Friday, November 27, 2009

President Obama

Obama's Tough Love for the Muslim World

White House aides say Obama is committed to continuing the conversation with Muslims around the world

Posted June 8, 2009

Even by the standards of a celebrity president known for his ability to draw huge crowds, it was an unusually grand stage. The audience for Barack Obama's address from Cairo last week was the world's 1.2 billion Muslims, who gathered around television sets from Beirut to Jakarta or read the speech on the Web and in newspapers in one of 13 languages into which the White House had it translated.

And even for a president already accustomed to making history, the stakes for Obama's message to the Muslim world were difficult to overstate. Centuries of strife between Islam and the West, the rise of Islamic terrorism, and two U.S.-led wars in predominantly Muslim nations have left relations between the United States and Muslims abroad in tatters.

Obama lost little time in acknowledging the magnitude of his task. "I have come here to seek a new beginning between the United States and Muslims around the world," he said from a packed auditorium at Cairo University. "One based upon mutual interest and mutual respect, and one based upon the truth that America and Islam are not exclusive."

Indeed, more than anything, Obama's nearly hourlong speech made a case for the compatibility of American and Islamic values. But the president also recognized that religion, culture, history, and geopolitics present stumbling blocks to reconciliation. "Change cannot happen overnight," he said. "But I am convinced that in order to move forward, we must say openly the things we hold in our hearts and that too often are said only behind closed doors."

With that, Obama dispensed with kumbaya-like platitudes and set about administering tough love to various global players, including the United States and ordinary Muslims. For instance, Obama called the current situation for the Palestinians "intolerable" and repeated his recent demand for Israel to stop building settlements: "America will not turn our backs on the legitimate Palestinian aspiration for dignity, opportunity, and a state of their own."

But the president also invoked his upcoming visit to the Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany to denounce Holocaust denial in Muslim circles as "baseless, ignorant, and hateful." Republicans in Congress quickly homed in on Obama's comments on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to accuse him of going wobbly on the Jewish state. But Obama's rhetoric on U.S.-Israeli relations was firm: "This bond is unbreakable."

He also straightforwardly acknowledged Muslim complaints about U.S. foreign policy. Dissenting from George W. Bush's vision of spreading democracy militarily, Obama said that "no system of government can or should be imposed upon one nation by any other." He also avoided the kind of contrition that had critics blasting his recent international travel as an "apology tour."

Instead, he called Afghanistan a "war of necessity" born of the 9/11 attacks. And though he characterized Iraq as a "war of choice that provoked strong differences in my country and around the world," Obama avoided mentioning his own opposition to it. Rather, he reaffirmed his commitment to removing all troops from Iraq by 2012.

In declining to apologize for Bush administration policies he clearly objected to, Obama was speaking as much to jittery American audiences as to anyone else. "When he said that he's going to do everything he can to counter stereotypes of Muslims but that they had to go against stereotypes of Americans, that was forceful," says Joel Hunter, an American evangelical leader who had cautioned the White House about American anxieties over Obama's Cairo speech. "He didn't just say, 'Let's get together and hug.' "

And yet Obama's speech struck a starkly different tone toward Islam from the Bush years. The address was sprinkled with quotations from the Koran that supplied the biggest applause lines from the audience in Cairo. "The overwhelming mood in the room was complete euphoria," says Dalia Mogahed, executivedirector of Gallup's Center for Muslim Studies, who attended the speech. "He achieved rock-star status."

Bush spoke of Islam as a "religion of peace," but he also popularized terms like "Islamofascism." Obama, meanwhile, went out of his way to praise Islam's contributions to civilization, from algebra to calligraphy to "paving the way for Europe's Renaissance." "After 9/11, there was a revival of the stereotype of the fanatical and ignorant Muslim," says Juan Cole, a University of Michigan professor who specializes in U.S.-Muslim relations. "Psychologically speaking, this is a much more important piece of the speech than Americans will realize."

Reader Comments

Code of Hammurabi vs Laws of Ur-Nammu

If the Islamic world would follow the Laws of Ur-Nammu instead of the Code of Hammurabi, then there would be less violence and more peace in the world.

Hammurabi found out that turning the other cheek was not the way to treat people because the people took advantage of the gov't's apparent weakness; so Hammurabi got tough and imposed an eye-for-an-eye ruling. Doing this stabilized his government.

Dealing with the terrorists who don't care how cruel they are to people can only be handled in one way,i.e., The Code of Hammurabi. Our enemy cuts off people's body parts, even heads and burns out eyes, dips people into concentrated sulphuric acid and other painful things that you don't want to hear about. This is the mentality of our enemy. Our enemy has killed enough Americans, It is about time that we really got tough with them.

Whatever the CIA has to do to get information from our enemy is okay, as you should know that the enemy is doing whatever they want to do to our captured American troops. (Don't forget 9-11)

We are not a nation of Goodie-TWO-Shoes. In war we follow the Code of Hammurabi as does our enemy. So let's stop making believe that we don't do whatever we have to do, to win!

My personal guess

is that Barack, in ABSOLUTE private, would freely describe the Koran as a literary monstrosity and the whole of Islam as one of the biggest crocks of bull ever dumped (by coercion, mostly) on people in the history of the world.

BUT, he would immediately then acknowledge that, in reality, about a fifth of the world is immersed in it, AND, that we westerners must deal with it sensibly.

So, as President of the United States, do you go out stirring up Christians and others to hate and war against 1.3 billion Muslims because some of them resorted to terror tactics? Or do you speak respectfully to the 1.3 billion Muslims and hope you can prod most of them to believe in peace and cooperation more than blindly follow a "strict constructionist" version of stuff that their Prophet wrote down in a bunch of strange writings?

I have a hard time blaming Obama for the latter, especially as his starting approach.

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