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Thomas L. Friedman: Outrage and
silence |
Thomas L. Friedman
THURSDAY, MAY 19, 2005
| WASHINGTON
It is hard not to notice two contrasting stories that have run side
by side during the past week. One is the story about the violent
protests in the Muslim world triggered by a report in Newsweek
(which the magazine has now retracted) that U.S. interrogators at
Guantánamo Bay desecrated a Koran by throwing it into a toilet. In
Afghanistan alone, at least 16 people were killed and more than 100
wounded in anti-American rioting that has been linked to that
report. I certainly hope that Newsweek story is incorrect, because
it would be outrageous if U.S. interrogators behaved that way.
That said, though, in
the same newspapers one can read the latest reports from Iraq, where
Baathist and jihadist suicide bombers have killed 400 Iraqi Muslims
in the past month - most of them Shiite and Kurdish civilians
shopping in markets, walking in funerals, going to mosques or
volunteering to join the police.
Yet these mass murders -
this desecration and dismemberment of real Muslims by other Muslims
- have not prompted a single protest march anywhere in the Muslim
world. And I have not read of a single fatwa issued by any Muslim
cleric outside Iraq condemning these indiscriminate mass murders of
Iraqi Shiites and Kurds by these jihadist suicide bombers, many of
whom, according to a Washington Post report, are coming from Saudi
Arabia.
The Muslim world's
silence about the real desecration of Iraqis, coupled with its
outrage over the alleged desecration of a Koran, highlights what
America is up against in trying to stabilize Iraq - as well as the
only workable strategy going forward.
The challenge America
faces in Iraq is so steep precisely because the power shift the
United States and its allies are trying to engineer there is so
profound - in both religious and political terms. Religiously, if
you want to know how the Sunni Arab world views a Shiite's being
elected leader of Iraq, for the first time ever, think about how
whites in Alabama would have felt about a black governor's being
installed there in 1920. Some Sunnis do not think Shiites are
authentic Muslims, and they are indifferent to their brutalization.
At the same time,
politically speaking, some Arab regimes prefer to see the pot
boiling in Iraq so the democratization process can never spread to
their countries. That's why their official newspapers rarely
describe the murders of civilians in Iraq as a massacre or acts of
terror. Such crimes are usually sanitized as "resistance" to
occupation.
Salama Na'mat, the
Washington bureau chief for the London-based Arabic daily Al Hayat,
wrote the other day: "What is the responsibility of the [Arab]
regimes and the official and semiofficial media in the countries
bordering Iraq in legitimizing the operations that murder Iraqis?
Isn't their goal to thwart [the emergence of] the newborn democracy
in Iraq so that it won't spread in the region?" (Translation by
Memri.)
In identifying the
problem, though, Na'mat also identifies the solution. If you want to
stop a wave of suicide bombing, the likes of which we are seeing in
Iraq, it takes a village. I am a big believer that the greatest
restraint on human behavior is not laws and police, but culture and
religious authority. It is what the community, what the village,
deems shameful. That is what restrains people. So how do we get the
Sunni Arab village to delegitimize suicide bombers?
Inside Iraq, obviously,
credible Sunni Baathists have to be brought into the political
process and constitution-drafting, as long as they do not have blood
on their hands from Saddam's days. And outside Iraq, the Bush team
needs to be forcefully demanding that Saudi Arabia and other key
Arab allies use their news media, government and religious systems
to denounce and delegitimize the despicable murder of Muslims by
Muslims in Iraq.
If the Arab world, its
media and its spiritual leaders, came out and forcefully and
repeatedly condemned those who mount these suicide attacks, and if
credible Sunnis are given their fair share in the Iraqi government,
I am certain a lot of this suicide bombing would stop, as happened
with the Palestinians. Iraqis themselves would pass on the
intelligence needed to prevent these attacks, and they would deny
the suicide bombers the safe houses they need to succeed.
That is the only way it
stops, because we don't know who is who. It takes the village - and
right now the Sunni Arab village needs to be pressured and induced
to restrain those among them who are engaging in these suicidal
murders of innocents.
The best way to honor
the Koran is to live by the cherished values of mercy and compassion
that it propagates.
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