Cal Thomas
June 2, 2005
The Pentagon has acknowledged five instances in which guards or
interrogators at the detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
handled the Koran in such a way as to cause offense to some who believe
it is the revealed word of Allah. Three are said to have been three
deliberate and two unintentional.
Amnesty International has put the United States high on the list of
countries it says are guilty of prisoner and human rights abuses
because of the way suspected terrorists are treated. The chairman of
the joint chiefs of staff, General Richard Myers, rebutted the notion
of inappropriate treatment of detainees last weekend when he told Fox
News Sunday that these are people who would "slit our throats, our
children's throats" were they to be set free.
Islamic countries apply a double standard when it comes to the
treatment of "holy books" and people who differ in faith and
practice from Islamic dogma. While Islamic groups in the United States
are engaged in "sensitivity training" sessions for non-Muslims that
have included federal workers, the Ohio National Guard and U.S. Air
Force Academy, there are no such training sessions directed at Muslims
to teach them tolerance for non-Islamic faiths. Quite the contrary.
While the slightest verbal or physical slight of any Muslim in America
is immediately condemned by activist groups and sometimes the U.S.
government, the denigration of Jews and Christians throughout much of
the Islamic world is theological and political business as usual. Jews
are regularly referred to as "apes and pigs," mostly because that is
what the Koran calls them.
According to the MEMRI-TV Monitor Project, which observes the way Jews,
especially, are portrayed throughout the Middle East, a Jordanian
produced program titled "Stories From Before the Verses Came Down" was
aired in February on Saudi Iqra TV. The soap opera contained familiar
anti-Semitic stuff, including blaming ancient Jews for distorting their
own Torah to make it seem like Mohammad could not be the "true prophet"
and portraying a Jewish character saying, "We are the slayers of
prophets, and we live off their blood! We live for destroying them"
According to a report authored by former CIA Director James Woolsey for
Freedom House, the government of Saudi Arabia has made it a practice to
disseminate propaganda about Jews, Christians and America through
mosques in the U.S. and through schools, many of which are funded by
the extremist Wahhabi Islamic sect.
The 89-page report titled, "Saudi publications on hate ideology fill
American mosques," concludes that propaganda collected from U.S.
mosques shows a "totalitarian ideology of hatred that can incite to
violence." The report also says such mosques are in the minority, but
how many are needed to train terrorists who might attack the U.S. with
biological, chemical or nuclear weapons?
Throughout much of the Islamic world, the practice of Christianity and
Judaism is severely restricted, if not outlawed. The Freedom House
report said Saudi publications "state that it is a religious obligation
for Muslims to hate Christians and Jews" and that, under Saudi law,
Muslims who convert to any other faith "are to be put to death."
In a column four years ago, The Washington Post's Richard Cohen wrote,
"The Arab world is the last bastion of unbridled, unashamed, unhidden
and unbelievable anti-Semitism. Hitlerian myths get published in the
popular press as incontrovertible truths. The Holocaust either gets
minimized or denied. . How the Arab world will ever come to terms with
Israel when Israelis are portrayed as the devil incarnate is hard to
figure out." Little, if anything, has changed since he wrote those
words.
Despite the Western diplomatic talk about Arabs and Palestinians living
in peace with even a geographically reduced Israel, the Arab world
demonstrates no intention of coming to terms with Israel or the Jewish
(or Christian) people, unless those terms involve their complete
subjugation to Islam, or their deaths.
The State Department acknowledged for the first time during the Clinton
Administration that Christians - from China, to the Sudan, to the
Middle East - have become the most persecuted faith group in the world.
Yet those persecutors are not pressured into the kind of sensitivity
training Muslim groups in America demand at the slightest slight,
whether actual, imagined or concocted.
To accept this Islamic double standard creates a significant threat to
the United States.