Raymond Ibrahim
By obsessing over the 14-minute YouTube Muhammad video and its maker,
the mainstream media ultimately exonerates the inexcusable and
murderous response of the Islamic world.
There is only one question: did those who make this movie break any
law? No, they did not—and so the matter should end there, and the media
should move on. Focusing on those who did not break any American laws as
a way to take the focus off those who murdered and initiated an act of
war against the United States is not only misleading; it validates and
gives Islamic blasphemy laws precedence over American freedoms.
Worse, even if making movies deemed offensive to Muslims was illegal
in the U.S., the fact is, these embassy attacks, which “coincidentally”
began on September 11, have nothing to do with the movie. On September
10, I wrote an article titled “Jihadis Threaten to Burn U.S. Embassy in Cairo.”
The demand that the U.S. release its imprisoned jihadis, including the
Blind Sheikh, was behind these threats. There was no mention of
“offensive movies.” My source, El Fagr, an Arabic website, reported all this on September 8.
In other words, several days before Muslims were angry about this
movie they were threatening to burn down the U.S. embassy in Cairo. I
had even seen sporadic Arabic reports, from months back, talking about
“extremist elements” threatening the embassy. The movie is just a
pretext—aided and abetted by the media, not to mention the Obama
administration: Hillary Clinton called the video “disgusting and reprehensible,”
wording which is more befitting those who murdered (and possibly raped,
see below) Americans; the U.S. embassy itself apologized for those who “hurt the religious feelings of Muslims“; and the administration asked YouTube to remove the 14 minute trailer.
Thus the U.S. administration validates Islam’s blasphemy laws and, once again, aligns itself with America’s jihadi enemies.
Seventy-year-old, retiring Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ) put it well, when he
suggested that the administration’s response to the embassy attacks was
akin to a court asking a rape victim for an apology, saying: “It’s like
the judge telling the woman who got raped, ‘You asked for it because of
the way you dressed.’”
Nor is the rape entirely allegorical. According to the Arabic website Tayyar,
“the American ambassador in Libya [Christopher Stevens] was sexually
raped before being killed by the gunmen who stormed the embassy building
in Benghazi last night [Tuesday, September 11], in protestation of a
film insulting to the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings upon him.”
Sexual abuse and degradation is a common tactic used against non-Muslims, especially women, as the repeatedly raped Lara Logan found. For example, a report in Arabic media
that just appeared discusses how Christian women—identified by wearing
crosses around their necks or simply not wearing a hijab—are subject to
sexual harassment, verbal abuse, and even threats of rape on the streets
of Egypt. This has only “become much more blatant and terrifying [after
the embassy attacks]—and has even reached the point of threats of genocide and purging the land of Egypt of infidel Christians,” writes one female Christian in Egypt.
Nor are men immune from such rapes. In fact, the photos of Ambassador
Stevens—stripped of clothes, bloodied and tortured right before he was
killed—very much resemble the photos of Gaddafi right before he was
killed. One U.S.-supported “freedom-fighter,” for example, can be seen sodomizing Gadaffi with a rod as others dragged him along.
The al-Qaeda affiliated men who sexually abused and killed Gaddafi
are the same sort of men who sexually abused and killed America’s
ambassador. We were told that the late Libyan dictator was killed
because he was an evil oppressor of his people. Why was the American
ambassador killed, who had hailed the revolution and was there helping to “build a better Libya“?
These are the questions the media and the Obama administration need
to be answering—not obsessing over a second-rate YouTube video and
questioning hard-won American freedoms enshrined in the First Amendment.
They should be explaining why it is that, after four years of appeasing
the Islamic world in ways unprecedented, including by helping oust
America’s longstanding allies like Egypt’s Mubarak to empower Islamists,
all we have to show for it are dead and violated Americans, stormed
embassies, burned U.S. flags, and greater anti-American sentiment than
ever before.
Raymond Ibrahim is
a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an Associate
Fellow at the Middle East Forum. This article was originally published
by Front Page Magazine.
No comments:
Post a Comment