Climate of Suspicion
December 25, 2007
The ideological assault on Muslims continues apace. Here Seumas Milne responds to the latest. ‘People who would have no problem recognising anti-semitism as a form of racism still claim Islamophobia is about ideology, not ethnicity’, he writes.
Perhaps it’s not surprising that someone who describes himself as phobic about the concept of Islamophobia and thinks that the invasion of Iraq is a “subject of purely historical interest” might struggle to grasp why the relentless campaign of hostile media stories about the Muslim community is toxic and dangerous – or recognise that it is driven by a neoconservative agenda about terror and war.
Last week Andrew Anthony, author of this year’s summer reading of choice for liberal hawks (The Fall-Out: how a guilty liberal lost his innocence), accused me of “wishful thinking and evasion” for highlighting the fabrication of evidence by the Tory-linked thinktank, Policy Exchange, in its report on “extremist literature” in British mosques – and for arguing that jihadist violence is essentially the product of western aggression, occupation and support of tyranny in the Muslim world
The insistence of Anthony and his neoconservative allies that terror attacks in Britain and elsewhere are instead fundamentally motivated by hatred of western freedoms flies in the face of overwhelming evidence: both of how and when Islamist violence emerged, the point at which it was launched in Britain and what the jihadists say themselves. As Osama Bin Laden himself asked in his 2004 US-election timed broadcast, if it was western freedom al-Qaida hated, why didn’t they attack Sweden? And as opinion polls showed after the 2005 London bombings, the real motivation was well understood by the British public.
But of course if you can start to convince people that resistance in Iraq, Afghanistan and Palestine – and bomb attacks on public transport in London or Madrid – are in fact the product of a socially-disconnected extremist ideology, then Anglo-American warmongering in the Muslim world is off the hook, the bloody and failed occupation of Afghanistan can be presented as well-intentioned peacekeeping and ordinary British Muslims can be held responsible for atrocities, real or attempted, by small groups of followers of al-Qaida.
That has been the thrust of a series of lurid and inflammatory TV and newspaper reports in the last couple of years, encouraged first by Tony Blair and then others in the government and on the Tory front bench. Policy Exchange’s current offering, The Hijacking of British Islam, which was exposed by Newsnight as based in part on faked material, is only the latest.
Anthony tries to cast doubt on the compelling evidence against Policy Exchange (see other criticism here and here on earlier Policy Exchange “research” into the Muslim community) by claiming that I “made pretty much the same accusations” against Undercover Mosque, a Channel Four programme on the “preaching of hate”, broadcast in January.
Er, no. I said, correctly, that the documentary had been found by the police and Crown Prosecution Service to have “completely distorted” what speakers had said. Subsequently, Ofcom – the government-appointed, industry-friendly quango in charge of broadcasting, headed by Blair’s former media adviser – disagreed. That hardly settles the question, let alone addresses the wider inflammatory impact of such programmes.
Nor does the half-hearted and disingenuous letter from Policy Exchange’s director, Anthony Browne, published in the Guardian on Saturday. Crucially, the Tory-linked thinktank still refuses to say whether it believes the supposed receipts for extremist literature exposed by Newsnight as fabricated were in fact genuine (and despite Browne’s attempt to suggest otherwise, only a minority of the receipts have so far been properly tested and investigated).
The point is in any case not that issues of separatism, misogyny, homophobia or jihadist violence within the Muslim community shouldn’t be reported or discussed, but that their disproportionate, sensationalist and unbalanced treatment by the media feeds ethnic tensions and actually intensifies the sense of anger behind the terror threat itself.
In the case of the Policy Exchange report, the “extremism” of the literature it tried to demonstrate is so prevalent in British mosques mostly refers to the kind of ultra-conservative texts which have their equivalents in Christianity, Judaism and other religions – but have precious little to do with jihadist terrorism. And in fact Policy Exchange barely attempted to make a link.
Nevertheless, it is this socially reactionary trend within the Muslim community that is constantly under the media spotlight, while the parallel strains in other religious groups are ignored, despite the devastating violence and suffering unleashed in the past six years by a born-again Christian US president and his messianic, Catholic-convert British understudy.
Anthony claims he wants to treat all “extremism” the same way, regardless of race and religion, and that this “challenge” must “avoid demonising Muslims at large and seek to prevent exploitation by the far right”. But he knows perfectly well that’s not what has been happening at all. It is the Muslim community that is under the cosh, not those who offer support to western military aggression and supremacism.
Muslims in Britain have been demonised, and are being demonised, by the very media campaign he defends – and that campaign is not only exploited by the BNP and the far right, but by the political mainstream. The barrage of Muslim-baiting scare stories of the past couple of years – of which the media blitz around the Policy Exchange report in October was just one example – has helped to create a climate where British people are now more suspicious of and hostile to Muslims than are Americans or citizens of any other major west European country, as an international Harris poll found this summer.
On the streets of British towns and cities, that feeds anti-Muslim aggression and violence. On Friday, Asaf Mahmood Ahmed was beaten to death, allegedly by two white youths in Bolton, in what the police are treating as a racist attack. The previous Saturday, another Muslim, Ahmed Hassan, was stabbed to death by a white gang in Dewsbury, where police are still investigating whether there was a religious or racial motive. In real life, the dividing line between racial and religious motives is non-existent. But meanwhile people who would have no problem recognising anti-semitism as a form of racism still try to insist that Islamophobia is simply about ideology, not ethnicity.
To equate the threats and intimidation experienced by racial and religious minorities in Britain, as Anthony does, with those experienced by the majority – or the random terror threat faced by all – simply won’t wash. In common with a small but vociferous and well-connected group of pro-war liberals, Antony has shown himself utterly unable to face up to the huge inequalities of power that underpin both domestic and international politics. Not a mistake so easily made in Dewsbury and Bolton.
December 25, 2007 at 12:48 pm
Big spat among the Guardianistas evidently and I would stand with Milne on the Islamophobic junk that passes for journalism among the likes of Anthony and the whole stable of shallow Grub Street hacks employed by Peter Preston or whoever the current editor is?
Preston’s piece is even more sick-making than the stuff Anthony is apparently churning out.He uses the typically timely and nauseatingly public conversion of Blair to Catholicism to try and sketch another pathetically tired invocation of English moderation and reticence on religious matters.
The intellectual class of educated liberals could have spent the last decade enlightening us about Islam,the perspective of other nationalities and states generally so that no-one would have thought the illegal and immediate recourse to war in the Balkans,Afghanistan and Iraq by a so-called mature democracy was a worthy position to assume in world affairs.
Preston in the Blair conversion story could have reminded us of the number of dictators,torturers and war criminals who the Catholic Church has taken warmly thus to its bosom over centuries.Given the glaringly authoritarian features of Blair’s conceptual framework,indeed of the government he ran,Preston could have mused on the likelihood of the next step in Blair’s illustrious career being his beatification!
Alas,in the world without irony the corporate media has created Preston missed the opportunity to do any these things.
Anthony’s current best-seller sounds utterly crass and vomit-inducing but naturally its plot around a self-appointed liberal waking up and suddenly going through a Damascene conversion to the War on Terror and a bout of equally shallow soul-searching about his devotion to the liberal ideal is bound to win him friends in the Zionist-backed corporate media.
It’s a shame that Milne felt the need to give the book some thoroughly undeserved early publicity.
When push comes to shove all these hacks,even Milne have been signed up to the “War on Terror” since 9/11.Islamic militancy is the subtext to this war and like the largely fictional Cold War invented by Churchill and Truman they will likely run with the story and make their livings from it for the next thirty years or so.
As for a little prima donna-like bout of soul-searching- well that’s good copy too.
When Randolph Bourne contemplated the role of the intelligentsia in succumbing all too easily to the break with neutralism that prefigured America’s entry into WW1 in 1917 he wrote-
Never having felt responsibility for labour wars and oppressed masses and excluded races at home,they had found a large fund of idle emotional capital to invest in oppressed nationalities(read Kurds,marsh Arabs,Bosnians,Kosovans etc)
elsewhere….
It was ever thus.
July 1, 2008 at 7:21 pm
If Guardian readers re-visit the Guardian review of Gordon Brown’s Courage:8 Portraits book(Guardian 26.5.07)they will get a sense of just how low their establishment left rag has sunk.
The book was reviewed by one Philip Gould.It was not vouchsafed to Guardian readers that the reviewer was one of the PR consultants who created New Labour and was in the business at that very moment in time of selling the new leader-in-waiting to the credulous British public.
So when the reviewer insisted that Brown’s book was very moving and entirely devoid of cynicism and talked of New Labour’s vast achievements over the previous decade many must have believed him.After all,Guardian readers are not known for their powers of discrimination and discernment-or they wouldn’t be reading such a rag in the first place!
Readers might have taken pause to reconsider the accuracy of Gould’s gushing account of the book had they been reminded that the title and format bore uncanny resemblances to a work by another political aspirant who was himself in an earlier decade trying to raise his own political profile.
In 1956 JFK was cajoled by his father into writing a book called Profiles in Courage.Old Joe Kennedy who’d made the family’s millions as a bootlegger during Prohibition made sure his vast entourage of staff bought copies of son,Jack’s book in huge quantities in order that it made the best-seller list.
Not only did the JFK Courage book reach the best-seller list it also won a Pulitzer the following year.
Funny thing was,as many of his biographers have pointed out,Jack’s investment in the book had been minimal in comparison to that of members of his father’s staff and Jack’s research associate Ted Sorensen.Jack’s handwritten original bore scant resemblance to the finished product and the writing and research had largely been conducted by members of Joe’s staff.
Nowadays we’d probably refer to Jack’s work as ghost-written!
According to Gould,Brown’s Courage:8 Portraits includes,aside from Edith Cavell,MLK,Mandela,includes a chapter on Bobby Kennedy where the obsequious reviewer notes that our hero and PM-in-waiting portrays him as the archetypal New Labour politician.One who began as hard McCarthyite Attorney General but became ultimately a touchy-feely liberal aspirant to Presidential office.
In the light of this brief history whether the Brown Courage book was like the JFK one on the same subject entirely uncynical and nothing to do with profile-raising is a little more open to doubt.As is the question as to whether both were ghost-written products!
Ultimately we’ll probably never know since the man most likely to have been involved in ghostwriting the Brown book was allowed by the Guardian also to review it!
In the year since the would-be Kennedyesque Brown’s book on courage was published ample evidence has been provided that its so-called author was not best qualified to write a book on the topic at all!
Gould evidently wrote the appalling review of what was likely mostly his own book while he was at the Hay festival promoting his own book.
The Unfinished Revolution:How the Modernizers Saved the Labour Party was Gould’s rather absurd title.
Any takers?