By Victor Davis Hanson
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
The terrorism in Paris is yet another bad chapter in an
ongoing Western debate over a seeming paradox. Almost all recent global terrorism
is attributable to Islamic-inspired violence — much of it directed against
Muslims. And yet the vast majority of the world’s 1.5 billion Muslims do not
directly aid and abet the spate of Islamic extremism.
How then to focus on the Islamic terrorists without
polluting the surrounding sea in which these sharks swim?
Do history’s radical movements assume initial or even
ongoing popular majorities to ensure their viability? Obviously, the vast
majority of Germans, Japanese, Italians, and Russians did not support the
extremists who came to power with Hitler, Tojo, Mussolini, and Lenin.
Indeed, besides carrying out the Holocaust against the
Jews, Hitler killed thousands of his own Germans, an array of homosexuals,
Communists, domestic critics, and the physically handicapped. Stalin caused
more deaths among his own fellow Soviet citizens in the Twenties and Thirties
than the Wehrmacht later did.
The point is that extremist movements, even when they
become strong enough to reach power, are not always particularly kind to their
own or well liked among them. That Muslim radicals kill Muslims in their midst
does not necessarily mean that they do not prefer to kill non-Muslims.
The continued influence of radical Muslims who engage in
terrorism hinges on whether they bring power, prestige, and resources to the
people that they otherwise usually oppress. Islamic theocrats control
governments only in the Gulf, Iran, and Gaza, and are trying to cobble together
a caliphate largely in Syria and Iraq. Turkey likewise is moving toward
theocracy. But Islamists are active, both above and below the radar, in almost
every Muslim-majority nation — and they can manage this even where they enjoy
very little popular support.
A great deal of attention has been given to radically
changing views toward Islamic terrorism in the Middle East, after the
disintegration of Syria and the rise of the Islamic State, along with the
bloody rampage of Boko Haram in central Africa.
But what is even more striking is the large minorities
who still either are willing to state their support for terrorists or say they
are unconcerned about their activity. According to the Pew Global Attitudes
Project, Muslim support for suicide bombing has dropped in recent years. Yet
even so, in 2014 in major Islamic countries — Palestine, Lebanon, Egypt, and
Jordan — somewhere between 18 and 46 percent of the population expressed
approval for the proposition that suicide bombing against civilian targets can
“often/sometimes be justified in order to defend Islam from its enemies.”
The vast majority of Muslims no longer express support
for the late Osama bin Laden, but sizable minorities in some countries still
do: 15 percent in Egypt, 23 percent in Bangladesh, and 25 percent in Palestine.
The polls suggest two disturbing possibilities. In a world of 1.5 billion
Muslims, perhaps 150 million Muslims worldwide — 10 percent — still admire bin
Laden, are not concerned about Islamic violence, and support suicide bombing
against the perceived enemies of Islam. While Muslim majorities are beginning
to react negatively to the escalating violence in their own midst, millions
still do not.
In an historical sense, under political and religious
systems that tolerate no dissent — it is still a capital crime in most Muslim
countries to slander the Prophet Mohammed or to become an apostate from Islam —
it is hard to assess what percentage of the population at any given time
supports radical leadership. Hitler was extremely popular with the German
people after the fall of France in June 1940, but he was generally disliked by
mid-1944, the time of the heavy bombing of German cities, the invasion of
Normandy, and the collapsing German front in the East.
Yet throughout those years, the Allies nonetheless used
the inexact rubric “Germans” without concern for the fact that over the
duration of the war sometimes many, sometimes very few Germans supported what
was done by the Third Reich in the name of Germany. Just as foreigners more
recently talked inclusively of “Americans” without regard for Republicans or
Democrats, who had far different views by 2006 on the Iraq war, and as people
speak of “Christians” to mean everyone from Southern Baptists to Brazilian
Catholics, so it is just as legitimate or illegitimate to generalize about
“Muslims.”
In 2003, substantial numbers of people in many Muslim
countries expressed “confidence” in Osama bin Laden — 46 percent in Pakistan,
56 percent in Jordan, 59 percent in
Indonesia, 72 percent in Palestine (all these countries recipients of U.S.
aid). Those favorability ratings declined significantly after the terrorist
hijackings of the so-called Arab Spring, the internecine wars in Lebanon, the
collapse of Syria, the crimes of Boko Haram, and the rise of the Islamic State.
Was it politically correct to say that “Muslims” supported terrorism in 2003
because a clear majority in places like moderate Jordan so polled?
Clearly polls are not the only evidence of the level of
support for Islamic-inspired radicalism. More important can be the degree of
passivity of the population. General Sisi of Egypt recently argued that the
Muslim clerical establishment bore a great deal of responsibility for global
Islamic terrorism, not because these clerics necessarily voiced support for it,
but because they were unwilling or unable to mobilize Muslims against it. I can
recall meeting with a group of Libyan exiles living in the United States in
2006, all of whom were highly educated, Americanized professionals. They voiced
optimism that their former tormentor Qaddafi was liberalizing their country and
offering hope of recreating a civil society even for secularized dissidents
like themselves. But when I mentioned the then-current case of the Islamic
attacks against those associated with the caricatures of Mohammed in the Danish
magazine Jyllands-Posten, all four Libyans voiced unanimous approval of the
violence against such blasphemers. And when I asked them about the then-recent
suicide bombings in Israel, they again voiced support for such activities.
So far, international polling organizations have not
conducted surveys in Muslim countries to ascertain popular attitudes about the
attack on Charlie Hebdo. However, we should not be surprised if sizable
minorities should voice their support. I would assume that a certain number of
Muslims worldwide — perhaps the 150 million posited above — would admire the
so-called martyrs whose terrorist acts were thought to be in service to the
reputation of the prophet.
While there is great talk in the West that it is only a
small minority of Muslims who support Islamic terrorism, and that the remedy
for such terrorism must be found within the world of Islam, there is not much
logical or historical evidence that such truisms matter much. Ten percent is a
tiny minority of any population. But if 10 percent of Muslims worldwide support
ongoing terrorist movements, that is still 150 million Muslims, who comprise a
large enough pool to aid and abet terrorism, either by giving moral and
financial support or by acting as pressure groups within mostly autocratic
political systems.
We should not be surprised at that fact. If just 10
percent of the French population is Muslim, and perhaps just 10 percent of that
subset supports Islamic violence, there remains a pool nevertheless of perhaps
600,000 radicalized French residents of Middle Eastern descent that offers the
sort of environment in the French suburban ghettos that spawns the current
terrorist violence.
Moreover, theoretical support or rejection of terrorism
as evidenced by polls does not necessarily translate into real-life consequences,
especially in non-democratic societies — as we know from supposed German
disenchantment with Hitler during the last year of the war. Were we wrong in
January 1945 to keep bombing “the Germans,” given that most by then both did
not like the Nazi government and yet did not dare to actively oppose it?
The truth is that to the degree that radical Muslim
terrorists kill other Muslims inside Islamic countries and make collective
progress impossible, or, by their actions, do tangible damage to the reputation
of these Islamic countries overseas, they will be become unpopular and
eventually find too little support to continue their violence.
However, if Islamic-inspired violence abroad does not
directly and negatively affect the Middle East, or if it creates a sense of
fear of radical Islam among Westerners that does not translate into hardship
for the Muslim world — or that perhaps even succeeds in winning a sort of
warped prestige — then there is no reason to expect the Islamic community will
take the necessary measures to curb it.
The sense of perceived persecution in the Middle East is
real — analogous to Germany’s lamentations after the Versailles Treaty. The
retreat into Islamic-inspired terror reflects a larger, complex stew of anger
at the reach of Western globalization into traditional and conservative Islamic
societies and of envy of the wealth and influence of the Western world,
combined with an inability to offer self-critical analyses about the role of
tribalism, statism, gender apartheid, religious fundamentalism, intolerance,
autocracy, and anti-Semitism in institutionalizing poverty and instability.
For a sizable minority of Muslim immigrants to the West,
a sense of inferiority is sometimes enhanced rather than diminished by contact
with Western liberal society. The longer and further immigrants are away from
the mess of the Middle East that caused them to flee or at least stay away, the
more they are able under the aegis of Western freedom, prosperity, and security
to romanticize what provides them with the sense of self that they have not
earned in their adopted countries.
In the Middle East, when modern societies reach such a
point, they prefer to blame “Jews” or “the decadent West” rather than their own
pathologies for a perceived descent from the glories of a past — and
religiously pure — age. Liberal internal reform would be the only lasting cure
of their maladies, but, tragically, such an impetus is usually thrust upon them
by forces from the outside, even if only a small but influential and activist
minority is responsible for acting out such self-destructive agendas.
When the nihilism of radical Islam manifests itself not
just in the bombings in Paris or Boston, but right at home with the rise of the
murderous Islamic State, or when the Arab Spring is hijacked by Islamists who
typically leave Somalias in their wake, or when Middle Eastern Muslims find it
hard to emigrate to and reside in Western countries or to freely import Western
goods, or when the leaders of Middle Eastern appeasing states are ostracized
from international gatherings, or when states that behead and stone are shunned
by the West, then support for the terrorists and what produced them will begin
slowly to fade.
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