The Danger Within: Militant Islam in America
Commentary
November 2001
In the aftermath of the violence on September 11, American politicians from
George W. Bush on down have tripped over themselves to affirm that the vast
majority of Muslims living in the United States are just ordinary people. Here
is how the President put it during a visit to a mosque on September 17:
"America counts millions of Muslims among our citizens, and Muslims make an
incredibly valuable contribution to our country. Muslims are doctors, lawyers,
law professors, members of the military, entrepreneurs, shopkeepers, moms and
dads." Two days later, he added that "there are millions of good
Americans who practice the Muslim faith who love their country as much as I love
the country, who salute the flag as strongly as I salute the flag."
These soothing words, echoed and amplified by many columnists and editorial
writers, were obviously appropriate at a moment of high national tension and
amid reports of mounting bias against Muslims living in the United States. And
it is certainly true that the number of militant Islamic operatives with plans
to carry out terrorist attacks on the United States is statistically tiny. But
the situation is more complex than the President would have it.
The Muslim population in this country is not like any other group, for it
includes within it a substantial body of people—many times more numerous than
the agents of Osama bin Ladin—who share with the suicide hijackers a hatred of
the United States and the desire, ultimately, to transform it into a nation
living under the strictures of militant Islam. Although not responsible for the
atrocities in September, they harbor designs for this country that warrant
urgent and serious attention.
In June 1991, Siraj Wahaj, a black convert to Islam and the recipient of some of
the American Muslim community's highest honors, had the privilege of becoming
the first Muslim to deliver the daily prayer in the U.S. House of
Representatives. On that occasion he recited from the Qur'an and appealed to the
Almighty to guide American leaders "and grant them righteousness and
wisdom."
A little over a year later, addressing an audience of New Jersey Muslims, the
same Wahaj articulated a rather different vision from his mild and moderate
invocation in the House. If only Muslims were more clever politically, he told
his New Jersey listeners, they could take over the United States and replace its
constitutional government with a caliphate. "If we were united and strong,
we'd elect our own emir [leader] and give allegiance to him. . . . [T]ake my
word, if 6-8 million Muslims unite in America, the country will come to
us." In 1995, Wahaj served as a character witness for Omar Abdel Rahman in
the trial that found that blind sheikh guilty of conspiracy to overthrow the
government of the United States. More alarming still, the U.S. attorney for New
York listed Wahaj as one of the "unindicted persons who may be alleged as
co-conspirators" in the sheikh's case.
The disparity between Wahaj's good citizenship in the House and his militant
forecast of a Muslim takeover—not to mention his association with violent
felons—is only one example of a larger pattern common to the American Muslim
scene. Another example, about which I have written recently elsewhere, involves
the American Muslims for Jerusalem, an organization whose official advocacy of
"a Jerusalem that symbolizes religious tolerance and dialogue"
contrasts markedly with the wild conspiracy-mongering and crude anti-Jewish
rhetoric in which its spokesmen indulge at closed events.1 At a
minimum, then, anyone who would understand the real views of American Muslims
must delve deeper than the surface of their public statements.
Doing so, one discovers that the ambition to take over the United States is
hardly a new one. The first missionaries for militant Islam, or Islamism, who
arrived here from abroad in the 1920's, unblushingly declared, "Our plan
is, we are going to conquer America." The audacity of such statements
hardly went unnoticed at the time, including by Christians who cherished their
own missionizing hopes. As a 1922 newspaper commentary put it:
To the millions of American Christians who have so long looked eagerly forward
to the time the cross shall be supreme in every land and the people of the
whole world shall have become the followers of Christ, the plan to win this
continent to the path of the "infidel Turk" will seem a thing
unbelievable. But there is no doubt about its being pressed with all the
fanatical zeal for which the Mohammedans are noted.
But it is in recent decades, as the Muslim population in the country has
increased significantly in size, social standing, and influence, and as Islamism
has made its presence widely felt on the international scene, that this
"fanatical zeal" has truly come into its own. A catalyzing figure in
the story is the late Ismail Al-Faruqi, a Palestinian immigrant who founded the
International Institute of Islamic Thought and taught for many years at Temple
University in Philadelphia. Rightly called "a pioneer in the development of
Islamic studies in America," he was also the first contemporary theorist of
a United States made Muslim. "Nothing could be greater," Al-Faruqi
wrote in the early 1980's, "than this youthful, vigorous, and rich
continent [of North America] turning away from its past evil and marching
forward under the banner of Allahu Akbar [God is great]."
Al-Faruqi's hopes are today widely shared among educated Muslim leaders. Zaid
Shakir, formerly the Muslim chaplain at Yale University, has stated that Muslims
cannot accept the legitimacy of the American secular system, which
"is against the orders and ordainments of Allah." To the contrary,
"The orientation of the Qur'an pushes us in the exact opposite
direction." To Ahmad Nawfal, a leader of the Jordanian Muslim Brethren who
speaks frequently at American Muslim rallies, the United States has "no
thought, no values, and no ideals"; if militant Muslims "stand up,
with the ideology that we possess, it will be very easy for us to preside over
this world." Masudul Alam Choudhury, a Canadian professor of business,
writes matter-of-factly and enthusiastically about the "Islamization agenda
in North America."
For a fuller exposition of this outlook, one can do no better than to turn to a
1989 book by Shamim A. Siddiqi, an influential commentator on American Muslim
issues. Cryptically titled Methodology of Dawah Ilallah in American
Perspective (more idiomatically rendered as "The Need to Convert
Americans to Islam"), this 168-page study, published in Brooklyn, remains
largely unavailable to general readers (neither amazon.com nor bookfinder.com
listed it over a period of months) but is widely posted on Islamist websites,2
where it enjoys a faithful readership. In it, in prose that makes up in
intensity and vividness for what it lacks in sophistication and polish, Siddiqi
lays out both a detailed rationale and a concrete plan for Islamists to take
over the United States and establish "Islamic rule" (iqamat ad-din).
Why America? In Siddiqi's judgment, the need to assume control here is even more
pressing than the need to sustain the revolution of the mullahs in Iran or to
destroy Israel, for doing so will have a much greater positive impact on the
future of Islam. America is central not for the reasons one might expect—its
large population, its wealth, or the cultural influence it wields around the
world—but on three other grounds.
The first has to do with Washington's role as the premier enemy of Islamism (or,
possibly, of Islam itself). In Siddiqi's colorful language, whenever and
wherever Muslims have moved toward establishing an Islamic state, the
"treacherous hands of the secular West are always there . . . to bring
about [their] defeat." Nor are Muslim rulers of any help, for they are
"all in the pockets of the Western powers." If, therefore, Islam is
ever going to attain its rightful place of dominance in the world, the
"ideology of Islam [must] prevail over the mental horizon of the American
people." The entire future of the Muslim world, Siddiqi concludes,
"depends on how soon the Muslims of America are able to build up their own
indigenous movement."
Secondly, America is central because establishing Islamism here would signal its
final triumph over its only rival, that bundle of Christianity and liberalism
which constitutes contemporary Western civilization. (One cannot help noting the
irony that Siddiqi's tract appeared in the same year, 1989, as Francis
Fukuyama's famous article speculating that, with the collapse of Communism and
the apparent triumph of liberal democracy, we had begun to approach the
"end of history.") And thirdly, and still more grandly, the infusion
of the United States with Islamism would make for so powerful a combination of
material success and spiritual truth that the establishment of "God's
Kingdom" on earth would no longer be "a distant dream."
But this dream will not happen by itself. To American Muslims, writes Siddiqi,
falls the paramount responsibility of bringing Islam to power in their country;
and to this goal, Muslims must devote "all of their energies, talents, and
resources." For this is how they will be assessed on judgment day:
"Every Muslim living in the West will stand in the witness box in the
mightiest court of Allah . . . in Akhirah [the last day] and give
evidence that he fulfilled his responsibility, . . . that he left no stone
unturned to bring the message of the Qur'an to every nook and corner of the
country."
How this desired end is to be achieved is a question on which opinions differ in
Siddiqi's world. Basically, the disagreement centers on the role of violence.
As has been made irrefutably clear in recent weeks, there are indeed some, not
just abroad but living among us, who see the United States as (in the phrase of
Osama bin Ladin) an "enemy of Islam" that must be brought to its knees
and destroyed. In its broad outlines, this judgment came to be solidified during
the crisis over Iraq's seizure of Kuwait in the early 1990's, when militants
like bin Ladin discerned a historic parallel between the presence of American
troops on the soil of Saudi Arabia and the brutal Soviet occupation of Afghanistan
in the 1980's. In their dialectical view, as the New Yorker writer Mary
Ann Weaver has explained, the United States, just like the Soviet Union before
it, represented "an infidel occupation force propping up a corrupt,
repressive, and un-Islamic government." And just as the Islamist mujahideen
in Afghanistan had succeeded in defeating and driving out their occupiers, and
thereby played a role in the collapse of the mighty Soviet Union itself, so
Islamists might cause the collapse of the United States: one down, one to go, as
it were.
To the blind sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, who after bin Laden is perhaps today's
most notorious enemy of the United States, bombing the World Trade Center in
1993 was part and parcel of this revolutionary strategy to "conquer the
land of the infidels" by force. The idea, as one of his followers put it,
was to "bring down their highest buildings and the mighty constructions
they are so proud of, in order thoroughly to demoralize them." 3
And this was a duty that Islamists saw as incumbent on all Muslims; having
helped humiliate the Soviets in Afghanistan, they now, as one native-born
American convert to Islam proclaimed in July 1989, must "complete the march
of jihad until we reach America and liberate her."
But there are several problems with the approach of revolutionary violence, even
from the perspective of those who share its goal. The most obvious has to do
with its impact on American society. Although attacks like the 1993 bombing or
the suicide massacres of September 11 are intended to demoralize the American
people, prompt civil unrest, and weaken the country politically, what they do
instead is to bring Americans together in patriotism and purpose. Those who
mastermind them, in the meantime, are often caught: Abdel Rahman is sitting out
a life sentence in a federal penitentiary, his campaign of violence stillborn,
while Osama bin Ladin is the object of a massive manhunt to get him "dead
or alive." Unlike in the very different case of the Soviet Union, it is
very hard to see how the use of force will succeed in wearing down this country,
much less lead to a change in government.
Besides, as a number of commentators have recently pointed out, in targeting all
Americans the perpetrators of Islamic violence do not bother even to
discriminate between non-Muslim and Muslim victims. According to preliminary
estimates, several hundred Muslims died in the collapse of the World Trade
Center. This is not exactly calculated to enlist the participation of most
resident Muslims in a campaign of violent insurrection. 4
For all these reasons, the non-violent way would seem to have a brighter future,
and it is in fact the approach adopted by most Islamists. Not only is it legal,
but it allows its enthusiasts to adopt a seemingly benign view of the United
States, a country they mean to rescue rather than to destroy, and it dictates a
strategy of working with Americans rather than against them. As a teacher at an
Islamic school in Jersey City, near New York, explains, the "short-term
goal is to introduce Islam. In the long term, we must save American
society." Step by step, writes a Pakistan-born professor of economics, by
offering "an alternative model" to Americans, Muslims can transform
what Ismail Al-Faruqi referred to as "the unfortunate realities of North
America" into something acceptable in God's eyes.
Practically speaking, there are two main prongs to the non-violent strategy. The
first involves radically increasing the number of American Muslims, a project
that on the face of it would not seem very promising. Islam, after all, is still
an exotic growth in the United States, its adherents representing just 1 to 2
percent of the population and with exceedingly dim prospects of becoming
anything like a majority. Islamists are not so unrealistic as to think that
these numbers can be substantially altered any time soon by large-scale
immigration (which is politically unfeasible and might anyway provoke a
backlash) or by normal rates of reproduction. Hence they focus most of their
efforts on conversion.
They do so not only as a matter of expediency but on principle. For Islamists,
converting Americans is the central purpose of Muslim existence in the United
States, the only possible justification for Muslims to live in an infidel land.
In the view of Shamim Siddiqi, there is no choice in the matter—American
Muslims are "ordained by Allah" to help replace evil with good, and
otherwise "have no right even to breathe." "Wherever you came
from," adds Siraj Wahaj, "you came . . . for one reason—for one
reason only—to establish Allah's din [faith]."
This imperative, relentlessly propagated by authoritative figures and promoted
by leading Islamist organizations like the Muslim Student Association, has been
widely adopted by Muslim Americans at large. Many attest to the sense of
responsibility that flows from being an "ambassador for Islam," and
are ever mindful of the cardinal importance of winning new adherents. And, given
what they hold to be the truth of their message and the depravity of American
culture, Islamists are optimistic about their chances of success. "A life
of taqwah [piety] will immediately attract non-Muslims towards
Islam," writes Abul Hasan Ali Nadwi, an important Indian Islamist, in his
"Message for Muslims in the West."
He has a point: the more readily the message of Islam is available, the more
converts it is likely to win. In making headway in the United States, Islam has
largely depended on hands-on contact and personal experience. According to one
survey, over two-thirds of American converts to Islam were motivated by the
influence of a Muslim friend or acquaintance. The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1964),
with its moving account of redemption through Islam, has had a wide impact on
American blacks (and even some whites), causing a substantial number to convert.
Similarly not to be discounted are the efforts of the various Muslim
organizations in the United States, whose "attempts at educating the
American public about Islam" may be responsible, according to one observer,
for "Islam's increasing numbers."
But if increasing numbers are necessary, they are also not sufficient. After
all, whole countries—Turkey, Egypt, Algeria—have overwhelmingly Muslim
populations, but Islamism is suppressed by their governments. From an Islamist
point of view, indeed, the situation in Turkey is far worse than in the
United States, for it is a more grievous thing to reject the divine message as
interpreted by Islamists than merely to be ignorant of it. Therefore, in
addition to building up Muslim numbers, Islamists must prepare the United States
for their own brand of ideology. This means doing everything possible toward
creating an Islamist environment and applying Islamic law. Activities under this
heading fall into various categories.
Promoting Islamic rituals and customs in the public square. Islamists
want secular authorities to permit students in public institutions, for example,
to recite the basmallah (the formula "In the name of God, the
Merciful, the Compassionate") in classroom exercises. They also want the
right to broadcast over outdoor loudspeakers the five daily Islamic
calls-to-prayer. Similarly, they have agitated for publicly maintained prayer
facilities in such institutions as schools and airports.
Privileges for Islam. Islamists seek public financial support for Islamic
schools, mosques, and other institutions. They also lobby for special quotas for
Muslim immigrants, try to compel corporations to make special allowances for
Muslim employees, and demand the formal inclusion of Muslims in
affirmative-action plans.
Restricting or disallowing what others may do. Islamists want
law-enforcement agencies to criminalize activities like drinking and gambling
that are offensive to Islam. While seeking wide latitude for themselves, for
instance when it comes to expressing disrespect for American national symbols,
they would penalize expressions of disrespect for religious figures whom Islam
deems holy, especially the prophet Muhammad; punish criticism of Islam,
Islamism, or Islamists; and close down critical analysis of Islam.
Some of these aims have already been achieved. Others may seem relatively minor
in and of themselves, implying no drastic alterations in existing American
arrangements but rather only slight adjustments in our already expansive
accommodation of social "diversity." Cumulatively, however, by
whittling away at the existing order, they would change the country's whole way
of life—making Islam a major public presence, ensuring that both the workplace
and the educational system accommodate its dictates and strictures, adapting
family customs to its code of conduct, winning it a privileged position in
American life, and finally imposing its system of law. Steps along the way would
include more radical and intrusive actions like prohibiting conversion out
of Islam, criminalizing adultery, banning the consumption of pork, formalizing
enhanced rights for Muslims at the expense of non-Muslims, and doing away with
equality of the sexes.
A Muslim majority? Islamic law the law of the land? Even the most optimistic
Islamists concede the task will not be easy. Just as Muhammad confronted
die-hard opponents in pagan Mecca, writes Siddiqi, so pious Muslims in America
will face opponents, led by the press cum media, the agents of capitalism, the
champions of atheism (Godless creeds) and the [Christian] missionary
zealots." Doing battle with them will demand focus, determination, and
sacrifice.
And yet Siddiqi also thinks Muslims enjoy advantages undreamt of in Muhammad's
day or in any other society than today's United States. For one thing, Americans
are hungry for the Islamist message, which "pinpoints the shortcoming of
capitalism, elaborates the fallacies of democracy, [and] exposes the devastating
consequences of the liberal lifestyle." For another, the United States permits
Islamists to pursue their political agenda in an entirely legal fashion and
without ever challenging the existing order. Indeed, precisely because the
Constitution guarantees complete government neutrality toward religion, the
system can be used to further Islamist aims. Democratic means are at hand for
developing an active and persistent lobby, cultivating politicians, and electing
Muslim representatives. Nearly a million legal immigrants arrive in the country
each year, plus many more through the long coastlines and porous land borders.
The courts are an all-important resource, and have already proved their worth in
winning concession after concession from American corporations and public
authorities.
Even so, the road will not be completely smooth. A delicate point will be
reached, in Siddiqi's mind, as society polarizes between Muslim and non-Muslim
camps "in every walk of life." At that point, as the struggle between
Truth and Error "acquires momentum and the tension increases along with
it," the "Wrong Doers" are likely to take desperate steps to
"eliminate the Islamic movement and its workers by force." But if
Islamists tread cautiously to navigate this point, taking special care not to
alienate the non-Muslim population, eventually there will follow what Siddiqi
calls a general "Rush-to-Islam." It will then be only a matter of time
before Muslims find themselves not just enfranchised but actually running the
show.
How much time? Siddiqi sees Islamists in power in Washington before 2020. For
Wahaj, implementation of the shari'a in the United States "appears
to be approaching fast," and in contemplating what that means his language
grows ecstatic:
I have a vision in America, Muslims owning property all over, Muslim
businesses, factories, halal meat, supermarkets, all these buildings
owned by Muslims. Can you see the vision, can you see the Newark International
Airport and a John Kennedy Airport and LaGuardia having Muslim fleets of
planes, Muslim pilots. Can you see our trucks rolling down the highways,
Muslim names. Can you imagine walking down the streets of Teaneck, [New
Jersey]: three Muslim high schools, five Muslim junior-high schools, fifteen
public schools. Can you see the vision, can you see young women walking down
the street of Newark, New Jersey, with long flowing hijab and long
dresses. Can you see the vision of an area of no crime, controlled by the
Muslims?
It hardly needs pointing out that this vision is, to say the least, farfetched,
or that Islamists are deluding themselves if they think that today's newborns
will be attending college in an Iranian-style United States. But neither is
their effort altogether quixotic: their devotion, energy, and skill are not to
be questioned, and the larger Muslim-American community for which they claim to
speak is assuredly in a position, especially as its numbers grow, to affect our
public life in decisive ways. Indeed, despite persistent complaints of bias
against them—more voluminous than ever in the wake of the airplane hijackings
on September 11—Muslim Americans have built an enviable record of
socio-economic accomplishment in this country, have won wide public acceptance
of their faith, and have managed to make it particularly difficult for anyone to
criticize their religion or customs.
Whether and to what degree the community as a whole subscribes to the Islamist
agenda are, of course, open questions. But what is not open to question is that,
whatever the majority of Muslim Americans may believe, most of the organized
Muslim community agrees with the Islamist goal—the goal, to say it once again,
of building an Islamic state in America. To put it another way, the major Muslim
organizations in this country are in the hands of extremists.
One who is not among them is Muhammad Hisham Kabbani of the relatively small
Islamic Supreme Council of America. In Kabbani's reliable estimation, such
"extremists" have "taken over 80 percent of the mosques" in
the United States. And not just the mosques: schools, youth groups, community
centers, political organizations, professional associations, and commercial
enterprises also tend to share a militant outlook, hostile to the
prevailing order in the United States and advocating its replacement with an
Islamic one.
Not all these organizations and spokesmen are open about their aspirations,
though some are: for example, the International Institute of Islamic Thought in
Herndon, Virginia, proclaims its academic purpose to be nothing less than
"the Islamization of the humanities and the social sciences." But the
best-known organizations—the ones whose members are invited to offer prayers
and invocations before Congress or to attend White House functions, or whose
representatives accompanied the President on his September 17 visit to a
mosque—tend to hide their true colors behind arch-respectable goals. Thus, the
American Muslim Council claims to work "toward the political empowerment of
Muslims in America," the Council on American-Islamic Relations is
"putting faith into action," and the Muslim Public Affairs Council
seeks only to make American Muslims "an influential component in U.S.
public affairs."
But as I have documented at greater length on other occasions, 5 much
if not everything about the conduct of these organizations points to their
essential agreement with the "conquer America" agenda, and from time
to time their leaders—including Al-Faruqi and Shakir—have even said as much.
As for Siraj Wahaj, he is a top figure in the Council on American-Islamic
Relations, the Islamic Society of North America, the Muslim Alliance in North
America, and the Muslim Arab Youth Association, and his views contaminate every
single one of them. It is not accurate to say, as President Bush said of the
Islamist leaders with whom he met on September 17, that they "love America
as much as I do."
That a significant movement in this country aspires to erode its bedrock social
and legal arrangements, including the separation of church and state, and has
even developed a roadmap toward that end, poses a unique dilemma, especially at
this moment. Every responsible public official, and every American of good
faith, is bent on drawing a broad distinction between terrorists operating in
the name of Islam and ordinary Muslim "moms and dads." It is a true
and valid distinction, but it goes much too far, and if adhered to as a
guideline for policy it will cripple the effort that must be undertaken to
preserve our institutions.
What such an effort would look like is a subject unto itself, but at a minimum
it would have to entail the vigilant application of social and political
pressure to ensure that Islam is not accorded special status of any kind in this
country, the active recruitment of moderate Muslims in the fight against Islamic
extremism, a keener monitoring of Muslim organizations with documented links to
Islamist activity, including the support of terrorism, and the immediate reform
of immigration procedures to prevent a further influx of visitors or residents
with any hint of Islamist ideology. Wherever that seditious and totalitarian
ideology has gained a foothold in the world, it has wrought havoc, and some
societies it has brought to their knees. The preservation of our existing order
can no longer be taken for granted; it needs to be fought for.
1 "Islam's American Lobby," Jerusalem Post,
September 20, 2001.
2 Here are two: http://www.islambook.com/dawah.htm and http:// www.
halalco.com/dawah.html.
3 These words were found in a notebook kept by Sayyid Abd al-Aziz
Nusayr, the Egyptian immigrant who assassinated Rabbi Meir Kahane in a New York
hotel in November 1990.
4 Upon hearing an immigrant Islamist speaker instruct an audience of
Muslims that they were "obligated to desire, and when possible to
participate in, the overthrow of any non-Islamic government—anywhere in the
world—in order to replace it by an Islamic one," one American-born
convert remembers protesting in dismay that this would involve people like
himself in political treason. "Yes, that's true," was the lecturer's
blithe response. (Jeffrey Lang, Even Angels Ask: A Journey to Islam in
America, 1997.)
5 See, in Commentary, "Are Muslim Americans
Victimized?" (November 2000), "How Elijah Muhammad Won"
(June 2000), "‘How Dare You Defame Islam'" (November 1999),
and "America's Muslims Against America's Jews" (May 1999).
All material on this site ©1980-2001 Daniel
Pipes.