Despite the apparent decision by President George
W. Bush against re-nominating him to the board of the United States Institute
of Peace (USIP), "anti-Islamist" activist Daniel Pipes is working
as diligently as ever to protect the United States and the Western world from
the influence of radical Islamists.
He has proposed the creation of a new Anti-Islamist Institute (AII) designed
to expose legal "political activities" of "Islamists," such
as "prohibiting families from sending pork or pork byproducts to U.S. soldiers
serving in Iraq," which nonetheless, in his view, serve the interests of
radical Islam.
"In the long term...the legal activities of Islamists pose as much or
even a greater set of challenges than the illegal ones," according to the
draft of a grant proposal by Pipes' Middle East Forum (MEF) obtained by IPS.
Pipes is also working with Stephen Schwartz on a new Center for Islamic Pluralism
(CIP) whose aims are to "promote moderate Islam in the U.S. and globally"
and "to oppose the influence of militant Islam, and, in particular, the
Saudi-funded Wahhabi sect of Islam, among American Muslims, in the America media,
in American education … and with U.S. governmental bodies."
Schwartz, a former Trotskyite militant who became a Sufi Muslim in 1997, has
received seed money from MEF, which is also accepting contributions on CIP's
behalf until the government gives it tax-exempt legal status, according
to another grant proposal obtained by IPS.
The CIP proposal, which says it expects to receive funding from contributors
in the "American Shia community" and in "Sunni mosques once liberated
from Wahhabi influence," also boasts "strong links" with Deputy
Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz and other notable neoconservatives, such as
former Central Intelligence (CIA) director James Woolsey and the vice president
for foreign policy programming at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), Danielle
Pletka, as well as with Pipes himself.
Pipes, who created MEF in Philadelphia in 1994, has long campaigned against
"radical" Islamists in the United States, especially the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and several other national Islamic groups.
Long before the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on New York and the Pentagon, he also
raised alarms about the immigration of foreign Muslims, suggesting that they
constituted a serious threat to the political clout of U.S. Jews, as well as
a potential "fifth column" for radical Islamists.
In addition, Pipes has been a fierce opponent of Palestinian nationalism. He
told Australian television earlier this month, for example, that Israeli Prime
Minister's Gaza disengagement plan and his agreement to negotiate with the new
Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, were a "mistake" because 80
percent of the Palestinian population, including Abbas, still favor Israel's
destruction.
In 2002, Pipes launched Campus Watch, a group dedicated to monitoring and exposing
alleged anti-Semitic, anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian, and/or Islamist bias in
teachers of Middle Eastern studies at U.S. colleges and universities.
The group, which invites students to report on offending professors, has been
assailed as a McCarthyite tactic to stifle open discussion of Middle East issues.
Pipes' nomination by Bush in 2003 to serve as a director on the board of the
quasi-governmental USIP, a government-funded think tank set up in 1984 to "promote
the prevention, management, and peaceful resolution of international conflicts,"
moved the controversy over his work from academia into the U.S. Senate where
such appointments are virtually always approved without controversy.
Pipes' nomination, however, offered a striking exception. Backed by major Muslim,
Arab-American, and several academic groups, Democratic senators, led by Edward
Kennedy, Christopher Dodd, and Tom Harkin, strongly opposed the nomination as
inappropriate, particularly in light of some of his past writings, including
one asserting that that Muslim immigrants were "brown-skinned peoples cooking
strange foods and not exactly maintaining Germanic standards of hygiene."
Several Republican senators subsequently warned Bush that they would oppose
the nomination if it came to a vote, and, in the end, the president made a "recess
appointment" that gave him a limited term lasting only until the end of
2004. It appears now that, despite the enhanced Republican majority in the Senate,
Bush does not intend to re-nominate him.
Indeed, both the USIP and Bush now probably regret having nominated him in
the first place. During his board tenure, Pipes blasted USIP for hosting a conference
with the Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy, charging that it employed
Muslim "radicals" on its staff.
That accusation was publicly refuted by the USIP itself, which echoed the complaints
of his longtime critics, accusing him of relying on "quotes taken out of
context, guilt by association, errors of fact, and innuendo."
Pipes also criticized Bush for "legitimizing" various "Islamist"
groups, such as CAIR and the Arab-American Institute, by permitting their representatives
to take part in White House and other government ceremonies and for failing
to identify "radical Islam" as "the enemy" in the war on
terror.
His own disillusionment with Bush is made clear in the AII draft which notes
that "creative thinking in this war of ideas must be initiated outside
the government, for the latter, due to the demands of political correctness,
is not in a position to say what needs to be said."
AII's goal, it goes on, "is the delegitimation of the Islamists. We seek
to have them shunned by the government, the media, the churches, the academy
and the corporate world."
Pipes' complementary goal – to enhance the influence of "moderate"
Muslims – is to guide the work of Schwartz's CIP, which is "headed by
one born Muslim (its President) and a 'new Muslim', i.e. an American not born
in the faith, as its Executive Director. This is the best combination for leading
such an effort."
The "extremists," according to the CIP proposal, are mainly represented
by the "Wahhabi lobby," an array of organizations consisting of CAIR,
the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), the North American Islamic Trust
(NAIT), the Muslim Students' Association of the U.S. and Canada (MSA), the Muslim
Public Affairs Council (MPAC), as well as "secular" groups, including
the Arab-American Institute (AAI) and the American Arab Anti-Discrimination
Committee (ADC).
"The first goal of CIP will be the removal of CAIR and ISNA from monopoly
status in representing Muslims to the American public," the proposal goes
on. "[S]o long as they retain a major foothold at the highest political
level, no progress can be made for moderate American Islam."
In achieving its goal, CIP cites the help it can expect from its "strong
links" to Wolfowitz, Woolsey, and Pletka; as well as Senators Charles Schumer
and Sen. Jon Kyl, among others, "terrorism experts" Steven Emerson
of the Investigative Project, Paul Marshall of Freedom House, and Glen Howard
of the Jamestown Foundation; and journalists such as Fox News anchors David
Asman, Brit Hume, and Greta van Susteren, Dale Hurd of the Christian Broadcasting
Network; and editors at the New York Post, the Los Angeles Times,
and the Toronto Globe and Mail.
Interviewed by phone, Professor Kemal Silay, "president-designate"
of the CIP who teaches Ottoman and Modern Turkish Studies at Indiana University,
told IPS he was not aware that he was to be group's president, but that he had
talked about the group with Schwartz and agrees with both Pipes and Schwartz
about the dangers posed by Wahhabi groups in the U.S. and the world.
Ali al-Ahmed, director of the Washington-based Saudi Institute and named as
CIP's research director in the grant proposal, told IPS he had also talked with
Schwartz about the group and strongly supported its goals, although he thought
several of the groups listed as part of the Wahhabi lobby were more independent.
He also said that he did not know that Pipes was involved with the group.
"[Pipes] sees all Arabs and Muslims the same, because he has interest
in the security of the state of Israel," said al-Ahmed, who publicizes
human rights abuses committed in Saudi Arabia.
Schwartz refused to speak with IPS.
(Inter Press Service)