Naming The Enemy Philadelphia as anyone noticed the dif- ference in the way America's two wars are approached? When the subject is Iraq, the U.S. government is proactive, articulate and specific. But when it comes to militant Islam, officialdom is reactive, awkward and vague. Take the issue of preventive security. To stop Iraqi sabotage and terrorism, the New York Times recently reported, Washington tracks thousands of Iraqi citizens and Iraqi-Americans who might pose a domestic risk. It even has plans in place to arrest sympathizers to Iraq's Saddam Hussein who are sus- pected of planning terrorist operations. No comparable program exists in the war against militant Islam. (I define "militant Islam" as not Islam, not ter- rorism, but a terrorist reading of Islam.) Fearful of being accused of. "profil- ing," law enforcement treads super gingerly around those who back this totalitarian ideology. Thus, the airline security system randomly harasses pas- sengers instead of looking for travelers . known to sympathize with the likes of Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini (who died E Daniel Pipes is director of the Middle East Forum and author of 'Militant Islam Reaches America." E mail: Pipes@MEForum.org - in.1989) and Osama bin Laden. ments refuse to say this out loud. the enemy is it possible to see Immigration officials focus on superfi- Instead, they repeat pleasant the goal of defeating and cial characteristics (nationality, crimi- statements disassociating the marginalizing this ideology nal record) and ignore what is truly religion of Islam from violence. (along the lines of what was relevant (ideology). Here is President George W. done to fascism and commu- The White House would not con- Bush on the subject some days nism in World War II and in sider inviting Baghdad's apologists to ago: "Islam, as practiced by the the cold war). festive functions. But it welcomed vast majority of people, is a • Defining the enemy. Right many of militant Islam's sympathizers peaceful religion, a religion DANIEL now, it's just "terrorists," "evil- at a Ramadan dinner hosted by the that respects others." doers," "a dangerous group of PIPES president earlier this month. Fine, but that completely people" and other non-specif- Special Or consider this: When did you last avoids the tough issues facing ic monikers. Naming militant Commentary hear praise for Saddam's regime on an his administration. Islam as the enemy reveals American television talk show? It does that the problem goes beyond not happen. But media outlets rou- terrorists to include those who in non- Clearing The Hurdles tinely offer a platform to those pro- violent ways forward the totalitarian moting militant Islam. Not acknowledging militant Islam agenda — that includes its finders, If "war on Iraq" is easy to say, "war impedes the war effort in several ways: preachers, apologists and lobbyists. on militant Islam" is not. Instead, the • Understanding the enemy's motives: • Defining the allies Allies are cur- Bush administration adopted the A virtual taboo exists in official circles rently restricted to those who help pre- euphemistic "war on terror." about Islam's role in the violence; in vent terrorism. Naming militant Islam Why the readiness to confront Iraq the words of one senior State clarifies the ideological dimension and head-on but reluctance to do so when Department official, this subject "has points to the crucial role. of Muslims it concerns militant Islam? to be tip-toed around." who reject this radical utopian ideolo- Because militant Islam benefits from As a result, the violence is treated as gy. They can both help argue against it two factors — political correctness and though it comes out of nowhere,_ the and then offer an alternate to it. lobbying — that Saddam lacks. work of (in Bush's description) "a A war cannot be won without iden- Iraq is a country ruled by an obvious- bunch of cold-blooded killers. tifying the enemy. If the U.S. govern- ly evil megalomaniac. Militant Islam is • Defining war goals: The U.S ment intends to prevail in the current an ideology grounded in a major reli- government's stated objectives in the , conflict, it must start talking about gion. Saddam has few supporters in the war are operationally vague — the war against militant Islam. This United States; the Islamic vision has Secretary of Defense Donald H. will then make it possible for others many convincing spokesmen. Rumsfeld once described them as — the media, Hollywood, even aca- Although everyone knows the enemy preventing terrorists "from adversely demics — to do likewise. is motivated in something having to do - affecting our way of life." At that point, both war efforts will with Islam, the U.S. and other govern- Only by naming militant Islam as be on the right footing. O )3 Confronting Claustrophobia Johannesburg, South Africa here's no need for a $6 mil- lion population study here, like the United Jewish Communities' boondoggle in America, to find out that the South African Jewish community is steadily getting smaller, older, more insular and more uncomfortable. Conversations with South African Jews in various walks of life paint a picture of what one worker at Cape Town's impressive Jewish Museum called a "claustrophobic" community. Many of the younger, more talented and wealthier Jews are leaving for the United States, Canada, Australia and, to a lesser degree, because of the intifada [Palestinian uprising], Israel. During the apartheid years, many Jewish families sent their sons abroad T Douglas M. Bloomfield is a former executive director of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. E-mail• dmb@his.com to avoid the draft. Today's 20-some- things don't see a bright future here and are leaving in growing numbers, as their parents are debating whether to follow or remain with their own generation. A major factor keeping the older generation here is the weakness of the South African currency, the rand which gives them a comfortable life they could not afford abroad. The quality of life many boast about seems surreal. It is a life with tennis courts, swimming pools and gardens surrounded by walls, barbed wire and electrified fences; it is accompanied by a fear to venture into many parts of the cities because of a plague of violent crime fed by rage from a recent past. Today's Jewish community is far below its postwar peak of about 120,000 — estimates range from 40,000 to 80,000, but no one knows for sure. While most Jews may have looked on blacks as "others" and counted themselves among the domi- Most Jews Not Activist nant white population, the One black author has estimat- white establishment, both ed that nearly 80 percent of British and Afrikaaners, views white South Africans sup- Jews as "others." porting progressive causes DOUGLAS M. were Jews. Mandela, the for- Jews have a rich history BLOOMFIELD mer South African president, here going back nearly two Special centuries, during which has written that he found they've risen to prominence Commentary Jews more progressive about in business, industry, the race and politics than other professions and government. whites because they, too, had But unlike in America, experienced prejudice. South African Jews have largely But that didn't translate into broad failed to use their position and power Jewish community support. Quite the to advance Jewish causes. That segre- opposite. Indifference, racism and fears gation of interests was especially of sparking neo-Nazi anti-Semitism in apparent in the battle against the ruling National Party kept most Jews apartheid. on the sidelines. The South African The leading white activists in the Jewish Board of Deputies was carefully struggle were Jews. In the infamous neutral; even when Catholic and Rivonia treason trial of 1964 that Protestant leaders were speaking out. sentenced Nelson Mandela to life in American journalist Glenn Frankel prison with six co-defendants, five of has written that "when it came to them were Jewish. So was Mandela's political morality the official Jewish lawyer (now this country's chief jus- tice) and so was the chief prosecutor. BLOOMFIELD on page 35 . msr 11/29 2002 33