By Victor Davis Hanson
Thursday, July 21, 2016
When President Obama entered office, he dreamed that his
hope-and-change messaging and his references to his familial Islamic roots
would win over the Muslim world. The soon-to-be Nobel Peace Prize laureate
would make the U.S. liked in the Middle East. Then, terrorism would decrease.
But, as with his approach to racial relations, Obama’s
remedies proved worse than the original illness.
Obama gave his first presidential interview to Al
Arabiya, noting that he has Muslims in his family. He implicitly blamed
America’s strained relations with many Middle Eastern countries on his
supposedly insensitive predecessor, George W. Bush.
The new message of the Obama administration was that the
Islamic world was understandably hostile because of what America had done
rather than what it represented.
Accordingly, all mention of radical Islam, and even the
word “terrorism,” was airbrushed from the new administration’s vocabulary.
Words to describe terrorism or the fight against it were replaced by
embarrassing euphemisms like “overseas contingency operations,” “man-caused
disaster,” and “workplace violence.”
In apology tours and mythological speeches, Obama
exaggerated Islamic history as often as he critiqued America. He backed the
Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. He pushed America away from Israel, appeased Iran,
and tried to piggyback on the Arab Spring by bombing Libya. He even lectured
Christians on their past pathologies dating back to the Crusades.
Yet Obama’s outreach was still interpreted by Islamists
as guilt and weakness to be exploited rather than magnanimity to be
reciprocated. Terrorist attacks increased. Obama blamed them on a lack of gun
control or generic “violent extremism.”
Careerist toadies in government parroted the party-line
message and even tried to outdo their politically correct boss.
Former Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano
focused on returning veterans as terrorist risks. Obama and Secretary of State
John Kerry said that global warming, not the Islamic State, was the real
threat. NASA administrator Charles Bolden said the president asked him to make
Muslim outreach a top priority for the agency. CIA director John Brennan said
that jihad “is a holy struggle, a legitimate tenet of Islam.” Director of
National Intelligence James Clapper opined that the Muslim Brotherhood was largely
secular.
The president often blamed the detention facility at
Guantanamo Bay for needlessly provoking Islam. Obama said that terrorist
dangers were no more deadly than falls in bathtubs. He wrote off the Islamic
State as an inept jayvee squad, assuring that they posed no existential threat.
He campaigned on the premise that al-Qaeda was on the run. Obama pulled all
troops out of Iraq, which instantly degenerated into chaos.
Obama kept insisting that guns, not Islamic terrorists,
were the real danger — even as assassins used bombs from Boston to Paris,
knives from California to Oklahoma, and, most recently, a truck to run over
innocents in Nice, France.
Intelligence and law-enforcement agencies got the message
and worried more about charges of “Islamophobia” than preempting deadly
terrorist attacks. Authorities had either interviewed and then ignored the
Boston, Fort Hood, San Bernardino, and Orlando terrorists, or they had blindly
ignored their brazen social-media threats.
There was never cause for such weak-horse contrition.
Radical Islam never had legitimate grievances against the
West. America and Europe had welcomed in Muslim immigrants — even as Christians
were persecuted and driven out of the Middle East.
Billions of dollars in American aid still flows to
Islamic countries. The U.S. spent untold blood and treasure freeing Kuwait and
later the Shiites of Iraq from Saddam Hussein. America tried to save
Afghanistan from the Soviets and later from the Taliban.
For over a half-century, the West paid jacked-up prices
for OPEC oil — even as the U.S. Navy protected Persian Gulf sea lanes to ensure
lucrative oil profits for Gulf-state monarchies.
Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, the original
architects of al-Qaeda, were so desperate to find grievances against the West
that in their written diatribes they had to invent fantasies of Jews walking in
Mecca. In Michael Moore fashion, they laughably whined about America’s lack of
campaign-finance reform and Western culpability for global warming.
The real problem is that Islamic terrorism feeds off the
self-induced failures of the Middle East. Jihadists try to convince the Arab
street that returning to religious fundamentalism and exporting jihad will
empower Muslims to recapture lost primacy over a decadent and guilty West, just
as in the mythical glory days of the caliphate.
In truth, religious intolerance, gender apartheid,
illiteracy, autocracy, statism, tribalism, and religious fundamentalism all
guarantee poverty, economic stagnation, and scapegoating. While much of Asia
and Latin America progressed through reform, the Middle East blame-gamed its
miseries on affluent Western nations and on Israel.
More disturbing, millions of Middle Easterners fled to
the safety of Europe and the United States — but on occasion, only to resist
assimilation and show ingratitude once they got there.
In short, the dreamy Obama approach to terrorism has
proved a nightmare — and it is not over yet.
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