Saying “radical Islam” has nothing to do with defeating terrorism. By Fareed Zakaria. Washington Post, December 17, 2015.
Zakaria:
“Radical Islamic terrorism.” Apparently, the phrase — if you can actually say it — has mystical powers. At Tuesday’s Republican debate, the candidates once more took pains to point out that they would speak the dreaded words that President Obama and Hillary Clinton dare not. “We have a president who is unwilling to utter its name,” Ted Cruz said in his opening statement.
“Radical Islamic terrorism.” Apparently, the phrase — if you can actually say it — has mystical powers. At Tuesday’s Republican debate, the candidates once more took pains to point out that they would speak the dreaded words that President Obama and Hillary Clinton dare not. “We have a president who is unwilling to utter its name,” Ted Cruz said in his opening statement.
As it
turns out, the first time I described the enemy as “radical Islam” was in a column I wrote days after 9/11. I used the phrase “radical Islamic terrorism”
in another column later that month. So, having established my credentials, I
can honestly say that it gives absolutely nothing in the way of an answer or
strategy to deal with terrorist attacks.
It’s
not just Republicans who have decided that Obama’s and Clinton’s unwillingness
to use this phrase is a sign of weakness and strategic incoherence. There is a
cottage industry of writers who boast that they are brave enough to name the
enemy.
In
fact, Obama has often spoken about the problems of extremism in Islam. His
speech last year to the U.N. General Assembly focused significantly on that
topic: “Today, it is violence within Muslim communities that has become the
source of so much human misery. . . . It is
time for the world —
especially Muslim communities — to
explicitly, forcefully, and consistently reject the ideology of organizations
like al-Qaeda and ISIL [the Islamic State].”
In his
speech after the San Bernardino, Calif., shootings, Obama again made some of
these points, leading late-night comic Seth Meyers to quip: “So he used the
words ‘radical,’ ‘Islam,’ and ‘terrorism,’ he just didn’t use them in the right
order. Which would be a problem if it was a spell and he was Harry Potter, but
he’s not, so it isn’t.”
Obama
and Clinton have chosen not to describe the enemy as “radical Islam” out of
deference to the many Muslim countries and leaders who feel it gives the
terrorists legitimacy. President George W. Bush was similarly careful in his
rhetoric. For this reason, throughout the Middle East, the Islamic State is
called Daesh , an acronym with derogatory connotations.
Conservatives
have discovered a newfound love for France after its president declared war
following the Paris attacks. They might not have realized that François
Hollande purposely declared war not on the Islamic State but on Daesh. His
foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, explained: “I do not recommend using the term
Islamic State because it blurs the lines between Islam, Muslims and Islamists.
The Arabs call it ‘Daesh,’ and I will be calling them the ‘Daesh cutthroats.’”
The
best proof that calling radical Islam by its name provides no solutions is that
the Republican candidates had none at Tuesday’s debate. After all the huffing
and puffing, the most aggressive among them proposed more bombing, no-fly zones
and arming the Kurds.
These
are modest additions to Obama’s current strategy, each with its own problems.
More bombing has proved hard because there are many innocent civilians in
Islamic State strongholds. Administration sources tell me that a no-fly zone
would require at least 200 U.S. aircraft and would do little to stop the
violence, which is mostly conducted on land, with some via helicopters). Arming
the Kurds directly would enrage the Iraqi and Turkish governments, as well as
many of the Sunni tribes that would have to eventually occupy the lands that are
liberated. These are judgment calls, not no-brainers.
Most
important, however, fighting this terrorist group is not the same as fighting
radical Islam. Strangely, after the GOP candidates boldly and correctly
described the enemy as an ideology — which is much broader than one group —
they spoke almost entirely about fighting that one group. Even if the Islamic
State were defeated tomorrow, would that stop the next lone-wolf jihadist in
New York or Paris or London? The San Bernardino killers appear to have been
radicalized when the terrorist group barely existed.
In
fact, the enemy is radical Islam, an ideology that has spread over the past
four decades — for a variety of reasons — and now infects alienated young men
and women across the Muslim world. The fight against it must at its core be
against the ideology itself. And that can be done only by Muslims — they alone
can purge their faith of this extremism. After a slow start, several important
efforts are underway, perhaps more than people realize. The West can help by
encouraging these forces of reform, allying with them and partnering in efforts
to modernize their societies. But that is much less satisfying than hurling
invectives, calling for bans on Muslims and advocating carpet-bombing.