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Politics : THE VAST RIGHT WING CONSPIRACY -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (4847)12/20/2003 11:55:50 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 6358
 
Stuck on Calypso’s Island
Dialoguing with the Europeans.

What follows is a fair summation of about 20 or so dialogues I had recently with a series of Europeans — a good cross-section really of Scandinavians, British, Germans, Greeks, and Dutch. Questions and answers are taken almost verbatim from our exchanges.











Europeans: What we object to most is the unilateralism and the language of the Bush administration, more so than any particular policy decision. Can't they tone it down?

Dumb American: Maybe this cowboyism is akin to a similarly southern-accented president's previous failure to consult both our Congress and the U.N. when we bombed Milosevic? Or are you guys ticked off at the litany of needlessly provocative and uncouth asides — like "German way," "sh*tty little country," "Nazi manner," "problems with Miami and New York," etc.? Or perhaps Mr. Bush — in the manner of President Putin — threatened castration to a French journalist?

Europeans: Moving on — you need to study our past to learn why we will no longer accept war as a method of adjudicating disputes.

Dumb American: We long ago did that — and in 1941 figured war was the only way to restore what you nearly destroyed.

Europeans: Well, war is simply not an option any longer for us, like it or not. You started this mess in Iraq and now want us to bail you out; so, yes, there is a sort of "I told you so" self-righteousness over here — and why not?

Dumb Americans: And do Osama bin Laden, General Mladic, Saddam Hussein, and Kim Jong Il — all suitably impressed with your elegant forbearance — agree about the futility of war? As far as Iraq goes, forget about the war, look at the peace. We are not asking you to help us fight, but to send some aid to a consensual government emerging in Iraq. Are we to assume that you would extend $100 billion in military and trade credits to a mass-murdering fascist, but almost nothing to his victims, who got very little from your lucrative trade deals?

Europeans: Perhaps our growing divide arises out of a sort of American simplicity about Israel and Sharon — now that the neocons have taken over Washington and have ignored the legitimate aspirations of the Palestinians. The United States simply is not as sensitive as we in Europe are to the problem of refugees and the abuse of power that is seen as so threatening to the Muslim world.

Dumb American: Do you mean the 50-something dead in Jenin last spring or the 80,000-something Muslim dead in Grozny over more than a decade — or is the rub the 250,000 Muslim dead in Kosovo and Bosnia? Is it the "hyper" reaction of IDF or of the Russian and Serbian armies that grates on you?

Europeans: True, there are legitimate differences in both points of view. But we worry that the Americans are not really aware of the depth of the European venom toward the United States. The anger is really cascading.

Dumb American: Do you think such populist fury will result in the wholesale expulsion of our soldiers from Germany, Suda Bay, or Spain? Or maybe even the ejection of the United States from NATO?

Europeans: Don't laugh — an all-EU force is months away.

Dumb American: Centered around the Charles de Gaul or the Luxembourg Air Force?

Europeans: Come on. You know that the animus is directed at Bush, not the American people.

Dumb American: No; I think the divide is even worse than that, I'm afraid. You see, the reaction over here is just the opposite — we have nearly given up not so much on European governments but Europeans themselves, which we see as essentially the same.

Europeans: In some ways you're right. After all, over half our population now believes that you — not the North Koreans or the Iranians — are the real threat to world peace.

Dumb American: I suppose a similar poll 65 years ago would have revealed the same thing about your fear of a unilateral Churchill and your ease with a multilateral Hitler, who seemed to get a nod from the Russians, Italians, Spanish, Eastern Europeans, and Japanese when he went into Poland. But in any case, we wish you luck with the Iranian mullahs. And as far as Tehran goes, for your sake — as long as we are not yet in missile range — we hope that your Nobel Prizes, trade credits, lectures, and so-called "soft power" provide better deterrence than an ABM.

Europeans: Our disagreement is not so simplistic as that. But part of the problem is that Americans simply do not know much outside their shores and listen to silly Fox News and Rush Limbaugh for their information.

Dumb American: Do you prefer instead the erudition and scholarship of Michael Moore, Noam Chomsky, Gore Vidal, or Thierry Meyssan, who, if the best-seller lists are any indication, have taught Europe much about America since 9/11?

Europeans: I'm talking about snap judgment and simple solutions to complex problems.

Dumb American: Like Bonapartism, Prussian militarism, Nazism, Italian fascism, Francoism, Marxism, and Communism?

Europeans: Well, it is precisely our experience with those nightmares that guides us today, and explains why we would never allow a South Central or Harlem. And certainly we wouldn't unleash someone like this Ashcroft — or wage a preemptive war in Iraq.

Dumb American: Marseilles is a socialist paradise? But tell me: Are Jews safer in Paris than Arabs are in Detroit? And is it a more moral thing for us to jail and try terrorist killers or, like you, turn them loose, as we saw all the time during the last two decades?

Europeans: But don't simply scoff; for us the idea that you would spend $87 billion on fighting in Iraq while your own people don't have health care is preposterous.

Dumb American: But was the death rate this August higher in the Sunni Triangle or Paris? We believe that a nanny state is not only inefficient, but, when the temperature rises, downright lethal.

Europeans: You can see what we need is more communication — what concrete steps need to be taken to resolve the issue?

Dumb American: For starters? Perhaps forgive Iraq's multibillion-dollar debt to France and Germany that Saddam ran up for imported weapons that killed thousands of his own people and some of us as well. Build a couple of aircraft carriers and learn how to use them to promote freedom and democracy. Impose a trade embargo on Syria and Iran. Don't give any more money to those who funnel it to suicide bombers on the West Bank. If you are in NATO, send 50,000 troops to Afghanistan to finish off those who attacked your ally; otherwise get out or dissolve NATO.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

And so it typically goes. Most of these European interlocutors are impressively educated. They are naturally inquisitive and well versed in the nuances of culture. But there is also a great fear among them — almost as if the United States is a painful reminder that the world might not be so calm beyond their shores. If we would just not stir things up, leave it alone, not worry about it — the "problem" of terror might go away — as if the Soviet Union once collapsed due not to billions invested in American deterrence, but to a change of heart by well-meaning Marxists in Moscow.

Europeans fixate on American and Israeli foibles — and not the far greater transgressions of Russians, Chinese, Iranians, or Arabs. Why? Because we alone listen to them, and with us they are not overwhelmed by the magnitude of a Grozny, Tibet, mass hangings in Tehran, the obliteration of an entire town in Hama, or the gassing of Kurds. And of course Mr. Bush does not threaten to cut off any European journalist's testicles, or brag about not clicking his heels to Germans.

I'm sure that the Europeans are light-years ahead of us in the use of public transportation. They probably are wiser in their per-capita energy utilization, and their primary and secondary education may be superior. But there is also something of Calypso's island about them. For all their professed enjoyment of food, shelter, and lovemaking, the Europeans are bored silly with their listless routine and are increasingly timid — this from a great people who should not, but really do, live in terror of their own past. Like Odysseus in his comfy subservience to Calypso, these mesmerized and complacent sensualists sometimes contemplate leaving the comfort of their fairyland atoll and in boredom weep nightly, gazing out at the seashore. But as yet they lack the hero's courage to finally build a raft and sail rough seas to confront suitors who are trying to crash their civilization.

This war would be over far sooner if 350 million Europeans insisted on a modicum of behavior from Middle Eastern rogue regimes, rounded up and tried terrorists in their midst, deported islamofascists, cut off funding to killers on the West Bank, ignored Yasser Arafat — and warned the next SOB who blew up Europeans in Turkey, North Africa, or Iraq that there was a deadly reckoning to come from the continent that invented the Western military tradition. Indeed, European sophistication and experience, combined with real power, could be a great aid to the West in its effort to promote liberal and consensual governments outside its shores. But if they do not even believe in the unique legacy of their civilization, then why should we — much less their enemies?

So for now we should not lament that the Europeans are no longer real allies, but rather be thankful that they are still for a while longer neutrals rather than enemies — these strange and brilliant people who somehow lost their way, and no longer can distinguish between a noisy Knesset and Arafat's hangmen, much less between those racing to topple a tyrant in Baghdad and others lounging at Sebrenica.





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To: calgal who wrote (4847)12/20/2003 11:56:03 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 6358
 
Comforting the Enemy
The Second Circuit seeks to bar the president from detaining enemy combatants.

By Andrew C. McCarthy

If you were under the impression that the 9/11 atrocities marked the long-overdue end of a suicidal government philosophy that terrorists and bombs should be fought with indictments and trials instead of missiles in the air and boots on the ground, guess again. A number of our esteemed federal judges did not get the memo. And having been such a ringing success at running prisons, schools, and housing developments, they've now decided to give micromanaging the prosecution of war a try.











Such is the unmistakable message of Thursday's decision by a divided panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York in the case of Jose Padilla (a.k.a. "Abdullah al Muhajir"), alleged to be an al Qaeda-trained dirty bomber. Despite the existence of very active military hostilities against an international terror network that has already executed domestic mass murder, the two-judge majority held that the president, the commander in chief responsible for conducting the war, is without authority to detain as an unlawful combatant an operative he found to have been dispatched by the terror network to carry out further slaughter, including the detonation of a radiological weapon of mass destruction. Padilla must instead, according to Circuit Judges Rosemary S. Pooler and Barrington D. Parker Jr., be charged and tried in a civilian court, where he would be entitled to the panoply of rights accorded criminal defendants — including, of course, massive amounts of discovery regarding what we know about his al Qaeda activities and how we know it.

Padilla, an American citizen and multiple prior felon with a juvenile murder conviction on his résumé, moved to Egypt and adopted militant Islam after being released from prison following a 1991 Florida weapons conviction. According to information proffered by the government to the federal district court, he traveled through the Middle East, eventually teaming up with al Qaeda in Afghanistan. In 2001 — long after bin Laden had already declared war against the United States, simultaneously bombed our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania (killing well over 200), and attacked the U.S.S. Cole in Yemen (killing 17 of our military personnel) — Padilla is said to have proposed to one of bin Laden's most intimate aides, the infamous Abu Zubaydeh, a plan to steal radioactive material within the United States in order to build a dirty bomb (or "radiological dispersal device"). Al Qaeda made available a safe house in Lahore, Pakistan, for research on the project, provided Padilla with the necessary training for this and other terror operations, and then dispatched him to the United States to make mayhem.

Fortunately, the government managed to develop enough evidence to detain him on a material-witness arrest warrant once he landed in Chicago, from Pakistan, on May 8, 2002. Then, as now, Americans were engaged in robust fighting against al Qaeda in Afghanistan and elsewhere; then as now, al Qaeda was promising new attacks against the United States and its allies. And while, thanks to the president's steely determination to take a military war to a military enemy, the terror network has not succeeded in reprising September 11 here at home, it has continued to conduct murderous bombing operations in Tunisia, Kenya, Indonesia, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Iraq.

There being a war against al Qaeda, and Padilla being an al Qaeda operative sent here to conduct attacks, the president made the eminently sensible decision to declare Padilla an enemy combatant and to have the Defense Department detain him. The authority under the laws of war to detain enemy combatants for the duration of hostilities has a rich pedigree. The logic, as explicitly recognized by the Geneva Conventions in 1949, is "to prevent military personnel from taking up arms once again against the captive state."

Under the Hague Convention of 1910, enemy combatants may be lawful or unlawful, based on whether they are subject to a formal chain of command, wear uniforms, carry their weapons openly, and conduct their operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war. Obviously, those who serve al Qaeda, a non-sovereign, multinational terrorist organization that clandestinely designs and executes indiscriminate mass homicide, are unlawful combatants.

While lawful combatants generally must be released at the cessation of hostilities unless some egregious conduct has rendered them triable as war criminals, unlawful combatants have no such right. It was once common for them to be executed summarily, although as Chief U.S. District Judge Michael B. Mukasey observed earlier in the litigation, "such Draconian measures have not prevailed in modern times in what some still refer to without embarrassment as the civilized world." Instead, it has long been established, as the Supreme Court recognized in its 1942 decision in Ex Parte Quirin, that unlawful combatants may be tried by military tribunals — even when civilian courts are available.

Faithful to these principles, District Judge Mukasey, deservedly among the most well-respected jurists in America and nonpareil in matters of national security, upheld President Bush's decision in a thoughtful, painstaking 102-page opinion. The dissenting third member of the Second Circuit's Padilla panel, Judge Richard C. Wesley, would have adopted the district court's ruling in all respects. Nevertheless, the panel majority reversed in a nettlesome opinion that both turns its back on settled law and displays a startling insouciance about the reality on the ground.

To arrive at their conclusion, Judges Pooler and Parker first had to tiptoe around about 150 years of jurisprudence, beginning with the Prize Cases of 1862 (arising out of President Lincoln's Civil War blockade of secessionist states), which holds that the president is not merely fully vested by Article II of the Constitution, but in fact obligated, to resist by all appropriate measures, including the use of force, a forcible attack against the United States. Similarly, the majority needed to end-around the commonsense separation of powers doctrine that it is for the president, not federal judges, to determine what measures are necessary to protect the country in time of war.

The majority paid lip service to these principles, but undermined them nonetheless by a demonstrably specious distinction: viz., whether the president's responsive measures are employed against "the outside world" or "turned inward" to United States territory. This notion the majority augmented with a loopy "zone of combat" theory — hypothesizing that even if the president can turn his powers war inward, he can only do so in a zone of active combat. The majority did not explain what "zone of combat" is, and who gets to decide whether there is one; they simply insisted that, wherever it was, Padilla was not in it.

Leaving aside al Qaeda's palpable success in fighting the war right in the heart of New York City — indeed, the chasm that was once the World Trade Center can be seen from the windows of the courthouse where the Second Circuit sits — the majority found this alleged distinction by mining language from a concurring opinion in the steel-seizure case (in which the Supreme Court undid President Truman's appropriation of American steel mills during the Korean War). Of course, that case had nothing to do with enemy combatants or an entity in hostilities with — and directing military operations inside — the United States.

A case that did deal directly with that situation was the aforementioned Quirin. There, Nazi operatives, including one who claimed to be an American citizen, stole into the United States by ship, shed their uniforms upon hitting the shore, and spread out to conduct sabotage operations against war industries and facilities. They, like Padilla (an American citizen), were captured before they could execute their designs. Importantly unlike Padilla, who at the moment is merely being detained, they were both detained and subjected to military tribunals. When they challenged that treatment, the Supreme Court ruled that, regardless of citizenship, persons who aligned themselves with an enemy and sought covertly to harm the United States in our territory while hostilities were ongoing could be declared unlawful combatants and subjected to military tribunals.

Recognizing that the Supreme Court's decisions are binding on lower federal courts, Judge Mukasey logically reasoned that if the Supreme Court had found prosecution by military tribunal (which could carry the death penalty) permissible, then mere detention must a fortiori be authorized for Padilla. The Second Circuit majority, however, contorted itself to draw a contrary conclusion.

First, the panel majority misleadingly suggested that Quirin was distinguishable because in World War II Congress had expressly authorized military tribunals. But Padilla's case is about detention, not military tribunals (at least not yet); and, more to the point, the Quirin Court expressly relied not only on the congressional grant of authority but also the president's independent constitutional authority as commander in chief under Article II. Second, the majority noted that the Quirin defendants had acknowledged their status as Nazi agents while Padilla "from all indications, intends to dispute his designation as an enemy combatant" — a bizarre point since it would hinge the propriety of presidential action to protect a nation at war on the subjective assertions of terrorists regarding whether they were really unlawful combatants. (One could strongly disagree with, but understand, a court saying that it, rather than the president, had the final word on who could be considered an enemy combatant; the thought of leaving the matter up to the terrorists themselves, however, is breathtaking.)

Third, and most plausibly, the majority noted that when Quirin was decided, an important statute, Section 4001(a) of Title 18, United States Code, had not yet been enacted. Section 4001(a) states that "[n]o citizen shall be imprisoned or otherwise detained by the United States except pursuant to an Act of Congress." This provision clearly spells trouble for the argument — advanced by the government — that the president still retains plenary constitutional authority to detain unlawful combatants. Such a contention would call for either holding Section 4001(a) unconstitutional (as an improper legislative infringement on the president's Article II authority as commander-in-chief) — something courts should do only as a last, unavoidable resort — or for finding a fairly straightforward statute somehow ambiguous and inapplicable.

Nonetheless, as the district court had wisely found, there was no need in Padilla's case to go down either of these unsavory paths because an Act of Congress authorizing Padilla's detention was ready to hand. Specifically, one week after the September 11 attacks, Congress passed a joint resolution, broadly authorizing the president to "use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons."

District Judge Mukasey had found that Padilla easily fell within the ambit of the joint resolution. Palpably, al Qaeda carried out the September 11 attacks, Padilla is alleged to be an al Qaeda operative who trained with the organization, and he was sent here precisely to commit "future acts of international terrorism against the United States." Remarkably, however, the Second Circuit majority quibbled that the resolution permitting "all necessary and appropriate force" (emphasis added) — which obviously includes killing enemy operatives — "contains no language authorizing detention." That should be interesting to try to apply in the field: You can shoot 'em but make sure you don't hold 'em.

The majority airily puttered that it was required under the circumstances to carve out for Padilla a lacuna in the sweep of the joint resolution because the Constitution enshrines civil rights just as it does the enumerated powers of government. Forgetting for the moment that we are in a war with soldiers and civilians being murdered, and even ignoring the dispositive rationale of Quirin that withers such high-minded ephemera, the majority's reasoning here cannot even withstand the steel seizure opinion it purports to regard as its analytical guide. There, as Judge Wesley pointedly noted in his Padilla dissent, the Supreme Court asserted: "When the President acts pursuant to an express or implied authorization of Congress, his authority is at its maximum, for it includes all that he possesses in his own right plus all that Congress can delegate." In such instances — as here, where President Bush prosecutes a war with the unambiguous and sweeping support of a legislative enactment — the civil rights of would-be dirty-bombers must take a back seat.

Concerns about detention of enemy combatants are not persuasive, but neither are they frivolous. There is no end in sight for the war on terror, which means there is in theory no set end date for release of al Qaeda fighters from detention — just as the American people have no set end date when their anxiety over the possibility of another September 11 might ebb. But there is no justification at this point to inflate the dimensions of Padilla's plight. We are not in a mere technical state of war; we are in a real, live shooting war. There is no rational fear here that the president is rounding up political enemies or suspect ethnic classes under the cover of phony hostilities; there are exceedingly few persons being held as unlawful combatants, and there is a reasoned basis for each of those detentions — indeed, even the Second Circuit majority conceded that Padilla appeared to be a national security threat.

While it is, moreover, a foreign concept to many federal judges today, it bears noting that the president is a coordinate constitutional actor, of equal status to the judicial branch. He takes an oath to uphold the Constitution just like judges do. Given that prosecution of war is uniquely a presidential prerogative, why should anyone have more faith in the courts than the president to decide who the combatants are and what must be done to neutralize them?

The Second Circuit's decision would do immeasurable damage to the prosecution of the war on terror — undermining those who are fighting it, clothing terrorists actively abetting al Qaeda in the rights of common criminal defendants, and forcing the government to reveal sensitive information to those terrorists in civilian criminal proceedings at the very time that information is most needed to defeat the enemy and protect national security. The government has the option of seeking review from the entire Second Circuit (i.e., all thirteen judges) or proceeding directly to the Supreme Court. It must do so with all appropriate speed.

— Andrew C. McCarthy, a former federal prosecutor who led the 1995 terrorism case against Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, is a consultant at the Investigative Project in Washington.



To: calgal who wrote (4847)12/20/2003 11:56:14 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6358
 
Chirac and the Muslims
A misguided policy.

By Amir Taheri

France's state-owned television channels reached their highest viewer ratings Wednesday when the nation was invited to witness what one commentator described as "an historic moment."











This consisted of a 4,000-word address by President Jacques Chirac, live from the Elysee Palace. With a tricolor in the background to emphasise the solemnity of the occasion, Chirac read his text as if it were a declaration of war. A crowd of 400 "leading citizens," including the prime minister, the entire cabinet, speakers of the two houses of parliament, and heads of the various religious communities, were present in the gilded hall to provide the cued applause.

But what was all the fuss about?

From the way the French media have covered the occasion, one would think that Chirac had raised the banner of national resistance against a foreign invader: something like Vercingetorix standing up to Roman conquerors in Gaul, or Charles Martel stopping the Saracens at Poitier.

All that Chirac did, however, was "instruct" the parliament to pass a law under which girls wearing the Islamist foulard (head scarf) would not be allowed to attend state-owned schools. Anxious that the move should not appear anti-Islamic, the president also announced that the wearing of "big crosses", and Jewish skullcaps, would also be banned. Chirac said that the Hand of Fatma be banned too, though apparently he didn't even know what it was: He pronounced it Fatima's Hand, and appeared to regard it as an Islamic symbol.

Chirac presented the foulard as the greatest challenge faced by the French republic since it formulated its secular principles in 1905. Using the traditional devices of French grandiloquence, the president recalled the heritage of the Great Revolution and its rallying cry: freedom, fraternity, and equality.

The truth, however, is that Chirac has decided upon — or been misled into — making a mountain out of a molehill. By doing so, he risks casting himself in the role of a modern Don Quixote, off to fight the windmills instead of the real giants.

First, it is wrong to see the foulard as a symbol of conflict between Islam and the West: The foulard in question is a political, not a religious, symbol. Designed in Lebanon in 1975 and imposed by force in Iran in the 1980s, it has never been sanctioned by any Islamic religious authority in France or anywhere else; it has, however, been adopted as a symbol by many radical Islamist groups.

Thus Chirac is wrong to present the foulard as a means by which mainstream Islam is trying to extend religion into the public space. And even then, the foulard concerns very few Muslims in France, or anywhere else in the world for that matter.

The French government's own statistics show that no more than 2,000 out of 1.8 million Muslim girls wore it in 2002. Several studies conducted in various Muslim-inhabited French suburbs show that more than two-thirds of girls wearing the foulard do so because of intimidation by organized Islamist gangs. But Chirac isn't passing laws to protect those girls from intimidation: He is suggesting legislation to punish them at the school gates instead.

France does have a problem with its Arab population, most of which comes from North Africa. The North African minority, known as beurs, bears deep resentment about France's colonial past. It also regards itself as a victim of racial discrimination, much as do African Americans in the United States.

The problem of the beurs, therefore, is social, cultural, and economic — not religious. Even if all beurs converted to Christianity or became atheists, they would still feel like victims, because they cannot get good jobs and are confined to the shanty towns built by French Stalinists in the 1950s and 1960s.

There's even more to refute about the "subversiveness" of France's six million Muslims. Of these, for example, more than half have taken up French nationality and thus, one must presume, respect the principles on which the French republic is based. Another 1.5 million, mostly from Algeria and Morocco, are believed to have dual nationality. But there is no reason to believe that they wish to undermine the principles of French statehood. Nor is the Muslim community isolated, or self-segregating: Some 40 percent of French Muslims marry non-Muslims. (

To treat France's Muslims as a single community is to mistakenly believe that Islam, like Christianity, has church-like structures. Islam, however, is the religion of the individual: Its chief feature is the direct line it establishes between the believer and the Creator, thus eliminating priests, intercessors, and other religious functionaries.

Since there is no baptism or confirmation in Islam, and certainly no excommunication either, the only way to know who is a Muslim and who is not is an individual's self-identification as one. The Chirac administration's attempt at inventing a single "authority" for Islam is already proving counterproductive. This was made abundantly clear last year when the interior ministry decided to create a "French authority" for Islam.

The ministry gathered a few beards from around the country and put them up for election as founders of the French "church" of Islam. Despite months of publicity, and some $50 million in public funds (illegal under French secular rules), the election that the ministry organized for the "church of Islam" attracted around 40,000 voters, less than one percent of Muslims eligible for the franchise. Not surprisingly, those who voted were mostly political militants who want to transform Islam into an ideology and use it as an instrument of achieving power, or at least a share in it.

Thus the battle Chirac needs to fight is not with Muslims in France, but instead with the militant Islamists that his own government has helped and financed.

French Muslims have scores of non-religious organizations and associations. But the authorities never talk to them. French governments, on both the left and the right, cannot understand a simple fact: It is possible to be a believing and practicing Muslim without subscribing to communitarian politics.

Despite Chirac's typically monarchic "instructions" to the legislature, the French parliament should not rush into hasty lawmaking on this sensitive issue. What France needs instead is a proper study of the Islamic presence on her soil.

Such a study would show that France has no problem with its Muslim citizens as such. The problem it has is with fascists using religion not only against the French republic, but also, and often primarily, against Muslims. The overwhelming majority of the girls who wear the foulard is forced to do so by verbal threats or even physical violence. The small numbers that might wear it for political and ideological reasons must be allowed to do so for as long as they do not try to impose it on others through psychological terror or physical violence.

Chirac's intervention may well be connected with the declining popularity of his government. His loose center-right coalition of half a dozen parties is facing local elections next May, and feels threatened by the rising tide of extremism from both left and right. The extreme Right, especially the National Front, which won over 18 percent of the votes in the presidential election almost two years ago, is trying to portray Islam as a religious threat to "Christian" France. The extreme Left, led by Trotskyites, claims that Islam is now the only religion that can endanger France's secular traditions.

By trying to make his own Islamic pitch, Chirac may well be trying to chip at the support base of both extreme-right and extreme-left parties. This may be a clever tactic in electoral terms. But it leaves the real issue untouched: France is threatened by a number of extremist groups of which the Islamists are but one — that have to be challenged and defeated in the political arena.

— Amir Taheri is an Iranian author of ten books on the Middle East and Islam. He's reachable through www.benadorassociates.com.





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WFB: Churchbound? 12/19 1:25 p.m.

Taheri: Chirac and the Muslims 12/19 1:22 p.m.

Murdock: Medicrime 12/19 9:28 a.m.

Greene: Bad-Mouthing Texas 12/19 9:26 a.m.

McCarthy: Comforting the Enemy 12/19 9:23 a.m.

Bandow: Where's the Compassion? 12/19 9:20 a.m.

Berkowitz: The Israeli Summit 12/19 9:20 a.m.

Barnett: Federalism Wins 12/19 9:15 a.m.

Ponnuru: Laboratories of Hypocrisy 12/19 9:13 a.m.

DeHaven: Bolten's Fuzzy Math 12/19 9:04 a.m.

Luskin: Research Rout 12/19 9:01 a.m.

York: Halliburton's "Gouging" 12/19 8:59 a.m.

Gurdon: Poinsettias and Society Garlic 12/19 8:49 a.m.

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