February 27,
2006
Oncoming
By David
Warren
This will be
my 11th consecutive column, directly or indirectly on the “Danish
cartoons” issue. The cartoons themselves were a red herring from
the start -- a fake issue, trumped up by fanatical Muslims seeking
grievances to abet a confrontation, and thereby extract
concessions from the West. It is a fire, still being stoked around
the world by radical “Islamists”, using shameless lies and
misrepresentations. (See my previous
columns.)
The reason I
have written so copiously on this subject -- not the cartoons
themselves, but what I have called the “organized apoplexy” in
response to them -- is because it is important. In my judgement,
it is the most important thing that has happened since the Al
Qaeda attack on the United States, in 2001. It is important in
combination with other fast-developing events, including the
victory of the openly terrorist Hamas in a Palestinian election;
Iran’s public promise to “wipe Israel off the map”; collapsing
public order in Pakistan, Nigeria, and elsewhere; the recent
Muslim riots, and continuing low-level Intifada in France; and now
the destruction of the Golden Mosque in Samarra, triggering
vicious sectarian strife in Iraq. And quite literally, hundreds of
lesser events of the same nature -- each revealing an Islamic
world in combustion, and a West retreating into contrived
apologies and other confused gestures of cowardice and
panic.
One cannot
keep up with all these events -- the wheels of history are turning
too quickly. The world in which we will find ourselves, a few
years hence, will not resemble the world we inhabited a few years
ago. Yet this is among the few predictions that can be safely
made. The events will fall out as unpredictably as those Danish
cartoons. The names, dates, and places are not yet recorded; but
the shape and scale of events is already blotting the sun on our
horizon.
Even after
the experience of the Great War, and the Depression, people on the
eve of the Hitler war could not appreciate what was coming. It is
only in retrospect that we understand what happened as the 1930s
progressed -- when a spineless political class, eager at any price
to preserve a peace that was no longer available, performed
endless demeaning acts of appeasement to the Nazis; while the
Nazis created additional grievances to extract more.
This is
precisely what is happening now, as we are confronted by the
Islamist fanatics, whose views and demands are already being
parroted by fearful “mainstream” Muslim politicians. We will do
anything to preserve a peace that ceased to exist on 9/11. Not one
of our prominent politicians dares even to name the
enemy.
And from a
mixture of fear of, and sympathy for, large, recent, Muslim
immigrant communities in the West, we confuse domestic and foreign
issues. I do not doubt the great majority of Muslims, in Canada
and around the world, are decent, “moderate” people, who want no
part in a “clash of civilizations”. But it has become obvious they
can do nothing to stop the triumph of “Islamism” internationally,
or oppose the fanatics proselytizing in their own
communities.
Germany was
full of moderate Germans, as Hitler rose; Stalin drove his oars
through a sea of moderate Russians. While we must not forget that
the Muslims are the first victims of “Islamism”, and may suffer
most from its triumph, we are beyond the point where we can do
more for them than destroy the tyranny by which they are
enthralled.
Indeed, many
Muslims, by birth or faith, remain our best allies, warning us as
many fine Germans did of what is coming our way. For example,
Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the Somali-born politician in the Netherlands --
a magnificent young woman -- speaking recently in
Berlin:
“Publication of the cartoons confirmed that there is
widespread fear among authors, filmmakers, cartoonists, and
journalists who wish to describe, analyze or criticize
intolerant aspects of Islam all over Europe. It has also
revealed the presence of a considerable minority in Europe who
do not understand or will not accept the workings of liberal
democracy. These people -- many of whom hold European
citizenship -- have campaigned for censorship, for boycotts, for
violence, and for new laws to ban 'Islamophobia'. … The issue is
not about race, colour, or heritage. It is a conflict of ideas,
which transcend borders and races.”
This was so,
she added, when we were finally obliged to stand against the
Nazis. It is true today, as we foolishly let the Islamist menace
grow and grow.
Copyright 2006 Ottawa Citizen