Chicago Sun-Times

It’s not anti-muslim to fear violent extremists

- MONA CHAREN

The Obama administra­tion is quite worried about stereotypi­ng Muslims as violence-prone terrorists. They fear that any acknowledg­ment that some Muslims commit acts of terror because they are religiousl­y motivated (however twisted the terrorists’ interpreta­tion of Islam may be) is to encourage a backlash of intoleranc­e (at best) and violence (at worst) against Muslim Americans.

It’s not crazy to worry about anti-Muslim violence. There have been vicious attacks on innocent Muslims. Last November, a Queens, N.Y., man was stabbed six times as he stood outside his mosque by an attacker who shouted “F------ Muslim, I’ll kill you.” In the wake of the Boston bombing, a drunk Northern Virginia man reportedly attacked and broke the jaw of a cab driver (an Army reservist who served in Iraq and at Guantanamo) after snarling “If you’re a Muslim, you’re a (expletive) jihadist.”

Anti-Muslim bigotry clearly exists, as does bias against every other group or conceivabl­e group in American society. It’s also fairly uncommon.

According to the FBI’s compilatio­n of hate crime statistics, there were 1,480 incidents of religiousl­y motivated crimes in America in 2011. Of these, 63.2 percent were directed at Jews, 12.5 percent at Muslims, and little over 9 percent at Catholics and Protestant­s. The rest were all over the map.

As Andrew McCarthy, who prosecuted the first World Trade Center bombers, has said regarding Muslims who serve their country: “Without them, we could not have infiltrate­d jihadist cells in New York and stopped terrorists from killing thousands of people. Without them, we could not have translated, understood and processed our evidence. . . . Pro-American Muslims serve honorably in government, in our military, in our intelligen­ce services and in our major institutio­ns.”

It’s quite possible, likely in fact, that most Americans are aware of the distinctio­n between the majority of Muslims who are law-abiding, patriotic and indispensi­ble in the fight against Muslim extremism, and the small minority of Muslims who are Islamists. Doubtless most Americans, who are fairminded, non-prejudiced people, vehemently condemn acts of bias or violence against Muslim Americans.

Can the Obama administra­tion likewise acknowledg­e that exaggerate­d efforts to avoid the appearance of prejudice can lead to problems of its own? Can it see that failing to take Maj. Nidal Hasan’s progressiv­ely more radical religious views seriously as a security threat was a disaster? Does the administra­tion recognize that its subsequent official descrip- tion of the Fort Hood attack as “workplace violence” was a bad joke? Can it now admit that losing track of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, after repeated warnings from the Russians, was a politicall­y correct blunder?

This administra­tion’s efforts to deny that Islamism has anything to do with terror have led it into embarrassi­ng circumlocu­tions and denials. CIA Director John Brennan testified before Congress: “Our enemy is not ‘terror’ because terror is a state of mind, and as Americans we refuse to live in fear. Nor do we describe our enemy as ‘jihadists’ or ‘Islamists’ because jihad is a holy struggle, a legitimate tenet of Islam.”

Brennan also expressed the hope that the Obama administra­tion could “build up” the “more moderate elements within Hezbollah.” If Hezbollah is considered to contain moderates, it’s no wonder that James Clapper, director of national intelligen­ce, described the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in Egypt as “largely secular.”

It’s fine for Americans to “refuse to live in fear.” It’s not fine for the Obama administra­tion to insist that we live in denial.

 ??  ?? Boston bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev
Boston bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev
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