, arachnophobes
are scared of both harmless daddy longlegs and
poisonous brown recluse spiders. In extreme cases, an
arachnophobe can break out in a sweat while merely
looking at photos of spiders. It is, of course,
reasonable to steer clear of black widows. What makes
a legitimate fear into an irrational phobia, however,
is the tendency to lump all of any group, spiders or
humans, into one lethal category and then to
exaggerate how threatening they are. Spider bites,
after all, are responsible for at most a handful of
deaths a year in the United States.
Islamophobia is, similarly, an irrational fear of
Islam. Yes, certain Muslim fundamentalists have been
responsible for terrorist attacks, certain fantasists
about a “global caliphate” continue to plot attacks on
perceived enemies, and certain groups like
Afghanistan’s Taliban and Somalia’s al-Shabaab
practice medieval versions of the religion. But
Islamophobes confuse these small parts with the whole
and then see terrorist jihad under every Islamic
pillow. They break out in a sweat at the mere picture
of an imam.
Irrational fears are often rooted in our dimly
remembered childhoods. Our irrational fear of Islam
similarly seems to stem from events that happened in
the early days of Christendom. Three myths inherited
from the era of the Crusades constitute the core of
Islamophobia today: Muslims are inherently violent,
Muslims want to take over the world, and Muslims can’t
be trusted.
The myth of Islam as a “religion of the sword” was a
staple of Crusader literature and art. In fact, the
atrocities committed by Muslim leaders and armies —
and there were some — rarely rivaled the slaughters of
the Crusaders, who retook Jerusalem in 1099 in a
veritable bloodbath. “The heaps of the dead presented
an immediate problem for the conquerors,”writes
Christopher Tyerman in God’s War. “Many of the
surviving Muslim population were forced to clear the
streets and carry the bodies outside the walls to be
burnt in great pyres, whereat they themselves were
massacred.” Jerusalem’s Jews suffered a similar fate
when the Crusaders burned many of them alive in their
main synagogue. Four hundred years earlier, by
contrast, Caliph ‘Umar put no one to the sword when he
took over Jerusalem, signing a pact with the Christian
patriarch Sophronius that pledged “no compulsion in
religion.”
This myth of the inherently violent Muslim endures.
Islam “teaches violence,” televangelist Pat Robertson
proclaimedin 2005. “The Koran teaches violence and
most Muslims, including so-called moderate Muslims,
openly believe in violence,” was the way Major General
Jerry Curry (U.S. Army, ret.), who served in the
Carter, Reagan, and Bush Sr. administrations, put it.
The Crusaders justified their violence by arguing that
Muslims were bent on taking over the world. In its
early days, the expanding Islamic empire did indeed
imagine an ever-growing dar-es-Islam (House of Islam).
By the time of the Crusades, however, this initial
burst of enthusiasm for holy war had long been spent.
Moreover, the Christian West harbored its own set of
desires when it came to extending the Pope’s authority
to every corner of the globe. Even that early believer
in soft power, Francis of Assisi, sat down with Sultan
al-Kamil during the Fifth Crusade with the aim of
eliminating Islam through conversion.
Today, Islamophobes portray the building of Cordoba
House in lower Manhattan as just another gambit in
this millennial power grab: “This is Islamic
domination and expansionism,” writes right-wing
blogger Pamela Geller, who made the “Ground Zero
Mosque” into a media obsession. “Islam is a religion
with a very political agenda,” warns ex-Muslim Ali
Sina. “The ultimate goal of Islam is to rule the
world.”
These two myths — of inherent violence and global
ambitions — led to the firm conviction that Muslims
were by nature untrustworthy. Robert of Ketton, a
twelfth century translator of the Koran, was typical
in badmouthing the prophet Mohammad this way: “Like
the liar you are, you everywhere contradict yourself.”
The suspicion of untrustworthiness fell as well on any
Christian who took up the possibility of coexistence
with Islam. Pope Gregory, for instance, believed that
the thirteenth century Crusader Frederick II was the
Anti-Christ himself because he developed close
relationships with Muslims.
For Islamophobes today, Muslims abroad are similarly
terrorists-in-waiting. As for Muslims at home,
“American Muslims must face their either/or,” writes
the novelist Edward Cline, “to repudiate Islam or
remain a quiet, sanctioning fifth column.” Even
American Muslims in high places, like Congressman
Keith Ellison (D-MN), are not above suspicion. In a
2006 CNN interview, Glenn Beck said, “I have been
nervous about this interview with you, because what I
feel like saying is, ‘Sir, prove to me that you are
not working with our enemies.’”
These three myths of Islamophobia flourish in our era,
just as they did almost a millennium ago, because of a
cunning conflation of a certain type of Islamic
fundamentalism with Islam itself. Bill O’Reilly was
neatly channeling this Crusader mindset when he
asserted recently that “the Muslim threat to the world
is not isolated. It’s huge!” When Deputy
Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence William
Boykin, in an infamous 2003 sermon, thundered “What
I’m here to do today is to recruit you to be warriors
of God’s kingdom,” he was issuing the Crusader call to
arms.
But O’Reilly and Boykin, who represent the violence,
duplicity, and expansionist mind-set of today’s
Western crusaders, were also invoking a more recent
tradition, closer in time and far more familiar.
The Totalitarian Myth
In 1951, the CIA and the emerging anti-communist
elite, including soon-to-be-president Dwight
Eisenhower, created the Crusade for Freedom as a key
component of a growing psychological warfare campaign
against the Soviet Union and the satellite countries
it controlled in Eastern Europe. The language of this
“crusade” was intentionally religious. It reached out
to “peoples deeply rooted in the heritage of western
civilization,” living under the “crushing weight of a
godless dictatorship.” In its call for the liberation
of the communist world, it echoed the nearly
thousand-year-old crusader rhetoric of “recovering”
Jerusalem and other outposts of Christianity.
In the theology of the Cold War, the Soviet Union
replaced the Islamic world as the untrustworthy
infidel. However unconsciously, the old crusader myths
about Islam translated remarkably easily into
governing assumptions about the communist enemy: the
Soviets and their allies were bent on taking over the
world, could not be trusted with their rhetoric of
peaceful coexistence, imperiled Western civilization,
and fought with unique savagery as well as a
willingness to martyr themselves for the greater
ideological good.
Ironically, Western governments were so obsessed with
fighting this new scourge that, in the Cold War years,
on the theory that my enemy’s enemy is my friend, they
nurtured radical Islam as a weapon. As journalist
Robert Dreyfuss ably details in his book The Devil’s
Game, the U.S. funding of the mujahideen in
Afghanistan was only one part of the anti-communist
crusade in the Islamic world. To undermine Arab
nationalists and leftists who might align themselves
with the Soviet Union, the United States (and Israel)
worked with Iranian mullahs, helped create Hamas, and
facilitated the spread of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Though the Cold War ended with the sudden
disappearance of the Soviet Union in 1991, that era’s
mind-set — and so many of the Cold Warriors sporting
it — never went with it. The prevailing mythology was
simply transferred back to the Islamic world. In
anti-communist theology, for example, the worst curse
word was “totalitarianism,” said to describe the
essence of the all-encompassing Soviet state and
system. According to the gloss that early
neoconservative Jeanne Kirkpatrick provided in her
book Dictatorships and Double Standards, the West had
every reason to support right-wing authoritarian
dictatorships because they would steadfastly oppose
left-wing totalitarian dictatorships, which, unlike
the autocracies we allied with, were supposedly
incapable of internal reform.
According to the new “Islamo-fascism” school — and its
acolytes like Norman Podhoretz, David Horowitz, Bill
O’Reilly, Pamela Geller — the fundamentalists are
simply the “new totalitarians,” as hidebound,
fanatical, and incapable of change as communists. For
a more sophisticated treatment of the Islamo-fascist
argument, check out Paul Berman, a rightward-leaning
liberal intellectual who has tried to demonstrate that
“moderate Muslims” are fundamentalists in reformist
clothing.
These Cold Warriors all treat the Islamic world as an
undifferentiated mass — in spirit, a modern Soviet
Union — where Arab governments and radical Islamists
work hand in glove. They simply fail to grasp that the
Syrian, Egyptian, and Saudi Arabian governments have
launched their own attacks on radical Islam. The sharp
divides between the Iranian regime and the Taliban,
between the Jordanian government and the Palestinians,
between Shi’ites and Sunni in Iraq, and even among
Kurds all disappear in the totalitarian blender, just
as anti-communists generally failed to distinguish
between the Communist hardliner Leonid Brezhnev and
the Communist reformer Mikhail Gorbachev.
At the root of terrorism, according to Berman, are
“immense failures of political courage and imagination
within the Muslim world,” rather than the violent
fantasies of a group of religious outliers or the
Crusader-ish military operations of the West. In other
words, something flawed at the very core of Islam
itself is responsible for the violence done in its
name — a line of argument remarkably similar to one
Cold Warriors made about communism.
All of this, of course, represents a mirror image of
al-Qaeda’s arguments about the inherent perversities
of the infidel West. As during the Cold War,
hardliners reinforce one another.
The persistence of Crusader myths and their
transposition into a Cold War framework help explain
why the West is saddled with so many misconceptions
about Islam. They don’t, however, explain the recent
spike in Islamophobia in the U.S. after several years
of relative tolerance. To understand this, we must
turn to the third unfinished war: the Global War on
Terror or GWOT, launched by George W. Bush.
Fanning the Flames
President Obama was careful to groom his Christian
image during his campaign. He was repeatedly seen
praying in churches, and he studiously avoided
mosques. He did everything possible to efface the
traces of Muslim identity in his past.
His opponents, of course, did just the opposite. They
emphasized his middle name, Hussein, challenged his
birth records, and asserted that he was too close to
the Palestinian cause. They also tried to turn liberal
constituencies — particularly Jewish-American ones —
against the presumptive president. Like Frederick II
for an earlier generation of Christian
fundamentalists, since entering the Oval Office Obama
has become the Anti-Christ of the Islamophobes.
Once in power, he broke with Bush administration
policies toward the Islamic world on a few points. He
did indeed push ahead with his plan to remove combat
troops from Iraq (with some important exceptions). He
has attempted to pressure Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu’s government to stop expanding settlements
in occupied Palestinian lands and to negotiate in good
faith (though he has done so without resorting to the
kind of pressure that might be meaningful, like a
cutback of or even cessation of U.S. arms exports to
Israel). In a highly publicized speech in Cairo in
June 2009, he also reached out rhetorically to the
Islamic world at a time when he was also eliminating
the name “Global War on Terror” from the government’s
vocabulary.
For Muslims worldwide, however, GWOT itself continues.
The United States has orchestrated a surge in
Afghanistan. The CIA’s drone war in the Pakistani
borderlands has escalated rapidly. U.S. Special Forces
now operate in 75 countries, at least 15 more than
during the Bush years. Meanwhile, Guantanamo remains
open, the United States still practices extraordinary
rendition, and assassination remains an active part of
Washington’s toolbox.
The civilians killed in these overseas contingency
operations are predominantly Muslim. The people seized
and interrogated are mostly Muslim. The buildings
destroyed are largely Muslim-owned. As a result, the
rhetoric of “crusaders and imperialists” used by al-Qaeda
falls on receptive ears. Despite his Cairo speech, the
favorability rating of the United States in the Muslim
world, already grim enough, has slid even further
since Obama took office — in Egypt, from 41% in 2009
to 31% percent now; in Turkey, from 33% to 23%; and in
Pakistan, from 13% to 8%.
The U.S. wars, occupations, raids, and repeated air
strikes have produced much of this disaffection and,
as political scientist Robert Pape has consistently
argued, most of the suicide bombings and other attacks
against Western troops and targets as well. This is
revenge, not religion, talking — just as it was for
Americans after September 11, 2001. As commentator M.
Junaid Levesque-Alam astutely pointed out, “When three
planes hurtled into national icons, did anger and
hatred rise in American hearts only after consultation
of Biblical verses?”
And yet those dismal polling figures do not actually
reflect a rejection of Western values (despite
Islamophobe assurances that they mean exactly that).
“Numerous polls that we have conducted,” writes
pollster Stephen Kull, “as well as others by the World
Values Survey and Arab Barometer, show strong support
in the Muslim world for democracy, for human rights,
and for an international order based on international
law and a strong United Nations.”
In other words, nine years after September 11th a
second spike in Islamophobia and in home-grown
terrorist attacks like that of the would-be Times
Square bomber has been born of two intersecting
pressures: American critics of Obama’s foreign policy
believe that he has backed away from the major
civilizational struggle of our time, even as many in
the Muslim world see Obama-era foreign policy as a
continuation, even an escalation, of Bush-era policies
of war and occupation.
Here is the irony: alongside the indisputable rise of
fundamentalism over the last two decades, only some of
it oriented towards violence, the Islamic world has
undergone a shift which deep-sixes the cliché that
Islam has held countries back from political and
economic development. “Since the early 1990s, 23
Muslim countries have developed more democratic
institutions, with fairly run elections, energized and
competitive political parties, greater civil
liberties, or better legal protections for
journalists,” writes Philip Howard in The Digital
Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy. Turkey has
emerged as a vibrant democracy and a major foreign
policy player. Indonesia, the world’s most populous
Muslim country, is now the largest economy in
Southeast Asia and the eighteenth largest economy in
the world.
Are Islamophobes missing this story of mainstream
Islam’s accommodation with democracy and economic
growth? Or is it this story (not Islamo-fascism
starring al-Qaeda) that is their real concern?
The recent preoccupations of Islamophobes are telling
in this regard. Pamela Geller, after all, was typical
in the way she went after not a radical mosque, but an
Islamic center about two blocks from Ground Zero
proposed by a proponent of interfaith dialogue. As
journalist Stephen Salisbury writes, “The mosque
controversy is not really about a mosque at all; it’s
about the presence of Muslims in America, and the
free-floating anxiety and fear that now dominate the
nation’s psyche.” For her latest venture, Geller is
pushing a boycott of Campbell’s Soup because it
accepts halal certification — the Islamic version of
kosher certification by a rabbi — from the Islamic
Society of North America, a group which, by the way,
has gone out of its way to denounce religious
extremism.
Paul Berman, meanwhile, has devoted his latest book,
The Flight of the Intellectuals, to deconstructing the
arguments not of Osama bin-Laden or his ilk, but of
Tariq Ramadan, the foremost mainstream Islamic
theologian. Ramadan is a man firmly committed to
breaking down the old distinctions between “us” and
“them.” Critical of the West for colonialism, racism,
and other ills, he also challenges the injustices of
the Islamic world. He is far from a fundamentalist.
And what country, by the way, has exercised European
Islamophobes more than any other? Pakistan? Saudi
Arabia? Taliban Afghanistan? No, the answer is:
Turkey. “The Turks are conquering Germany in the same
way the Kosovars conquered Kosovo: by using higher
birth-rates,” argues Germany’s Islamophobe du jour,
Thilo Sarrazin, a member of Germany’s Social
Democratic Party. The far right has even united around
a Europe-wide referendum to keep Turkey out of the
European Union.
Despite his many defects, George W. Bush at least knew
enough to distinguish Islam from Islamism. By
targeting a perfectly normal Islamic center, a
perfectly normal Islamic scholar, and a perfectly
normal Islamic country — all firmly in the mainstream
of that religion — the Islamophobes have actually
declared war on normalcy, not extremism.
The victories of the tea party movement and the
increased power of Republican militants in Congress,
not to mention the renaissance of the far right in
Europe, suggest that we will be living with this
Islamophobia and the three unfinished wars of the West
against the Rest for some time. The Crusades lasted
hundreds of years. Let’s hope that Crusade 2.0, and
the dark age that we find ourselves in, has a far
shorter lifespan.