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It Didn’t Start With bin Laden
family.org ^ | 2001 | Chris Jeub

Posted on 07/25/2005 12:15:26 AM PDT by abu afak

Religiously motivated terrorism against America isn't new — in fact, it dates back hundreds of years.

By Chris Jeub

It may seem like the terrorist war against the United States is only a few weeks old, but radical Muslims’ hatred of our nation dates back centuries. In fact, it’s not the first time America has faced adversaries who were individual renegades instead of allied nations.

President Thomas Jefferson, for instance, faced threats from Islamic pirates who lived along Africa’s northern coast and daily terrorized European ships. When America won its independence, it too became a target for pirates — and Jefferson found himself forced into war.

But war against whom? Unknown pirates? African nations like Tripoli, Tunisia, Morocco and Algiers, which harbored the marauders but did not consider them citizens? Jefferson’s challenge resembles President Bush’s modern-day dilemma. Like today’s terrorists, the 19th-century pirates also were Muslims with an animosity toward Christians dating back to the Crusades.

The Muslim faith took root in northwestern Africa in the seventh century, and for generations the region served as a base for piracy — the looting and confiscation of ships as well as the murder of crew members. In the 19th century, European and American ships sailing around northern Africa paid tolls to the pirates for safe passage. This reign of terror went largely unchallenged until America took the lead — without the initial support of Europe.

War on Christianity

According to David Barton of WallBuilders, a Christian-heritage ministry in Aledo, Texas, the Barbary pirate raids stemmed more from prejudice against Christianity than from economic gain. “The numerous documents surrounding the Barbary Powers Conflict confirm that historically it always was viewed as a conflict between Christian America and Muslim nations,” Barton wrote in his 1996 book Original Intent: The Courts, the Constitution & Religion.

U.S. Capt. William Eaton, in a letter to the secretary of state in 1805, explained why the Muslims were such dedicated foes:

Taught by revelation that war with the Christians will guarantee the salvation of their souls, and finding so great secular advantages in the observance of this religious duty [the secular advantage of keeping captured cargoes], their inducements to desperate fighting are very powerful.

Indeed, the countries whose ships were attacked — England, France, Spain, Denmark and the United States — all were predominately Christian. Nonetheless, Barton said, the 1797 Treaty of Tripoli declared the United States’ religious neutrality, “in an attempt to prevent further escalation of a ‘Holy War’ between Christians and Muslims.” Article XI of the treaty states that “the government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion . . . it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion or tranquility of [Muslims].”

But the 1797 treaty failed, as did others. The Muslims, motivated by religious fervor, continued their attacks.

In 1815, the U.S. government sent a war hero, Stephen Decatur, to negotiate a more forceful treaty. Decatur had demonstrated his ability to thwart Barbary pirates a dozen years earlier; In 1804, on Jefferson’s orders, he led 74 volunteers into the Tripoli harbor and burned the captured American frigate Philadelphia. British Adm. Lord Nelson called the raid “the most daring act of the age.”

In the War of 1812, Decatur, the youngest captain in U.S. Navy history, defeated the British frigate Macedonian and brought the enemy vessel safely to the United States. It was the only captured British ship to be refitted and commissioned in the American Navy during that war.

Perhaps it was his reputation for victory that persuaded Algiers, Tunis and Tripoli to agree to Decatur’s terms and put an end to piracy. Perhaps it was his charm. John Quincy Adams described Decatur as “kind, warm-hearted, unassuming, gentle and hospitable, beloved in social life and with a soul totally and utterly devoted to his country.” Or maybe it was America’s naval power that outmatched Tripoli’s.

Whatever the cure, then, we can only pray that today’s war will rid the world of terrorism as America rid the world of piracy 200 years ago.


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Israel; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: barbarypirates; binladen; cary; globaljihad; islam; islamofacist; muslim; origins; terrorism
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To: TheOtherOne

abu: "It may seem like the terrorist war against the United States is only a few weeks old,"

The otherOne: """I just don't get this sentence. Who thinks terrorism against the US is only weeks old?""""

Check the article date.

It was written in 2001 .. just after 9/11
thus the "few weeks"


41 posted on 07/25/2005 11:51:34 AM PDT by abu afak (abuafak@yahoo.ie)
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To: abu afak
Article XI of the treaty states that “the government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion . . . it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion or tranquility of [Muslims].”

This line, as I understand it was an unauthorized addition by one of the diplomats tangentially involved in the negotiation of the treaty. He might have been merely the scribe.

In any event, it's remarkable that no on caught the embarrassing addition to all the copies of the treaty for decades!

42 posted on 07/25/2005 12:27:18 PM PDT by Publius6961 (Liberal level playing field: If the Islamics win we are their slaves..if we win they are our equals.)
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To: abu afak

It goes back even further. The Greeks were Moslem slaves for hundreds of years. Western Civilization owes its life to the Orthodox peoples who staved off the Moslem horde the best they could.


43 posted on 07/25/2005 12:39:19 PM PDT by Sam Gamgee
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To: abu afak
I have been saying this all along. We were studying pirates around the time of 9/11. By coincidence I got a video on the Barbary Pirates and wouldn't be surprised if that was part of it. Talk about carrying a grudge!
The other day my husband said he remembered a story about a guy who gathered 1000 of these types abd shot them with bullets covered in pig blood. We didn't have a problem for a century.
44 posted on 07/25/2005 12:43:05 PM PDT by HungarianGypsy
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To: EdReform; abu afak; SJackson; yonif; Happy2BMe; Simcha7; American in Israel; Taiwan Bocks; ...
This is interesting.



AMERICA AT WAR
At Salem the Soldier's Homepage ~
Islam, a Religion of Peace®? Some links...  by backhoe

American Flag  British Flag

45 posted on 07/25/2005 5:37:29 PM PDT by Salem (FREE REPUBLIC - Fighting to win within the Arena of the War of Ideas! So get in the fight!)
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To: abu afak
God, please bless this man. He is one of the good ones.

Becki

46 posted on 07/25/2005 5:46:00 PM PDT by Becki (The first point and click device was a Smith and Wesson.)
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To: Becki
Wrong thread.

Never mind.

[blushing and slinking over to right thread]

Becki

47 posted on 07/25/2005 5:51:26 PM PDT by Becki (The first point and click device was a Smith and Wesson.)
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To: Salem

Very interesting thanks for the ping!


48 posted on 07/25/2005 7:52:28 PM PDT by since1868
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To: abu afak

Indeed, those who do not study History are doomed to repeat it. Islam has a long history of being the Religon of Piracy and the Peace of the graveyard.


49 posted on 07/25/2005 11:57:05 PM PDT by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: lightingguy

ping


50 posted on 07/26/2005 10:35:51 AM PDT by agrace (Where were you when I founded the earth? Tell me if you know so much. Job 38:4)
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