Archived news and commentary: May 22 - 28, 2006

2006/05/22 - 2006/05/28
2006/05/15 - 2006/05/21
2006/05/08 - 2006/05/14
2006/05/01 - 2006/05/07
2006/04/24 - 2006/04/30
2006/04/17 - 2006/04/23

From 2001/09/11 -

 


Sunday, May 28, 2006


News and commentary:

"Denmark Condemned for Mishandling Cartoon Crisis" (Robert Spencer, Dhimmi Watch, 2006/05/28)
"Danish dhimmitude from IslamOnline, with thanks to Inexion:

COPENHAGEN, May 26, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Denmark was condemned Thursday, May 25, in an official report for its mishandling of the cartoon crisis sparked by the publication of 12 caricatures that lampooned Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him) in Danish mass-circulation Jyllands Posten in September.

"The government's management of the Muhammad (cartoon) affair was a bigger problem than the caricatures themselves and the prime minister ... should have entered into dialogue with the Muslim ambassadors," said the government-sanctioned study, a copy of which was obtained by Jyllands Posten, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP)....

What absurdity. Fogh Rasmussen, you may recall, refused to meet with the ambassadors because he said, correctly, that it was not his province to limit freedom of the speech or freedom of the press. But for this "official report," evidently, those freedoms matter less than appeasing those whose reaction to these cartoons was so insanely disproportionate as to include multiple murders of innocent people."

"'After the Rushdie affair, Islam in Britain became fused with an agenda of murder'" (Melanie Phillips, The Observer, 2006/05/28)
"Our capital is now 'Londonistan', the hub of Islamist extremism, argues Melanie Phillips in her provocative new book. In this explosive extract she traces the impact of one disturbing episode [the Rushdie affair]":
"Here in microcosm were the key features of what would only much later be recognised as a major and systematic threat to the state and its values. There was the murderous incitement; the flagrant defiance of both the rule of law and free speech; the religious fanaticism; the emergence of British Muslims as a distinct and hostile political entity; and the supine response by the British establishment. What was also on conspicuous display was the mind-twisting, back-to-front reasoning that is routinely used by many Muslims to turn their own violent aggression into victimhood. Muslim leaders claimed that the refusal by the British government to ban The Satanic Verses showed that Muslims in Britain were under attack, with the political and literary establishment trying to destroy their most cherished values. 'They are rapidly coming to the conclusion that they will have to fight to defend Islam in Britain,' said Dr Kalim Siddiqui of his community.
Of course, it was Britain that was under attack from an Islamism that required the British state to dump its most cherished values in order to placate the Muslim minority. Yet this was promptly inverted to claim that it was Islam that was under attack. Thus, Islamist violence was justified and its victim blamed instead for aggression, the pattern that has come to characterise the Muslim attitude to conflict worldwide."

"Dissident tells of assaults and threats against children during 66 days in jail run by Iran's clerical regime" (Philip Sherwell, The Sunday Telegraph, 2006/05/28)
"A leading Iranian pro-democracy and women's activist, who was jailed on trumped-up charges last year, has revealed how the clerical regime cynically deploys systemic sexual violence against female dissidents in the name of Islam.
Roya Tolouee, 40, was beaten up by Iranian intelligence agents and subjected to a horrific sexual assault when she refused to sign forced confessions. It was only when they threatened to burn her two children to death in front of her that she agreed to put her name to the documents.
Perhaps just as shocking as the physical abuse were the chilling words of the man who led the attack. "When I asked how he could do this to me, he said that he believed in only two things - Islam and the rule of the clerics," Miss Tolouee told The Sunday Telegraph last week in an interview in Washington after she fled Iran.
"But I know of no religious morality that can justify what they did to me, or other women. For these people, religion is only a tool for dictatorship and abuse. It is a regime of prejudice against women, against other regimes, against other ethnic groups, against anybody who thinks differently from them."
Miss Tolouee's account of her ordeal confirms recent reports from opposition groups that Iranian intelligence officials use sexual abuse against female prisoners as an interrogation technique and even rape young women before execution so that they cannot reach heaven as virgins."

 


Saturday, May 27, 2006


News and commentary:

"Ahmadinejad threatens Europe" (The Jerusalem Post, 2006/05/27)
"Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad warned Europe that it should support his country's nuclear program or "suffer the consequences."
In an interview to be published in the German Der Spiegel on Sunday, Ahmadinejad also expressed his doubt regarding the Holocaust, saying that even if it had occurred, the Jewish state should have been established in Europe, not in Palestine.
"I only accept something as the truth if I am truly convinced of it," he asserted.
The Iranian president, who previously stated his intention to travel to Germany for the World Cup games that will take place there this summer, said that he had not yet decided on the matter. Iran is one of the 32 nations participating in the world-wide sporting event.
"My decision depends on a lot of different things," Ahmadinejad said."

"Iranian-backed militia groups take control of much of southern Iraq" (Tom Lasseter, Knight Ridders/Iran Focus, 2006/05/27)
"BASRA, Iraq - Southern Iraq, long touted as a peaceful region that's likely to be among the first areas returned to Iraqi control, is now dominated by Shiite Muslim warlords and militiamen who are laying the groundwork for an Islamic fundamentalist government, say senior British and Iraqi officials in the area.
The militias appear to be supported by Iranian intelligence or military units that are shipping weapons to the militias in Iraq and providing training for them in Iran.
Some British officials believe the Iranians want to hasten the withdrawal of U.S.-backed coalition forces to pave the way for Iran-friendly clerical rule.
Iranian influence is evident throughout the area. In one government office, an aide approached a Knight Ridder reporter and, mistaking him for an Iranian, said, 'Don't be afraid to speak Farsi in Basra. We are a branch of Iran.'" (Hat tip: Jihad Watch.)

"In Haditha, Memories of a Massacre" (Ellen Knickmeyer, The Washington Post, 2006/05/27)
"Witnesses to the slaying of 24 Iraqi civilians by U.S. Marines in the western town of Haditha say the Americans shot men, women and children at close range in retaliation for the death of a Marine lance corporal in a roadside bombing.
Aws Fahmi, a Haditha resident who said he watched and listened from his home as Marines went from house to house killing members of three families, recalled hearing his neighbor across the street, Younis Salim Khafif, plead in English for his life and the lives of his family members. "I heard Younis speaking to the Americans, saying: 'I am a friend. I am good,' " Fahmi said. "But they killed him, and his wife and daughters."
The 24 Iraqi civilians killed on Nov. 19 included children and the women who were trying to shield them, witnesses told a Washington Post special correspondent in Haditha this week and U.S. investigators said in Washington. The girls killed inside Khafif's house were ages 14, 10, 5, 3 and 1, according to death certificates.
Two U.S. military boards are investigating the incident as potentially the gravest violation of the law of war by U.S. forces in the three-year-old conflict in Iraq."

 


Friday, May 26, 2006


News and commentary:

"Terrorism: Europe a target of Iranian suicide bombers" (AKI, 2006/05/26)
"Tehran, 26 May (AKI) - (Ahmad Rafat) - On Thursday afternoon in Tehran's cemetery of Behesht Zahra a group of 100 aspiring suicide bombers was sworn in at a ceremony also attended by a group of Hezbollah militants from Lebanon. The would-be terrorists are the new recruits of a movement which claims to have 50,000 members and is called Setad Pasdasht Shohadaye Nehzat Jahani Islam (Headquarters for the Commemoration of the Martyrs of the International Islamic Movement).
A day after the ceremony, Mohammad Ali Samadi, the organisation's spokesman, told Adnkronos International (AKI) in a phone conversation that "Each Israeli, soldier or civilian, must not feel safe wherever he or she is."
Samadi said Israel is a target of the group along with the US and European Union countries where the group has allegedly recruited militants. "We have brothers who are ready to sacrifice their lives for the triumph of Islam in Great Britain, France, Belgium, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands and also the United States," he said. ...
However, Samadi said his group is thinking to "widen the list" of targets in the membership forms and include the Netherlands, Italy and France.
"We have learnt that they want to make a follow up to the trash movie 'Submission'," by Theo Van Gogh, who was killed in 2004 by a Dutch-Moroccan Islamic militant, he said. Submission highlighted the repression of women in some Islamic cultures.
France will reportedly be a target "for greatly offending Islam after it prohibited to young women to go to school with the hijab."
Italy was included in the potential list of new entries for granting political asylum in March to an Afghan man who risked the death penalty for converting to Christianity from Islam.
"Giving political asylum to an idiot who defied Islam is a very serious offense which cannot be ignored," said Samadi. 'We will make Italians pay for this offence.'" (Hat tip: Jihad Watch.)

"Dissecting the Danish Cartoon Controversy" (Salim Mansur, FrontPageMagazine, 2006/05/26)
"Through the Cold War decades we heard from a body of opinion in the West that shared in the goals of its communist adversary in the Soviet Union. This body of opinion is skeptical of democracy, and opposes freedom as the fundamental liberal value. Jean-Francois Revel, the French public intellectual and author of The Totalitarian Temptation, explained, “The totalitarian phenomenon is not to be understood without making allowance for the thesis that some important part of every society consists of people who actively want tyranny: either to exercise it themselves or – much more mysteriously – to submit to it. Democracy will therefore always remain at risk.” ...
The Danish cartoon controversy showed this body of opinion being in sympathy with the Muslim outrage arguing for abridgement of the freedom of expression in open society, a right protected by constitution in liberal-democracies, as a demonstration of solidarity with people at odds with modern civilization. This body of opinion ironically has a greater capacity to do harm to liberal-democracy and the open society than any outrage of Muslims orchestrated to extract concessions from non-Muslims. It has an enervating effect on those in Europe and America on whose conviction and strength rests the defense of modern civilization. It feeds upon an excess of white guilt about past sins and, as Shelby Steele recently observed, “this guilt makes our Third World enemies into colored victims, people whose problems – even the tyrannies they live under – were created by the historical disruptions and injustices of the White West.” This is the paradox of our time, and for liberals the perennial dilemma to contend with while remaining true to liberal ideals." (See also:
"Image of Muhammad" - News and commentary on the Danish cartoon affair.)

"Say No to Tehran's Gambit" (Charles Krauthammer, The Washington Post, 2006/05/26)
"All of a sudden, revolutionary Iran has offered direct talks with the United States. All of a sudden, the usual suspects -- European commentators, American liberals, dissident CIA analysts, Madeleine Albright -- are urging the administration to take the bait.
It is not rare to see a regime such as Iran's -- despotic, internally weak, feeling the world closing in -- attempt so transparent a ploy to relieve pressure on itself. What is rare is to see the craven alacrity with which such a ploy is taken up by others. ...
The very fact that Iran is desperately trying to change the subject, change the venue and shift the burden onto the United States shows how close the mullahs believe we are to achieving major international pressure on them.
Pushing Washington to abandon the multilateral process and enter negotiations alone is more than rank hypocrisy. It is a pernicious folly. It would short-circuit the process that, after years of dithering, is about to yield its first fruits: sanctions that Tehran fears. It would undo the allied consensus, produce endless new delays and give Iran more time to reach the point of no return, after which its nuclear status would be a fait accompli."

"Galloway says murder of Blair would be 'justified'" (Oliver Duff, Independent, 2006/05/26)
"The Respect MP George Galloway has said it would be morally justified for a suicide bomber to murder Tony Blair.
In an interview with GQ magazine, the reporter asked him: "Would the assassination of, say, Tony Blair by a suicide bomber - if there were no other casualties - be justified as revenge for the war on Iraq?"
Mr Galloway replied: "Yes, it would be morally justified. I am not calling for it - but if it happened it would be of a wholly different moral order to the events of 7/7. It would be entirely logical and explicable. And morally equivalent to ordering the deaths of thousands of innocent people in Iraq - as Blair did."
The Labour MP Stephen Pound, a persistent critic of Mr Galloway during previous controversies, told The Sun that the Respect MP for Bethnal Green and Bow in east London was "disgraceful and truly twisted".
He said: 'These comments take my breath away. Every time you think he can't sink any lower he goes and stuns you again. It's reprehensible to say it would be justified for a suicide bomber to assassinate anyone.'"

Added today/in archive:
"Fight over lawmaker divides the Dutch" (Marlise Simons, The New York Times/IHT, 2006/05/24)
"Dutch Courage: Holland's latest insult to Ayaan Hirsi Ali" (Christopher Hitchens, Slate, 2006/05/22)
"The Caged Virgin: Holland's shameful treatment of Ayaan Hirsi Ali" (Christopher Hitchens, Slate, 2006/05/08)

 


Thursday, May 25, 2006


News and commentary:

"We Got Mail from Reuters (Bumped)" (Charles Johnson, Little Green Footballs, 2006/05/26)
Read the whole thing: "At 3:23 am, this creature used our contact form to send the following email with the obviously phony Hotmail address ‘zionistpig@hotmail.com’ and the subject line, “You bunch of wankers.”

I look forward to the day when you pigs get your throats cut....

Well, isn’t that tolerant.
But this particular death threat is a bit different from the run of the mill hate mail we get around here, because an IP lookup on the sender reveals that he/she/it was using an account at none other than Reuters News: RIPE Whois Database: 192.165.213.18."

 


Wednesday, May 24, 2006


News and commentary:

"Europe rethinks its 'safe haven' status" (Sarah Wildman, The Christian Science Monitor, 2006/05/24)
Ayaan Hirsi Ali II. "Ayaan Hirsi Ali's departure from Dutch politics last week played off fears about 'bogus' asylum seekers.":
VIENNA – The night air in Vienna has finally turned warm, filling the city's trams with visitors. On the Ringstrasse, tourists take in the city, pointing out the City Hall and the parliament.
"Did you see that one girl - so young! And wearing a veil," a woman clucks in lightly accented English, staring out the window of tram D. "They will form a separate culture."
The sentiment isn't isolated. Earlier this month, Austria's Interior Minister Liese Prokop announced that 45 percent of Muslim immigrants were "unintegratable," and suggested that those people should "choose another country." ...
Today, in once-homogenous Europe, tensions between immigrants and native Europeans appear to be increasing. The perception that an ever increasing number of newcomers - who neither speak the language of their adopted country nor accept its cultural mores - are changing the culture has increased support for ideas once only advanced by far-right political parties."

"Fight over lawmaker divides the Dutch" (Marlise Simons, The New York Times/IHT, 2006/05/24)
Ayaan Hirsi Ali I: "Dutch diplomats, embarrassed by scathing news coverage abroad, have hastily circulated statements insisting that Hirsi Ali is not being silenced or expelled and that she had decided to leave the country to take up a fellowship in Washington even before the latest dispute broke out.
But the public is divided. Opinion polls have said that half the people questioned agreed with the immigration minister's move, and Internet chat rooms set up by immigrant groups have brimmed with insults, bidding good riddance to the Muslim "traitor."
As she resigned from Parliament, Hirsi Ali politely expressed her sadness but said the difficult questions about "the future of Islam in our country" will not go away.
It is true that in this country of 16 million people, more than one million of whom are first- or second-generation Muslims, distrust runs deep.
"Some Muslims were euphoric, which I don't quite understand," said Hikmat Mahawat Khan, leader of the Contact Group, an umbrella organization that includes all Dutch Muslim associations. "Instead of blaming Ms. Hirsi Ali, they will now have to deal with difficult subjects themselves. And politicians should also worry, not because they lost a valuable colleague, but because they now have to show their colors."

"European nations draw up Iran compromise" (George Jahn, AP/Yahoo! News, 2006/05/24)
"Key European nations put finishing touches Tuesday on a proposal meant to enlist the support of Russia and China for possible U.N. Security Council sanctions against
Iran should Tehran refuse to abandon uranium enrichment, diplomats said.
The compromise — which would drop the automatic threat of military action if Iran remains defiant — is part of a proposed basket of incentives meant to entice Iran to give up enrichment, a possible pathway to nuclear arms. It also spells out the penalties if it does not.
France, Britain and Germany discussed the final form of the package Tuesday ahead of submission for hoped-for approval Wednesday at a formal meeting of the five permanent Security Council members and Germany." (See also: "Iran says will not negotiate on uranium enrichment" (AFP/Khaleej Times, 2006/05/22))

 


Tuesday, May 23, 2006


News and commentary:

"While Europe Slept" (Jamie Glazov, FrontPageMagazine, 2006/05/23)
An interview with Bruce Bawer on his recent book "While Europe Slept: How Radical Islam Is Destroying the West from Within":
"FP: Is there any hope for reform in Europe?
Bawer: We have to hope. Some days I’m more optimistic than others. Sometimes, alas, it seems as if the elite appeasers are so firmly in control of the reins of government, and the masses of people are so used to being passive and letting the elite call the shots, that it’s hard to imagine all of this working itself out in a positive way. All that’s certain is that the Muslim minorities are growing in numbers and in self-confidence and in power – and that many Europeans are upset about this, and frustrated with official inaction. There’s already been a noticeable movement toward right-wing, anti-immigration parties, some of which are cheering oases of pro-American and pro-freedom sentiment, and some of which are disturbingly racist and fascist. If European governments don’t stop being dhimmis and appeasers, there’ll be more and more movement in the direction of such parties. A Europe torn between nativist fascism and Islamofascism is a grim prospect, all too reminiscent of the situation in Europe in the 1930s. Some days it feels avoidable. Other days it feels inevitable."

 


Monday, May 22, 2006


News and commentary:

"Dutch Courage: Holland's latest insult to Ayaan Hirsi Ali" (Christopher Hitchens, Slate, 2006/05/22)
"Hirsi Ali calls for a pluralist democracy where all opinion is protected but where the law does not—in the name of some pseudo-tolerance—permit genital mutilation, "honor" killing, and forced marriage. One might have expected a more robust defense of this position from the Dutch, and indeed the international left, but instead there has been a response of extraordinary and sullen ungenerousness, as if a lone woman defying taboo and standing up to violence has in some way let down the side and become a menace to multiculturalism.
It will be delightful to have Ayaan Hirsi Ali in Washington. But the American Enterprise Institute, which has offered her a perch, is not the place where she is most needed. In Holland, every day, extremist imams preach intolerance and cruelty, and, when they are criticized, invoke the help of foreign embassies to bring pressure on the Dutch authorities. They face no risk of expulsion. In my youth, the action of lighting one person's cigarette with another was called — don't ask me why — a "Dutch f***." I once heard a young lady, offered a light in those terms, respond loftily by saying, "Doesn't say much for the Low Countries, does it?" No, it didn't, and neither does this mean and petty harassment of a woman who has also redefined that old expression 'Dutch courage.'" (See also: "The Caged Virgin: Holland's shameful treatment of Ayaan Hirsi Ali" (Christopher Hitchens, Slate, 2006/05/08))

"Press Release: Amir Taheri addresses queries about dress code story" (Amir Taheri, Benador Associates, 2006/05/22)
"Regarding the dress code story it seems that my column was used as the basis for a number of reports that somehow jumped the gun.
As far as my article is concerned I stand by it.
The law has been passed by the Islamic Majlis and will now be submitted to the Council of Guardians. A committee has been appointed to work out the modalities of implementation.
Many ideas are being discussed with regard to implementation,
including special markers, known as zonnars, for followers of
Judaism, Christianity and Zoroastrianism, the only faiths other than Islam that are recognized as such. The zonnar was in use throughout the Muslim world until the early 20th century and marked out the dhimmis, or protected religious minorities. ( In Iran it was formally abolished in 1908).
I have been informed of the ideas under discussion thanks to my
sources in Tehran, including three members of the Majlis who had tried to block the bill since it was first drafted in 2004.
I do not know which of these ideas or any will be eventually adopted. We will know once the committee appointed to discuss them presents its report, perhaps in September." (Hat tip: Melanie Phillips, who has more. See also: "Iranian Lawmakers Debate Women's Clothing" (Tarek Al-Issawi, AP/The Washington Post, 2006/05/19) and "A colour code for Iran's 'infidels'" (Amir Taheri, National Post, 2006/05/19))

"More than 32,000 Islamist extremists in Germany" (Expatica, 2006/05/22)
"The number of Islamist extremists based in Germany increased slightly last year but the country faces far lower threat of terrorist attacks than states which took part in the Iraq war, an official report said Monday.
There were 32,100 Islamists living in Germany last year - an increase of about 300 from 2004, said the report by Germany's domestic security agency, the Verfassungsschutz.
Germany has a Muslim minority of about 3 million out of a total population of 82 million, said the report.
The biggest Islamist group is Milli Gorus, a Turkish movement with 26,500 members.
Other groups are Hamas with about 300 members, Hezbollah with 900 and the Muslim Brotherhood with 1,300."

"Iran says will not negotiate on uranium enrichment" (AFP/Khaleej Times, 2006/05/22)
"TEHERAN - Iran’s hardline government said on Monday it would not negotiate on its controversial uranium enrichment programme and vowed the country would continue to work towards an industrial-scale capacity.
“The right to enrichment within the framework of the NPT and under the surveillance of the IAEA is an absolute right,” government spokesman Gholam Hossein Elham told reporters.
“This right and its implementation must be guaranteed. This is not something on which we can back down, whether for research or industrial purposes. This is not something on which we can negotiate or back down,” he said.
Britain, France and Germany are drawing up a proposal aimed to persuading Iran to halt fuel cycle work, which Washington and its allies say hides an effort to build a nuclear bomb."

"EU "regrets" Israeli snub of racism conference" (Herb Keinon, The Jerusalem Post, 2006/05/22)
"European officials responded with "regret" Monday to Israel ambassador to Austria Dan Ashbel's decision to boycott a conference on racism in the media in Vienna Monday because of concern in Jerusalem that anti-Semitism was getting short shrift at the meeting. ...
srael was angered that while the description of the conference it received in March said the conference would deal with various forms of racism, including anti-Semitism and Islamophobia, a later description sent to Jerusalem in May eliminated references to anti-Semitism, while the program still included a report on Islamophobia.
Diplomatic officials in Jerusalem were also perturbed that in the conference program that they received no Israeli or Jewish speaker was included in any of the conference's panel discussions, and that it was apparent from the schedule that the focus would be on the depiction of Islam and Muslims in the media, especially in light of the controversy surrounding the Danish cartoon lampoon of Muhammad earlier in the year.
Officials in Jerusalem said that while this issue was worthy of discussion, there was also a real need at such a conference to discuss anti-Semitism in both the Arab and European media, and that by judging by the topics and the various panelists, this issue was not on the agenda."

"How $45m secretly bought freedom of foreign hostages" (Daniel McGrory, The Times, 2006/05/22)
"FRANCE, Italy and Germany sanctioned the payment of $45 million in deals to free nine hostages abducted in Iraq, according to documents seen by The Times.
All three governments have publicly denied paying ransom money. But according to the documents, held by security officials in Baghdad who have played a crucial role in hostage negotiations, sums from $2.5 million to $10 million per person have been paid over the past 21 months. Among those said to have received cash ransoms was the gang responsible for seizing British hostages including Kenneth Bigley, the murdered Liverpool engineer.
The list of payments has also been seen by Western diplomats, who are angered at the behaviour of the three governments, arguing that it encourages organised crime gangs to grab more foreign captives."

 
 

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When people accept futility and the absurd as normal, the culture is decadent. The term is not a slur; it is a technical label."

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Articles of the week


"Handout picture released from the Hamas media office..." (Reuters, 2006/11/23)

"Losing the Enlightenment" (Victor Davis Hanson, OpinionJournal, 2006/11/29)

"Allah’s England?" (Daniel Johnson, Commentary. November 2006)

"'Sex in the Park': The latest doings of the Danish imams" (Henrik Bering, The Weekly Standard, 2006/11/18)

"Narcissism on Stilts" (Harold Evans, New York Sun, 2006/11/16)

"Terrorists are recruiting in our schools, says MI5 boss" (Philip Johnston, The Daily Telegraph, 2006/11/10)

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From the archives

"Italian veteran journalist and writer Oriana Fallaci..." (AP, 2006/09/15)

Oriana Fallaci, R.I.P.

"The Rage, the Pride and the Doubt" (Oriana Fallaci, The Wall Street Journal, 2003/03/13)

"How the West Was Won and How It Will Be Lost" (Oriana Fallaci, The American Enterprise, from the January/February 2003 issue)

"On Jew-hatred in Europe" (Oriana Fallaci, dennisprager.com, 2002/04/13)

"Anger and Pride" (Oriana Fallaci, dennisprager.com, 2001/12/19)



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