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Krauthammer: Candor needed in describing Islamist ideology behind terror

Jul. 4, 2010 12:01 am
By Charles Krauthammer
The Fort Hood shooter, the Christmas Day bomber, the Times Square attacker. On May 13, the following exchange occurred at a hearing of the House Judiciary Committee:
Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Tex.: Do you feel that these individuals might have been incited to take the actions that they did because of radical Islam?
Attorney General Eric Holder: There are a variety of reasons why I think people have taken these actions. ...
Smith: OK, but radical Islam could have been one of the reasons?
Holder: There are a variety of reasons why people -
Smith: But was radical Islam one of them?
Holder: There are a variety of reasons why people do these things. Some of them are potentially religious-based.
A similar question arose last week in U.S. District Court when Faisal Shahzad, the Times Square attacker, pleaded guilty. Shahzad said:
“One has to understand where I'm coming from ... I consider myself a mujahid, a Muslim soldier.”
Well, that is clarifying. As was the self-printed business card of Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, the Fort Hood shooter, identifying himself as SoA: Soldier of Allah.
Holder's avoidance of the obvious continues the absurd and embarrassing refusal of the Obama administration to acknowledge who out there is trying to kill Americans and why. It has banned from its official vocabulary the terms jihadist, Islamist and Islamic terrorism.
Instead, President Barack Obama's National Security Strategy insists on calling the enemy - how else do you define those seeking your destruction? - “a loose network of violent extremists.” But this is utterly meaningless. These are people professing a powerful ideology rooted in a radical interpretation of Islam, in whose name they propagandize, proselytize, terrorize and kill.
Why is this important? The first rule of war is to know your enemy. If you don't, you wander into intellectual cul-de-sacs and ignore the real causes that might allow you to prevent recurrences.
The Pentagon review of the Fort Hood shooting runs 86 pages with not a single mention of Hasan's Islamism. It contains such politically correct inanities as “religious fundamentalism alone is not a risk factor.”
Of course it is. Islamist fundamentalism is the risk factor, the common denominator linking all the great terror attacks of this century. The attackers varied in nationality, education, age, social class, native tongue and race. The one thing that united them was the jihadist vision in whose name they acted.
To deny this undeniable truth leads to further absurdities. Remember the wave of speculation about Hasan's supposed secondary post-traumatic stress disorder - that he was so deeply affected by the heart-rending stories of his war-traumatized patients that he became radicalized?
There's a final reason the administration's cowardice about identifying those trying to kill us cannot be allowed to pass. It is demoralizing. It trivializes the war between jihadi barbarism and Western decency and diminishes the memory of those who have died fighting it.
Churchill famously mobilized the English language and sent it into battle. But his greatness lay in his appeal to the moral core of a decent people to rise against an ideology the nature of which Churchill never hesitated to define and describe - and to pronounce (“Nahhhhzzzzi”) in an accent dripping with loathing and contempt.
No one is asking Obama or Holder to match Churchill's rhetoric - just Shahzad's candor.
n Comments: letters@charleskrauthammer.com
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