I find it
difficult to believe that more than a billion Muslims approve of the constant
attacks in the name of Islam that kill Christians, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists,
and, yes, Muslims. The attack in a popular Nairobi shopping mall is just one
example, but we have grown so accustomed to reports of bombings in Iraq,
Pakistan, and other nations that we barely take notice of them.
This may
seem totally counter-intuitive at a time when militant Islam is bathing in the
blood of its victims, but your grandchildren may watch as Muslims around the
world retreat from current efforts to impose governments based on the Koran,
preferring to separate church and state. Many will decide to embrace another
religion.
It’s not
widely discussed, but we could be watching the violent death throes of a
religion in decline.
Indeed, it
may be even sooner according to a friend who is a longtime observer of Islam
and author of several books. “Maybe in the coming 20
years we will see Islam diminished to such an extent that it will become
irrelevant. The events happening in the Middle East only will make
Muslims realize Islam is a failed paradigm. Many of them are already coming to
realize the root cause of their suffering is Islam.”
The
protests that overthrew the dictators of Tunisia, Libya, and Egypt were an
expression of people who had grown tired of the oppression their governments
imposed. The 1979 revolution in Iran was not based in Islam, but rather a
resistance against the Shah who had ruled with an iron fist. All manner of
secular and sectarian groups joined together in that revolution, but the
radical Islamists took over, as often as not killing and imprisoning those who
had aided in the overthrow. In 2009, Iranians in Tehran protested the regime
and were ruthlessly resisted by the ayatollahs.
The civil
war in Syria is not Islamic, but rather resistance to the two-generation
dictatorship of the Assad’s, father and son, and the Alawite minority they
represent. It began as a protest by farmers who had lost their farms and whose
economic condition had worsened in recent years. To put it down, Bashar
al-Assad has employed every brutal means he could. Syria had been a nation
where various religions had lived side by side with no conflict. The civil war
changed that as al Qaeda sensed an opportunity to seize territory.
The
Egyptian revolt against Hosni Mubarak, the longtime dictator and ally of the
U.S., was an example of the growing demand of ordinary Muslims to have a
government that focuses on improving the economy, providing justice, and the
kind of freedoms they know Americans and others in the West enjoy. When the
Muslim Brotherhood won the first election after his overthrow, it took barely a
year for the protesters to fill the streets and demand that Mohammed Morsi be
deposed by the military.
In Egypt,
the army and what passes for a transitional government has cracked down hard on
the Muslim Brotherhood and those clerics whom are regarded as a threat. It has
outlawed the Muslim Brotherhood and the interim government recently stripped
tens of thousands of imams—Muslim clerics—of their license to preach. It only
took ten weeks for this to occur. As reported, the government “has moved
aggressively to rein in the Islamist sensibilities that allowed Mohammed Morsi
to win the country’s first free and fair presidential elections more than a
year ago.”
So we have
not witnessed the rise of Islam in these nations, but rather the simmering desire
for real freedom. In Turkey, where a secular government has existed since the
end of World War I when the Ottoman Empire ceased, its current president, a
rabid Islamist, could meet a similar end as Morsi as popular discontent with
his government is on the rise.
Reza Azlan, an Adjunct Senior Fellow of the Council on Foreign Relations, commenting
on political Islam in the Middle East, said “I think what these Islamists are
starting to learn, across the region, is that you can’t maintain your
incorruptible image while also having political power.”
The Muslim
Brotherhood, the oldest of the Islamist political organizations, ran into a
buzz-saw of resistance in Egypt from ordinary Muslims who, while valuing the
role Islam plays in their lives, do not want to live under the harsh dictates
of Sharia law. They want it to be separate from the governance of their
nations.
As Azlan
says, “Success means moderation, failure means irrelevance” noting that “the
more these Islamists gain political power, the more fractured they become” and
it is fracturing along generational lives with a younger, more connected generation
want their nations to be governed in a more democratic fashion as they have
seen in the West. Azlan says “it’s the rule of law that will define it.” The
medium age in many Middle Eastern nations is around 19 and 20.
What is
simultaneously occurring is a struggle for power between the Sunnis and Shiites
in the region where the Sunnis are the majority. Iran and Iraq are Shiite, as
is Hezbollah and Hamas. The rest are ruled by Sunnis. Iran is seeking to
establish “a Shiite crescent” and is being resisted by Saudi Arabia and other
Gulf States, all allied with the U.S. in some fashion.
The U.S.
attempted to intervene following 9/11 (and previously) but this has only led to
inconclusive military operations. Under both Bush administrations, the outcome
was long wars that Americans came to see as failures. Under the Obama
administration, the desire was to withdraw from the region. The President has displayed
a tilt toward Islam in general and the Muslim Brotherhood in particular.
It does
not help that President Obama so obviously favors Islam while, at the same
time, is so inept that he clearly has no strategic foreign policy regarding the
Middle East. Americans and the rest of the world must wait out the remaining
years of his administration. Fortunately, his ability to influence events and
outcomes has been diminished.
Islam is
changing. It is Muslims in a modern world that are changing it and, as the
carnage mounts, many will choose to abandon it. The change will involve warfare
and bloodshed, but that is usually the way revolutions play out.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
What a great analysis and summary...keep up the good work. I really enjoy reading your blogs!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Wendell.
ReplyDeleteWell said, Allan!
ReplyDeleteAs you are aware, This is my take on violent and bloody Islamism as well, which I see as a last great "Battle of the Bulge" type of offensive against Western Civilization by a doomed collectivist society.
Of course, Islam will still continue to exist, but those of that religion in the future will turn to more harmless form that allows the separation of Mosque and State.
I suppose you're right, not ALL Muslims are bad people, but I still have a problem with *trust*..
ReplyDeleteWe walked into one of our local eateries a while back and there they sat, Dad, the kids and what I have to assume was Mommy, in her *bee keeper* get-up, sitting right by the exit in case a fast getaway was needed I suppose..
I look at Muslims like I look at rattlesnakes...
They might not ALL be bad, there may be one in that pit that wants nothing more than to be your buddy, to curl up next to you on the sofa and watch TV and eat cheese puffs..
I'm not wading off into that snakes den to find out though... Pour gas on it, lite em up and fry em down...
... but your grandchildren may watch as Muslims around the world retreat from current efforts to impose governments based on the Koran, preferring to separate church and state. Many will decide to embrace another religion.
ReplyDeleteI certainly HOPE you're right about that!
At least for now, and especially for Muslims in western countries, rather the opposite appears to be the happening: an increasing adherence to a resurgent fundamentalist Islam...