Fifth Column internal subversion.this is a war with Islam and not only
fought with guns and bombs.
 
Bruce
 
by Daniel Pipes
New York Sun
September 12, 2006
http://www.danielpipes.org/article/3960
[NY Sun title: "How Terrorism Has Failed The Cause of Radical Islam"]
Five years after the attacks of September 11, 2001, it is clear how
terrorism has set back the cause of radical Islam.
The horrors of 9/11 alarmed Americans and fouled the quiet but deadly
efforts of lawful Islamists working to subvert the country from within. They
no longer can replicate their pre-9/11 successes. This fits an ironic
pattern whereby terrorism usually (but not
<http://www.danielpipes.org/article/3914>  always) obstructs the
<http://www.danielpipes.org/article/2888>  advance of radical Islam. For an
illustration of this change, consider an example from radical Islam's
halcyon days in the late 1990s - how a prominent Islamist organization, the
Council on American-Islamic Relations, easily humiliated the giant
manufacturer of athletic gear, Nike, Inc.
Nike had introduced its "Air" line of basketball shoes in 1996 with a
stylized, flame-like logo of the word Air on the shoe's backside and sole.
When the elders at CAIR nonsensically declared that this logo could "be
in-terpreted" as the Arabic-script spelling of Allah, Nike initially
protested its innocence. But by June 1997, it had accepted multiple measures
to ingratiate itself with the <http://www.danielpipes.org/rr/2919.php>
council. It:
*       "apologized to the Islamic community for any unintentional offense
to their sensibilities"; 
*       "implemented a global recall" of certain samples; 
*       "diverted shipments of the commercial products in question from
'sensitive' markets"; 
*       "discontinued all models with the offending logo"; 
*       "implemented organizational changes to their design department to
tighten scrutiny of logo design"; 
*       promised to work with CAIR "to identify Muslim design resources for
future reference"; 
*       took "measures to raise their internal understanding of Islamic
issues"; 
*       donated $50,000 for a playground at an Islamic school; 
*       recalled about 38,000 shoes and had the offending logo sanded off. 


The offending Nike shoe logo, where "Air" supposedly looks like "Allah" in
Arabic script.
 

 
 
 


The sole of a Nike "Air" shoe.
 

 
 


Giving up all pretense of dignity, the company reported that "CAIR is
satisfied that no deliberate offense to the Islamic community was intended"
by the logo.
The executive director of CAIR, Nihad Awad, arrogantly responded that, had a
settlement not been reached, his organization would have called for a global
boycott of Nike products. A spokesman for the group, Ibrahim Hooper, crowed
about the settlement: "We see it as a victory. It shows that the Muslim
community is growing and becoming stronger in the United States. It shows
that our voices are being heard."
Emboldened by this success, Mr. Awad traveled to the headquarters of the
World Assembly of Muslim Youth, a Wahhabi
<http://www.discoverthenetwork.org/groupProfile.asp?grpid=6425>
organization in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, one year later to announce that Nike
had not lived up to its commitment. He flayed the firm for not recalling the
full run of more than 800,000 pairs of shoes and for covering the Air logo
with only a thin patch and red paint, rather than removing it completely.
"The patch can easily be worn out with regular use of the shoe," he
complained. Turning up the pressure, Mr. Awad proclaimed a campaign "against
Nike products worldwide."
Nike again capitulated, announcing an agreement in November 1998 on "the
method used to remove the design and the continued appearance of shoes in
stores worldwide." It coughed up more funding for sports facilities at five
Islamic schools and for sponsorship of Muslim community events, and donated
Nike products to Islamic charitable groups. The trade press also suggested a
financial contribution to CAIR.
Today, all this is distant history. CAIR still can bully major corporations,
as it did in 2005 with the Canadian
<http://www.danielpipes.org/article/2919>  Imperial Bank of Commerce, but it
can no longer shake them down for cash, nor can it ride a bogus issue
<http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/513>  like Air=Allah. The public is
somewhat more skeptical (though not always
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Printable.asp?ID=24324>  enough so).
Successes like the Nike capitulation inspired an Islamist triumphalism
<http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/146>  pre-9/11. One apologist, Richard H.
<http://www.mepc.org/forums_chcs/19.asp>  Curtiss, captured its flavor in
September 1999, when he called a decision by Burger King to shut a
franchised restaurant in a Jewish town on the West Bank, Ma'aleh Adumim,
"the battle of Burger King." He hyperbolically compared it "to the battle of
Badr in 624 A.D., which was the first victory of the vastly outnumbered
Islamic community."
Portraying a trivial lobbying success as similar to a world-shaking
<http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9011713?tocId=9011713>  battlefield
victory provides an insight into Islamist confidence pre-9/11. No less
suggestively, Mr. Curtiss wrongly predicted that American Muslims would,
"within the next 5 or 10 years," go on to win more such battles. Instead,
terrorists seized the initiative, relegating lawful Islamists mostly to
fighting defensive
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=19221>  skirmishes.
Thus did mass violence, paradoxically, seriously impede the Islamist agenda
in America.
 
 


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