John Bolton's Anti-Muslim Hate: A Raging Islamophobe, Donald Trump's National Security Adviser
05 April 2018
Trump's new pick for national security adviser is close with some of the
most unhinged anti-Muslim groups in America.
By Christopher Mathias
John Bolton is a raging Islamophobe, and on April 9, he's set to become
President Donald Trump's national security adviser.
Trump announced Thursday, to the alarm of foreign policy experts around the
world, that Bolton would replace H.R. McMaster in the position. Bolton, who
served under President George W. Bush in the State Department and as
ambassador to the United Nations, is best known for his support of the Iraq
War, in which hundreds of thousands of people were killed.
A less well-known but equally troubling aspect of Bolton's career is his years
of involvement with some of the most hateful and conspiratorial elements of
the anti-Muslim movement in America.
"We urge Americans across the political spectrum to speak out against the
appointment of John Bolton as White House National Security Adviser because of
his ties to anti-Muslim bigots and his promotion of extremist views that will
inevitably harm our nation and that could lead to unnecessary and
counterproductive international conflicts," Nihad Awad, national executive
director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said in a statement
Thursday.
"Bolton is the last person who should be entrusted with this
critically-important position, which requires sound judgment and a fact-based
approach to national security matters," Awad said.
Bolton did not respond to a request for comment for this story.
Since 2013, Bolton has served as chairman of the Gatestone Institute, an
anti-Muslim think tank. Under his leadership, Gatestone has published
fearmongering articles with headlines like "Islam's 'Quiet Conquest' of
Europe" and "Refugees of an Occupation Army?" Other posts have depicted Muslim
refugees as rapists and hosts of "highly infectious diseases."
Gatestone has trafficked in paranoid and debunked conspiracy theories about
American Muslims secretly working to undermine the U.S. government and
implement Sharia, or Islamic law. The group has also been a proponent of the
"no-go zone" myth, the false claim that certain neighborhoods in various
European and American cities are off-limits to non-Muslims.
In 2016, Bolton was the keynote speaker at the annual conference of the
far-right American Freedom Alliance. The title of that conference was "Islam
and Western Civilization: Can They Coexist?" A few minutes into his speech,
Bolton made a joke based on the racist conspiracy theory that President Barack
Obama is secretly a Muslim.
The crowd, a who's who of American Islamophobes, laughed and applauded.
Since leaving government work in 2006, Bolton has had a cozy relationship with
some of America's most virulent anti-Muslim activists, including Pamela Geller
and Robert Spencer. He wrote the foreword for Geller and Spencer's 2010 book,
The Post-American Presidency: The Obama Administration's War on America.
Bolton gave a full-throated endorsement of the book, which is replete with
anti-Muslim tropes.
Since then, Bolton has been interviewed by Geller multiple times, and even
offered a blurb for her latest book, Fatwa. "Free speech advocates who don't
make waves are not doing their jobs," Bolton wrote. "Pamela Geller writes a
guidebook here for Paladins of the First Amendment."
Geller and Spencer are founders of the American Freedom Defense Initiative,
which the Southern Poverty Law Center has classified as a hate group, and
which the Anti-Defamation League describes as "consistently vilifying the
Islamic faith under the guise of fighting radical Islam."
The SPLC describes Geller as "probably the best known — and the most unhinged
— anti-Muslim ideologue in the United States." She came to prominence for her
fearmongering over a proposed Islamic community center in lower Manhattan,
which she argued would be a "victory mosque" for Muslims on "conquered land."
She has called Islam, the world's second largest religion, "the most radical
and extreme ideology on the face of the earth" and said it should be regarded
as "an authoritarian and supremacist political system."
Her online presence is devoted to spreading anti-Muslim and anti-refugee
propaganda. A 2015 FBI intelligence bulletin referred to stories published by
Geller as "unfounded" and amounting to nothing more than "conspiracy theories"
responsible for fomenting fear of Muslims in the U.S.
Geller was very excited Thursday that Trump had tapped Bolton as national
security adviser:
Robert Spencer has likewise made a career out of spreading fear and
misinformation about Islam. From the SPLC:
Spencer has complained of 'Shariah enclaves' and predicted that they will grow
across America; referred to Barack Obama as 'the first Muslim president';
claimed that Islam 'mandates warfare against unbelievers' and said that
'traditional Islam is not moderate or peaceful'; and even suggested that the
media may be getting money to depict Muslims in a positive light.
Bolton also contributed a blurb to Spencer's 2008 book, Stealth Jihad.
Bolton isn't the only admirer of Spencer and Geller's work. In 2011, the
far-right Norwegian terrorist Anders Breivik killed 77 people who he believed
were abetting what he saw as the "Islamization of Europe." In a sprawling,
racist manifesto, Breivik cited the work of Geller and Spencer 174 times.
Bolton has also been a close associate of another prominent anti-Muslim
conspiracy theorist: Frank Gaffney.
Gaffney is the founder of the Center for Security Policy, an anti-Muslim think
tank that the SPLC considers a hate group. He's done much to promote debunked
"civilization jihad" and "creeping Sharia" conspiracy theories, which claim
that American Muslims are plotting to somehow take over the U.S. government
and replace the Constitution with a brutal version of Sharia.
Gaffney has claimed in the past that the Muslim Brotherhood has infiltrated
every level of the federal government. He once called for a "House of
Anti-American Activities Committee" to root out these alleged subversives.
In 2015, Bolton spoke at multiple "National Security Action Summits" organized
by Gaffney's Center for Security Policy. In 2006, Bolton accepted the CSP's
Freedom Flame Award.
Bolton has also appeared multiple times as a guest on Gaffney's "Secure
Freedom Radio" podcast ― most recently in July, when he agreed with Gaffney
that the Muslim Brotherhood should be designated a terror group. (The idea of
labeling the MB a terror group is widely frowned upon in foreign policy
circles; national security experts believe such a designation would mainly
serve to provide cover for prosecuting and harassing American Muslim civil
rights groups.)
On Thursday, Gaffney seemed enthused about Bolton's new career opportunity.
Trump, who's declared that "Islam hates us," has turned his White House into a
haven for people with paranoid, hostile views toward the religion.
Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, Attorney General Jeff
Sessions, former CIA director and current secretary of state nominee Mike
Pompeo, former national security adviser Sebastian Gorka, senior policy
adviser Stephen Miller, and White House counsel Kellyanne Conway all have
well-established ties to anti-Muslim hate groups.
America does not do a good job of tracking incidents of hate and bias. We need
your help to create a database of such incidents across the country, so we all
know what's going on. Tell us your story.
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