SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : High Tolerance Plasticity -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bruce L who wrote (21602)9/25/2004 3:39:26 PM
From: Bruce L  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 23153
 
Awesome analysis of the presidential election by George Firedman of Stratfor:

Read Message Back to: Inbox

From: Strategic Forecasting <alert@stratfor.com>
Date: 2004/09/23 Thu PM 09:14:10 EDT
To: standard@stratfor.com
Subject: Geopolitical Intelligence Report: The U.S. Presidential Election: On Its Own Terms

(Choose Folder) Buying Family Friends HISTORY PHILOSOPHY POLITICS RECIPES SentMail Trash

Geopolitical Intelligence Report: The U.S. Presidential Election:
On Its Own Terms
.................................................................

REFER A FRIEND TO STRATFOR

To refer a friend to Stratfor, send this Stratfor Weekly
directly to a friend or colleague by forwarding this email, or
by visiting:

web2.stratfor.com

You can also find a link to the referral form on:

stratfor.com

.................................................................

THE GEOPOLITICAL INTELLIGENCE REPORT

The U.S. Presidential Election: On Its Own Terms
September 23, 2004

By George Friedman

Last week, we analyzed the U.S. presidential elections in terms
of foreign expectations, merely touching on the internal dynamics
of the election. This week, it is time to bite the bullet and
analyze the U.S. election as we would analyze any other -- on its
own terms.

From the beginning, there has been a single, overriding factor in
the 2004 presidential campaign: It is the first election since
1988 in which a substantial third-party candidate is not running.

In 1992 and 1996, Ross Perot captured a substantial number of
votes in critical states. In terms of the popular vote, Bill
Clinton took well below 50 percent in 1992 and just a shade above
50 percent in 1996. There is a great deal of debate as to how the
votes that went to Perot would have broken if he had not been in
the race, but it is our view that without Perot, George H.W. Bush
likely would not only have made a much closer run of it, but
probably would have been re-elected. Perot gave an outlet to
voters in Republican areas who deeply distrusted Bush's
internationalism but were equally uneasy with the Democrats' tax
policy.

In 2000, Ralph Nader cost Al Gore the presidency. In a race as
close as 2000 was, it is clear that, absent Nader, Gore would
have nailed down the handful of critical states that would have
given him an uncontested victory.

Certainly, we can say this much: The last three presidential
elections might not have been determined by third parties, but
these third parties certainly defined the dynamics of those
elections. Now, there is no full-bore third-party candidate. What
limits Nader's effect is that he is able to run only in a limited
number of states. He is on some important ballots, like Florida,
but it would take an extraordinary election -- as in 2000 -- to
make it matter.

The starting point of all analysis is in historical precedent,
but in this case, that means that we have to reach back to 1984
for an appropriate comparison. That is 20 years ago, but it was
the last time that a sitting Republican president was challenged
head-to-head by a Democrat. The 1984 race contains some other
parallels also: One of the charges against both Reagan and George
W. Bush is that they are simplistic and simple-minded, totally
unsuited for the job -- amiable but not particularly bright. In
each race, both have been condemned for pursuing adventurist
foreign policies. Both cases involve Democratic challengers who
served in the U.S. Senate and were broadly regarded as much more
deeply versed in policy matters. Both challengers are or were
liberals. In 1984, Reagan demolished Walter Mondale.

In considering this, two things must be remembered. First, no
Democrat from outside the former Confederacy has been elected
president since John F. Kennedy in 1960 -- 44 years ago. Johnson,
Carter and Clinton all came from the South. Humphrey, McGovern,
Mondale and Dukakis all came from well outside the Confederacy.
Gore was the only Southern Democrat to be defeated in a
presidential election, and that was as close to a dead tie as you
can get. Carter lost in his second try. So we can make the
following statement: It is not enough to come from the South if
you are a Democrat, but you cannot win unless you come from the
South.

There is a reason for this. Until 1960, the South was a solid
bloc for the Democrats. From reconstruction onward, the Democrats
could count on the region as their electoral base. It wasn't
enough to win the presidency, but it was enough to put the
presidency within reach so long as coalitions could be cobbled
together from other parts of the country. During the 1960s,
however, the South ceased to be automatically Democratic, given
the split over civil rights. While the far West (excluding the
Pacific states) became increasingly Republican, the Democrats no
longer had a solid bloc anywhere. If the South came in Republican
along with the West, all the GOP had to pick up were a couple of
industrial states to win -- whereas the Democrats had to build a
new coalition in every election.

This was why Southern Democrats had a chance of winning. Leaving
Johnson out of this (as there was a very different dynamic at
play there), for 40 years, Democrats could win the presidency
only if they at least split the South. That made the general
election a horse race, with Republicans and Democrats equally
scrambling in the industrial states and California. In practical
terms, only Southern natives were able to truly split or rally
the South. Thus, non-Southern Democratic candidates lose. The
reverse is not true: Nixon and Reagan were not from the South.

Second, the last president to be directly elected from the Senate
was -- once again -- Kennedy. Nixon was the last president to
have served in the Senate, but he had been out of the Senate for
16 years before moving into the Oval Office. Carter, Reagan, and
George W. Bush had all been governors. Bush Sr. had served in the
House of Representatives -- but again, long before becoming
president. Goldwater, Humphrey, McGovern, Mondale, Dole and Gore
all were rooted in the Senate. Ford had been House minority
leader before becoming vice president, and Michael Dukakis was a
governor.

There is actually a reason why senators lose elections. More than
others, they are in the business of taking policy positions. They
are constantly voting on bills, constantly making speeches that
are remembered, and they are somewhat less sensitive to public
opinion than Congressmen because they have six years between
elections rather than two. They figure, properly, that the things
they say and do in the first four years of their terms won't
affect them much in their last two years. That is true, but it is
also the case that when they run for president, all of these
votes, statements and positions that they themselves might have
forgotten and which might have been well-received in their own
states, suddenly are dragged out of the deep by teams of
sophisticated analysts looking for trouble.

Governors have this problem to a much lesser degree. For one
thing, they tend to deal with much more parochial matters.
Whether a highway should be built in a certain place is, of
course, a burning issue in that state and in that time, but it
rarely has national significance. Moreover -- and this is an
interesting fact -- speeches by governors are not recorded with
the precision that those of senators are, nor do governors
actually vote on issues. A huge amount of deniability is built
into the jobs of governors because the history-making machinery
of the U.S. Senate isn't there. People sort of remember what a
Clinton or Bush said or did on some subject or another, but
everyone knows what a Gore or Dole said or did -- and if they
don't, they can look it up. Somewhere in that record, something
will alienate some important constituency. All senators take
positions and shift them over time. It is an easy business to
make them appear inconsistent or unprincipled.

This year, the Democrats are running a non-Southern senator for
president. That means that they are starting the campaign with
two strikes against them. The Democrats are going to have a much
tougher time building a coalition in the South, which means that
they must focus heavily on the industrial Midwest and North, as
well as on California. This can be done, but it hasn't been done
by a Northerner in 44 years. Second, the Democrats have Kerry's
highly recorded political career in front of them, with thousands
of votes and statements. For the Republicans, casting him as
indecisive will be a breeze, leaving Kerry constantly on the
defensive.

The specific dynamic of the 2004 race also poses serious
challenges for Kerry. In looking at the polls, it would appear
that about 43 percent of likely voters have made the decision to
vote for Bush regardless of the course of the campaign, while
about 41 percent will vote for Kerry. That is, in effect, a tie,
and actually shows a larger Democratic base than in previous
elections. That means that the election battle is for 16 percent
of the voters. Of that 16 percent, about 6 percent are undecided
by reason of stupidity. How they vote or whether they vote will
depend on almost random events.

About 10 percent of the electorate, therefore, are the
intelligent undecideds. They are actively considering the
options. This 10 percent seem to be heavily focused on the war
against militant Islamists in general and on Iraq in particular.
They are far from anti-war voters, in the sense that they have
not bought into Michael Moore's view of the war as a vast right-
wing conspiracy, nor are they at all impressed with Bush's
execution of the war. Their view appears to be -- and it is
tricky and not altogether fair to sum up such a diverse and
fragmented group -- that the war against terrorism was forced on
the United States, that the war in Iraq was probably a mistake,
but that withdrawal is not an option. They are looking for
someone who can do better than Bush in fighting and winning the
war.

This should make it Kerry's presidency in a walk. In fact, he
thought it would, which is why he led with his military record.
Bush struck back at Kerry's center of gravity, attacking what
would have appeared to be an unassailable military record. With
his own military record known and discounted, Bush had nothing
much to lose. He not only tarnished Kerry's record, but forced
him onto the defensive when Kerry needed to be taking the
offensive instead.

But Kerry's problems are more than simply tactical. Kerry has a
severe problem on his left wing. Entirely apart from Nader,
Democratic voters have the option of staying home. Many of them,
particularly supporters of Howard Dean, have severe doubts about
Kerry. More important, they are a single-issue constituency: They
are anti-war. If they revolt against Kerry, he can't win.

That means that if Kerry appeals to the intelligent centrists by
acknowledging that the war must now be fought and offering
himself as a superior commander-in-chief, he faces the very real
possibility that he will bleed off support from his left. George
W. Bush had exactly the same problem in 2000: He waged a campaign
to take the center and did fairly well, but his campaign
alienated the right. Several million Republican voters stayed
home.

Bush has an advantage over Kerry this time. His right wing is
fragmented and can be motivated to vote on issues other than
Iraq. Abortion, stem cell research, gay marriage -- all rank as
higher-priority issues on the far right of the Republican Party
than does Iraq. Moreover, these issues seem to alienate primarily
those voters who are never going to vote for Bush anyway. The
center is so fixated on the war that these other issues tend to
have limited impact.

It is understandable why Bush opened his campaign with a series
of apparently random positions that appealed to his flank, and
then attacked Kerry directly at the point where Kerry had crafted
his appeal to the center. Kerry, on the other hand, is faced with
a huge problem: His far left has become a single-issue bloc that
is highly sensitive to his position on Iraq. The center is
single-issue and highly sensitive to Iraq. Any move that
satisfies one side will alienate the others.

This is why Kerry has had such difficulty defining his Iraq
policy. It is clear that his heart is in the center, and that he
would like to take the centrist position. His problem is that his
polls are telling him that his bleed-off to the left -- perhaps
no more than 3 or 4 percentage points -- could well spell his
defeat. That gives Bush the opening he needs: He uses Kerry's
senatorial record to paint him as inconsistent -- the antithesis
of the kind of leader the center is looking for -- while allowing
Kerry's political problem to make him appear to be consistently
wobbly.

Given all of this, it would appear extremely unlikely that Kerry
can defeat Bush. There is no precedent for a Democratic victory
with these dynamics, and the internal structure of the campaign
militates against it. Put simply, the idea that a wealthy
Massachusetts liberal will defeat a sitting Republican president
in time of war is a dubious proposition.

But that is the wild card in the election. Bush is an incumbent
president in a time of war. The public is much less sensitive to
the war itself, according to polls, but it is highly sensitive to
the idea of mismanagement of the war. This is what could pull the
middle toward Kerry without threatening his flanks. If Kerry
remains unclear on the war but centrist voters conclude that Bush
doesn't know what he is doing or that the war is going out of
control, Kerry can win the election.

His problem is that he cannot force this to happen. More than in
most cases, he must play the passive observer, benefiting from
Bush's failure. Kerry is trapped by his left -- preventing him
from offering war-fighting solutions -- and by the center,
preventing him from abandoning the war altogether. He also cannot
afford to appear to be hoping for failure in Iraq. Failure must
come to him.

That is certainly possible, and militant leader Abu Musab al-
Zarqawi is certainly trying to create a situation in which Bush
is toppled. Militants like al-Zarqawi care not one whit for
either candidate, but they do care for the perception in the
Islamic world that they have the ability to define American
politics. But it is not clear to us that al-Zarqawi alone has the
resources for a sustained campaign. He needs support from other
factions in Iraq. Thus far, that support has not materialized --
and that is because Bush does have a degree of control over the
internal evolution of political relations in Iraq.

Kerry's only hope is a massive shift in public perception of
Bush's management of the war. There are six weeks left to go, so
it is not impossible that the first northern Democratic senator
since JFK is about to take office. But it isn't the likely bet.

(c) 2004 Strategic Forecasting, Inc. All rights reserved.

stratfor.com

=================================================================

STRATFOR SERVICES NOW AVAILABLE:

Join decision-makers around the world who read Stratfor for daily
intelligence briefs, in-depth analyses and forecasts on a wide
range of international security, political and economic affairs.

Stratfor Premium is our flagship product providing comprehensive
global intelligence including daily analyses, special reports,
intelligence alerts, premium analyses, situation reports, country
and regional net assessments as well as Stratfor's sought after
Annual and Quarterly Forecasts. Corporate or multi-user volume
discount packages available. Visit this web page for details:
web2.stratfor.com

Stratfor Basic offers daily analysis, situation reports and
ongoing coverage of global events. Also available with this
package is a pay per view service for many of our premium
reports.
Visit this web page for details:
web2.stratfor.com
.................................................................

CONTACT INFORMATION:

Product inquiries, partnership, and sales: marketing@stratfor.com
Subscription and customer service issues: service@stratfor.com
Comments and/or information for analysis: analysis@stratfor.com
Media services and trade show requests: PR@stratfor.com

.................................................................

NOTIFICATION OF COPYRIGHT

The Geopolitical Intelligence Report (GIR) is published by
Strategic Forecasting, Inc. (Stratfor), and is protected by the
United States Copyright Act, all applicable state laws, and
international copyright laws. The content in this GIR may be used
as a resource while accessing Stratfor website products or
consulting services, and may be freely redistributed to friends
and associates without prior permission. Individuals,
corporations, organizations or other commercial entities are not
authorized to distribute this GIR en masse without prior written
permission before publication. Upon receiving written consent
from Stratfor, the reprinted content must be appropriately
credited and sourced with Stratfor's name and website address.
Individuals, corporations, organizations or other commercial
entities are not authorized to reproduce, retransmit, or
distribute with the intent to sell, publish, or broadcast for
purposes of profit without prior written consent of Stratfor. Any
other use is prohibited and will constitute an infringement upon
the proprietary rights of Stratfor.

.................................................................

HOW TO UNSUBSCRIBE:

If you wish to remove yourself from this mailing list,
send an email to <Majordomo@ystratfor.com> with
the following command in the body of your email message:

unsubscribe weeklyintel

.................................................................

stratfor.com

=================================================================

(c) 2004 Strategic Forecasting, Inc. All rights reserved.

(Choose Folder) Buying Family Friends HISTORY PHILOSOPHY POLITICS RECIPES SentMail Trash


Back to: Inbox

© 2003 Adelphia Communications. All Rights Reserved. Help



To: Bruce L who wrote (21602)10/9/2004 11:02:08 AM
From: Bruce L  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 23153
 
Re: "The Moor's Last Laugh"

I was reviewing old saved articles and came across this one from the 3/22/04 WSJ. I thought some of you might be interested in the demographics that are changing - and INFLUENCING - Europe. It can explain a lot.

Professor Ajami is a very interesting Arab-American professor who teaches at John Hopkins.

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

The Moor's Last Laugh

By FOUAD AJAMI
March 22, 2004; Page A18

In the legend of Moorish Spain, the last Muslim king of Granada, Boabdil, surrendered the keys to his city on January 2, 1492, and on one of its hills, paused for a final glance at his lost dominion. The place would henceforth be known as El Ultimo Suspiro del Moro -- "the Moor's Last Sigh." Boabdil's mother is said to have taunted him, and to have told him to "weep like a woman for the land he could not defend as a man." An Arab poet of our own era gave voice to a historical lament when he wrote that as he walked the streets of Granada, he searched his pockets for the keys to its houses. Al Andalus -- Andalusia -- would become a deep wound, a reminder of dominions gained by Islam and then squandered. No wonder Muslim chroniclers added "May Allah return it to Islam," as they told and retold Granada's fate.

The Balkans aside, modern Islam would develop as a religion of Afro-Asia. True, the Ottomans would contest the Eastern Mediterranean. But their challenge was turned back. Turkey succumbed to a European pretension but would never be European. Europe's victory over Islam appeared definitive. Even those Muslims in the Balkans touched by Ottoman culture became a marked community, left behind by the Ottoman retreat from Europe like "seaweed on dry land."

* * *
Yet Boabdil's revenge came. It stole upon Europe. Demography -- the aging of Europe on the one hand and, on the other, a vast bloat of people in the Middle East and North Africa -- did Boabdil's job for him. Spurred by economic growth in the '60s, which created the need for foreign laborers, a Muslim migration to Europe began. Today, 15 million Muslims make their home in the European Union.

The earliest migrants were eager to hunker down in this new and (at first) alien world. They took Europe on its own terms, and lived with the initial myth of migration that their sojourn would be temporary. But for the overwhelming majority, Algiers and Casablanca and Beirut and Anatolia became irretrievable places. In time, there would be slaughter and upheaval in Lebanon and Iran, sectarian warfare in Syria, and a long era of sorrow and bloodshed in Algeria, just across the sea from Marseilles. Economic destitution would cut a swath of misery through the lands whence they came. Birth rates worked their way like a wrecking ball: It became impossible to transmit culture and civility and the old familiar world to the young. Migration became the only safety valve.

In the '80s, terrible civil wars were fought in Arab and Islamic countries -- with privilege on one side, militant wrath on the other. The despots and the military caste in Algeria and Tunisia and Syria and Egypt won that struggle. Their defeated opponents took to the road: From Hamburg and London and Copenhagen, the battle was now joined. If accounts were to be settled with rulers back home, the work of subversion would be done from Europe. Muslim Brotherhoods sprouted all over the Continent. There were welfare subsidies in the new surroundings, money, constitutional protections and rules of asylum to fight the old struggle.

"The whole Arab world was dangerous for me. I went to London." The words are those of an Egyptian Islamist, Yasser Sirri. In London, Sirri runs an Islamic "observation center" and agitates against the despotism of Hosni Mubarak. But Sirri, a man of 40, is wanted back home. Three sentences have been rendered against him in absentia: One condemns him to 25 years of hard labor for smuggling armed terrorists into Egypt; the second to 15 years for aiding Islamic dissidents; and the third to death for plotting to assassinate a prime minister. Sirri had fled Egypt to Yemen. But trouble trailed him there, so he moved to the Sudan, but it was no better. He turned up in London -- there, he would have liberties, and the protections of a liberal culture. There would be no extradition for him, no return to the summary justice of Cairo.

Sirri was not working in a vacuum. The geography of Islam -- and of the Islamic imagination -- has shifted in recent years. The faith has become portable. Muslims who fled their countries brought Islam with them. Men came into bilad al kufr (the lands of unbelief), but a new breed of Islamists radicalized the faith there, in the midst of the kafir (unbeliever).

The new lands were owed scant loyalty, if any, and political-religious radicals savored the space afforded them by Western civil society. But they resented the logic of assimilation. They denied their sisters and daughters the right to mix with "strangers." You would have thought that the pluralism and tumult of this open European world would spawn a version of the faith to match it. But precisely the opposite happened. In bilad al kufr, the faith became sharpened for battle. We know that life in Hamburg -- and the kind of Islam that Hamburg made possible -- was decisive in the evolution of Mohammed Atta, who led the "death pilots" of Sept. 11. It was in Hamburg where he conceived a hatred of modernity and of women and of the "McEgypt" that the Mubarak regime had brought into being. And it was in Hamburg, too, that a young "party boy" from a secular family in Lebanon underwent the transformation that would take him from an elite Catholic prep school in Beirut to the controls of a plane on Sept. 11, and its tragic end near the fields of Shanksville, Penn. In its economic deterioration, the Arab world is without cities where young Muslims of different lands can meet. A function that Beirut once provided for an older elite had been undone. European cities now provide that kind of opportunity.

Satellite TV has been crucial in the making of this new radicalism. Preachers take to the air, and reach Muslims wherever they are. From the safety of Western cities, they counsel belligerence and inveigh against assimilation. They forbid shaking hands with women examiners at universities. They warn against offering greetings to "infidels" on their religious holidays, or serving in the armies and police of the new lands. "A Muslim has no nationality except his belief," wrote an intellectual godfather of radical Islamism, the Egyptian Sayyid Qutb, who was executed by Nasser in 1966. While on a visit to Saudi Arabia in 2002, I listened to a caller from Stockholm as he bared his concerns to an immensely popular preacher. He made Qutb's point: We may carry their nationalities, he said, but we belong to our own religion.

Radical Islamism's adherents are unapologetic. What is laicite (secularism) to the Muslims in France and their militant leaders? It is but the code of a debauched society that wishes to impose on Islam's children -- its young women in particular -- the ways of an infidel culture. What loyalty, at any rate, is owed France? The wrath of France's Muslim youth in the banlieues (suburbs) is seen as revenge on France for its colonial wars. France colonized Algeria in the 1830s; Algerians, along with Tunisians and Moroccans, return the favor in our own time.

France grants its troubled Muslim suburbs everything and nothing. It leaves them to their own devices, and grants them an unstated power over its foreign policy decisions on Islamic and Middle Eastern matters; but it makes no room for them in the mainstream of its life. Trouble has come even to placid Belgium. In Antwerp, Dyab Abu Jahjah, a young Lebanese, only 32, has stepped forth to "empower" the Muslims of that country. Assimilation, he says, is but "cultural rape." He came to Belgium in 1991, and he owns up to inventing a story about persecution back home; it was a "low political trick," he says, and in the nature of things. The constitution of Belgium recognizes Dutch, French, and German as official languages. Abu Jahjah insists that Arabic be added, too.

Europe's leaders know Europe's dilemmas. In ways both intended and subliminal, the escape into anti-Americanism is an attempt at false bonding with the peoples of Islam. Give the Arabs -- and the Muslim communities implanted in Europe -- anti-Americanism, give them an identification with the Palestinians, and you shall be spared their wrath. Beat the drums of opposition to America's war in Iraq, and the furies of this radical Islamism will pass you by. This is seen as a way around the troubles. But there is no exit that way. It is true that Spain supported the American campaign in Iraq, but that aside, Spain's identification with Arab aims has a long history. Of all the larger countries of the EU, Spain has been most sympathetic to Palestinian claims. It was only in 1986 that Spain recognized Israel and established diplomatic ties. With the sole exception of Greece, Spain has shown the deepest reserve toward Israel. Yet this history offered no shelter from the bombers of March 11.

* * *
Whatever political architecture Europe seeks, it will have to be built in proximity to the Other World, just across the Straits of Gibraltar and in the grip of terminal crisis. There is no prospect that the rulers of Arab lands will offer their people a decent social contract, or the opportunities for freedom. It is a sad fact that the Arab peoples no longer make claims on their rulers. Instead the "drifters," such as the embittered terrorists who blew into Madrid, now seek satisfaction almost solely in foreign lands.

You can't agitate against Mubarak in Cairo, but you can do it from the safety of Finsbury Park in London. The ferocity of the debate in the Arab world about France's decision to limit Islamic headgear in public schools is a measure of this displaced rage. Spain may attribute the cruelty visited on it to its association with America's expedition into Iraq. But the truth is darker. Jacques Chirac may believe that he has spared France Spain's terror by sitting out the Iraq war. But he is deluded. The Islamists do not make fine distinctions in the bilad al kufr.

Europe is host to a war between order and its enemies, fuelled by demography: 40% of the Arab world is under 14. Demographers tell us that the fertility replacement rate is 2.1 children per woman. Europe is frightfully below this level; in Germany it is 1.3, Italy 1.2, Spain 1.1, France 1.7 (this higher rate is a factor of its Muslim population). Fertility rates in the Islamic world are altogether different: they are 3.2 in Algeria, 3.4 in Egypt and Morocco, 5.2 in Iraq and 6.1 in Saudi Arabia. This is Europe's neighborhood, and its contemporary fate. You can tell the neighbors across the Straits, (and within the gates of Europe) that you share their dread of Pax Americana. But nemesis is near.

Five centuries ago, the Castilians took Granada from Boabdil. They were a hardy breed of sheep-herders driven by a Malthusian logic, outgrowing their grazing lands, pushing southward -- and into the New World from Seville -- to answer Castile's needs. Today there is great turmoil in Islamic lands, and a Malthusian crisis. Were it only true that those in harm's way in Europe are solely the friends of the Americans. The New World is a demon of this Islamism, it is true. But that old border between Europe and Islam has furies all its own.

Mr. Ajami, a professor at Johns Hopkins, is the author of "The Dream Palace of the Arabs" (Vintage, 1999).