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No Surrender (The British government is in denial about the dangers of Islam)
Daily Mail ^ | July 11, 2005 | Melanie Phillips

Posted on 07/11/2005 4:59:14 AM PDT by ToveL

Sixty years on, Britain has commemorated the end of World War Two and the sacrifices made to achieve victory over fascism. The ceremonials took place yesterday in the long shadow of last Thursday’s atrocities in London — the terrible manifestation of a very different kind of threat.

We now face an enemy which has no country, no uniform and no visible shape but is instead a loose and shifting affiliation of groups across the world, bound only by their unifying cause.

The problem is that, unlike sixty years ago, our leaders shy away from giving this menace its proper name. They call it ‘terrorism’. But in fact it is nothing less than a world war being waged in the name of religion — with terror its weapon of attack — whose aim is to emasculate the power and reach of western culture and replace it by the hegemony of Islam.

The foot-soldiers of this religious army have camouflaged themselves among the citizens of the world. The result in Britain, according to leaked government documents, is that up to an estimated 16,000 British Muslims are said to be sympathetic to terrorism and and, according to fomer Metropolitan Police Commissioner Lord Stevens, up to 3000 British born or British based people have passed through al Qaeda training camps over the years.

Of course, the vast majority of Muslims are undoubtedly decent, law-abiding, peaceful citizens. But since only one bomber needs to get lucky in order to cause death and destruction, these statistics are clearly absolutely horrifying.

In the face of this threat, however, our Prime Minister is muddled. He said last weekend that the root causes of terrorism were the perversion of Islam and extremism, fanaticism and acute forms of poverty in one continent which could spread their poison throughout the world.

He was right about the extremism and fanaticism, but wrong about the rest. Poverty is not the issue. Many Islamic terrorists are wealthy; most poor peoples do not resort to terror. The root cause of this threat is a religion whose dominant traditions have, over the past twelve centuries, preached or practised at various times of intensity holy war against the infidel.

Most British Muslims are appalled by these attacks. Indeed, they themselves are at equal risk of becoming victims of such indiscriminate terror. And many of them clearly wish to reconcile the undoubtedly peaceful elements of their faith with the tenets of western society.

But at same time they and others — from the Prime Minister downwards — are in denial when they say that because Islam is a religion of peace, by implication those who commit such acts are not true Muslims. On the contrary, this war against the west is not only being fought in the name of Islam but its aims, if not all its tactics, have been condoned by countless Islamic states and religious authorities and supported by millions of Muslims across the world.

Our leaders are too frightened to say this for fear of upsetting the Muslim community. So on the basis of a deeply flawed analysis, the government has produced a hopelessly misguided strategy.

This is to give British Muslims widespread concessions in the hope that this will dampen down the rage of the most extreme. According to the Home Office Permanent Secretary Sir John Gieve, the roots of Muslim extremism in Britain lie in ‘discrimination, disadvantage and exclusion.’ The remedy, therefore, is to reduce discrimination and promote integration. Hence, for example, ministers’ support for the law against incitement to religious hatred, or the introduction of sharia-compliant mortgages and suggestions by the Inland Revenue that polygamy should be recognised for the purposes of inheritance tax.

But Muslim extremism is not caused by lack of integration; the lack of integration is caused by the fact that Muslims are being inflamed against the west by radical preachers. A small minority of young Muslims are vulnerable to this process because, adrift between the profoundly opposing cultures of Islam and the western free-for-all, they are easy prey for the ostensibly righteous and idealistic message that they must fight the decadence and corruption of the west.

Some people think that the war in Iraq, where al Qaeda has regrouped after it was smashed in Afghanistan, has greatly inflamed Islamic terrorism and resulted in its export to Britain.

The first and most obvious answer to this is that 9/11 preceded the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq; indeed, America had been attacked by al Qaeda for a decade even before the Twin Towers were hit.

Iraq is indeed central, but for a different reason. Al Qaeda desperately wants the coalition troops to withdraw from Iraq, where the stakes for terror across the Middle East are so enormous, and has decided that the best way to achieve this is to put pressure on the public. Hence the bombings of Madrid and now London, whose aim was to destroy the alliance with America.

Those arguing that the Iraq war has put the coalition countries in danger are therefore doing the bombers’ dirty propaganda work for them. The Spanish fell for it. But even though they withdrew their troops, this did not stop al Qaeda from subsequently trying twice more to bomb the Spanish people — thus proving that for al Qaeda, the Iraq war is merely a side issue.

This is demonstrated time and again by its terror attacks across the world from Indonesia to the Caucasus, including in countries which were opposed to the Iraq war — while in Britain, as in Germany and elsewhere, planned attacks were being tracked and foiled even before 9/11.

Nevertheless, despite this evidence of unprovoked attacks on country after country, radical imams teach that the very existence of western influence is an act of aggression. Any action against the west is therefore said to be a legitimate defence of religious principles — and so any actual defence by the west against Islamic terror is presented instead as a further act of war to be avenged.

This lethal double-think means that the defence against terror has indeed inadvertently acted as a recruiting sergeant for that terror. But this is the terrible dilemma that terrorism poses. If its victims try to defend themselves by taking action against the terrorists (and Saddam was a godfather of terror) this feeds their warped victimology and recruits more to their cause. But to take the path of least resistance instead of fighting back is to signal a defeatism which spurs the terrorists on to their perceived and inevitable victory.

In other words, the choice is this: we take actions which may increase the immediate problem or, in the long term, we suffer total defeat.

Given such a choice, the only morally viable position is to fight terror with all the means at our disposal. There is no doubt that chronic American mistakes in failing adequately to respond to the nature and scale of the battle in Iraq have exacerbated the problem of Muslims flocking to the cause.

But to say that the fight against religious fascism should not be fought because it turns those who are fighting it into a target is a bit like complaining that the only reason London endured the Blitz was because Britain had declared war on Germany.

Now as then, appeasing aggression means cultural suicide. We are in for the long haul -- but we must no longer flinch from the truth, and from the means we must use to defeat the horror that we all face.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Israel; News/Current Events
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To: NoClones

"'Our leaders are too frightened to say this for fear of upsetting the Muslim community...'
Ain't that the truth!"

I think that it is not that they are afraid of simply upsetting the muslim commmunity, they are afraid of what the muslim community will do: commit more acts of murder. So what we have here is that we can't call a murderer a murderer for fear that they will commit more murders. It's a very perverse foreign policy AND domestic policy. In the end, I'm afraid US citizens will be left to fend for themselves while putting themselves in danger of arrest for doing a job that the government fails to do.


21 posted on 07/11/2005 10:24:19 AM PDT by ArmedNReady (Demand That Your Congressmen Declare islam a Terrorist Organization)
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To: ArmedNReady
England's gun registration laws will bite them in the a$$. Their citizenry is underarmed. There are an awful lot of Islamists over there. The price of excessive governmental power will be a lot of civilian blood in the streets, however; the Brits will eventually handle the situation
22 posted on 07/11/2005 10:34:20 AM PDT by conservativewasp (Liberals lie for sport and hate their country.)
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To: Gritty

I'm not a regular Hal Lindsay watcher but I like him. Last week he called it "The supernatural nature of their hate," or something close to that.


23 posted on 07/11/2005 11:29:56 AM PDT by johnb838 (A chill wind.)
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To: crazycat

Like the Jews and the Bolsheviks.


24 posted on 07/11/2005 11:30:44 AM PDT by johnb838 (A chill wind.)
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To: Mind-numbed Robot
Although they are the minority, the Asses (Democrats) attempt to control through threats and intimidation in Congress .

Back in the days of the Revolution in Russia, the Bolsheviks were in the clear minority. Bolshevik means Majority Party. They called themselves that to create the impression they were stronger than they were. Propaganda. Don't underestimate the lies the leftist leninists will propagate. Propagate-Propaganda. I bet that's where that word comes from.

25 posted on 07/11/2005 11:33:12 AM PDT by johnb838 (A chill wind.)
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To: Celtman

Oh, come'on. Blair deserves more credit than that. For a socialist he's been remarkably strong on this. He went to war in Iraq when the polls were 70-80% against him. He stood with Bush when no one else in the world would. We owe him our thanks. He has to talk the double talk now. I think the day of reckoning will come. And we need to be equally as strong of an ally.

If this came out of Iran, Katie bar the door. Unless they cover it up that it came from Iran because there's nothing we can do about it.

Frankly, I'm still waiting for the other shoe to drop.


26 posted on 07/11/2005 11:37:11 AM PDT by johnb838 (A chill wind.)
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To: johnb838
...the Bolsheviks were in the clear minority. Bolshevik means Majority Party.

An apt comparison as the Asses are direct decendents of the Bolsheviks.

27 posted on 07/11/2005 11:51:38 AM PDT by Mind-numbed Robot (Not all that needs to be done needs to be done by the government.)
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To: ArmedNReady
So what we have here is that we can't call a murderer a murderer for fear that they will commit more murders.

On my better days I think this is also why more muzzies don't speak out against the madness.

28 posted on 07/11/2005 1:15:16 PM PDT by johnb838 (A chill wind.)
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To: Mind-numbed Robot

People think that is hyperbole but it is not.


29 posted on 07/11/2005 1:16:13 PM PDT by johnb838 (A chill wind.)
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To: johnb838
People think that is hyperbole but it is not

Keep on preaching. We need all the voices we can get!

30 posted on 07/11/2005 4:32:10 PM PDT by Mind-numbed Robot (Not all that needs to be done needs to be done by the government.)
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To: ToveL

It didn't take the Left long to blame Blair for the London bombings, then GW and America. Nowhere do they blame Islamofascist monsters who set those bombs off and killed innocents. Talk about stupid.


31 posted on 07/11/2005 4:40:05 PM PDT by hershey
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To: Brilliant

You'd think some brave soul in the House of Commons would get up on his hind legs and read this piece aloud and then demand that the govt. get serious about defending Britain and its people.


32 posted on 07/11/2005 4:41:55 PM PDT by hershey
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To: ToveL

"5. They blow up people travelling on trains - civilians.

6. They target people on buses - civilians.

7. They take civilian hostages. "

Their are no "civilians."


http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1441015/posts



33 posted on 07/12/2005 1:57:27 PM PDT by dervish (freedom is a long distance race)
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