Iraq’s History
The Key
I’ve known President Bush since he was governor
of Texas and gave us permission to start the first Christian prison in this
country. One thing I’ve always liked about him is that he says what he
means and means what he says.
That’s
why I felt something was missing in his speech and press conference on April
13. I think he would have liked to have told us the whole story, but it’s
impossible for him to do so.
The
president said we weren’t on a war footing before September 11, 2001.
That’s true. He went on to say that we are now on a war footing and are
in a war, also true, but I think he had to pull his punches in telling us the
character of that war.
We
Westerners forget history. We forget that from the time Muhammad began writing the
Qur’an in 610 A.D., Islam and the Christian West were engaged in armed
conflicts that lasted for a thousand years. Islam even occupied Spain during
much of this period, and it wasn’t until 1683 that the Ottoman Empire was
finally defeated at Vienna.
We
see what is happening today as an isolated case of terrorists taking a
misguided reading of the Qur’an. I wish it were that simple. The truth is
there’s an element in Islam some estimate as high as 20 percent who see
this battle as a resumption of the thousand years of war. In fact, Osama bin
Laden was a student of Mohammed Qutab whose brother, Saeb Qutab, a radical
Egyptian Islamist, argued for a resumption of this conflict with the West. Saeb
Qutab was thoroughly anti-Semitic, had a burning hatred of the West, and saw
its destruction as the world’s only hope. And that’s what filled
the mind of Osama bin Laden.
We’re
kidding ourselves if we think that containing a few terrorists will allow
America to live in peace and safety. We’re kidding ourselves if we think
we can bring troops home from Iraq and that’s the end of the war. This
war is going to be with us for generations. Millions of followers of Osama bin
Laden and those like him believe that it is their manifest destiny as Muslims
to bring about the utter destruction of Jews, Christians, and Western
civilization.
Now
the president can’t say this because it would alienate moderate Muslim
governments and might unleash frenzy among Islamists.
But
those of us on the sidelines can say things the president can’t say. If
we can create a democracy in the Middle East, Muslim people will see it and
realize it is good for them. And moderate Muslims may then capture control of
Islamic governments.
As
I see it, it’s our only hope. I think that President Bush sees this too
and recognizes that a flagship democracy in Iraq can bring democracy and
freedom to the Muslim masses. Yes, it’s a tough job, but it is our only
hope.
We
need a sober realistic view of what is happening, and we need to recognize that
Iraq is not another quagmire like Vietnam, but a beachhead of democracy and
freedom in the Middle East that may win over the Muslim masses and isolate the
terrorists and radical Islamists.
Bush
could promise a quick end to Iraq, as the partisan choruses are demanding in this
election year and he’d ensure his reelection. But to abandon Iraq would
be to surrender to radical Islam. That’s why Christians have a duty to
bring some historical perspective to this debate.
o
Copyright 2004 Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with permission.