Allah's
Butchers
By
Ralph Peters
June 21, 2004
Perhaps
the greatest blasphemers in any religion are those who appoint themselves as
God’s executioners. When an entire civilization embraces such butchers,
both the civilization and the religion are in trouble.
The
ritual slaughter of Paul Johnson Jr. in
Religions
are what men make of them. In the Arab heartlands of Islam, Muslims are
making a gory mess of their faith. It’s time to end the politically
correct baby-talk insisting that Islam isn’t the problem. In the
decaying Arab world, Islam is the problem—because of the way bitter old
men interpret and deform its more humane precepts while embracing its cruelest
injunctions.
The
decapitation of yet another American civilian can’t be dismissed as an
aberration from “true” Islam. The tradition of beheading unarmed
prisoners dates to the earliest decades of the Muslim faith. The
butchering of Paul Johnson, Nick Berg and others isn’t a new
phenomenon—it’s revivalism, “that old-time religion” returning for a
re-match with secular devils.
Millions
of Muslims find such atrocities inspiring. Millions more view such cruelty
as just. It’s the vicarious revenge of the self-made failure. And
for every rent-a-cleric the Saudi government pushes in front of a television
camera to condemn such acts, thousands of other mullahs continue to preach
anti-Western hatred--the brutal specificity of which would horrify even
America’s leftists, if only they stopped apologizing to terrorists long enough
to listen.
The
Saudis, especially, have sown the wind and now are reaping the whirlwind.
I personally have seen their attempts to “purify” Islam and provoke
anti-Western rage, from
But
the problem is far greater than the degenerate House of Saud. We face a
phenomenon new to history: A once-great civilization failing before our
eyes. Whether or not one subscribes to the idea of a “clash of
civilizations,” we are incontestably witnessing the crash of an entire
civilization, that of Middle Eastern Islam.
After
centuries of self-destructive behavior, Arab civilization is unable to compete
in a single field of human endeavor relevant to progress. Instead, Arab
societies are racing backward into superstition, bigotry and a narcotic culture
of blame. They have grown so impotent in every other regard—unable even
to translate great wealth into minor power—that Arabs rich and poor, educated
and illiterate, are enraptured by their rare “triumphs” over the West, from
9/11 to the barbaric murder of Westerners doing the work that Arabs themselves
are too slothful or incompetent to do.
One
can’t say that, of course. Arab Muslims are allowed to spew
anti-Western, anti-Christian, anti-Jewish, anti-Hindu, anti-everybody-else hate
speech. That’s just their culture, you see. But it’s taboo for a
Westerner to suggest that the roots of terror may go a bit deeper than a black
sheep or two in a few Middle-Eastern families.
Leftist apologists
for terror here in the
By
refusing to hold Middle Eastern civilization to reasonable standards of behavior
and responsibility, our domestic Left has given new life to the “little brown
brother” school of colonialist thought. According to the Left’s
internal logic, Arabs aren’t capable of the same moral reflection and
behavioral maturity well-educated whites demonstrate. And, of course,
Arabs are oppressed (no matter that their oppressors are all Arabs).
Arab
extremists and dictators have become the ghetto blacks of hard-Left foreign
policy. They’re all victims of
The
family secret of the hard-Left is that its followers share one powerful trait
with Osama bin Laden: They need to look down on others, to feel superior
and just. If the lords of terror dispense with displays of pity for their
victims, it’s only because they haven’t yet attained the leftist’s level
of hypocrisy.
Why
shouldn’t we hold a civilization accountable for its own failures and horrors?
Why does our domestic Left revel endlessly in the excesses of a few renegade
guards at Abu Ghraib prison while remaining silent on the industrial-scale
massacres of Saddam Hussein—and other terror regimes? Why don’t our
self-appointed “voices of conscience” speak out against the beheading of
Paul Johnson Jr. or Nick Berg? What about the hundreds of Iraqi doctors,
lawyers, engineers and educators slain by terrorists for trying to build a
humane government in the
The
silence isn’t just deafening. It’s revolting.
We
all await, anxiously, Michael Moore’s film “Trolling For al-Qaeda.”
A pity Paul Johnson Jr. won’t be around to watch it.
Ralph
Peters is the author, most recently, of Beyond Baghdad: Postmodem Ware
and Peace.