- Reaction score
- 6,243
- Points
- 1,260
I hesitate to (re)join this debate, but ...
We have talked 'round and 'round the war on terror vs insurgency vs clash of civilizations and cult of death issues but I feel a need to restate (maybe refine) my views that:
"¢ We are not "at war with Islam";
"¢ We are not (or, at least ought not to be) at "war against terror" if for not other reasons than that it is impossible to win and we might want to resort to it in the future, as we have in the past;
"¢ We are witnessing a clash of values within one of Sam Huntington's civilizations even as we are involved in a Clash of Civilizations between most of the secular, liberal-democratic West and part of Arabic Islam - the part which is both: Arabic extremist - in its desire to return to medieval Arabic social structures, and fundamentalist Islamic - to the degree that some versions of Islam are rooted in those same medieval Arabic social structures;
"¢ Arabic Islam, certainly, and maybe all of Islam needs a reformation as a (necessary, in my view) precursor to an Arabic enlightenment*; and
"¢ Enlightenments tend to be slow, stately, scholarly affairs which flow out of the bitter lessons of rather bloody reformations. Both are the work of generations.
It seems to me that we, the secular, liberal-democratic West, ought to be doing all we can, openly and covertly, too, to promote the reformation. We have, in other words, a vested interest in helping the Osama bin Ladens to destabilize moderate Arab regimes and we have an equally vested interest in helping those (generally friendly) regimes to fight against the fundamentalist terrorists - the jihadis. We don't want bin Laden to acquire any more countries but we do want him to turn his attention away from us and towards our 'friends' like Saudi Arabia, Syria, Egypt and even Jordan and the Emirates. We want the Arab foundamentalists to believe they are strong enough and popular enough to accomplish one of their primary aims: their reform of Islam. We want them to act, to strike, then we can support our 'moderate' friends - just enough to fight off the extremists. Such little wars might be enough to stir reformation (and counter-reformation) ideas amongst the people and provoke the sort of internecine, generation long Arabic wars which I believe are necessary to settle issue and to set the stage for an enlightenment which, I believe, again, is what we really need to defeat the Arab foundamentalists who are at the centre of the enemy movements arrayed against us.
In other words, I don't think it matters, much, what happens in Iraq so long as Iraq becomes a base from which one or the other group (secular 'moderates' or Islamic fundamentalists) can attack the others in neighbouring countries.
There are some risks, including.
"¢ A complete regional conflagration could do real, serious economic harm to us (North America and/or the Anglosphere) by sending both Japan and Europe into a 'no oil' depression; and
"¢ The Arab foundamentalists might win - the people in the region (who are mostly Arabs, after all) may decide that their reformation is to go back to medieval social and cultural values.
Another 2 ¢ for the pot.
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* I do not believe that Asian Islam (Malaysia and Indonesia, for example) need much of a reformation or any special kind of enlightenment, except to defeat the Arabists who are trying to impose what Canadian public intellectual/author (or lesbian chic gadfly, if you prefer) Irshad Manji calls Arab foundamentalism - that view that Islam is only 'true' when it is practiced in Arabic and when believers adhere to the medieval Arab social mores.
We have talked 'round and 'round the war on terror vs insurgency vs clash of civilizations and cult of death issues but I feel a need to restate (maybe refine) my views that:
"¢ We are not "at war with Islam";
"¢ We are not (or, at least ought not to be) at "war against terror" if for not other reasons than that it is impossible to win and we might want to resort to it in the future, as we have in the past;
"¢ We are witnessing a clash of values within one of Sam Huntington's civilizations even as we are involved in a Clash of Civilizations between most of the secular, liberal-democratic West and part of Arabic Islam - the part which is both: Arabic extremist - in its desire to return to medieval Arabic social structures, and fundamentalist Islamic - to the degree that some versions of Islam are rooted in those same medieval Arabic social structures;
"¢ Arabic Islam, certainly, and maybe all of Islam needs a reformation as a (necessary, in my view) precursor to an Arabic enlightenment*; and
"¢ Enlightenments tend to be slow, stately, scholarly affairs which flow out of the bitter lessons of rather bloody reformations. Both are the work of generations.
It seems to me that we, the secular, liberal-democratic West, ought to be doing all we can, openly and covertly, too, to promote the reformation. We have, in other words, a vested interest in helping the Osama bin Ladens to destabilize moderate Arab regimes and we have an equally vested interest in helping those (generally friendly) regimes to fight against the fundamentalist terrorists - the jihadis. We don't want bin Laden to acquire any more countries but we do want him to turn his attention away from us and towards our 'friends' like Saudi Arabia, Syria, Egypt and even Jordan and the Emirates. We want the Arab foundamentalists to believe they are strong enough and popular enough to accomplish one of their primary aims: their reform of Islam. We want them to act, to strike, then we can support our 'moderate' friends - just enough to fight off the extremists. Such little wars might be enough to stir reformation (and counter-reformation) ideas amongst the people and provoke the sort of internecine, generation long Arabic wars which I believe are necessary to settle issue and to set the stage for an enlightenment which, I believe, again, is what we really need to defeat the Arab foundamentalists who are at the centre of the enemy movements arrayed against us.
In other words, I don't think it matters, much, what happens in Iraq so long as Iraq becomes a base from which one or the other group (secular 'moderates' or Islamic fundamentalists) can attack the others in neighbouring countries.
There are some risks, including.
"¢ A complete regional conflagration could do real, serious economic harm to us (North America and/or the Anglosphere) by sending both Japan and Europe into a 'no oil' depression; and
"¢ The Arab foundamentalists might win - the people in the region (who are mostly Arabs, after all) may decide that their reformation is to go back to medieval social and cultural values.
Another 2 ¢ for the pot.
----------
* I do not believe that Asian Islam (Malaysia and Indonesia, for example) need much of a reformation or any special kind of enlightenment, except to defeat the Arabists who are trying to impose what Canadian public intellectual/author (or lesbian chic gadfly, if you prefer) Irshad Manji calls Arab foundamentalism - that view that Islam is only 'true' when it is practiced in Arabic and when believers adhere to the medieval Arab social mores.