Saturday, February 24, 2007

The Myth of Muslim Support for Terror

This is what I have been saying from LONG personal experience myself, it is a myth that Islam supports terror. BUT, if you keep on repeating the lie long enough, commit actions which under NORMAL human behavior will turn others against you, sooner or later you will be party to creating the very thing you say exists. This is the case in the so called "war on terror" which targets so called "Islamic terrorism". Firstly, one need only look at the statistics of terrorist attacks vs. state sponsored terrorism (illegal invasion and occupation). This administration has gone to war in Iraq based on a COMPLETE pack of lies (notice the date is June 2003, we've known it was lies for a LONG time). Whereas "terrorism" did not exist in Iraq prior to our invasion, or as I like to call it, "the terrorist tea party", we now have full blown (and yes I personally will call it that) civil war which is a direct reaction to the OCCUPATION of Iraq and we here in the US refer to this as "terrorism" but even the NIE (National Intelligence Estimate) does not refer to the "Iraqi on Iraqi" civil war as "terrorism"!!!

Newly declassified sections of the NIE do state that "jihdist terrorism" IS on the rise since our ill-thought out imperialist invasion of Iraq. It also states, "Countering the spread of the jihadist movement will require coordinated multilateral efforts that go well beyond efforts to capture or kill terrorist leaders". I refer to this as the "DUH moment". Yet this administration continues to go down the path which is leading to increasing hatred towards our country by peoples who HAPPEN TO BE MUSLIM because it is THEIR countries we are invading and in the case of Israel, another terrorist state which is OCCUPYING a mostly Muslim country, Palestine, we are SUPPORTING them.

For an excellent post titled, "The Top Ten Misconceptions in Islam" link here to my dear friend Karin's blog.

The myth of Muslim support for terror

The Christian Science MonitorThe common enemy is violence and terrorism, not Muslims any more than Christians or Jews.
By Kenneth Ballen

Those who think that Muslim countries and pro-terrorist attitudes go hand-in-hand might be shocked by new polling research: Americans are more approving of terrorist attacks against civilians than any major Muslim country except for Nigeria.

The survey, conducted in December 2006 by the University of Maryland’s prestigious Program on International Public Attitudes, shows that only 46 percent of Americans think that “bombing and other attacks intentionally aimed at civilians” are “never justified,” while 24 percent believe these attacks are “often or sometimes justified.”

Contrast those numbers with 2006 polling results from the world’s most-populous Muslim countries - Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nigeria. Terror Free Tomorrow, the organization I lead, found that 74 percent of respondents in Indonesia agreed that terrorist attacks are “never justified”; in Pakistan, that figure was 86 percent; in Bangladesh, 81 percent.

Do these findings mean that Americans are closet terrorist sympathizers?

Hardly. Yet, far too often, Americans and other Westerners seem willing to draw that conclusion about Muslims. Public opinion surveys in the United States and Europe show that nearly half of Westerners associate Islam with violence and Muslims with terrorists. Given the many radicals who commit violence in the name of Islam around the world, that’s an understandable polling result.

But these stereotypes, affirmed by simplistic media coverage and many radicals themselves, are not supported by the facts - and they are detrimental to the war on terror. When the West wrongly attributes radical views to all of the world’s 1.5 billion Muslims, it perpetuates a myth that has the very real effect of marginalizing critical allies in the war on terror.

Indeed, the far-too-frequent stereotyping of Muslims serves only to reinforce the radical appeal of the small minority of Muslims who peddle hatred of the West and others as authentic religious practice.

Terror Free Tomorrow’s 20-plus surveys of Muslim countries in the past two years reveal another surprise: Even among the minority who indicated support for terrorist attacks and Osama bin Laden, most overwhelmingly approved of specific American actions in their own countries. For example, 71 percent of bin Laden supporters in Indonesia and 79 percent in Pakistan said they thought more favorably of the United States as a result of American humanitarian assistance in their countries - not exactly the profile of hard-core terrorist sympathizers. For most people, their professed support of terrorism/bin Laden can be more accurately characterized as a kind of “protest vote” against current US foreign policies, not as a deeply held religious conviction or even an inherently anti- American or anti-Western view.

In truth, the common enemy is violence and terrorism, not Muslims any more than Christians or Jews. Whether recruits to violent causes join gangs in Los Angeles or terrorist cells in Lahore, the enemy is the violence they exalt.

Our surveys show that not only do Muslims reject terrorism as much if not more than Americans, but even those who are sympathetic to radical ideology can be won over by positive American actions that promote goodwill and offer real hope.

America’s goal, in partnership with Muslim public opinion, should be to defeat terrorists by isolating them from their own societies. The most effective policies to achieve that goal are the ones that build on our common humanity. And we can start by recognizing that Muslims throughout the world want peace as much as Americans do.

* Kenneth Ballen is founder and president of Terror Free Tomorrow, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to finding effective policies that win popular support away from global terrorists.

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