![]() |
That "Radical Muslims Will Kill Obama" NYT Op-Ed? Blame Daniel Pipes |
|
| Pipes is Patient Zero in the epidemiology of smears | ||
by Daniel Koffler, May 13, 2008 |
||
Edward Luttwak doesn't know anything about Islamic law, but he does have an agenda to push, which is apparently enough to get him space on the New York Times op-ed page arguing that Barack Obama, being the son of an atheist who renounced Islam and abandoned Obama at the age of two, is considered a Muslim apostate, and thus is subject to a sentence of death. Ali Eteraz, who does know some things about Islamic law, noted in the Huffington Post that Luttwak is wrong in every single particular. Ali only obliquely addresses the larger point, which is that even if Luttwak were (stopped-clockwise) right about Islamic law, his political argument beggars parody.
Daniel Pipes: He is to character assassination what Charlie Parker was to bebop
Are we actually meant to believe that there is a government or organization on earth that would attempt to assassinate an American president because his grandfather was a Luo Muslim, but would leave any other American president alone? The question can't be asked with a straight face. Self-evidently, what Luttwak is trying to do is to sustain the belief that Obama is a Muslim in one form or another --- and it isn't particularly difficult to figure out what the next wave of Luttwak-inspired chain-emails will look like: Even the liberal New York Times admits.... But that's all there is to the story, right, just an old smear in fancy enough dress to win an invitation to the Grey Lady's ball?
Actually, no. Luttwak's seemingly original riff on the old Obama-is-a-Muslim, alert-the-cousins-in-Boca!!11!!! chestnut is actually a retread of --- wait for it --- a Daniel Pipes feature from FrontPageMag. When it comes to the spread of dishonest memes designed to stoke hatred of people who pray out of the Koran or have the wrong color of skin, pre-empt Israeli governments from working on peace deals (or failing that, destabilize Israeli governments), crack down on academic freedom, tar political opponents with the career-threatening charge of antisemitism, or just scare the shit out of credulous Americans (and especially American Jews), Pipes is inevitably, indefatigably at or near the origin.
Last week in Jewcy, I noted Pipes' central role in the character assassination of Debbie Almontaser: Knowing nothing whatsoever about her life and career --- and freely admitting it --- Pipes nonetheless launched a campaign to destroy her project of offering Arabic-language education to New York City students because he believes that "Arabic-language instruction is inevitably laden with pan-Arabist and Islamist baggage" and "learning Arabic in of itself promotes an Islamic outlook." Having succumbed to such vile racist paranoia, it's hardly surprising that Pipes felt his end, obstructing public education in Arabic (thus hurting American national security in the process), justified his means. Namely, deliberately doctoring a quote from Almontaser to precisely reverse its meaning and depict her as a 9/11 denialist, calling her (secular) school a "madrassa," and thereby subjecting her to a deluge of slander in the months that followed.
One particularly hysterical comment raised in Pipes' defense pointed to a nice illustration of how Pipes' agitprops have become pathological, in addition to being immoral. This Weekly Standard article, offered as proof of Almontaser's sinister Islamist connections, in fact produces not a jot of original evidence against her, but merely recycles the Pipes-originated smear that she was "accused of trying to establish an 'intifada academy.'" The weaselly passive locution puts the whole sordid story in a nutshell: Yes, Almontaser has been so accused, by unscrupulous propagandists. That's how smears spread.
Likewise, all of Edward Luttwak's confusions about Islamic law find a place in Pipes' original reportage, but Pipes has even more proof that Obama is both a secret Muslim and soon to be targeted for death by Islamists for his apostasy. Did you know: Obama's middle name is "Hussein" (cognate to "Hassan" and other "H-S-N" names, Pipes reminds those of us who don't get the hint)? How else would Muslims worldwide react to a self-identified Chrisian American president with that name than to condemn him to death by beheading? (For a sane view of likely Muslim reactions to Obama's election, turn to Ali Eteraz again.) Did you know Obama once lived and went to school in Indonesia? Which is full of you-know-what?
There are at least two morals to the story, depending on whether you share Pipes' paranoia or dwell with the rest of us in the real world. For the former, start a blog if you like, but above all find a day job. Pipes has more energy than you do, more connections, and a larger and more devoted team of "researchers." Cannonball Adderley was a brilliant soloist, but he sounded too derivative of Charlie Parker to ever completely escape his shadow; similarly, it's just not possible for an emulator, no matter how talented, to top the work of the Yardbird of slander.
For the latter, the lesson is epistemic. Whenever a literally incredible McCarthyite charge that someone who most assuredly is not an Islamist harbors secret sympathy for Islamism breaks through into the mainstream media, check Daniel Pipes' archives for the past three to six months, and it's a fair bet you'll locate the original pathogen.
kid blast
http://harpers.org/archive/2
http://harpers.org/archive/2007/02/0081384
Luttwack thinks counterinsurgency, ala the surge, is military "malpractice" too. Seems he's wrong about all sorts of things.
naftali
An Epistemological Trap
There are things we know on a macro level that are just about impossible to prove on a micro, or case by case level. We know that there is a strain of Islam that is dangerous, not just to the West but to other Muslims. We've seen their work for years, even before 9/11--but that pre-9/11 time was a comfort zone. The West was deluded with thoughts that the Arab world, probably because of their lack of technological development, just wasn't as smart.
9/11 changed that misperception, and it turns out, like in a game of chess, that the advantage is really with the other side. We now know that the violent strain of Islam is well-funded, technologically sophisticated, strategically adept--more so than the West. Consequently, most folks in the West, at some level, see that our mode of civilization might be finite, and might be finite in our lifetimes. That is not the kind of knowledge that sits well within people. Strategically, after 9/11, we were faced with a choice--that either our civil liberties go voluntarily (such as the press abandoning the principle of its own freedom after the Mohammed cartoons), or they would be forcibly taken away (such as the case with Salman Rushie or Ayaan Hirsi Ali, not to mention Theo Van Gogh).
So, on a macro level, we know what is going on--we know that Iran is building nuclear weapons, for instance. But when it comes to identifying people before the event--as in, wouldn't it have been marvelous to identify the 9/11 hijackers before their crime, or, depending upon your view, their act of war--it is virtually impossible to do, and ends up sounding like hysteria with the only mode of proof for the lay person is to use guilt by association. There isn't any way around this. And that's the trap. It's a logical trap--that our notion of proof might be effective at times, but sometimes it causes the death of innocent people, sometimes thousands of innocent people, because we don't feel we have enough proof, or the proof wouldn't even stand up in a court of law.
The battlefield in this present war is intellectual. And for this reason, although one could criticize just about anyone as being an alarmist, the way that Pipes is criticized, there really isn't a third option. There aren't other kinds of proof available before the fact of a terrorist act.
I don't know how to resolve this problem--you can't go around labeling everyone an Islamist, but you can't very well deny that Wahabism, or Jihadist thinking, or terrorist groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah, not to mention all of the different factions of Fatah, don't exist either.
It's like we need a medicine that doesn't yet exist, or tools that have yet to be invented. And as a result, we have an existential problem that can't be solved. But, personally, I wouldn't be too harsh on those who are trying to connect the dots before a horrible event occurs. Ultimately, they are trying to save lives and preserve liberties. But like the rest of us, they, we, are caught in a double-bind.
Post new comment