Muslims in the US and around the world have a responsibility to fight
the idea that terrorist groups like Islamic State speak for them,
Barack Obama has declared in his most direct remarks yet about any link
between Islam and violent extremism.
“We are not at war with Islam,” Obama said. “We are at war with people who have perverted Islam.”
In the first of two speeches to a counter-extremism summit in
Washington, the president reiterated his determination to avoid letting
the agenda become characterised as a battle against Islam, saying this would be playing into the hands of Isis and other terrorist groups.
“They propagate the notion that America, and the west generally, is
at war with Islam; that’s how they recruit, that’s how they try to
radicalise young people,” he said.
“Just as leaders like myself reject the notion that terrorists like
Isil genuinely represent Islam, Muslim leaders need to do more to
discredit the notion that our nations are determined to suppress Islam.”
For weeks the Obama administration
has sidestepped the question of whether deadly terror attacks in Paris
and other western cities amount to “Islamic extremism”, wary of
offending a major world religion or lending credibility to the “war on
terror” waged by George Bush.
But as he hosted the summit at the White House, the president said
some in Muslim communities had bought into the notion that Islam was
incompatible with tolerance and modern life.
While putting the blame on Isis and similar groups — Obama said the
militants masqueraded as religious leaders but were really terrorists —
the president also appealed directly to prominent Muslims to do more to
distance themselves from brutal ideologies, calling it the duty of all
to “speak up very clearly” in opposition to violence against innocent
people.
Obama acknowledged it was a touchy subject but insisted it was critical to tackle the issue “head-on”.
“We can’t shy away from these discussions,” he said. “And too often
folks are understandably sensitive about addressing some of these root
issues, but we have to talk about them honestly and clearly.”
The president differentiated militant groups from the “billion Muslims
who reject their ideology”. Isis was killing far more Muslims than
non-Muslims, he said, and called for the world community to elevate the
voices of those who “saw the truth” after being radicalised temporarily.
Obama acknowledged many Muslims in the US had a suspicion of
government and police and felt they were unfairly targeted – confounding
efforts to strengthen co-operation between law enforcement and Muslim
communities. He praised Muslims who have served the US and other
capacities for generations.
“Of course that’s the story extremists and terrorists don’t want the
world to know: Muslims succeeding and thriving in America,” Obama said.
“Because when that truth is known it exposes their propaganda as the lie
that it is.”
Obama has long tried to shift his administration’s terror rhetoric
away from what he saw as the hyperbolic terminology used by his
predecessor, George Bush, particularly Bush’s declaration in the
aftermath of the 9/11 attacks that the US was engaged in a “war on
terror”.
On Wednesday Obama said: “If we’re going to prevent people from being
susceptible to the false promises of extremism, then the international
community has to offer something better and the United States intends to
do its part.”
Issuing such a direct challenge to Muslims to disown the ideology of
extremist groups marked a clear departure from the restrained, cautious
language Obama and his aides have used to describe the situation in the
past.
In the days after last month’s shootings at a satirical French
newspaper that had caricatured the prophet Muhammad, Obama avoided
calling the attack an example of “Islamic extremism” and instead opted
for the more generic “violent extremism”. Recently the White House also
struggled to explain whether the US believed the Afghan Taliban to be a
terrorist organisation.
The refusal to directly assess any Islamic role in the terrifying
scenes playing out in Europe, the Middle East and Africa has drawn
criticism from those who say Obama has prioritised political correctness
over a frank acknowledgement of reality. National security hawks, in
particular, have argued that Obama’s counterterrorism strategy couldn’t
possibly be successful if the president was unable or unwilling to
confront the true nature of the threat.
Yet the argument over terminology has increasingly become a
distraction, including this week as Obama gathered law enforcement
officials, Muslim leaders and lawmakers for a three-day summit on
violent extremism.
Obama echoed the concern over the killings in Chapel Hill, North Carolina,
though he did not directly address the question of the murderer’s
motive, preferring to emphasise the solidarity of other Americans.
“Most recently, with the brutal murders in Chapel Hill of three young
Muslim Americans, many Muslim Americans are worried and afraid and I
want to be as clear as I can be: as Americans of all faiths and
backgrounds, we stand with you in grief and we offer our love and we
offer our support,” he said.
Obama is due to speak again on Thursday when delegates from about 65
countries gather for the summit’s closing session at the state
department.
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