By Jonah Goldberg
Friday, November 13, 2015
Americans could learn a thing or two from Bibi Netanyahu.
The Israeli prime minister was in Washington this week to
receive the American Enterprise Institute’s Irving Kristol Award. He made some
controversial remarks — at least controversial at AEI, where I am a fellow, and
where the freedom agenda is alive and well — about the need to be realistic
about what’s going on in the Middle East. Sometimes, he said, brutal dictators
are better than the real-world alternatives: even more brutal Islamist
movements hell-bent (or, if you prefer, paradise-bent) to conquer the world.
Less controversial but more intriguing was his
description of the turmoil in the Middle East. “The core of the conflicts in
the Middle East is the battle between modernity and early primitive
medievalism,” Netanyahu explained.
Everyone understood what he meant, of course. The Islamic
State believes the Muslim world took a wrong turn more than a thousand years
ago.
The Taliban, the Wahhabis, al-Qaeda, the Muslim
Brotherhood, and all the other Islamists share this same worldview to one
extent or another. Not every Islamist believes in crucifying Christians or
throwing acid in the face of little girls going to school. But they all reject
modernity, pluralism, secularism, democracy, and, in many cases, even science.
“Medievalism” isn’t a perfect word, but it’s a better
word than “terrorism” or “Islamism.”
President George W. Bush settled on “the war on terror”
to describe our fight with Islamic terrorists. But there are problems with
using “terrorism” as a euphemism for Islamic radicals. I’ll give you three.
First, terrorism is a tactic. If North Korea launches a
nuclear missile at the United States, we will not declare war against
intercontinental ballistic missiles. We will declare war against North Korea.
Second, in a war, tactics are secondary. Let’s imagine
the Islamic State kept growing and became a major military power. If it
replaced typical terror tactics with tanks, ships, and armies but continued to
make war against the U.S. and our allies, that wouldn’t change the fact that
we’d still need to destroy our enemy.
Last, there are many terrorist groups that are not
Islamic at all. The self-described “Real IRA” is certainly a terrorist outfit,
and I have no problem with it being crushed, but it is not a strategic threat
to the United States.
This is why many conservatives prefer terms such as “jihadism”
or “radical Islam” — for the simple reason that it is more accurate. Conceptual
clarity is essential to national security strategy.
Still, one can understand why Bush didn’t want to declare
war on Islamism or jihadism. Put simply, such labels create a propaganda
problem because they make it easier for the radicals to claim we are at war
with Islam itself. There are more than a billion Muslims in the world, and
while far too many are sympathetic to the jihadists, there are still hundreds
of millions who reject terrorism. It does not help us with our Muslim allies
when we sound like we are at war with their faith.
Israel certainly can’t afford to sound like it’s at war
with Islam, not when it needs to work with Muslim countries like Egypt and
Jordan. Hence the term “medievalism.” While not perfect, the term is far more
clarifying and accurate than “terrorism.” It also helps to illuminate why the
Left is so wrongheaded in its knee-jerk tendency to condemn criticism of
Islamic radicalism as intolerant.
At the core of progressive ideology is the Whiggish idea
that modernity is preferable to the customs of the past. As a conservative, I
think progressives often go too far — way too far — in applying and misapplying
this thinking. But they are right on the big picture. Modernity — by which I
mean tolerance, pluralism, equality, democracy — is preferable to absolutism.
In February the U.N. issued a report chronicling how the
Islamic State was burying alive, beheading, and crucifying children. The next
day, President Obama went on a tear about how we in the West shouldn’t get on
our “high horse” about it because Christians did terrible things a thousand
years ago.
I’d still rather live under medieval Christians than
under the Islamic State, but that’s beside the point. The reason Obama’s
statement was so morally obtuse is that he was comparing medieval Christians
from a millennium ago to monsters who proudly videotape their crimes in the
here and now. If we can’t get on our high horses about that, what use is there
in having high horses at all?
And that’s what I like about the term “primitive
medievalism.” It highlights the real divide not just between modern Westerners
and the barbarians, but between modern Muslims and the barbarians.
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