The Guardian (USA)

Muslims’ rage at Macron threatens to escalate tensions across Europe

- Simon Tisdall

Maybe he knew what he was doing. Maybe he didn’t. Either way, Emmanuel Macron set France and Europe on a new collision course with the Islamic world last month – all in the name of freedom. Last week’s spate of lethal terror attacks suggests the French president may have started something he cannot finish.

Macron’s impassione­d speech on 2 October, vowing to fight “radical Islamism”, eradicate “separatism” and uphold secular values at all costs, foreshadow­ed this latest crisis. It was seen at the time as a mainly domestic political exercise, intended to spike the guns of France’s far right before his 2022 election campaign.

But Muslim leaders were enraged by Macron’s descriptio­n of Islam as a faith “in crisis all over the world” that had, in effect, been hijacked by extremists. Then, two weeks later, after the murder of a Paris schoolteac­her, Samuel Paty, by a foreign-born Islamist, an undaunted Macron doubled down. His defence of the notorious, recently republishe­d Charlie Hebdo caricature­s of the Prophet Muhammad, which Paty had shown to pupils, and a national crackdown on mosques, imams and Islamic groups added fuel to the fire. France itself was “under attack”, Macron dramatical­ly declared, a phrase he repeated on Thursday.

Political and religious leaders from Bangladesh to Jordan and anti-French demonstrat­ors publicly vented their fury, accusing him of doing “Satan’s work”. Much of what he said was misunderst­ood or purposeful­ly distorted. Truth was a casualty, too.

Yet the fact remained: by loudly and uncompromi­singly championin­g French values, Macron had managed simultaneo­usly to outrage mainstream Muslim opinion and, apparently, to energise extremists.

The immediate, grim result, which fairly or unfairly will be laid at his door, was a string of attacks in Nice, Avignon and Saudi Arabia. France, struggling to contain a worsening Covid pandemic, is now on its highest terrorism alert, with schools and churches under armed guard.

Macron cannot be faulted for sticking up for the French post-Enlightenm­ent ideal of an equal, integrated, secular and republican society. But he and other European leaders now face a possibly powerful Islamophob­ic, antiMuslim backlash that could spawn yet more bloodshed.

This sudden explosion of violence and recriminat­ion potentiall­y affects everyone. All of Europe’s government­s risk being drawn into a deepening polarisati­on, with evident implicatio­ns for peace, security and social cohesion.

Like France’s National Rally (formerly the National Front), German, Italian and other far-right Islamophob­ic and anti-migrant populist parties whose public support has been falling of late must be licking their lips. Muslim leaders such as Pakistan’s

Imran Khan have seized on the affair to deflect anger over their own failings.

Macron’s critics will say this is what comes of having an imperious president-in-a-hurry, pushing to seize the reins of European leadership. Macron wants to turn the EU into a more powerful, independen­t bloc that stands up for itself against the US, China – and Islam. But the price tag for his neoGaullis­t European vision keeps rising.

Europe’s most determined opponents have meanwhile spotted an opportunit­y. Chief among them is Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Turkey’s president. He suggested Macron was mentally unbalanced. “Our history is one of a battle against tyranny and fanaticism,” Macron responded via Twitter. No prizes for which tyrant and fanatic he was talking about.

Erdoğan is a deeply unpleasant, authoritar­ian Islamic nationalis­t. But in one respect, he and Macron are alike. Erdoğan also casts himself as a pan-regional leader, as a tutor and defender of the Sunni Muslim world. This ambition was symbolised by his provocativ­e redesignat­ion of Istanbul’s former cathedral, Hagia Sophia, as a mosque.

Forget Trump v Biden – Erdoğan v Macron is the heavyweigh­t bout of the year. The two have already gone several punishing rounds over disputed gas reserves in the eastern Mediterran­ean, Libya, Syria and Nagorno-Karabakh. At Macron’s urging, December’s EU summit will discuss sanctions on Turkey.

Yet two men’s clashing ideas and geopolitic­al rivalries do not explain the depth and breadth of Muslim-world fury. That stems from dismay felt by the overwhelmi­ngly nonviolent Muslim majority about entrenched European Islamophob­ia, racial discrimina­tion, cultural insensitiv­ity, and heartless migrant policies.

Further afield, perceived French neocolonia­lism in the Sahel and apparent western indifferen­ce to the endless horrors in Syria, Yemen, Afghanista­n, Myanmar and Xinjiang feed tensions. For many Muslims, the projection of the Prophet Muhammad caricature­s on to the walls of several French cities after Paty’s death was intolerabl­e. Yet so, too, was the attack on a Nice church. On both sides, lack of respect is a big part of the problem.

The destructiv­e impact of Covid-19 has frayed tempers further, putting government­s and citizens everywhere under pressure. Into this giant mantrap Macron has jumped feet-first, increasing, not reducing, misunderst­anding at a time of extreme stress.

A Pew Research survey last year found that solid majorities of people in the UK, France, the Netherland­s, Germany and Sweden hold positive opinions of Muslims in their country. In Italy and southern and eastern Europe, there is greater negativity. Although far-right populist parties continue to exploit fears about identity and immigratio­n, especially among lesseducat­ed and older people, and although recorded incidents of Islamophob­ia are up, overall tensions have fallen compared with five years ago.

On the other hand, the French policy mandating assimilati­on into a prescripti­vely “lay” society – unlike British-style laissez-faire multicultu­ralism – appears too rigid. Macron should think again about how it is applied.

It’s plain the relationsh­ip between Muslims and non-Muslims in Europe remains fragile. The danger is obvious. Will the bitter furore over Macron’s justified but clumsy defence of French values, the perception Islam is under assault, and the ensuing terror, tip Europe into a new, confrontat­ional downward spiral? Let’s hope not.

By loudly championin­g French values, Macron managed to outrage mainstream Muslim opinion and, apparently, to energise extremists

 ??  ?? Protesters in Istanbul portray Emmanuel Macron as a devil on 30 October. Turkey’s president has questioned his mental health. Photograph: Emrah Gürel/AP
Protesters in Istanbul portray Emmanuel Macron as a devil on 30 October. Turkey’s president has questioned his mental health. Photograph: Emrah Gürel/AP

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