From: Washington Times
Islamofascism by any other name
This
newspaper has printed the words "Islamic fascism" or the variant
"Islamofascism" more than 100 times since 2001, so we think we're in a
good position to tell Democratic critics and Professor Stephen Wayne of
Georgetown University that it's not some focus-grouped buzzword. The
term "Islamic fascism" describes a political reality.
The
cynical claim at present is that the White House "probably had a focus
group and they found the world 'fascist.' " Actually, no.
On
July 20, 2001, our former religion editor, Larry Witham, interviewed
the Muslim scholar who is sometimes credited with inventing the term.
Daring to question hardline Islam, the German-born Khalid Duran told The
Washington Times that Islamism is really "Islamofascism" because it
seeks to impose a forceful religious orthodoxy on the state and the
citizenry. Use of the term has mushroomed ever since. It's easy to see
why. It describes a real phenomenon.
But
assuming for a moment that all this talk of Islamic fascism is some
cynical Republican public-relations ploy, New York Times columnist
Thomas Friedman must be in on the action. In 2002, he referred to "the
Islamic fascism of Osama bin Laden" in an opinion piece on Iran. Also
count Robert Wistrich, who holds the Neuberger chair for Modern European
History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His evident cynicism led
him to pen the essay "The New Islamic Fascism" in the journal Partisan
Review in 2001, ostensibly to give the term some academic currency. Even
the Brookings Institution's Michael O'Hanlon must be an honorary
collaborator; he recently told reporters that while he does not wholly
buy into the term's usage, he thinks it "calls attention to the Islamic
quality of the movement." This is some conspiracy.
It's
incredible the depths to which ideologues stoop to prevent accurate
language from taking hold. Here's the incorrigible Juan Cole doing his
best recently: "Linking Islam... with a pejorative term such as fascism
is extremely unfair," he told NPR. "In fact, it is a form of racism."
But
then, these same critics seem to think it's perfectly fine for Dick
Durbin, Illinois Democrat, to compare U.S. soldiers guarding detainees
at Guantanamo to Nazis. Do they really think it's alright to compare
American soldiers to Nazis, but not terrorist fanatics?
The terms Islamic fascism and Islamofascism are here to stay. They describe an actual political phenomenon, like it or not.
FAIR
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