AN ARTICLE TODAY FROM A COLLEGE MAGAZINE FROM HILLSDALE COLLEGE IN MICHIGAN
CALLED "IMPRIMIS. THE ARTICLE WAS ENTITLED *iSLAM- FACTS OR DREAMS* WRITTEN
BY A FORMER US ASST. ATTORNEY WHO PROSECUTED SHEIK OMAR ABDEL RAHMAN (THE
BLIND SHEIK). IT IS THE BEST ARTICLE ABOUT ISLAM AND THE ABSURDITY OF
SAYING TERRORISM HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH ISLAM.







http://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/islam-facts-or-dreams/

[image: Imprimis]
Islam—Facts or Dreams?

February 2016 • Volume 45, Number 2
<http://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/islam-facts-or-dreams/> • Andrew C. McCarthy
<http://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/author/andrewcmccarthy/>

*Andrew C. McCarthy*
National Review Institute
------------------------------

[image: Andrew C. McCarthy]*Andrew C. McCarthy* is a senior fellow at the
National Review Institute. A graduate of Columbia College, he received his
J.D. at New York Law School. For 18 years, he was an Assistant U.S.
Attorney in the Southern District of New York, and from 1993-95 he led the
terrorism prosecution against Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and 11 others in
connection with the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and a plot to bomb New
York City landmarks. Following the 9/11 attacks, he supervised the Justice
Department’s command post near Ground Zero. He has also served as a Special
Assistant to the Deputy Secretary of Defense and an adjunct professor at
Fordham University’s School of Law and New York Law School. He writes
widely for newspapers and journals including *National Review*, *PJ Media*,
and *The New Criterion*, and is the author of several books, including *Willful
Blindness: A Memoir of the Jihad* and *Grand Jihad: How Islam and the Left
Sabotages America*.
------------------------------


*The following is adapted from a speech delivered on February 24, 2016, at
Hillsdale College’s Allan P. Kirby, Jr. Center for Constitutional Studies
and Citizenship in Washington, D.C., as part of the AWC Family Foundation
Lecture Series.*

In 1993 I was a seasoned federal prosecutor, but I only knew as much about
Islam as the average American with a reasonably good education—which is to
say, not much. Consequently, when I was assigned to lead the prosecution of
a terrorist cell that had bombed the World Trade Center and was plotting an
even more devastating strike—simultaneous attacks on the Lincoln and
Holland Tunnels, the United Nations complex on the East River, and the
FBI’s lower Manhattan headquarters—I had no trouble believing what our
government was saying: that we should read nothing into the fact that all
the men in this terrorist cell were Muslims; that their actions were not
representative of any religion or belief system; and that to the extent
they were explaining their atrocities by citing Islamic scripture, they
were twisting and perverting one of the world’s great religions, a religion
that encourages peace.

Unlike commentators and government press secretaries, I had to examine
these claims. Prosecutors don’t get to base their cases on assertions. They
have to prove things to commonsense Americans who must be satisfied about
not only what happened but why it happened before they will convict people
of serious crimes. And in examining the claims, I found them false.

One of the first things I learned concerned the leader of the terror cell,
Omar Abdel Rahman, infamously known as the Blind Sheikh. Our government was
portraying him as a wanton killer who was lying about Islam by preaching
that it summoned Muslims to jihad or holy war. Far from a lunatic, however,
he turned out to be a globally renowned scholar—a doctor of Islamic
jurisprudence who graduated from *al-Azhar University in Cairo, the seat of
Sunni Islamic learning for over a millennium.* His area of academic
expertise was sharia—Islamic law.

I immediately began to wonder why American officials from President Bill
Clinton and Attorney General Janet Reno on down, officials who had no
background in Muslim doctrine and culture, believed they knew more about
Islam than the Blind Sheikh. Then something else dawned on me: the Blind
Sheikh was not only blind; he was beset by several other medical handicaps.
That seemed relevant. After all, terrorism is hard work. Here was a man
incapable of doing anything that would be useful to a terrorist
organization—he couldn’t build a bomb, hijack a plane, or carry out an
assassination. Yet he was the unquestioned leader of the terror cell. Was
this because there was more to his interpretation of Islamic doctrine than
our government was conceding?

Defendants do not have to testify at criminal trials, but they have a right
to testify if they choose to—so I had to prepare for the possibility.
Raised an Irish Catholic in the Bronx, I was not foolish enough to believe
I could win an argument over Muslim theology with a doctor of Islamic
jurisprudence. But I did think that if what we were saying as a government
was true—that he was perverting Islam—then there must be two or three
places where I could nail him by saying, “You told your followers X, but
the doctrine clearly says Y.” So my colleagues and I pored over the Blind
Sheikh’s many writings. And what we found was alarming: whenever he quoted
the Koran or other sources of Islamic scripture, he quoted them accurately.

Now, you might be able to argue that he took scripture out of context or
gave an incomplete account of it. In my subsequent years of studying Islam,
I’ve learned that this is not a particularly persuasive argument. But even
if one concedes for the purposes of discussion that it’s a colorable claim,
the inconvenient fact remains: Abdel Rahman was not lying about Islam.

When he said the *scriptures command that Muslims strike terror into the
hearts of Islam’s enemies, the scriptures backed him up.*

When he said *Allah enjoined all Muslims to wage jihad until Islamic law
was established throughout the world, the scriptures backed him up.*

When he said *Islam directed Muslims not to take Jews and Christians as
their friends, the scriptures backed him up.*

You could counter that there are other ways of construing the scriptures.
You could contend that these exhortations to violence and hatred should be
“contextualized”—i.e., that they were only meant for their time and place
in the seventh century.  Again, I would caution that there are compelling
arguments against this manner of interpreting Islamic scripture. The point,
however, is that what you’d be arguing is an interpretation.

The fact that there are multiple ways of construing Islam hardly makes the
Blind Sheikh’s literal construction wrong. The blunt fact of the matter is
that, in this contest of competing interpretations, it is the jihadists who
seem to be making sense because they have the words of scripture on their
side—it is the others who seem to be dancing on the head of a pin. For our
present purposes, however, the fact is that the Blind Sheikh’s summons to
jihad was rooted in a coherent interpretation of Islamic doctrine. He was
not perverting Islam—he was, if anything, shining a light on the need to
reform it.

Another point, obvious but inconvenient, is that *Islam is not a religion
of peace*. There are ways of interpreting Islam that could make it
something other than a call to war. But even these benign constructions do
not make it a call to peace. Verses such as “Fight those who believe not in
Allah,” and “Fight and slay the pagans wherever ye find them, and seize
them, beleaguer them, and lie in wait for them in every stratagem of war,”
are not peaceful injunctions, no matter how one contextualizes.

Another disturbing aspect of the trial against the Blind Sheikh and his
fellow jihadists was the character witnesses who testified for the defense.
Most of these people were moderate, peaceful Muslim Americans who would no
more commit terrorist acts than the rest of us. But when questions about
Islamic doctrine would come up—“What does jihad mean?” “What is sharia?”
“How might sharia apply to a certain situation?”—these moderate, peaceful
Muslims explained that they were not competent to say. In other words, for
the answers, you’d have to turn to Islamic scholars like the Blind Sheikh.

Now, understand: there was no doubt what the Blind Sheikh was on trial for.
And there was no doubt that he was a terrorist—after all, he bragged about
it. But that did not disqualify him, in the minds of these moderate,
peaceful Muslims, from rendering authoritative opinions on the meaning of
the core tenets of their religion. No one was saying that they would follow
the Blind Sheikh into terrorism—but no one was discrediting his status
either.

Although this came as a revelation to me, it should not have. After all, it
is not as if Western civilization had no experience dealing with Islamic
supremacism—what today we call *“Islamist” ideology, the belief that sharia
must govern society.* Winston Churchill, for one, had encountered it as a
young man serving in the British army, both in the border region between
modern-day Afghanistan and Pakistan and in the Sudan—places that are still
cauldrons of Islamist terror. Ever the perceptive observer,* Churchill
wrote:*

How dreadful are the curses which Mohammedanism lays on its votaries!
Besides the fanatical frenzy, which is as dangerous in a man as hydrophobia
in a dog, there is this fearful fatalistic apathy. . . . Improvident
habits, slovenly systems of agriculture, sluggish methods of commerce, and
insecurity of property exist wherever the followers of the Prophet rule or
live. A degraded sensualism deprives this life of its grace and refinement;
the next of its dignity and sanctity. *The fact that in Mohammedan law
every woman must belong to some man as his absolute property—either as a
child, a wife, or a concubine—must delay the final extinction of slavery
until the faith of Islam has ceased to be a great power among men.*

Habitually, I distinguish between Islam and Muslims. It is objectively
important to do so, but I also have a personal reason: when I began working
on national security cases, the Muslims I first encountered were not
terrorists. To the contrary, they were pro-American patriots who helped us
infiltrate terror cells, disrupt mass-murder plots, and gather the evidence
needed to convict jihadists. We have an obligation to our national security
to understand our enemies; but we also have an obligation to our principles
not to convict by association—not to confound our Islamist enemies with our
Muslim allies and fellow citizens. Churchill appreciated this distinction.
“Individual Moslems,” he stressed, “may show splendid qualities. Thousands
become the brave and loyal soldiers of the Queen.” The problem was not the
people, he concluded. It was the doctrine.

What about Islamic law? On this topic, it is useful to turn to Robert
Jackson, a giant figure in American law and politics—FDR’s attorney
general, justice of the Supreme Court, and chief prosecutor of the war
crimes trials at Nuremberg. In 1955, Justice Jackson penned the foreword to
a book called *Law in the Middle East*. Unlike today’s government
officials, Justice Jackson thought sharia was a subject worthy of close
study.  And here is what he concluded:

In any broad sense, Islamic law offers the American lawyer a study in
dramatic contrasts. Even casual acquaintance and superficial knowledge—all
that most of us at bench or bar will be able to acquire—reveal that its
striking features relative to our law are not likenesses but
inconsistencies, not similarities but contrarieties. In its source, its
scope and its sanctions, the law of the Middle East is the antithesis of
Western law.

Contrast this with the constitution that the U.S. government helped write
for post-Taliban Afghanistan, which showed no awareness of the opposition
of Islamic and Western law. That constitution contains soaring tropes about
human rights, yet it makes Islam the state religion and sharia a principal
source of law—and under it, Muslim converts to Christianity have been
subjected to capital trials for apostasy.

*Sharia rejects freedom of speech as much as freedom of religion. It
rejects the idea of equal rights between men and women as much as between
Muslim and non-Muslim. It brooks no separation between spiritual life and
civil society. It is a comprehensive framework for human life, dictating
matters of government, economy, and combat, along with personal behavior
such as contact between the sexes and personal hygiene. Sharia aims to rule
both believers and non-believers, and it affirmatively sanctions jihad in
order to do so.*

Even if this is not the only construction of Islam, it is absurd to
claim—as President Obama did during his recent visit to a mosque in
Baltimore—that it is not a mainstream interpretation. In fact, it is
*the* mainstream
interpretation in many parts of the world. Last year, Americans were
horrified by the beheadings of three Western journalists by ISIS. American
and European politicians could not get to microphones fast enough to insist
that these decapitations had nothing to do with Islam. Yet within the same
time frame, the government of *Saudi Arabia beheaded eight people for
various violations of sharia—the law that governs Saudi Arabia.*

Three weeks before Christmas, a jihadist couple—an American citizen, the
son of Pakistani immigrants, and his Pakistani wife who had been welcomed
into our country on a fiancée visa—carried out a jihadist attack in San
Bernardino, California, killing 14 people. Our government, as with the case
in Fort Hood—where a jihadist who had infiltrated the Army killed 13
innocents, mostly fellow soldiers—resisted calling the atrocity a
“terrorist attack.” Why? Our investigators are good at what they do, and
our top officials may be ideological, but they are not stupid. Why is it
that they can’t say two plus two equals four when Islam is involved?

The reason is simple: stubbornly unwilling to deal with the reality of
Islam, our leaders have constructed an Islam of their very own. This
triumph of willful blindness and political correctness over common sense
was best illustrated by former British Home Secretary Jacqui Smith when she
described terrorism as “anti-Islamic activity.” In other words, the
savagery is not merely unrelated to Islam; it becomes, by dint of its being
inconsistent with a “religion of peace,” *contrary to* Islam. This explains
our government’s handwringing over “radicalization”: we are supposed to
wonder why young Muslims spontaneously become violent radicals—as if there
is no belief system involved.

This is political correctness on steroids, and it has dangerous policy
implications. Consider the inability of government officials to call a
mass-murder attack by Muslims a terrorist attack unless and until the
police uncover evidence proving that the mass murderers have some tie to a
designated terrorist group, such as ISIS or al Qaeda. It is rare for such
evidence to be uncovered early in an investigation—and as a matter of fact,
such evidence often does not exist. Terrorist recruits already share the
same ideology as these groups: the goal of imposing sharia. All they need
in order to execute terrorist attacks is paramilitary training, which is
readily available in more places than just Syria.

The dangerous flipside to our government’s insistence on making up its own
version of Islam is that anyone who is publicly associated with Islam must
be deemed peaceful. This is how we fall into the trap of allowing the *Muslim
Brotherhood*, the world’s most influential Islamic supremacist
organization, to infiltrate policy-making organs of the U.S. government,
not to mention our schools, our prisons, and other institutions. The
federal government, particularly under the Obama administration,
acknowledges the Brotherhood as an Islamic organization—notwithstanding the
ham-handed attempt by the intelligence community a few years back to
rebrand it as “largely secular”—thereby giving it a clean bill of health.
This despite the fact that* Hamas is the Brotherhood’s Palestinian branch,*
that the Brotherhood has a long history of terrorist violence, and that
major Brotherhood figures have gone on to play leading roles in terrorist
organizations such as al Qaeda.

To quote Churchill again:  “Facts are better than dreams.” In the real
world, we must deal with the facts of Islamic supremacism, because its
jihadist legions have every intention of dealing with us. But we can only
defeat them if we resolve to see them for what they are.


__._,_.___
------------------------------
Posted by: "Beowulf" <[email protected]>
------------------------------


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