January 22, 2007

Hitchens Builds on Steyn's Thesis

Christopher Hitchens writes an interesting critique of Mark Steyn's America Alone. It is a must read for anyone interested in international affairs. Hitchens, an atheist and socialist, supported the Iraq War and is very concerned with the rise of Islam in the West. He proposes a number of actions the West should take to halt the spread of radical Islam and reduce the threat of terrorism:

1. An end to one-way multiculturalism and to the cultural masochism that goes with it. The Koran does not mandate the wearing of veils or genital mutilation, and until recently only those who apostasized from Islam faced the threat of punishment by death. Now, though, all manner of antisocial practices find themselves validated in the name of religion, and mullahs have begun to issue threats even against non-Muslims for criticism of Islam. This creeping Islamism must cease at once, and those responsible must feel the full weight of the law. Meanwhile, we should insist on reciprocity at all times. We should not allow a single Saudi dollar to pay for propaganda within the U.S., for example, until Saudi Arabia also permits Jewish and Christian and secular practices. No Wahhabi-printed Korans anywhere in our prison system. No Salafist imams in our armed forces.

2. A strong, open alliance with India on all fronts, from the military to the political and economic, backed by an extensive cultural exchange program, to demonstrate solidarity with the other great multiethnic democracy under attack from Muslim fascism. A hugely enlarged quota for qualified Indian immigrants and a reduction in quotas from Pakistan and other nations where fundamentalism dominates.


3. A similarly forward approach to Nigeria, São Tomé and Príncipe, and the other countries of Western Africa that are under attack by jihadists and are also the location of vast potential oil reserves, whose proper development could help emancipate the local populations from poverty and ourselves from dependence on Middle Eastern oil.

4. A declaration at the UN of our solidarity with the right of the Kurdish people of Iraq and elsewhere to self-determination as well as a further declaration by Congress that in no circumstance will Muslim forces who have fought on our side, from the Kurds to the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan, find themselves friendless, unarmed, or abandoned. Partition in Iraq would be defeat under another name (and as with past partitions, would lead to yet further partitions and micro-wars over these very subdivisions). But if it has to come, we cannot even consider abandoning the one part of the country that did seize the opportunity of modernization, development, and democracy.

5. Energetic support for all the opposition forces in Iran and in the Iranian diaspora. A public offer from the United States, disseminated widely in the Persian language, of help for a reformed Iran on all matters, including peaceful nuclear energy, and of assistance in protecting Iran from the catastrophic earthquake that seismologists predict in its immediate future. Millions of lives might be lost in a few moments, and we would also have to worry about the fate of secret underground nuclear facilities. When a quake leveled the Iranian city of Bam three years ago, the performance of American rescue teams was so impressive that their popularity embarrassed the regime. Iran’s neighbors would need to pay attention, too: a crisis in Iran’s nuclear underground facilities—an Iranian Chernobyl—would not be an internal affair. These concerns might help shift the currently ossified terms of the argument and put us again on the side of an internal reform movement within Iran and its large and talented diaspora.

6. Unconditional solidarity, backed with force and the relevant UN resolutions, with an independent and multi-confessional Lebanon.

7. A commitment to buy Afghanistan’s opium crop and to keep the profits out of the hands of the warlords and Talibanists, until such time as the country’s agriculture— especially its once-famous vines—has been replanted and restored. We can use the product in the interim for the manufacture of much-needed analgesics for our own market and apply the profits to the reconstruction of Afghanistan.

8. We should, of course, be scrupulous on principle about stirring up interethnic tensions. But we should remind those states that are less scrupulous—Iran, Pakistan, and Syria swiftly come to mind—that we know that they, too, have restless minorities and that they should not make trouble in Afghanistan, Lebanon, or Iraq without bearing this in mind. Some years ago, the Pakistani government announced that it would break the international embargo on the unrecognized and illegal Turkish separatist state in Cyprus and would appoint an ambassador to it, out of “Islamic solidarity.” Cyprus is a small democracy with no armed forces to speak of, but its then–foreign minister told me the following story. He sought a meeting with the Pakistani authorities and told them privately that if they recognized the breakaway Turkish colony, his government would immediately supply funds and arms to one of the secessionist movements—such as the Baluchis—within Pakistan itself. Pakistan never appointed an ambassador to Turkish Cyprus.

Interesting thoughts. If only other socialists were as realistic and sane as Mr. Hitchens to the true threat to Western Civilization.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Is this the new 8 Commandments? I like them!
On a more serious note, I must say that I agree with most of what he has said.
We are seeing a double standard that will eventually destroy the culture of the west as we know it.

Irfan said...

It amuses me when culturally senile conservatives manufacture a dispute with mainstream Islam and ordinary Muslims just because a bunch of lunatics decide they want to fly airplanes into skyscrapers.

Steyn and Hitchens should just come out and write their next book jointly. They can call it "The protocols of the Learned Elders of Islam".

With this sort of thinking, it's little wonder the neo-Cons are on the nose ...

The Strong Conservative said...

Irfan:
When 80% of the imams in Canada are noted to be preaching extremist versions of Islam by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Mr. Hitchens and Mr. Steyn seem quite sane.
It is the willful blindness of citizens like your self that seems culturally suicidal and "senile" to me.
But hey, at least we can agree on U2, "In the Name of Love"...

Anonymous said...

Irf;

Come on now. 'Culturally senile conservatives manufacturing a dispute with mainstream Islam and ordinary Muslims' misses the greater point. We have not heard from mainstream Islam or ordinary muslims. Will we ever?

Best,
Kev

Ryan said...

a minor note, but hitchens is no longer a socialist, and has not been for some time. he is loosely a neoconservative, but admits to disputation with their rather asinine alliance with christian conservatives.

also, i would wager we have not heard much from moderate islam because it does not sell books and fire up the public imagination the way the islamists do. the squeaky wheel gets the cluster bomb, you might say.

hitchens is a mighty thinker, far more nuanced than irfan gives him credit for, and i think a bit more circumspect than steyn. you can disagree with his stance, but his logic is frequently hermetic. there are no fallacies to pry at, as with steyn.