The War's Most Agonizing Issue Philadelphia he day after 9-11, Texas police arrested two Indian Muslim men riding a train and carrying about $5,000 in cash, black hair dye, and box cut- ters like those used to hijack four planes just one day earlier. The police held the pair initially on immigration charges (their U.S. visas had expired); when further inquiry turned up credit card fraud, that kept them longer in detention. But law enforcement's real interest, of course, had to do with their possible connec- tions to Al Qaida. To investigate this matter — and here our information comes from one of those two Indian Muslims, Ayub Ali Khan, after he was released — the authorities put them through some pretty rough treatment. Khan says the interrogation "terrorized" him. He recounts how "five to six men would pull me in different directions very roughly as they asked rapid-fire questions ... Then suddenly they would brutally throw me against the wall." They also asked him political ques- tions: Had he, for example, "ever dis- cussed the situation in Palestine with friends?" Eventually exonerated of connec- T Daniel Pipes is director of the Middle East Forum and author of Militant Islam Reaches America. His e-mail address is: Pipes@MEForum.org Lions to terrorism and freed from jail, Khan is not surprisingly bitter about his experience, saying that he and his traveling partner were singled out on the basis of profiling: "I was caught because I was a Muslim." This is self- evidently correct; had Khan not been a Muslim, the police would have had lit- tle interest in him and his box cutters. Khan's tribulation brings to attention the single most delicate and agonizing issue in prosecuting the war on terror. Does singling out Muslims for addi- Does singling out Muslims for addi- tional scrutiny serve a purpose? And if so, is it legally and morally acceptable? tional scrutiny serve a purpose? And if so, is it legally and morally acceptable? In reply to the first question — yes, enhanced scrutiny of Muslims makes good sense, for several reasons: • In the course of their assaults on Americans, Islamists . — the supporters of militant Islam — have killed close to 4,000 persons since 1979, and they are plotting to kill many more. No other Jews In The Trenches Washington, D. C. ewish community relations activists around the country may not have the high profile of the communal talking heads in New York or the big-time lobbyists in Washington, but in the coming year they're going to be on the front lines of some of the community's toughest battles. Many of those fights will take place in city halls and statehouses, commu- nity centers and churches, away from the media glare in Washington. They may be underpaid and over- worked and dismissed as amateurs by some of the big organizational machers, but they are the Jewish com- munity's early warning system and advance troops; they are the ones who get clobbered with problems long before the communal headliners start Jr James D. Sesser is a Washington correspon- dent. His e-mail address is jbesser@attmet blast-faxing their latest sound bites. Here are a handful of big challenges that will affect Jewish community rela- tions councils in the upcoming year. • War fallout. Today, polls show a strong majority of Americans support President Bush's determination to oust Iraq's Saddam Hussein, but that sup- port is thin and could evaporate quickly if the impending military action isn't as quick and painless as administration officials suggest. The embryonic anti-war movement could gain substantial traction if the war turns sour, and that's very bad news for the Jewish community for one reason: that emerging movement is riddled with vehement anti-Israel ideology and, in some cases, outright anti-Semitism. The big Jan. 18 protest rally in Washington was organized by ANSWER (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism), a group responsible for group has remotely the same scrutiny be permitted? past record or future intentions. To ask this question is to • While most Muslims are answer it. If Americans want to not Islamists and most protect themselves from Islamist Islamists are not terrorists, all terrorism, they must temporari- Islamist terrorists are Muslims. ly give higher priority to securi- (In rare circumstances, non- ty concerns than to civil liber- Muslims provide help; thus tarian sensitivities. Preventing the New York lawyer Lynne Islamists from wreaking further DANIEL Stewart is charged with help- damage implies the regrettable PIPES ing Omar Abdel Rahman, an step of focusing on Muslims. Special imprisoned terrorist leader.) Commentary Not to do so is an invitation to • Islamist terrorists do not further terrorism. appear spontaneously but This solemn reality suggests emerge from a milieu of religious sanc- four thoughts: First, as Khan's experi- tion, intellectual justification, financial ence shows, Muslims are already sub- support and organizational planning. jected to added scrutiny; the time has These circumstances — and this is come for politicians to catch up to the unpleasant part — point to the reality and formally acknowledge what imperative of focusing on Muslims. are now quasi-clandestine practices. There is no escaping the unfortu- Doing so places these in the public nate fact that Muslim government arena where, to the benefit of all, they employees in law enforcement, the can openly be debated. military, and the diplomatic corps Second, because having to focus need to be watched for connections to heightened attention on Muslims is terrorism, as do Muslim chaplains in inherently so unpleasant, it needs to be prisons and the armed forces. Muslim conducted with utmost care and tact, - visitors and immigrants must undergo remembering above all that seven out additional background checks. of eight Muslims are not Islamists and Mosques require a scrutiny beyond fewer still are connected to terrorism. that applied to churches, synagogues, Third, this is an emergency measure and temples. Muslim schools require that should end with the war on ter- increased oversight to ascertain what is ror's conclusion. being taught to children. Finally, innocent Muslims who must Singling out a class of persons by endure added surveillance can console their religion feels wrong, if not down- themselves with the knowledge that right un-American, prompting the their security too is enhanced by these question: even if useful, should such steps. ❑ ugly pro-Palestinian rallies last year. One of its current proj- ects: promoting an interna- tional tribunal to indict the .U.S. and Israel for war crimes. Their job won't be to mobi- lize support for the Iraq war — already, the community is far from unanimous on that, and differences are likely to grow if the war is not quick and clean — but to ensure that legiti- War And Israel mate dissent in their commu- Despite the moderate tone of nities does not spill over into JAM ES D. anti-Israel animus or anti- the March 18 protests, the BES SER organizing group is so radical Semitism. Spe cial • Black-Jewish relations. and so biased on Mideast ques- Comm entary They're worsening; black anti- tions that even many Jewish left-wingers feel uncomfortable Semitism is on the rise, and the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) has at its events. become the primary venue for criticism A nasty turn in the expected Iraq war in an overwhelmingly pro-Israel — huge U.S. casualties, protracted Congress. Some CBC members even urban warfare, new terrorism on these provide forums for hostile voices such as shores, a big hit to the U.S. economy — Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. could cause that movement to mush- room, carrying the anti-Israel element And black-Jewish relations could feel the impact of a Democratic presi- along with it. dential primary contest that features Local Jewish community relations both the Rev. Al Sharpton, .a flamboy- activists will play a role in ensuring that grass-roots discontent over the Iraq war ant, highly controversial civil rights leader, and Sen. Joe Lieberman, D- does not provide cover for anti-Israel radicals. BESSER on page 36 1/24 2003 35