The Islamist Charm Offensive

April 16, 2007, 1:34 pm
  





By Douglas Farah*

The Islamist front is clearly on a widespread charm offensive. The results are impressive. We have the Foreign Affairs piece, op-eds in both the Boston Globe and Wall Street Journal, the friendly forum for 4.5 hours of undisputed discourse from Tariq Ramadan at Georgetown University and the upcoming “What Does it Mean to Be Muslim in America” forum again at Georgetown. The last includes the president of ISNA, which comes out of the groups affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood in the United States.

Brigade Quartermasters, Ltd.

Given the scope and success of this push for a new acceptance of Islamists as politically representative of Islam writ large, and the efforts to reframe the debate in this country away from Islamists believe toward what they are willing to say in public, it is an important move.

The debate is now to be framed over whether Islam is compatible with democracy and how “moderate” groups like the Brotherhood are, despite their continued support of jihad and an Islamic world government. (For a good look at the fallacies of this argument, see today’s Frontpage piece by Patrick Poole.)

It is interesting that Georgetown University chose to allow Europe’s leading Islamist, Tariq Ramadan, a friendly forum from which to espouse his views, virtually uncontested. Ramadan has been banned from the United States and Europe for his defense of the Islamist agenda and long-standing associations with violent Islamist jihadists.

I do not believe talking to Ramadan and those like him is necessarily a bad thing. But allowing him to set the definitions, the parameters of the debate and underlying assumptions is wrong. My full blog is here.

*Counterterrorism Blog
April 16, 2007
http://counterterrorismblog.org/2007/04/
the_islamist_cham_offensive.php

Cross-posted with permission




Related: United States, Islam, War Against Islamo-fascism, Academia


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