After years of speaking out of
both sides of its mouth on the issue of terrorism, the
United Nations
has finally staked out a clear position: Any negative
portrayal of Islam will not be tolerated.
The General Assembly has just passed a resolution entitled
“Combating Defamation of Religions” which deals exclusively
with perceived slights committed against the Islamic faith.
What led the
United Nations to this counterintuitive conclusion?
The 2005 Danish cartoons which featured the prophet Muhammed.
Additionally, the resolution alleges that the media have
“negatively portrayed Islam” and painted Islam as a religion
of terrorism.
Let’s pause for a moment to examine the tortured logic
behind the resolution and the UN’s position.
For the past 30 years, Islamic terrorists have attacked
civilian targets in
Europe,
Israel
and more recently, the United States -- to say nothing of
the murderous violence committed by extremists in Muslim
countries.
Osama bin Laden, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and others have
themselves claimed the label of "Muslim"; no one has thrust
it upon them.
More to the point, our president and our government have
taken great pains to clearly distinguish the United States ’
war against the Islamic radicals from a more indiscriminate
war against Islam in general.
President Bush
has repeatedly refused to lay the blame for terrorism at the
feet of Islam. Despite the fact that Islamic extremists
continue to maim and kill innocents, the
United Nations
insists that even to mention that fact is to tar all Muslims
with the same gruesome brush.
The UN’s sense of priority is curious indeed. Why does the
General Assembly continue to blame the victim? An easy
answer would be that its “humanitarian” impulses nearly
always lead the
United
Nations to do the wrong thing at the wrong time.
However, there’s a bit more method to this particular
madness.
Within the General Assembly, the Organization of the Islamic
Council bears responsibility for the resolution. As Robert
Spencer has noted in a column for
FrontPageMagazine.com, the OIC occupies the
largest voting bloc in the assembly. When one considers the
relationship between society, faith and governments in much
of the Middle East , these things begin to make more sense.
In the United States , the religious and political spheres
overlap in places; devoutly religious men and women seek and
hold political office, often appealing to loyalties of faith
in doing so. Yet the Constitution's protection of religious
liberty and our deeply rooted Anglo-American tradition of
civil government maintain faith and politics as independent
spheres of influence.
In much of the Middle East , however, the two spheres are
one and the same. In
Iran ,
the mullahs are also the rulers. In
Saudi Arabia
, the House of Saud has maintained its grip in political
power in large part due to the support of the ulama, or
Islamic clerics. Therefore, a critique of Saudi or Iranian
society is often interpreted as a critique of Islam itself.
The current threat of Islamist violence is ultimately rooted
in the simple fact that encroaching Western culture
represents a threat to the status quo in much of the Third
World , where despots and religious extremists hold most of
the political power.
Crass though it may be, the commercial culture of the West
has the power to awaken the desire for a better life within
those who have known only subjugation. The foundation of
that better life -- rule of law, free markets, a government
that is responsive to its citizens --must necessarily be
laid with the headstone of the old order.
In the meantime, this United Nations resolution must be seen
and declared for what it is: One more futile attempt to stop
the onset of progress in the places that need it most. The
OIC does not speak for all Muslims, and it does not speak
for the citizens of its member states. Let’s not give them
the attention they so desperately demand.

Copyright © 2008 by Nathan
Tabor
Nathan Tabor is a conservative political activist based in Kernersville, North
Carolina. He has a bachelor’s degree in psychology and a master’s degree in
public policy. He is a contributing editor at
www.theconservativevoice.com
and his 60-second commentaries are heard on over 250 stations daily. Visit
www.aconservativemoment.com
to hear them. You can contact him at
Nathan@nathantabor.com.