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Fixing Islam
By Daniel Pipes
The
global war on terror cannot be won through counterterrorism alone;
it also requires convincing the terrorists and their sympathizers
that their goals and methods are faulty and failing. But how is
this to be done?
By
focusing on the ideological and religious sources of the violence,
say I: "the immediate war goal must be to destroy militant
Islam and the ultimate war goal the modernization of Islam."
I have not worked out the detailed implications of this policy,
however.
Which
explains my delight on finding that the RAND Corporation's Cheryl
Benard has done just this, publishing her results in a small book
titled Civil Democratic Islam: Partners, Resources, and Strategies
(available in full on the Internet at the RAND website, www.rand.org).
Benard
recognizes the awesome ambition of the effort to modernize Islam:
If nation-building is a daunting task, she notes, religion-building
"is immeasurably more perilous and complex." This is something
never tried before; we enter uncharted territory here.
Civil
Democratic Islam covers three topics: rival Muslim approaches to
Islam; which approach contributes most to a moderate version of
Islam; and policy recommendations for Western governments.
Like
other analysts, Benard finds that in relation to their religion,
Muslims divide into four groups:
-
Fundamentalists, who in turn split into two. Radicals (like the
Taliban) are ready to resort to violence in an attempt to create
a totalitarian order. Scripturalists (like the Saudi monarchy)
are more rooted in a religious establishment and less prone to
rely on violence.
- Traditionalists,
who also split into two. Conservatives (like Grand Ayatollah Ali
Sistani in Iraq) seek to preserve orthodox norms and old-fashioned
behavior as best they can. Reformists (like the Kuwaiti rulers)
have the same traditional goals but are more flexible in details
and more innovative in achieving them.
-
Modernists (like Muammar Qaddafi of Libya) assume that Islam is
compatible with modernity and then work backwards to prove this
point.
- Secularists
again split into two. The mainstream (like Atatürkists in
Turkey) respects religion as a private affair but permits it no
role in the public arena. Radicals (like communists) see religion
as bogus and reject it entirely.
The
author brings these viewpoints to life in a smart, convincing presentation,
showing their differences on everything from establishing the pure
Islamic state to husbands having rights to beat their wives. She
rightly dwells on values and lifestyles, finding dissimulation about
polygamy far less commonplace than about the use of violence.
Which
of these groups is most suitable to ally with? Modernists, says
Benard, are "most congenial to the values and the spirit of
modern democratic society." Fundamentalists are the enemy,
for they "oppose us and we oppose them." Traditionalists
have potentially useful democratic elements but generally share
too much with the fundamentalists to be relied upon. Secularists
are too often hostile to the West to fix Islam.
Benard
then proposes a strategy for religion-building with several prongs:
- Delegitimize
the immorality and hypocrisy of fundamentalists. Encourage investigative
reporting into the corruption of their leaders. Criticize the
flaws of traditionalism, especially its promoting backwardness.
-
Support the modernists first. Support secularists on a case-by-case
basis. Back the traditionalists tactically against the fundamentalists.
Consistently oppose the fundamentalists.
-
Assertively promote the values of Western democratic modernity.
Encourage secular civic and cultural institutions. Focus on the
next generation. Provide aid to states, groups, and individuals
with the right attitudes.
I agree
with Benard's general approach, doubting only her enthusiasm for
Muslim modernists, a group that through two centuries of effort
has failed to help reconcile Islam with current realities. H.A.R.
Gibb, the great orientalist, condemned modernist thinking in 1947
as mired in "intellectual confusions and paralyzing romanticism."
Writing in 1983, I dismissed modernism as "a tired movement,
locked in place by the unsoundness of its premises and arguments."
Nothing has changed for the better since then.
Instead
of modernists, I propose mainstream secularists as the forward-looking
Muslims who uniquely can wrench their co-religionists out of their
current slough of despair and radicalism. Secularists start with
the proven premise of disentangling religion from politics; not
only has this served the Western world well, but it has also worked
in Turkey, the Muslim success story of our time.
Only
when Muslims turn to secularism will this terrible era of their
history come to an end.
Daniel
Pipes (www.DanielPipes.org)
is director of the Middle East Forum and author of Miniatures (Transaction
Publishers).
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