World Rustle Of Politics Conservative panel spotlights philosophical, strategic leanings. Robert Sklar Editor 0 n a crisp fall evening, Iran's threat to America, Israel's changing political philosophy and America's grappling with socialistic rumblings were among the topics filling the air at Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield. Those subjects were built around the theme "From Iran Aggression to U.S. Recession: The Challenges Ahead:' The subject matter certainly resonated, drawing 850 people to the Jewish Policy Center-sponsored forum. The JPC, based in Washington, D.C., is not for profit and unabashedly pro-Israelit seeks to provide scholarly perspectives on foreign and domestic policies affecting the American Jewish community and the broader American public. The Zionist Organization of America- Michigan Region invited the discussion panel of four of America's top conservative political observers. By their applause and questions, the audience was decidedly Zionist. A Nuclear Iran Frank Gaffney, director of the Washington- based Center for Security Policy, deliv- ered the most haunting message in response to moderator Michael Medved's question about the threat to America a nuclear-armed Iran Aak, would pose. Gaffney was Frank Gaffney President Reagan's assis- tant secretary of defense for international security policy. He founded the center in 1988, following Reagan's presidency. While Israelis and diaspora Jews about Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's boasts to destroy Israel with a nuclear blast, America shouldn't discount such a blast over America, Gaffney said. Ahmadinejad repeatedly talks about a "world without America" being not only desirable, but also achiev- able. An Iran-launched atomic bomb — developed in part by scientists from such far-flung places as North Korea, Pakistan, Russia and China — would wreak havoc if detonated in space 200 or 300 miles above the continental United States. Unleashed would be a strategic electro- magnetic pulse (EMP) attack. "It would be a burst of intense electro- magnetic energy," Gaffney said. "To give you a sense of the magnitude of it, it could be, by some estimates, a billion times the power of the most powerful radio signal on Earth." The U.S. electrical power grid would bear the brunt, triggering catastrophic consequences, according to a blue rib- bon commission reporting to Congress twice in the last two years. At least half the country could be affected, Gaffney said. Such an interruption would couple with our failure to find substantial alternative energy resources. "I think of it as transforming the United States pretty much in a blink of an eye from a 21st-century superpower into a pre-industrial society, one in which most of us over time would not be able to subsist; in other words, a world without America," Gaffney said. Gaffney reminded listeners that Iranian leaders parade their advanced missile, capable of being launched with a nuclear warhead from a freighter in international waters, through the Tehran streets with a sign on it saying, "Death to America, Death to Jews." A Failed Policy Daniel Pipes, director of the Philadelphia- based Middle East Forum and whose column often appears in the Detroit Jewish News, took issue with Israel's change of heart toward its Palestinian adversaries since the 1993 Oslo Accords. The Israeli government has made a fundamental shift from a policy of Daniel Pipes military deterrence to one of diplomatic reso- lution. While good in theory, it has proven any- thing but practical, Pipes said. "The last 15 years," he said, "have seen one Israeli concession after another in terms of land, recognition, money, training and arms. The result has been decreased resolution. Compare the situation today to 1993 and Israel's status and standing is far diminished." Israelis should seek victory considering that Israel's destruction remains a core of the Hamas charter. But compromise and remediation, not victory, is what's on the minds of Israel's top tier of leaders, Pipes said. "And that won't work with an enemy who wants your elimination:' he said. "Victory must be sought for Israel to remain strong and secure' The Israeli military still hasn't rebounded fully from its 2006 war along the Lebanon border with Hezbollah, he added. The Danger Of Sharia Frank Gaffney called the rising adherence to sharia, the system of Islamic religious law, in Western Europe a trou- bling phenomenon. Sharia is derived from the Koran, the Muslim holy book; the Hadith, the sayings and conduct of Mohammed; and fatwas, the edicts of Islamic leaders. "It's fair to say that all adherents of sharia are Muslim, but it's important to know that all Muslims are not adher- ents to sharia," Gaffney said. Gaffney distinguished between Muslims, like many in America, who are tolerant, peaceful and law abiding, and those in uncivilized regions who may subscribe to bar- baric forms of sharia like floggings, stonings, beheadings, amputations and female mutilation. He called that brand of sharia "stealth jihad." Typically, sharia followers, wherever they live and what- ever level they practice, seek not only to impose their belief on coreligionists, but also create political forces in mosques, prisons, chaplaincies and military units through parallel societies established through sharia courts. Such societies eventually will affect the general com- munity, creating a kind of totalitarian parasite, Gaffney believes. "For those who are doubters," Gaffney said, "I think A Better System Mona Charen, a Virginia-based syndicated columnist and political analyst, addressed moderator Medved's question whether the financial crisis could end America's free- market economy. Financial shockwaves aren't unheard of in capi- talist societies. There's no reason to think our free market won't bounce back. "In all of human history:' Charen said, "the great engine Mona Charen for prosperity and for improving the lives of human beings, particularly those on the lowest end of the economic ladder, has been capitalism. There's simply no other system that has ever been so successful at improving people's lives." She fears what some disbelievers in capitalism are gleaning from the financial tea leaves: reason to become like Europe and scrap the free market. In its place would be a government run and regulated economy, a more socialized economy. In that scenario, our healthcare network would be hit hard. "As you look around the world at economic systems that have socialized healthcare, they control costs by rationing care Charen said. "They'd rather ration care by forbidding people of a cer- Rustle on page A26 important respects of the practice that I just described is indistinguishable from the means by which the Nazis came to power in Germany and took over a continent and damn near took over the world." He added, "It's the playbook of classic totalitarianism." America must maintain its guard, he said. Daniel Pipes said sharia and its attributes are already happening "at a remarkable rate" in the United Kingdom. According to Mona Charen, the archbishop of Canterbury said he could see a recognition of UK sharia courts, which already treat women as subservient to men. "The British seem to have lost something," she said. "They have no internal reserves to say, 'We really don't have to accept sharia law. We do believe our way of treat- ing women is superior; that our way of justice is superior. And there will not be a compromise. "We will stand up for thousands of years of Western civilization.— She added, "The British have lost confidence in Western civilization. And that to me is even more frightening than the sharia challenge. It's the failure on the part of the West to have faith in our own society and in our own stan- dards." - Robert Sklar, editor November 6 ffi 2008 A25