Don’t
Make San Bernardino a Victory for ISIS/Haider Ali Hussein Mullick, a United States Naval Reserve officer with the Fifth Fleet, teaches graduate seminars on combating terrorism at the Naval War College.
The
New York Times |4/12/15
I
am an American Muslim. I have spent my adult life teaching and advising senior
military leaders in the fight against terror. On Wednesday night, as I watched
representatives of the American Muslim community in San Bernardino, Calif.,
denounce the shooters who had just killed 14 people in their city, I recognized
in their bearing and words their feelings of humiliation, horror and loyalty to
the United States — alongside a great fear that a new round of Islamophobia will
now follow.
I
know from my own experience that more Islamophobia would be the worst outcome
for American efforts to defeat the Islamic State.
As
a naval officer I’ve taken an oath to defend the American Constitution against
all enemies, foreign and domestic. I’ve trained members of the Navy SEAL teams,
and my mentors include the former head of the National Rifle Association, the
supreme allied commander of NATO, and the commanding general of the war in
Afghanistan.
I
have been deeply troubled by the anti-Muslim vitriol in our country since
Islamist fanatics wreaked havoc in Paris. Fearmongers have already called for
registering Muslims and closing mosques. The F.B.I. has warned Muslims about
possible attacks from white supremacist militias.
American
Muslims are a strong bulwark against Islamic extremism. Last month, a group of
demonstrators gathered in New York to condemn the Islamic State's
interpretation of Islam and the terrorist acts carried out by them. Credit
Albin Lohr-Jones/Pacific Press, via LightRocket, via Getty Images
American
Muslims are a strong bulwark against Islamic extremism. Last month, a group of
demonstrators gathered in New York to condemn the Islamic State’s
interpretation of Islam and the terrorist acts carried out by them. Credit
Albin Lohr-Jones/Pacific Press, via LightRocket, via Getty Images
If
we don’t want to play into the hands of Islamic State propaganda that America
is at war with Islam, we must stand up against Islamophobia. We should separate
the few extremists from the vast majority of law-abiding patriotic American
Muslims by working with the moderates, not against them.
The
Islamic State has little to no support in most Muslim-majority countries,
according to a Pew Research Center poll after the Paris attacks. Instead, with more
than 60 countries aligned against it, the Islamic State is banking on Western
societies to alienate their Muslim populations to increase recruitment.
In
the latest edition of the Islamic State magazine Dabiq, which glorifies the
Paris attacks, a recruiter makes a telling pitch. He writes that a Muslim in
the West is “a stranger amongst Christians and liberals … fornicators and
sodomites … drunkards and druggies,” and must come to the Islamic State to
avoid sleeping “every night with a knife or pistol … fearing an overnight or
early morning raid on his home.”
The
Islamic State wants every American Muslim to feel alienated. Its false utopia
rests on the warped dream that the estimated three million American Muslims
will believe they can no longer live, thrive and worship in peace in America.
We must not let that happen, even while we remain vigilant about the few
American Muslims who wish us harm.
Certainly,
the world faces a deadly cult of Islamist fanaticism, and a few American
Muslims have attacked their countrymen: Colleen LaRose, Nidal Hasan and
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, for example. More than 250 American Muslims have joined the
Islamic State, according to a report by the House Homeland Security Committee,
and 68 have been indicted on charges of supporting it, according to the Center
on National Security at Fordham Law School. According to New America Foundation
data released before Wednesday’s attack in California, in 26 deadly attacks
inside the United States since 9/11, Islamist extremists had killed 31 people.
By comparison, right-wing groups had killed 48, the data said.
Indeed,
a few American Muslim preachers stoke sectarian divisions, ignore human rights,
fail to condemn female genital mutilation, look the other way when women are
killed in the name of honor, and demonize gays. Like me, most American Muslims
condemn such perversions of our faith.
But
critics argue that Islam is against democracy, nation-states, human rights and
the separation of mosque and state. There are no good Muslims, according to die-hard
demagogues. The message is clear: Be an American or be a Muslim.
This
is nonsense. In 2012, a vast majority of American Muslims said they would vote.
Muslims also uphold the rule of law and respect the separation of mosque and
state, and they are in fact the greatest bulwark against Islamic extremism.
A
Pew poll in 2011 found that 60 percent of American Muslims worried about
extremism in the United States, and 72 percent believed that most Muslims
wanted to assimilate or mix their cultural heritage with American customs,
while only 33 percent of the rest of Americans believed their Muslim
compatriots want to assimilate.
Against
the few Muslims who join a group like the Islamic State stand millions who
reject extremism. A telling example is a community outreach program run by the
Department of Justice, the National Counterterrorism Center and the Department
of Homeland Security.
Around
2006, many Americans feared the entry of refugees from Somalia who were fleeing
a war against Islamist fanatics. Instead of isolating these refugees because of
fears of terrorists in their midst, however, Minneapolis law enforcement
agencies worked closely with the community to develop trust.
With
the F.B.I.’s community outreach program in force, Minneapolis has avoided attacks
from the few Somali-Americans who have been inspired by the Shabab, a militant
Islamist group. For this authorities credit the support of the local Muslim
community, even during moments of controversy about intelligence gathering
techniques.
Nationwide,
from 2001 through 2014, more than 100 plots were disrupted, according to a
University of North Carolina report.
The
F.B.I.’s work to stop Islamic State recruiters from exploiting at-risk Muslim
youth continues today.
Alongside
it, there are people like the Somali-American cartoonist Mohamed Amin Ahmed,
whose “Average Mohamed” cartoon series dispels Islamic State propaganda for
teenagers as it supplements a mainstream religious education. This approach is
a tool that can bring together concerned parents and law enforcement officials.
“I live happily in the greatest place a person can call home,” Mr. Ahmed has
said of America. “It is,” he has said, for “my children and the right to free
speech that I do this.”
Now
is not the time to shun our fellow citizens. America also needs its Muslim
citizens to serve in the military. As with African-Americans in the Civil War
and Asian- and German-Americans in World War II, we need their cultural,
linguistic, religious and geopolitical expertise to help us defeat the Islamic
State and its propaganda.
In
America we don’t pick or reject a state religion. We guarantee freedom of
religion for all. Our founding fathers fought for Protestants and deists, blue
blood and blue collar, slave owners and philanthropists, soldiers and Quakers.
We
can win the war against Islamist fanatics by remembering that, embracing our
American Muslims and rejecting xenophobia.
As
for myself, I hope my 13-month-old son grows up in an America that continues to
honor diversity and loyalty to our Constitution, without any religious, racial
or ethnic test.
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