Posted by
Mark Hansbauer on Tuesday, February 12, 2008 4:25:10 PM
Editorial Rule 1: Words and phrases flagged in red are, in my opinion, vague, ambiguous, subject to dispute, or otherwise problematic. But for that they are not inadmissible in political discourse. As you may surmise, they are the lifeblood of such discourse.
This is part two of a blog entitled “Reasoned Response to Unreason.” The “unreason” refers to the jihad confronting America and its allies. The jihad is aimed not only at the West: it is global. It is directed to Islamic regimes such as Jordan, Turkey, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia. It has reached deep into Africa and is trying to make inroads in Latin America. It has infiltrated Europe to such an extent that some have taken to refer to that noble continent as “Eurabia.” Nor is the jihad of recent origin. It has been underway for at least thirty years. And, lastly, it is not limited to terrorism. The mujhadeen are waging a “war of ideas” within Islam to bend it to their whim. This war of ideas goes unnoticed in the West, but, ultimately, it is where the jihad will stand in absolute triumph or fall to ignominious defeat.
The “reasoned response” in my title is not a reference to yours truly. (Though, if you estimate some of his product to be reasonable, he has your gratitude.) It is a tribute to those who fight the mujhadeen on the battlefields of the war of ideas. I had mentioned two of these warriors, and they deserve mention again: Dr. Hillel Fradkin and his team at the Center on Islam, Democracy, and the Future of the Muslim World at the Hudson Institute (www.futureofmuslimworld.com) and Dr. Joshua Parens at the University of Dallas (http://www.udallas.edu/philosophy/faculty.cfm?ID=62).
In part one of this blog I argued that America at the very least needed to take an interest in the intra-Islamic war of ideas. The conviction of yours truly is that we go further, namely, that we take an active part in this war to the extent it would be prudent for us and equitable to our Muslim allies. By taking an active part in this war, we would be helping to "reshape" or "reconstitute” Islam, and I outlined what I meant by these terms. The next step in my argument, which I will now undertake, is to explain why this project would be compatible with a regime dedicated to the proposition set forth in the Declaration of Independence.
The proposition enshrined in the Declaration is the animating, or first, principle of America. Such a principle is not a principle if it forbids its own defense or forbids the seeking of a just peace in which it would be vindicated over and against competing principles. So, I am reasonably well persuaded there is no contradiction in fighting the jihad to a just peace in which our first principle prevails over theirs. And, as I expressed in part one, there is latitude in how we envision that just peace.
Similarly, there is latitude under our first principle regarding the means towards that just peace. It would not be tenable if I insisted that the first principle of our regime mandated a reshaping or reconstituting of Islam. Nor would it be tenable, however, to argue that one necessarily deduces from our first principle a mandate to leave Islam untouched. The only means I would contend that our first principle forbids—and this is by no means a trivial limitation—is the killing of Muslims solely because they are Muslims. Our first principle would not forbid the conversion of Muslims as a means, but forcible conversion (for example, under pain of death) would be tantamount, in my opinion, to the killing of Muslims solely because they are Muslims. (I am leery of the conversion of Muslims as an official American policy, but I advocate it wholeheartedly as an essential mission for Christianity in the 21st century.)
A reshaping or reconstituting of Islam, if carried out unilaterally by us and opposed by our Muslim allies, might be considered as analogous to the forcible conversion of Muslims. But how close does the analogy run? Islam is not the sole property of its adherents. By its own terms, it is meant for all of humankind: it is shared by Muslims and is potentially sharable by non-Muslims. It is thus a field open to disputation and suasion. If we non-Muslims sought the reshaping of Islam through disputation and suasion, even against the wishes of our Muslim allies, we would be acting consistent with Islam’s own inner logic. Moreover, we would be acting consistent with our first principle, because disputation and suasion are methods based on obtaining consent. In this context, we would need to win over our allies first, and that might be slow in coming and perhaps not at all. We might be accused of not having the best interest of Islam in mind; we might even be accused of being categorically incapable of acting in its best interest. And true, we would not be intending to convert to Islam. Also true, the end result we envisioned for Islam might not resemble the result envisioned by our Muslim allies. The difference would not be fundamental, however, provided we acted through disputation and suasion, using resources already present within Islam or fairly introduced into it.
Of course, acting unilaterally in the reshaping of Islam would be imprudent if there were Muslim allies already doing so. And, fortunately, we have allies such as the Jordanian regime presently in the trenches of the intra-Islamic war of ideas. Further, if, as I have argued in the paragraph above, we could justifiably undertake the reshaping of Islam without ally support, so much stronger is the case for us to pursue this project with their support. The case is stronger because the matter of consent is reconciled to a significant extent before our entering the fray. Our Muslim allies will have already consented to the reshaping of Islam: their consent is presupposed in the fact that they have initiated the reshaping of Islam. Indeed, they have commenced the change because they view it as indispensable to their own interest. In this instance, we would be joining the good fight in their support.
I will add a third part to this blog in which I will share some thoughts on "The Jordanian Regime Fights the War of Ideas" by Yair Minzili, published May 2007 under the aegis of the Center on Islam, Democracy, and the Future of the Muslim World at the Hudson Institute (www.futureofmuslimworld.com/research/pubID.69/pub_detail.asp).