Blaming the United States, Israel, or Capitalism Is Not the Solution

The majority of participants (Cohen, Esposito, Fuller, and Khan) shared the concern that militant and violent adherents of radical political Islam – “jihadis,” for lack of a better term – may not only radicalize the West’s attitude toward western Muslims, but, more importantly, toward Islam as a wh...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Ariel Cohen
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: International Institute of Islamic Thought 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/0feb32926ecf4c25a3073857136f4d87
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:0feb32926ecf4c25a3073857136f4d87
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:0feb32926ecf4c25a3073857136f4d872021-12-02T17:49:42ZBlaming the United States, Israel, or Capitalism Is Not the Solution2690-37332690-3741https://doaj.org/article/0feb32926ecf4c25a3073857136f4d872005-07-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/3012https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3733https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3741 The majority of participants (Cohen, Esposito, Fuller, and Khan) shared the concern that militant and violent adherents of radical political Islam – “jihadis,” for lack of a better term – may not only radicalize the West’s attitude toward western Muslims, but, more importantly, toward Islam as a whole. Indeed, the continuation of terrorism against western interests will likely result in either an American or a combined western future response – both political and military. The result of either action may be greater involvement by the United States in the greater Middle East, although, ironically, one needs to remember that it is the radicals who would, in fact, prefer that this country pull out of the region. Terrorism is also the cause of what some authors refer to as “Islamophobia,” a phenomenon that remains quite rare despite the events of 9/11. Though 2004 saw a greater number of anti-Jewish incidents reported in the United States than anti-Islamic incidents, one could assume that the jihadis would prefer to see anti-Muslim incidents carried out by Americans to increase. One reason for this could be that aberrant American actions, especially if they are blown out of proportion by media in the United States and abroad, will radicalize Muslims and cause the jihadis’ ranks to swell. Additionally, Cohen, Esposito, Fuller, and Khan also agreed upon the necessity for a broader interpretation of the meaning of ijtihad as a tool of modernization for the Muslim world. However, one of the other participants, Jan, formulated a traditionalist/fundamentalist position regarding ijtihad, viewing it as a tool that only the ulama can wield. He believes that mass and elite indoctrination along the lines of traditional orthodox Islam will bring about the establishment of a pan-Islamic state along the lines of a khilafah. Most of other participants disagreed with such a prognosis. Unfortunately, Esposito, Fuller, and Jan launched quite vitriolic and misplaced attacks against the supporters of Israel. They refer to them by different names: “pro-Likud Lobbies,” “extremists,” or supporters of the “Zionist state.” The topic of Arab-Israeli relations has little to do with the questions at hand: moderate Islam vs. radical Islam, and the future of political Islam. If Israel never existed, the extremists would identify other issues to fight about. Israel-bashers, fall prey – or are, indeed, intentional mouthpieces for – a conspiracy theory of the worst kind: an ideological canard, that the United States, or even the world, is run by the Jews. These modern simulacra certainly resemble something out of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a Czarist secret service (Okhrana) piece of anti-Semitic disinformation, or the vitriolic rhetoric of Der Sturmer, the Nazi propaganda weekly rag. Take Jan’s 2003 discussion of Husain Haqqani’s article in The Nation: … there are well-studded gems for pleasing [the] master of our destiny, the Zionists in the U.S… Realising Zionist power, the chief opportunist, General Musharraf, took the lead through covert promises of recognising Israel during his visit to the U.S.[2] The intellectual mercenaries are now trying to catch up with some confused mixture of rejecting Musharraf and accepting Israel ... Ariel CohenInternational Institute of Islamic ThoughtarticleIslamBP1-253ENAmerican Journal of Islam and Society, Vol 22, Iss 3 (2005)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Islam
BP1-253
spellingShingle Islam
BP1-253
Ariel Cohen
Blaming the United States, Israel, or Capitalism Is Not the Solution
description The majority of participants (Cohen, Esposito, Fuller, and Khan) shared the concern that militant and violent adherents of radical political Islam – “jihadis,” for lack of a better term – may not only radicalize the West’s attitude toward western Muslims, but, more importantly, toward Islam as a whole. Indeed, the continuation of terrorism against western interests will likely result in either an American or a combined western future response – both political and military. The result of either action may be greater involvement by the United States in the greater Middle East, although, ironically, one needs to remember that it is the radicals who would, in fact, prefer that this country pull out of the region. Terrorism is also the cause of what some authors refer to as “Islamophobia,” a phenomenon that remains quite rare despite the events of 9/11. Though 2004 saw a greater number of anti-Jewish incidents reported in the United States than anti-Islamic incidents, one could assume that the jihadis would prefer to see anti-Muslim incidents carried out by Americans to increase. One reason for this could be that aberrant American actions, especially if they are blown out of proportion by media in the United States and abroad, will radicalize Muslims and cause the jihadis’ ranks to swell. Additionally, Cohen, Esposito, Fuller, and Khan also agreed upon the necessity for a broader interpretation of the meaning of ijtihad as a tool of modernization for the Muslim world. However, one of the other participants, Jan, formulated a traditionalist/fundamentalist position regarding ijtihad, viewing it as a tool that only the ulama can wield. He believes that mass and elite indoctrination along the lines of traditional orthodox Islam will bring about the establishment of a pan-Islamic state along the lines of a khilafah. Most of other participants disagreed with such a prognosis. Unfortunately, Esposito, Fuller, and Jan launched quite vitriolic and misplaced attacks against the supporters of Israel. They refer to them by different names: “pro-Likud Lobbies,” “extremists,” or supporters of the “Zionist state.” The topic of Arab-Israeli relations has little to do with the questions at hand: moderate Islam vs. radical Islam, and the future of political Islam. If Israel never existed, the extremists would identify other issues to fight about. Israel-bashers, fall prey – or are, indeed, intentional mouthpieces for – a conspiracy theory of the worst kind: an ideological canard, that the United States, or even the world, is run by the Jews. These modern simulacra certainly resemble something out of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a Czarist secret service (Okhrana) piece of anti-Semitic disinformation, or the vitriolic rhetoric of Der Sturmer, the Nazi propaganda weekly rag. Take Jan’s 2003 discussion of Husain Haqqani’s article in The Nation: … there are well-studded gems for pleasing [the] master of our destiny, the Zionists in the U.S… Realising Zionist power, the chief opportunist, General Musharraf, took the lead through covert promises of recognising Israel during his visit to the U.S.[2] The intellectual mercenaries are now trying to catch up with some confused mixture of rejecting Musharraf and accepting Israel ...
format article
author Ariel Cohen
author_facet Ariel Cohen
author_sort Ariel Cohen
title Blaming the United States, Israel, or Capitalism Is Not the Solution
title_short Blaming the United States, Israel, or Capitalism Is Not the Solution
title_full Blaming the United States, Israel, or Capitalism Is Not the Solution
title_fullStr Blaming the United States, Israel, or Capitalism Is Not the Solution
title_full_unstemmed Blaming the United States, Israel, or Capitalism Is Not the Solution
title_sort blaming the united states, israel, or capitalism is not the solution
publisher International Institute of Islamic Thought
publishDate 2005
url https://doaj.org/article/0feb32926ecf4c25a3073857136f4d87
work_keys_str_mv AT arielcohen blamingtheunitedstatesisraelorcapitalismisnotthesolution
_version_ 1718379331254747136