Posted on 04/05/2004 9:45:16 PM PDT by JohnHuang2
Witnessing the gruesome attacks on four Americans in Fallujah last week would thoroughly sicken any fellow Americanexcept for one very prominent American-Muslim organization, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).
In a statement issued shortly after the gory murders, CAIR said that it condemned the mutilation of those killed in Iraq on Wednesday. The slaughter of these men was not murder, though, it was merely a killing.
Nowhere in the statement, in fact, did CAIR condemn the murder of the four Americans.
Nowhere in the statement did CAIR condemn setting on fire the cars the men were driving.
Nowhere in the statement did CAIR condemn the parading of the charred bodies through the street or the hanging of one of the headless corpses hanging from a bridge over the Euphrates River as the locals stoned it.
This is no mere oversight or simple semantic slip. In the press releases second paragraph, CAIR explains, The mutilations violated both Islamic and international norms of conduct during times of war.
What war? The war ended long ago, even long before Saddams beard was examined for lice and other living creatures. What has been going on since can only be described as terrorism, not war.
But CAIR clearly sees this as a war between legitimate foes, going so far as to call on all parties to the conflict to respect the sanctity of the dead and the sensitivities of their families. The only parties, though, are the American-led coalition forces attempting to build a democracy and the terrorists trying to prevent it.
So why is CAIR calling on all parties as if there were a war between two legitimate sides? Probably because CAIR doesnt view terrorists as terrorists.
This means that an American Muslim organization has incredibly taken the same stance as much-publicized Fallujah cleric Sheikh Khalid Ahmed, who condemned only the mutilations as contrary to IslamCAIRs reasoning as wellbut not the murders.
And this isnt the only time CAIR has refused to condemn terrorism.
CAIRs spokesman was given the opportunity to condemn Hamas and Islamic Jihad by the Washington Post in November 2001. His response was telling: Its not our job to go around denouncing. Asked a similar question about Hamas and Hezbollah by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in February 2002, CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper called such inquiries a game and explained, Were not in the business of condemning.
But when Israel is to blame, CAIR seems to be very much in the business of condemning.
After Israel recently killed the founder of Hamasa man responsible for the deaths of 52 mostly young Palestinian suicide bombers and 377 mostly civilian IsraelisCAIR saw fit to condemn the Jewish state without a moments pause. In its press release, CAIR said it condemned the assassination of a wheelchair-bound Palestinian Muslim religious leader, calling it an act of state terrorism.
CAIR couldnt bring itself to call the founder of one of the bloodiest terrorist organizations on earth even a militant, let alone a terrorist. To them, a man with the blood of over 400 people on his hands was a handicapped religious leader. Seems awfully instructive about the kind of Islam they must follow if they label terrorist masterminds religious leaders.
All of this could be happily ignored if CAIR was some fringe organization, but it is not. The group represents Muslims in the media and to the government and touts itself in its press releases as America's largest Islamic civil liberties group with 25 regional offices and chapters nationwide and in Canada.
Read a news story on American Muslims or on Islamic terrorism or flip on a cable news channel, and there is CAIR, being held up as the representative of American Muslims.
But what kind of American Muslim would want to be represented by a group that refuses to condemn the brutal murder of four Americans or any number of different terrorist organizations?
Lets hope not many.
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