The Façade in CAIR's Paris Attacks Condemnation

Leaders at the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) condemn Friday's coordinated terrorist attacks in Paris that left an estimated 130 people dead. They really, really condemn it.

But if the discussion turns to the terrorists' religious motivations, they'll condemn that, too. Beginning with social media posts and a news conference with leaders of other Muslim organizations Saturday, CAIR is waging a campaign to stifle any reference to the Islamist ideology that drove the Islamic State attack on Paris.

If defeating ISIS requires a war of ideas among Muslims to determine how literally to apply the Quran, CAIR wants no part.

"Let's not legitimize ISIS and help them in their propaganda by calling them the Islamic State," CAIR Executive Director Nihad Awad told reporters." They're not Islamic. They're not state. They're anti-Islamic. Let's not call them jihadis. They have nothing to do with jihad. Jihad is a legitimate self-defense in Islam. Let's not give them this legitimizing title. They are brutal killers. They have no legitimacy.

"And I urge media, politicians, analysts to be very careful with the choice of their words. ISIS is appealing to the marginalized, disenfranchised and alienated young people in the Middle East and in the West. Let's not help ISIS recruit more disenfranchised and alienated young people."

It's an argument directly contradicted by ISIS itself and one being mocked both by Islamic radicals and by secular advocates of religious freedom.

In a statement claiming credit for Friday's slaughter re-posted at the Long War Journal, ISIS described the attacks as "a blessed battle whose causes of success were enabled by Allah" to strike "the capital of prostitution and vice, the lead carrier of the cross in Europe — Paris."

"This group of believers were youth who divorced the worldly life and advanced towards their enemy hoping to be killed for Allah's sake, doing so in support of His religion," the ISIS statement said. "...The targets included the Bataclan theatre for exhibitions, where hundreds of pagans gathered for a concert of prostitution and vice."

CAIR, meanwhile, created a Twitter hashtag, "TerrorismHasNoReligion," and sent the director of its Florida chapters, Hassan Shibly, onto the radio, where he essentially blamed the victims. It isn't religion that drove the attacks, he said. Rather, it is the consequence of "failing foreign policy" by Western nations including France and the United States.

In a four-minute segment, Shibly made seven references to foreign policy, describing it as "bad" and "horrific." Fix the foreign policy, he said, and the terrorism will end. The problem is, "We cannot have a real conversation about terrorism these days."

Terrorists, he told host Dean Obeidallah, "are not motivated by religion. They're motivated by politics, by fighting for power and their own political agenda and they use religion to galvanize support. But ultimately, it isn't about the religion. An absence of religion but still with the same political issues, you would still have the same problems. So it's about politics, not religion."

This is an argument wholly divorced from any facts about the Paris attacks or about ISIS's ideology. We have cited numerous examples in which Islamist terrorists clearly describe their actions as religiously-inspired. And now, ISIS and its supporters provide fresh examples contradicting CAIR's very premise.

In a sickly sarcastic essay, "Sorry Paris," Salafi-jihadist ideologue Hussain bin Mahmud ridicules "our respectable and venerable 'scholars' who opened their mouth faster than the speed of light to condemn those criminal events."

Mahmud's beefs are about a perceived Western disrespect for Islam:

Sorry Paris, we have forgotten your enmity towards our religion, your insults towards our Lord and His messenger peace be upon him, your efforts to change our cultures in our countries, and suppressing Islam from the hearts of the young people in the East and the West.. Sorry Paris.

On the other side of the spectrum, Iraqi-born secularist Faisal Saeed Al Mutar likens arguments like CAIR's to a Monty Python sketch depicting an Islamist terrorist arguing with an apologist:

"We did this because our holy texts exhort us to do it."

"No you didn't."

"Wait, what? Yes we did..."

"No, this has nothing to do with religion. You guys are just using religion as a front for social and geopolitical reasons."

"WHAT!? Did you even read our official statement? We give explicit Quranic justification. This is jihad, a holy crusade against pagans, blasphemers, and disbelievers."

Read the entire script here.

In its statement claiming credit for the Paris attacks, ISIS refers to its grievances with the "crusader" nations, but makes a point of emphasizing religion. Those countries "will continue to be at the top of the target list for the Islamic State and that the scent of death will not leave their nostrils as long as they partake in the crusader campaign, as long as they dare to curse our Prophet (blessings and peace be upon him), and as long as they boast about their war against Islam in France and their strikes against Muslims in the lands of the Caliphate with their jets, which were of no avail to them in the filthy streets and alleys of Paris."

It starts with a Surah in which Allah "cast terror into their hearts so they destroyed their houses by their own hands and the hands of the believers."

Never mind that, CAIR says. It insists religion should not be part of the conversation.

But despite the protestations, acknowledging the words and ideals that fuel terrorists in no way indicts the belief of the world's billion Muslims or the ideals of any broad spectrum of American Muslims. That is a false argument intended to shut down the debate before it starts.

During his interview, Shibly and Obeidallah mocked the argument that terrorists hate us for our culture, for our freedom. As the ISIS statement shows, it views Paris as "the capital of prostitution and vice, the lead carrier of the cross in Europe."

According to Shibly, that really means they hate French and American foreign policy.

"There's hundreds of other countries in the world that have the freedoms we have but that don't have the problems we have," he said. "We do need to start asking ourselves how is our failed foreign policy leading to the troubles that we are seeing today while recognizing that the actions of terrorists is never justifiable."

In a speech last July, British Prime Minister David Cameron rejected the notion that discussions about Islamic theology fueling terrorism be avoided.

It doesn't work, Cameron said, in part "because these extremists are self-identifying as Muslims. The fact is from Woolwich to Tunisia, from Ottawa to Bali, these murderers all spout the same twisted narrative, one that claims to be based on a particular faith."

Minimizing debate is counter-productive, he added, because there are voices advocating reform who challenge "the fusing of religion and politics, the voices that want to challenge the scriptural basis which extremists claim to be acting on...the voices that are crucial in providing an alternative worldview that could stop a teenager's slide along the spectrum of extremism."

These voices lack the profile and money the terrorists have at their disposal.

Perhaps Shibly and his colleagues at CAIR are targeting the wrong audience. Rather than tell non-Muslims to ignore the statements issued by Islamist terrorists, CAIR might provide a better public service by loudly and clearly speaking to the terrorists themselves. If the terrorists are wrong theologically, who better than the most visible Muslim advocacy group in the country to set them straight?

Instead, CAIR has chosen the same template over and over again. Like "Fight Club," the first rule of radical Islam is you do not talk about radical Islam.

Related Topics: , CAIR, radical Islam, Paris attacks, ISIS, Nihad Awad, Hassan Shibly, Dean Obeidallah, Hussain bin Mahmud, Faisal Saeed Al Mutar, David Cameron

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