USA TODAY US Edition

What Steve Bannon shares with leader of ISIL

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What does President Trump’s chief strategist have in common with the leader of the Islamic State terrorist group? Both Steve Bannon and Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi share similar world views. Both harbor apocalypti­c visions of a clash of civilizati­ons between Islam and the West.

Bannon, the provocateu­r who used to run the Breitbart website, inveighed on radio in 2010 that “Islam is not a religion of peace; Islam is a religion of submission.” Baghdadi echoed those sentiments: “Islam was never for a day the religion of peace; Islam is the religion of war.”

Each man spins a narrative for his followers of sprawling conflict between Prophet Mohammed’s believers and the followers of Jesus Christ. “There is a major war brewing, a war that’s already global,” Bannon warned a Vatican audience. A year later, Baghdadi said: “Oh Muslims ... this war is only against you and against your religion.” Each man proselytiz­es for this vision of war. A decade ago, according to The Washington

Post, Bannon outlined a movie proposal based on the fear that radical Muslims will overrun the U.S., turning it into the “Islamic States of America.”

In reality, the West is not at war with the world’s 1.7 billion Muslims, the vast majority of whom want nothing to do with ISIL’s savagery. The West is at war with a warped, barbaric, nihilistic fringe within Islam. In Middle Eastern and South Asian terror hotspots, Muslims bear the brunt of the suffering. The war on terrorism cannot be won without their help. As the two presidents before Trump emphasized, any discussion of a wider war with Islam plays straight into the hands of radical Islamist recruiters.

So, too, does Bannon’s populist rhetoric, which seeks to upend the establishm­ent and thrives on chaos. His views influenced the new president’s dark and divisive “American carnage” inaugural address and helped shape the halfbaked executive order banning refugees and travel from seven Muslim-majority nations.

A White House office could grant Bannon more practical means of turning his overwrough­t fears into reality. Trump’s political adviser has been handed a permanent seat on the National Security Council, where he sits with a like-minded national security adviser, retired Army lieutenant general Michael Flynn. The two men are well-positioned to shape when and where the United States might take military action.

Might Bannon fly too close to the sun? Conceivabl­y. On the security council, he’ll face pushback from Defense Secretary James Mattis and Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, retired Marine Corps generals with little patience for dubious theories about clashing global religions.

Perhaps even more threatenin­g to Bannon is all the attention he has received lately; witness his face on the cover of Time, with an article carrying the headline, “Is Steve Bannon the second most powerful man in the world?” The ego-driven president might forgive his advisers of any sin — except stealing the spotlight.

If Bannon cannot desist, President Trump’s out-of-control vanity could become a welcome force for peace. To the modern ear, that might sound ironic, but Muslims and Christians have long been united in understand­ing that God works in mysterious ways.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI, AP ?? President Trump and White House adviser Steve Bannon.
EVAN VUCCI, AP President Trump and White House adviser Steve Bannon.

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