Saddam Had a History – We knew he was a threat

As the so-called “intelligence failure” gains press, pundits insist our collective judgment on the war turns on unquestionable proof of WMD. Never mind 250,000 troops Saddam could have invited in for an inspection until the very day the war commenced instead of running into a spider hole. Never mind his history of use and proliferation of WMD and genocide. Never mind his Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari’s explanation of a very sophisticated system of WMD concealment and hiding. All spin aside, Saddam’s terminally defiant behavior led to his necessary removal. Gaddafi’s behavior in Libya ever since is living testimony. This comment appeared originally at the Arizona Republic at this link.

A Day of Worship not Politics – This Service Crossed the Line

FEB 2, 2004 3:00 P.M. A Day of Worship not Politics: This Service Crossed the Line. by M. Zuhdi Jasser Mixed feelings with many questions. This is the only way to describe my feelings after attending the Valley-wide Muslim prayer service for our holiest day of the year on Sunday morning. Muslims around the world celebrated on Sunday the 10th day of the 12th lunar month of the Islamic calendar, honoring the day in which the Prophet Abraham came near to sacrificing his son at the command of God and instead sacrificed a ram. Each year over two million Muslims at this time also finish our faith’s most spiritual pilgrimage or ‘Hajj’ after two weeks of prayer and renewal in Medina and Mecca. Yesterday’s Muslim prayer service held at Sun Angel’s Stadium in Tempe and attended by some 5,000 Valley Muslims was the first time in our history that a sitting Arizona governor attended such a prayer service. Governor Napolitano certainly could not have been more gracious, respectful, and honoring of the diversity represented by the Muslim population in the Valley. In fact, after the sermon from an Arizona Imam, Omar Shaheen, selected by the Valley mosque leadership, the governor spoke before the Muslim crowd wearing a hijab or female head scarf out of respect to the customs of the Muslim faith during prayer. She continues to live up to the motto of her administration, “many lands, many people, many faiths, one Arizona.” Unfortunately I left the service with far more questions than I had when I arrived. Did my family and I get the spiritual guidance we came seeking in the spirit of the exemplary piety of the Prophet Abraham signified by the holiday? Or were we exploited by the politics of the day? Was I a victim of the opportunity in front of the media and the governor to make long overdue statements on Islam and peace followed by opportunistic opinions on foreign policy as I sat captively? Where was my Islamic faith’s deep spiritual message that when read through the Koran and the traditions of the Prophet free of politics energizes the core of my being? Was I a victim of mutual pandering between a well-intended governor and a well-intended Muslim leadership at the expense of my faith’s most holy day? Just because the political opportunity presents itself, does that make it mutually appropriate? The Imam actually spoke of the “ends never justifying the means.” Aside from my fear over to what “ends” he was referring, was that not in fact what the exploitation of the prayers for politics accomplishes in a very rare opportunity in front of the largest annual gathering of Muslims in the Valley? Why did many Muslims find this a natural and momentous development of recognition for the Muslim community, while I came away fearful for the continued fall down the slippery slope of the bridge across religion and politics for Muslims and for America? Only just a few days ago, I blogged here about Rep. Quelland’s exploitation of the opening prayer in the State House that crossed similar lines. Only that time the line crossed was political. Has the governor ever given a speech to the Christian faithful at Christmas Day services, Easter Day services or Jewish Yom Kippur services in the name of old fashioned pandering within their houses of worship as they seek renewal and atonement? Yet, why was this happening in a Muslim service? Why would the Muslim leadership not facilitate a separate, clearly political, gathering of Muslims (and call it a PAC) with the intention of political rallying rather? Why surprise worshipers who came to escape the stress of this world with religious cheers for an elected official? Our houses of worship are to be the house of God that frees our soul in the absence of politics, free from the political cheering and jeering whether conservative or liberal or Republican or Democrat. While the governor’s words were well received, and meaningful, another setting outside a place of worship would have been far more appropriate. As for Imam Shaheen’s words, he presented a good effort at trying to clearly define the peaceful nature of Islam, but in predictable fashion left it marred by the not-so-subtle exploitative messages about foreign policy rather than a Valley wide prayer on ‘Eid al-Adha’ (the Holiday of the Sacrifice). Last I checked, no one ever stopped an Imam like Shaheen from calling a separate press conference on another day and inviting politicians and interested Muslims to listen to him speak on Palestinian politics to an expecting group. While as a Muslim I felt acknowledged by the governor, I left yearning for the time I came to pray with my family in communal worship and to God for the sake of worship to allow my soul to breathe. Instead I seemed to have participated in a Muslim-governmental P.R. campaign. While yesterday signaled a landmark step forward in the acknowledgement of the Muslim population by our state’s leadership, the blurring of the line between religion and politics violates a core principle of Islamic spirituality and America. It left me wondering and with mixed feelings. Dr. Jasser’s original column can be found online at the Arizona Republic. —- —- — — — Chris Thomas responds: FEB 3, 2004 9:00 AM Janet’s Gracious Speech: Straining to Blur On Sunday, a Muslim day of celebration known as the Eid-ul-Adha, or Festival of Sacrifice, two things happened. One is that Iraqi terrorists killed 67 people by exploding two bombs during a party in the territory of our reliable Kurdish allies in northern Iraq. The second is that Gov. Janet Napolitano gave a “gracious and respectful” speech, while wearing a head scarf, to a Muslim congregation of 5,000 at Sun Angel Stadium. Naturally, my partisan Republican colleague Zuhdi Jasser ignores the former and criticizes the latter. He’s worried that the speech, while “well-intended,” represented a “blurring of the line between religion and politics.” Zuhdi, my friend, you’re working too hard to see the blurring. The Bush administration’s man in charge of finding Osama bin Laden and wooing moderate Muslims remains evangelical Gen. Jerry Boykin, who thinks your God is an “idol” that his God can beat the crap out of. Perhaps He can, but it’s ill-advised to gloat in these matters. The president calls for spending $1.5 billion of taxpayer money to reinforce the sanctity of Christian marriage. That’s the same administration that has never proposed a balanced budget, and that has vowed to amend the Constitution to enforce dominant social morality. Your prior posts suggest to me that you are a fiscally conservative civil libertarian who believes in religious diversity. So why are you stretching so hard to find fault with a smart, pragmatic, and open-minded governor, and to support a free-spending, moralist president? Chris Thomas’ response can also be found at the Arizona Republic at this link. — — — — FEB 3, 2004 “Our Governor Was Exploited: Politics should never have been part of the Prayer Service” – M. Zuhdi Jasser Chris, my friend, I appreciate your thoughts on my commentary regarding the governor and a Muslim holy day, but you missed the entire point of my comments. Let me articulate them more clearly. In fact, the real blame for exploitation of my faith’s holiest day of prayer on Sunday for political gains lies squarely on the organizers of the event who are the Valley Muslims in a position to bring her into such a spiritual gathering. The governor was certainly invited. I am sure she and her staff found significant problems either way in trying to accept or refuse the invitation. In my opinion, she was only a victim since she attended in what was a very ecumenical sense of bridge-building. Despite an invitation, my sense is that the governor would probably want to avoid giving a Christmas day address from the pulpit during Christmas Day mass or during Yom Kippur services. But that is only due to her familiarity with the Christian and Jewish traditions and understanding of the significance of those days theologically. During our Islamic services she was certainly relying upon the guidance she took from the Muslim organizers of the event, which, by the way, was only billed as a Muslim holy day prayer service. Most certainly Chris, the Muslims advising the governor are responsible, and the Muslim community needs to provide greater political diversity in its input into roles for the governor and the appropriate times and places for the governor’s bridge-building efforts. Your depiction of my criticism as partisan is completely fatuous, for it applies across the political spectrum and is ingrained in the principles of our founding fathers and the secular principles of the Abrahamic faiths. Chris, you conveniently ignore my criticism of Rep. Quelland here, and my prior suggestion to President Bush to fire General Boykin. Most importantly Chris, your juxtapositioning of comments on Iraqi terrorism on our sons and daughters in war within this discussion of Valley Muslims is beyond inappropriate, in fact, careless. And it reflects on your ignorance of the principles of Islam. You will find no stronger critic than me of the so-called “Islamic” terrorists that exploit religion for criminal activity and political gains. You will not find a more vocal critic than me of the hijacking of the Islamic religion by extremists who cowardly kill noncombatants and soldiers of war in cowardly anti-Islamic asymmetric warfare. I would hope that in the future you avoid the en vogue propagandistic techniques of attacking a whole religion or the opinion of an individual Muslim based upon the malignant actions of a fanatical minority. I do hope that some day, the advisors to the governor and others in our governmental and party leadership structure will become savvy enough on the religion of Islam to understand that at times their presence will be exploited by various political factions within a faith to participate in the name of political expediency in ways that may be quite contradictory to the spirituality of the faith and the separation of religion and politics. At my expense, Chris, you deflect the discussion into partisanship, when in fact I was taking a step forward which so many complain is never done by moderate Muslims in the public setting. There is no “working too hard to see the blurring” here. Somehow, Islam seems to be given different standards from the other faiths. I simply asked why? I do believe that if you ask the governor about the content of the sermon given prior to her speech, you will find some significant disapproval in the content and the presentation. Not only was the audience exploited in coming to what was billed only as a prayer service for “Eid al-Adha,” but ended up in a state rally of sorts from an unsuspecting audience. But she was also exploited as a governor in listening to a “political” sermon with which I am sure she would have had some political difficulties. Again, the point here is that the blind mixing of religion and politics will always create divisiveness most essentially within the soul – never-mind all of the partisan issues you raised. I, and perhaps, many other like-minded Muslims, while in no way holding the governor responsible, felt exploited on Sunday by those who brought her into this most holy Muslim prayer service. As a final comment, I want to express my deep feeling as a Muslim of gratefulness for all of the inclusive efforts of the governor in giving her valuable time and her most valuable words to the Muslim community. It is obvious that my criticism was not directed at her or at the gracefulness she has demonstrated. — — — — FEB 3, 2004 11:00 PM Chris Thomas responds: Pandering to Christians: All Faiths Suffer their fanatics Common wisdom holds that you shouldn’t talk about either politics or religion among polite company. My thoughtful colleague Zuhdi Jasser and I find ourselves in the unfortunate situation of debating both simultaneously. Unsurprisingly, it appears that we’ve both misunderstood each other. Rightly or wrongly, I interpreted my colleague’s initial post as a from-left-field criticism of Gov. Janet Napolitano for pandering to Muslim voters by giving a speech that was, by all accounts, gracious and inclusive. As best I could tell, Zuhdi felt offended by the blurring of religion and politics. My inarticulate response apparently convinced my colleague that I was demonizing Islam. I was, in fact, attempting to note the incongruity of a Muslim conservative finding fault with a centrist Democrat’s effort to reach out to a population that is under political attack, largely by evangelical conservatives. I hadn’t noticed a flood of opportunistic politicians jumping on the pro-Islam bandwagon. Since I apparently didn’t do a very good job last time, let me try again. First, any idiot – even me – recognizes that one should not condemn an entire faith based upon the worst behavior of those who claim to be adherents. As someone who has spent much time in the Middle East – and, yes, who has many Muslim friends – I would no more define Islam by the actions of al-Qaida than I would define Christianity by the actions of abortion clinic bomber Eric Rudolph. Having heard the call of the muezzin during both Ramadan and the Eid, I hope I’m more attuned than most white-bread Methodists to understand the power and grace of Islam. All religions, alas, have to answer occasionally for the “malignant actions of a fanatical minority.” Second, the politicization of religion is, as my colleague notes, notes a serious problem in American democracy. The least of our problems, however, is political cultivation of Muslims. The biggest problem is political pandering to my dominant religion, Christianity. Zuhdi, my friend, there is indeed a party that is attempting to exploit religion for political advantage. But those being exploited are evangelical Christians, not Muslims, and those doing the exploiting are more often than not your fellow Republicans. That’s the blurring line of separation between church and state that ought to concern both of us. A gracious speech by a kind-hearted centrist governor is the least of your worries. Chris’ response can be found online at the Arizona Republic at this link. — — — — — FEB 4, 2004 3:00 P.M. Zuhdi Jasser comments: Oxygen for Radical Islam’s Fire: Separating church and state denies fuel to the fanatics Chris, we have almost reached agreement. I appreciate your last comments. If there is to be an effective and lasting change, however, in the influence upon the Republican party of the Pat Robertson’s and Franklin Grahams, who are rabidly anti-Muslim, this is certainly most effectively done by moderate Republicans, despite the open arms of centrist Democrats. Any Democrat who is quick to rush to the salvation (sorry for the pun) of disenfranchised conservative Muslims, who generally share very few political ideologies with the left save civil liberty issues, seems somewhat opportunistic. While in this election cycle, it certainly appears the Muslim vote is heading for a grand fickle pendulum swing from the right in 2000 to the left in 2004. And while Republican handlers are not entirely innocent, the lack of political engagement by Muslims within the Republican party has allowed them to become dispensable. However, again, the blame here lies squarely upon conservative Muslim activists who have abandoned their party. They’ve done so without a grounding in conservative principles and without the strength to expose the Christian right from within the party for its own violation of the most central of conservative philosophies – “the smaller the government the better.” This is true whether in regards to taxation, sch
ol choice, or the legislating of morals. But the disenfranchisement of Muslims from the right was a topic I addressed in a prior blog. The subject for this debate remains reform among Muslims and the role of the discipline of the separation of religion and politics. Regardless of where my political stances are, for the purposes of this discussion, I am a moderate conservative Muslim (in terms of religion) who believes the U.S. Constitution and American principles of separation of religion and politics are consistent with the essence and the spirit of the faith I practice. The war on terror has many fronts and one of those which most continue to discuss as being essential is the reformation of Muslim activism and practice toward a direction which honors and highlights the separation of religion and politics. For, until that explicitly happens, and as long as mosques and organized Muslim faith-based organizations serve as venues of politics and governmental activism, they will serve as cover for radicals attempting to carry the torch of religion into the halls of politics and governmental policy. No one is arguing that some aspects of this discussion may apply to Christianity. I will leave that to the Christian faithful to straighten out for me. However, in the setting of the most holy Islamic day of the year, I am applying it strictly to Muslims. As you recall, since al-Qaida declared war on America in 1998, the biggest threat to the safety of Americans has been the targeting of civilians around the world by their ilk who exploit the religion of Islam for political gains. Thus, let us set aside partisan politics for a moment. You will see that from my perspective as an American Muslim, the issue of separation of religion and state in 2004 among Muslims is relatively novel in a mostly immigrant population. But while somewhat novel, it runs at the essence of allowing the free practice of my faith apart from the political coercion of others while also being vital to the war on terror. The blurring of the line between religion and politics is the oxygen for the fire of the Islamists that exploit the religion of Islam for political ends. There certainly may not be any Islamists among the Muslim population of the Valley. But, from where I sit as a concerned American, a faithful practicing Muslim, and a former U.S. Navy officer, eliminating havens for those who may be our enemies is a high priority. The facilitation of the strict separation of religion and politics among Muslims is not only a part of the faith, a faith with no clergy or hierarchy, but will be a step towards marginalization of the radicals. Dr. Jasser’s comments could be found online at this link at the Arizona Republic.

A Disgraceful Prayer – The Wrong Place, The Wrong Time

Having had the privilege as a Muslim of giving the opening prayer to the Arizona Legislature on two occasions in the past year, I read with interest the prayer provided to Monday’s opening session by Rep. Doug Quelland (R-Phoenix). Wednesday’s Republic describes the angry reaction from many legislators and specifically identifies the outrage of the Democrats. In fact, as a conservative, I am particularly offended since it brings guilt by association to others who may at times share some of his views. An opening prayer to any state Legislature which represents the diverse political spectrum of the state’s population should be provided in a manner that highlights the uniqueness of the individual in a manner respectful of all those present, regardless of faith or political persuasion. Alexis de Tocqueville stated that dictatorships can exist without God, but freedom and liberty cannot. Opening prayers or benedictions, interfaith prayer services, and other public acknowledgements of our diverse faiths are an essential practice in a secular democracy that promotes public religious tolerance and freedom. His exploitation of the prayer is disgraceful. There are certainly many political venues for Rep. Quelland to offer his views. However, the opening prayer service of Arizona’s House of Representatives, which serves all Arizonans is hardly the place and time. The American moto of ‘e pluribus unum’ (out of many one) is one which Rep. Quelland should refresh his memory the next time he offers a prayer to a diverse body of a diverse state. This column first appeared online at the Arizona Republic at this link.

Moderate Muslims and Arabs Emerge from the Shadows

After 9/11 it was generally understood that cultivating moderation throughout the Arab and Muslim world was crucial to winning the war on terrorism. Suddenly, the elusive moderate Muslim was much sought after. But after coming to the disappointing discovery that their numbers were few and far between, many Americans became cynical about their existence. モWhere are the voices raised in protestation?ヤ they wondered as the crimes of Islamic terrorism stunned the rest of the world. But even as the West comes face to face with the barbarity of Islamism, the disingenuousness of the Arab media, and the conspiracy-theory-driven Muslim masses, voices of reason have begun to emerge from the chaos. That many of them originated in the West is not surprising; only in a political environment friendly to free expression can such voices truly flourish. But even amidst the dictatorships of the Arab world, a brave few have refused to conform. Fed up with the scapegoating ヨ of Americans, Jews, Christians, and the West ヨ that passes for governance and journalism in their countries, some Muslims have begun writing their own narratives. They suffer intimidation, harassment, and even attacks at the hands of fellow Muslims, but by refusing to cave in to the extremists, they can perhaps pave the way for future generations to follow. Daniel Pipes, Middle East scholar and Bush appointee to the U.S. Institute of Peace (although often falsely accused of the opposite), routinely gives moderate Muslims and Arabs their due. In his article “Moderate Voices of Islam” Pipes calls attention to such writers and activists because, as he puts it, “Promoting anti-Islamists and weakening Islamists is crucial if a moderate and modern form of Islam is to emerge in the West.” Indeed, it behooves those who wish to advance U.S. victory against Islamic terrorism to highlight such voices. For such a struggle cannot be won on the battlefield alone, but must also be fought ideologically. And in order to do so, reform should be encouraged from within. In the United States, organizations such as CAIR (The Council on American-Islamic Relations), beholden to Wahhabist interests in Saudi Arabia, have for too long set the agenda for American Muslims. Issuing selective condemnations of terrorism or none at all, and opposing every U.S. effort to combat Islamism, these groups are part of the problem, not the solution. In contrast, organizations like the Free Muslim Coalition Against Terrorism and the American Islamic Forum for Democracy (AIFD) are shaking the foundations of the American Islamic establishment. Not only do these groups renounce Islamic terrorism and the ideology that fuels it, they also express unconditional support for their country ヨ America, that is. The Free Muslim Coalition Against Terrorism has become increasingly visible on the national scene, with its spokespersons appearing regularly on Fox News and beyond. The American Islamic Forum for Democracy (AIFD) put on the first Muslim-sponsored モRally Against Terrorヤ in the country earlier this year in Phoenix, Arizona. Although the turnout wasnメt huge and members of CAIR reportedly tried to infiltrate the crowd, AIFD should be commended for its efforts. In his articles for the Arizona Republicメs モPlugged Inヤ weblog, AIFD chairman M. Zuhdi Jasser routinely condemns Islamic terrorism, as well as critiquing Arab journalists who provide backhanded support for Islamism. See the full article online at FrontpageMag.com

Religious Voting Blocs: Shades of Theocracy

In the year 2000, American Muslim organizations set out for the first time to empower a “Muslim voting bloc.” They formed the American Muslim Political Coordination Committee-PAC that included major national Islamic organizations. On the heels of their endorsement of then-Gov. George W. Bush, they along with many other American voting blocs, went on to claim credit for President Bush’s victory. Now, in a whole new world after 9/11, many of these same American Muslim organizations, along with some new ones, have formed the American Muslim Task Force-PAC. This coalition of 10 major American Islamic organizations endorsed Sen. John Kerry on Oct. 21 via their PAC. They cite a Georgetown/Zogby poll claiming that 81 percent of American Muslims will support the Muslim PAC endorsement and 76 percent happen to also support Sen. Kerry. The question in all of this is – is it healthy for a secular democracy to have religious voting blocs? It is certainly natural for a minority community to unite, circle the wagons, and affect democracy – many certainly do. But, faith-based voting blocs blur the line between religion and state far too much. How can a secular democracy remain secular if voters divide into blocs based upon faith? Doesn’t this fly in the face of our nation’s principles that led to the tax exemption status for religious organizations? If co-religionists can unify their cause behind a candidate, does he become beholden to that faith’s leadership? What if a majority faith in the United States votes en mass? Is this not one step closer to the theocracies that we in the Middle Eastern community have left behind? The Moral Majority died a slow death in the 1980s after it became clear that it was harming more than helping the cause for which it stood. In addition this development also led to internal corruption which fractured several large evangelical organizations. The development of faith voting blocs can create a quasi-multiparty system. In the Israeli democracy due to the number of parties and the need for a coalition to govern, often small blocs can wield significant influence. This certainly explains the impact that the minority Jewish orthodoxy has had upon instituting orthodox religious elements into Israeli law. While I applaud the engagement of my co-religionists in the American political system, I cannot understand the focus on faith from within the political arena. American Muslims are in no way monolithic. Yet a voting bloc reinforces the stereotype that we are tribal. When we vote for President, we assess issues both domestic and foreign. From economics and immigration to security and the general role of government, the religious doctrine cannot fit into a single point of view. In majority Islamic nations, religious political parties are often the norm. These religious parties have long sought to institute various forms of Islamic theocracy under the pretense of democracy. This is not the reported motive of AMT. But it is certainly a step in the wrong direction for Muslim reform and for the health of our American democracy. Only Muslims can articulate a response that resonates to the fanatical global philosophy of theocracy that threatens our American security. American Muslims who feel the time is now to only circle their wagons need ask themselves just one question-how relevant would their voting bloc be if American Christians voted en bloc in the 2004 elections? M. Zuhdi Jasser is a Phoenix physician and chairman of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy (www.aifdemocracy.org). He can be reached at Zuhdi@aifdemocracy.org This column originally appeared online at the Arizona Republic and can be found at this link at the Arizona Republic

Bin Laden’s Sleight of Hand: Sign of His Decline

The newest Bin Laden video tape, aired so willingly by the Islamist Jihad Network, Al Jazeera, timed as an “October surprise” only days before our election carries many lessons for America. Osama Bin Laden in his latest diatribe not once mentions Iraq. While his first lieutenant Zarqawi took the al-Qaida war to Iraq, OBL is now beginning to focus upon Israel and HAMAS. Witness the probable al-Qaida bombings in the Egyptian Hilton Hotel of Taba which viciously murdered 28 and injured over 100, mostly Israelis, a few weeks ago. Soon after, this latest tape surfaces. A whole new pattern is emerging. Following the pattern of every other Middle Eastern tyrant, he is diverting attention away from the battles he is losing in the hearts and minds of Muslims (i.e. Iraq and Afghanistan, where elections are soon to be held) toward the one he can demagogue as a rallying cry – the Israeli Palestinian crisis. This is a desperate sign that he is losing grip on his original goals as stated in his declaration of war in 1998 against America. As the HAMAS leadership has disappeared, OBL is now trying to fill the power vacuum with Machiavellian motive. Philosophically, HAMAS and al-Qaida share similar methods, similar fascism, and share dreams of theocracy. Bin-Laden is also aware that Americans, different from the Spanish will most likely respond with a hawkish anti-terror vote for President Bush if OBL leads another attack prior to the election. So he now presents a case for Sen. Kerry. His effaced video to the world carries a sublime air of victory over the Bush administration in plain defiance by only demonstrating that he is still alive against the war machinery of the U.S. It harkens back to the same narcissitically defiant pan-Arabism and fascism of Gemal Abdel Nasser, the tyrant of Egypt in the 1960s who after having his entire military handed to him in the Yom Kippur war of ’67 gave a speech to his brainwashed populace that “we have actually not lost the war since you still have me as your leader.” Bin-Laden’s resurfacing seems to imply the same thing. Additionally, Al-Qaida’s recruits are becoming much harder to find as freedom begins to ring in the Middle East. It should be clear to all that OBL is now begrudgingly stepping up the ideological battle, he long tried to deceptively dismiss. The longer he could hide the clash of ideologies, the longer he had to break the will of the American populace. For Americans will not walk away from a fight against an ideology that threatens freedom. Bin-Laden this week decided to come out of hiding, blow his cover and throw some last salvos. He has now gone beyond the simple America hating vitriol to a more detailed indictment of our form of government, making inferences to an “American monarchy”, attacking the Patriot Act, attacking President Bush’s response at the moments of 9/11, and comparing the Bush administration to repressive Arab regimes. In point of fact, now those in America who have ignored this fight, are going to have a much harder time doing so. OBL may be trying to frustrate the world with what he is trying to portray as the Bush administration’s apparent lack of success in eradicating Al-Qaida. He has, however, in the process now exposed his real motives. Most telling was his statement, “We fought you because we are free and because we want freedom for our nation. When you squander our security we squander your’s.” Bin-Laden could not help himself. In desperation and frustration, he has admitted to 9/11 and once and for all silenced all of the conspiracy theorists with pathological denial. He also just handed the world the answer to “Why do they hate us?” The question most bandied since 9/11. This war is not about terror. It is about freedom and liberty. It’s about Al-Qaida wanting us to leave Middle Eastern dictatorships and monarchies alone for them to continue their oppression over the Muslim people. To destroy Bin Laden and his networks, the Middle East, which created him, must be freed. As he whimpers in desperation he is quickly moving from his original anti-American war cry toward feebly trying to convince his warriors that their ticket to freedom is theocracy and not secular democracy. As he dishonestly uses the language of freedom, he actually reveals his real cause – disdain for freedom and democracy and desire for Islamist theocracy. In that battle we cannot waiver. We must answer with resolve in this war that the greatest antidote to his Islamist plague is the inoculating spread of secular freedom and liberty. A freedom that cherishes free expression of religion and human rights for all. This October surprise may backfire on bin-Laden. Now most voters will go to the polls asking themselves before they punch their chad, “which candidate better understands the enemy, the ideology we are fighting, and what exactly is at stake in this war?” “Who will have the resolve to see this war on militant Islamism to its end? Bin Laden attacked us and declared war on us long before President Bush’s policies had any impact. President Bush finally has Al Qaeda in desperation. Does anyone know what exactly a Kerry administration would do in this war? Can we afford to take that chance? This column can also be found at this link at the Arizona Republic

Muslims Must Lead the War on Terror: And rise up soon

Yesterday’s headlines rang with the not-so-profound revelation that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi had now declared his allegiance to Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida. The world heard about al-Zarqawi’s call for “unity against the enemies of Islam”. He reported communicating with bin Laden and joining the strategy of al-Qaida with that of his own fascist “Tawhid and Jihad.” The real question is who actually believes this to be a new revelation? This coverage yesterday appears to lend credence to the fact that much of the media establishment remained under gross denial of the obvious link between the Iraq war, al-Qaida, and Islamo-fascist terror. The denial cannot last much longer. It is only a matter of time. The terrorists will remain bent on explicitly proving their associations no matter how slow the world coverage is on the uptake. It is going to become increasingly difficult for contrarians to the Iraq war to revel in the denial of linkage as al-Zarqawi and his fellow thugs make their associations clear and their obsession with Operation Iraqi Freedom clear for all to note. The Islamo-fascists came to us on 9/11 on the heels of Clinton’s foreign policy. We have now taken the fight to them in Iraq and Iraq seems to be infested with them. As Dennis Prager noted last week, “what would Zarqawi be doing today if he weren’t in Iraq today?” He is the head of a snake that has long been waiting to poison America. Taking the war to him and al-Qaida to liberate Islam from the true enemies of Islam and freedom will prove in the future to be a prescient foreign policy approach. Similarly, today will most likely yield little verbal responses from international Muslim leaders about al-Zarqawi himself being the greatest enemy of Islam. Perhaps someday soon, whether by ‘fatwa’ or a more modern pronouncement of a call to action of the moderate faithful, Muslims worldwide will declare their own clear disgust and intentions to lead the war against al-Qaida, al-Zarqawi, and their ilk – the real enemies of Islam. For until they do, the nauseating religious pronouncements of crazed zealots like al-Zarqawi will continue to be tacitly accepted by the world media on face value without criticism. Without massive worldwide immediate Muslim response and calls of action to defeat al-Zarqawi, he and al-Qaida will continue in their hijacking of the faith. A few countries like Saudi Arabia and Pakistan are beginning to “get it.” In the setting of autocratic regimes in the absence of reform their motives will remain questionable, but time will reveal what role moderate Muslims will take in stepping up to the plate to defeat their own greatest enemy, the real enemies of Islam – Islamofascists. This column can also be found at this link at the Arizona Republic.