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BOOKS: Fighting Jihad
By Peter Berkowitz
Peter Berkowitz on Faith, Reason, and the War Against Jihadism: A Call to Action by George Weigel
George Weigel. Faith, Reason, and the War Against Jihadism: A Call
to Action. Doubleday
Religious Publishing. 208 pages. $18.95
Among
the many issues that divide the
nation, perhaps none is more consequential than that presented by
jihadist terrorism. Of course, to entertain such an opinion is to
take sides in a bitterly contested partisan debate. For the left
tends to regard jihadist terrorism as one threat among many,
including globalization, the environment, and universal health
care. Conservatives, who needn’t disregard the disruptions of
globalization, the threats to the environment, and the public
interest in affordable health care for all, are more likely to see
in the rise of Islamic extremism, and in the mega-terror aimed at
civilian populations that is its weapon of choice, the paramount
challenge of the age.
Notwithstanding reasonable differences of
opinion over policy priorities, it should be possible to reach
agreement on the proposition that the menace of mega-terror is real
and growing. Walter Russell Mead convincingly argues in Power, Terror, Peace, and War, a study of grand strategy in our post 9/11 world, that “as
the international capitalist system Americans have worked so hard
to build continues to reward innovation, we can expect the
increasingly rapid development of new technologies, especially in
biology, that can unleash unimaginable destruction, with relative
ease.” Indeed, with every passing moment, weapons of mass
destruction — not only biological, but also chemical and
nuclear, to say nothing of the techniques for potentially
devastating cyber terror — are growing more powerful and
plentiful, while the costs to produce, distribute, and maintain
them are steadily falling. Paradoxically, the triumph of technology
and the American international system produces an ever more
abundant and diverse supply of weapons for the mega-terror that now
threatens it.
Mega-terror, however, requires more than
weapons of mass destruction. It also requires will, discipline,
organization, strategy, and money. It is true that technology is
increasingly offering to common criminals and even to alienated
adolescents, armed with credit cards and internet access,
opportunities to build bombs, produce toxins, and unleash viruses
that can inflict harm on a mass scale. But the threat of
mega-terror does not emanate equally from all corners of society
and from all areas around the globe. The disgruntled and the
misfits, the poor and the oppressed, exist everywhere. Thus far,
however, it is only the jihadists who have declared war against the
American-led West, only the Muslim extremists who have developed
the ideas, recruited the fighters, established the institutions,
obtained the funds, and demonstrated the determination to bring the
United States to its knees, or die trying.
There can be little doubt that we have the
resources to defeat this vicious adversary. But will we acquire the
knowledge? And do we have the will?
These
are the important questions that George
Weigel, no stranger to partisan battles, and an eminent student of
war and peace and theology and politics, addresses in his concise
and trenchant book. Distinguished Senior Fellow at
Washington’s Ethics and Public Policy Center (on whose
advisory board I sit), Weigel contends that we were poorly prepared
for the immense challenges presented by the al Qaeda jihadists when
they launched their mass murder surprise attack on September 11, and that we have made
too little progress in the seven years since that awful day.
Believing that the threat we face is too dire to indulge in
partisan posturing, Weigel aims to reach a reasoned understanding
of the enemy and of ourselves to equip us to defend our nation and
our civilization. But he doesn’t seek in his short volume to
provide a comprehensive account. Rather, he focuses on the
religious dimensions of the war against jihadist terror: the
distinctive Islamic beliefs that the jihadists radicalized; the
reform of our politics based on a proper appreciation of the
jihadists’ religious warfare; and the resources within our
own religious traditions for informing and fortifying our spirits
for the long war ahead.
The first step is to overcome the powerful
prejudice, grounded in Enlightenment arrogance and progressive
hope, that religious belief is in the process of vanishing as a
relevant factor in world politics:
Viewed through history’s wide-angle
lens, the events of September 11, 2001, were one lethal expression of the fact that,
contrary to secularization theory and the widespread assumptions of
the world’s elites (including the governmental elites), the
twenty-first century will be one in which rapidly advancing
modernization coincides with an explosion of religious conviction
and passion. Indeed, a case can be made that the acids and
volatilities of modernization have themselves contributed mightily
to this remarkable global religious revival, which includes such
socially and politically benign phenomena as the dramatic expansion
of Pentecostalism (the fastest growing religious phenomenon in
human history) and Mormonism (the most important new religion in
fourteen centuries). Yet 9/11 was clearly something else, and something
more. For the expression of globalized religious passion Americans
saw that day represented a specific and mortal threat to the
civilization of the West, and to the United States as the lead
society of the West. War had been declared upon us by an enemy the
overwhelming majority of us did not recognize — an enemy
whose motivations were utterly alien to twenty-first century
western sensibilities.
Unless we grasp the religious roots of our
enemies’ passions and purposes, argues Weigel, we are bound
to misunderstand their intentions, fail to anticipate their plans,
and leave ourselves vulnerable to catastrophic blows.
Moreover, because Islamic extremism has
acquired bases around the globe, the war against the jihadists is a
global war,
being fought on many fronts, with more likely
to come. Many are interconnected: there is an Afghan front, an
Iraqi front, an Iranian front, a Lebanese/Syrian front, a Gaza
front, a Somali front, a Pakistani front, a North Africa/Maghreb
front, a Sudanese front, a Southwest Asian front, an intelligence
front, a financial-flows front, an economic front, an energy front,
and a homeland security front. These are all fields of fire —
some kinetic, others of a different sort — in the same global
war; and they must be understood as such. Al-Qaeda attacks on the
United States and on American diplomatic and military assets were,
for example, planned in the Philippines and other parts of
Southeast Asia. Places unknown to the vast majority of Americans
are now among the most evil places on earth, as one U.S. Special
Forces officer puts it; what happens in locales previously unknown
save in the most recondite geography bees — North Waziristan
— has direct effects on our armed forces in Afghanistan,
Iraq, and elsewhere. What is being plotted in such places could
have devastating effects on the homeland.
In this global war, religious questions have
become a vital national security issue.
In
fact, the political salience of
religion is nothing new. It is we, maintains Weigel, thanks in no
small measure to the “aggressive and inward looking
secularism” of our academic and journalistic elites, who have
lost sight of how convictions about God — and about
God’s death — shape conceptions of family and
friendship, freedom and responsibility, nobility and happiness, and
justice and the legitimate methods for achieving a just society.
Unless we recognize that jihadists’ ideas do not cease to
have consequences because they are religious ideas, the United
States will be unable to marshal, as it did during the Cold War in
response to communist doctrine, “intellectual and cultural
resources to blunt the threat.” Weigel notes in this regard
the irony that our fashionable, bestselling atheists —
Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Christopher Hitchens — have,
by pouring scorn on religion in all its forms, weakened our ability
to take religious ideas seriously at the very moment that grasping
religion’s power in our adversaries’ lives and the
religious supports of our own principles has become urgent.
Recognition of religion’s centrality
should be accompanied by an appreciation of distinctions among
religions. In particular, observes Weigel, the tendency to speak of
the three great monotheistic religions — Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam — as a family of faiths conceals more
than it reveals, particularly in the case of Islam. Although all
three trace their origins to God’s revelation to Abraham, the
shared beliefs of Judaism and Christianity, on the one hand, and
Islam on the other, have been, he contends, exaggerated.
Weigel asks us to consider, for example, that
whereas Jesus proclaimed that he came not to abolish but to fulfill
Jewish law, Islam teaches that God’s revelation to Muhammad
unequivocally supersedes the Hebrew Bible and the Christian New
Testament. Whereas Jewish and Christian understandings of sacred
scripture invite a human grappling with God’s revelation (in
Hebrew, “Israel,” the name Jacob received after
wrestling with an angel, means “you have struggled with
God”), the Muslim understanding of the Qur’an as
dictated by God through the angel Gabriel or Jabril and perfectly
and completely transcribed by Muhammad encourages submission (the
meaning in Arabic of “Islam”) or surrender to the will
of God and leaves less room for creative interpretation and
religious self-criticism. Whereas Judaism and Christianity
understand God as a loving Father, Islam understands Allah as
radically distant and dwelling outside this world, which makes it
difficult to understand how, on the Islamic view, man can be made
in God’s image, or can, in his thought and actions, imitate
God. Whereas Jews and Christians mourn when one of their number
converts to the other faith, under Islamic law a Muslim convert to
Judaism or Christianity is “liable at least in principle to
death.” And whereas Judaism advances no claims to rule over
non-Jews and whereas Christians now preach separation of church and
state, Islam fuses religious and political authority. Indeed, to
the extent that it teaches that the Muslim world is in exclusive
possession of the revealed truth, that the Islamic state is the
sole legitimate political form, and that the world is divided into
a “House of Islam” and a “House of War,”
Islam lends support to the conclusion that engaging in permanent
imperialism until the whole world comes under its sway is a
religious imperative.
In some cases, Weigel seems to compare the best
readings of Jewish and Christian doctrine to the most literal and
rigid readings of Islam. Still, he stresses “that Islam has,
over the centuries, given meaning and purpose to hundreds of
millions of lives that have been nobly and decently lived,”
and that Islam has made magnificent contributions in architecture,
poetry, philosophy, and more. And his overarching purpose in
distinguishing key features of Islamic theology is to contribute to
an understanding of the flash points in Islam’s wrenching
centuries-long struggle with modernity. The outcome of that
struggle, argues Weigel, depends in large measure on the extent to
which Muslims can find resources within Islam — as resources
were found during the Muslim Enlightenment of the ninth through the
thirteenth centuries to justify the embrace of Greek philosophy
— to provide religious grounds for the protection of
individual rights, and moral, political, and intellectual
pluralism.
Whereas Judaism
and Christianity view
God as a loving Father,
Weigel observes,
Islam understands
Allah as radically
distant and dwelling
outside this world.
The enemy, in other words, is not Islam. The
enemy is jihadism, or the extreme interpretation of Islam according
to which all Muslims have a religious responsibility to wage
permanent war — governed exclusively by Muslim interpretation
of politics and justice — aimed at imposing Muslim rule
world-wide.
Contemporary jihadism, as Weigel shows, has
roots that extend deep into Muslim intellectual history. To be
sure, the plain meaning of many Qur’anic verses and the high
points of Muhammad’s life as a warrior-prophet provide rich
material. But the doctrine of jihadism required development. It got
it from ‘Abd al-Halim ibn Taymiyya (1265–1328), who, in
pondering the destruction of the Caliphate by the Mongols in 1265, elaborated the
meaning of jihad as the spread of Islam through war and conquest.
Five centuries later, the founder of Wahhabism, Muhammad ibn
‘Abd al-Wahab (1703/4–1792),
emphasized that God is an absolute lawgiver who
demands total submission. In the twentieth century, Hasan al-Banna
(1906–1949), the Egyptian-born founder of the Muslim Brotherhood,
condemned modernizers and liberalizers for corrupting the Muslim
spirit. Sayyid Qutb (1903–1966) took up where al-Banna left off by penning a
withering critique of liberal modernity and by restating jihadist
doctrine for his time. A teacher to the teachers of today’s
jihadists, Qutb produced a synthesis that requires the cleansing of
the House of Islam of infidels and unbelievers; the creation of an
Islamic state governed by Islamic law; the state’s extension
through conquest in the House of War; and the treatment of other
religions and political orders as not simply mistaken but evils to
be extinguished, and the treatment of all who disagree —
Muslim as well as non-Muslims — as enemies to be wiped out.
Following a suggestion in Pope Benedict
XVI’s controversial 2006 lecture at the University of Regensburg,
Weigel argues that ultimately the doctrine that underlies jihadism
flows from a theological error. The understanding of Allah as
Absolute Will, according to Weigel, separates God from reason and
justice, and thereby deprives Muslims of standards for criticizing
authoritative interpreters of the Qur’an and Islamic law.
To what extent Weigel correctly diagnoses a
fundamental theological error, as opposed to articulating a
Catholic critique of Islam — and to what extent his focus on
theology must be supplemented by examination of the role that
family order and social structure play in the Muslim world in
devaluing individual rights and channeling alienation into
religious fanaticism — are matters of great interest. He is
certainly persuasive that the jihadists interpret history and
politics not on the basis of common assumptions in the West about
the inevitability of progress and the triumph of liberal and
democratic ideas, but rather informed by alien and very potent
theological convictions. It therefore behooves us to study their
theology.
Not the least of the benefits of studying
Islamic theology is to prepare the grounds for dialogue with
Muslims of good faith and understanding. Like all great world
religions, Islam is constituted by a trove of teachings and
traditions. Devotion to it is consistent with choosing which
teachings and traditions to emphasize and elaborate and which to
fence in or allow to fade into the background. Indeed, such choices
are crucial to the conservation of all faiths. Accordingly, argues
Weigel,
The interreligious dialogue of the future
should focus on helping those Muslims willing to do so to explore
the possibility of an Islamic case for religious tolerance, social
pluralism, and civil society — even as Islam’s
interlocutors (among Christians, Jews, and others, including
non-believers) open themselves to the possibility that the Islamic
critique of certain aspects of modern culture is not without merit.
The preconditions for such a dialogue are few.
Foremost among them is the conviction that men and women of
different faiths and cultures are endowed with a common humanity
and share an ability to reason about justice.
To
confront jihadism, Weigel champions a
reformed realism, of which interfaith dialogue is one part.
Invoking the spirit of Protestant theologian Reinhold Niebuhr (1892–1971), Weigel
argues in favor of an orientation that recognizes both the human
propensity toward wickedness and the ennobling capacity of men and
women to make progress in living in accordance with principles of
freedom and equality. Taking both power and justice seriously, it
urges rigorous preparation for national defense, and no less
rigorous preparation for peace.
Weigel’s reformed realism issues in
several unexceptionable conclusions. For example, rather than
aiming at the creation of liberal democracies throughout the Middle
East and the wider Muslim world, we should take the painful lessons
of Iraqi reconstruction to heart, counsels Weigel, and more
modestly seek to foster “responsible and responsive
government, which will take different forms given different
historical and cultural circumstances.” At the same time, we
should be under no illusions about the limits of dialogue and the
constraints of strategies that worked under very different
circumstances against very different enemies. Deterrence strategies
are likely to be less effective against those determined to be
martyrs and those, like Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who,
under the influence of the Shiite school of jihadism, see
themselves as obliged to hasten the apocalypse.
A reformed realism at home, Weigel maintains,
depends upon a restoration of cultural self-confidence. Unless we
renew our appreciation of the principles and practices at the core
of representative self-government in America, we will be unable to
take adequate responsibility for fostering “the virtues of
the citizenry” which, in a liberal democracy, “are the
foundations of national security.”
The doctrine that has come to be known as
multiculturalism, observes Weigel, presents a major obstacle. It
should not be confused with the reasonable liberal teaching that
individuals are equal before the law and that diverse cultures
should be appreciated for their distinctive achievements. Instead,
multiculturalism advances the more dogmatic theory that all
cultures are equal, but in practice it preaches that Western
culture is peculiarly oppressive. This incoherent mix, which urges
toleration for them and intolerance of us, goes further than the
familiar forms of relativism to estrange us from the best in our
civilization and to erode respect for reason.
Nothing less than reclaiming the history of the
West, in Weigel’s view, will renew our confidence in our own
principles. That history teaches that liberty and equality and the
political institutions that support them are not the exclusive work
of the modern Enlightenment but also draw on classical and
religious sources. It demonstrates that the first of individual
rights, religious freedom, is not merely a pragmatic accommodation
with the diversity of human experience and judgment, but also a
statement about the fundamental nature of the person. It strongly
suggests that the Christian belief in the intelligibility of the
world provided a powerful impetus to modern science, and fostered a
curiosity about humanity that, coupled with the biblical belief in
the dignity of the person, spurred Western civilization to study
other civilizations to an extent unrivaled by other civilizations.
And perhaps paradoxically, the history of freedom and reason in the
West, precisely because it encourages an appreciation for religion
by showing how our morals and politics have been nourished by
biblical faith, can contribute to the construction of a common
ground on which to pursue a mutually appreciative and tolerant
conversation with Islam.
But that concerns the long term. In the short
term, it will be necessary to resist what Weigel calls
“salami tactics,” or the embrace of destructive
multicultural policies that pervert the imperatives of toleration.
These include the development of poor Muslim suburbs around
European cities which have become a law unto themselves; the
disregard by European authorities of female circumcision and forced
marriage; and Europeans’ dramatic capitulations in the domain
of liberty of thought and discussion to Muslim demands to silence
opinions critical of Islam.
So far from obliging states to bar the
expression of opinions some factions oppose, the doctrine of
toleration imposes an obligation on the state to protect unpopular
opinions and an obligation on citizens to learn to live with the
pronouncement and publication of views they reject. “When
democratic states with a record of genuine tolerance that puts most
Islamic societies to shame turn themselves inside out legally in
order to appease seditious extremists,” Weigel admonishes,
“they betray their own constituting principles and lay the
cultural groundwork for further trouble in the future.”
Indeed, it is not intolerant for a state to maintain the moral
foundations of toleration, which include securing the equal liberty
of all under impartial laws. And the defense of toleration depends
not only on criticism of those who condemn liberty and equality,
but also on the punishment or exclusion of those who use violence
to curtail the essential liberties of others.
There is plenty to be done in the intermediate
term as well. Weigel wants us to reduce our role in financing the
jihadists by developing alternatives to oil. And he urges that we
take public diplomacy no less seriously in the war against the
jihadists than we did in the Cold War, which means that we must
substantially increase funding for our embassies around the world
and for programs abroad designed to make America’s case,
while creating initiatives at home to produce a new generation of
experts and leaders well-versed in the languages and cultures of
the wider Muslim world.
Whether from the perspective of the
short, intermediate, or long term, there is, as Weigel concludes,
no reasonable alternative in the long war ahead to U.S. leadership.
For the U.S. to exercise that leadership reasonably, it will be
necessary for some substantial portion of conservatives and some
substantial portion of progressives to recognize and unite around
their common interest in the preservation of democracy in America,
which, given the fanaticism of our adversaries and the power of the
weapons increasingly at their disposal, is what is at stake in the
war against jihadism.
Peter Berkowitz is the Tad and Dianne Taube Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and teaches at George Mason University School of Law. His writings are posted at www.PeterBerkowitz.com.
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