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A history of the word from the first
Westerner to use it.
by
Stephen Schwartz
"Islamic fascists" -- used by President George W. Bush for the
conspirators in the alleged trans-Atlantic airline bombing plot
-- and references by other prominent figures to "Islamofascism,"
have been met by protests from Muslims who say the term is an
insult to their religion. The meaning and origin of the
concept, as well as the legitimacy of complaints about it, have
become relevant -- perhaps urgently so.
I admit to a lack of modesty or neutrality about this
discussion, since I was, as I will explain, the first Westerner
to use the neologism in this context.
In my analysis, as originally put in print directly after the
horror of September 11, 2001, Islamofascism refers to use of the
faith of Islam as a cover for totalitarian ideology. This
radical phenomenon is embodied among Sunni Muslims today by such
fundamentalists as the Saudi-financed Wahhabis, the Pakistani
jihadists known as Jama'atis and the Egyptian Muslim
Brotherhood. In the ranks of Shia Muslims, it is
exemplified by Hezbollah in Lebanon and the clique around
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Iran.
Political typologies should make distinctions, rather than
confusing them and Islamofascism is neither a loose nor an
improvised concept. It should be employed sparingly and
precisely. The indicated movements should be treated as
Islamofascist, first, because of their congruence with the
defining characteristics of classic fascism, especially in its
most historically significant form -- German National Socialism.
Fascism is distinguished from the broader category of extreme
right-wing politics by its willingness to defy public civility
and openly violate the law. As such it represents a
radical departure from the tradition of ultra-conservatism.
The latter aims to preserve established social relations,
through enforcement of law and reinforcement of authority.
But the fascist organizations of Mussolini and Hitler, in their
conquests of power, showed no reluctance to rupture peace and
repudiate parliamentary and other institutions; the fascists
employed terror against both the existing political structure
and society at large. It is a common misconception of
political science to believe, in the manner of amateur Marxists,
that Italian fascists and Nazis sought maintenance of order, to
protect the ruling classes. Both Mussolini and Hitler
agitated against "the system" governing their countries.
Their willingness to resort to street violence, assassinations,
and coups set the Italian and German fascists apart from
ordinary defenders of ruling elites, which they sought to
replace. This is an important point that should never be
forgotten. Fascism is not merely a harsh dictatorship or
oppression by privilege.
Islamofascism similarly pursues its aims through the willful,
arbitrary, and gratuitous disruption of global society, either
by terrorist conspiracies or by violation of peace between
states. Al Qaeda has recourse to the former weapon;
Hezbollah, in assaulting northern Israel, used the latter.
These are not acts of protest, but calculated strategies for
political advantage through undiluted violence. Hezbollah
showed fascist methods both in its kidnapping of Israeli
soldiers and in initiating that action without any consideration
for the Lebanese government of which it was a member.
Indeed, Lebanese democracy is a greater enemy of Hezbollah than
Israel.
Fascism rested, from the economic perspective, on resentful
middle classes, frustrated in their aspirations and anxious
about loss of their position. The Italian middle class was
insecure in its social status; the German middle class was
completely devastated by the defeat of the country in the First
World War. Both became irrational with rage at their
economic difficulties; this passionate and uncontrolled fury was
channeled and exploited by the acolytes of Mussolini and Hitler.
Al Qaeda is based in sections of the Saudi, Pakistani, and
Egyptian middle classes fearful, in the Saudi case, of losing
their unstable hold on prosperity -- in Pakistan and Egypt, they
are angry at the many obstacles, in state and society, to their
ambitions. The constituency of Hezbollah is similar: the
growing Lebanese Shia middle class, which believes itself to be
the victim of discrimination.
Fascism was imperialistic; it demanded expansion of the German
and Italian spheres of influence. Islamofascism has
similar ambitions; the Wahhabis and their Pakistani and Egyptian
counterparts seek control over all Sunni Muslims in the world,
while Hezbollah projects itself as an ally of Syria and Iran in
establishing regional dominance.
Fascism was totalitarian; i.e. it fostered a totalistic world
view -- a distinct social reality that separated its followers
from normal society. Islamofascism parallels fascism by
imposing a strict division between Muslims and alleged
unbelievers. For Sunni radicals, the practice of takfir --
declaring all Muslims who do not adhere to the doctrines of the
Wahhabis, Pakistani Jama'atis, and the Muslim Brotherhood to be
outside the Islamic global community or ummah -- is one
expression of Islamofascism. For Hezbollah, the posture of
total rejectionism in Lebanese politics -- opposing all
politicians who might favor any political negotiation with
Israel -- serves the same purpose. Takfir, or
"excommunication" of ordinary Muslims, as well as Hezbollah's
Shia radicalism, are also important as indispensable, unifying
psychological tools for the strengthening of such movements.
Fascism was paramilitary; indeed, the Italian and German
military elites were reluctant to accept the fascist parties'
ideological monopoly. Al Qaeda and Hezbollah are both
paramilitary.
I do not believe these characteristics are intrinsic to any
element of the faith of Islam. Islamofascism is a
distortion of Islam, exactly as Italian and German fascism
represented perversions of respectable patriotism in those
countries. Nobody argues today that Nazism possessed
historical legitimacy as an expression of German nationalism;
only Nazis would make such claims, to defend themselves.
Similarly, Wahhabis and their allies argue that their doctrines
are "just Islam." But German culture existed for centuries
and exists today, without submitting to Nazi values; Islam
created a world-spanning civilization, surviving in a healthy
condition in many countries today, without Wahhabism or
political Shiism, both of which are less than 500 years old.
But what of those primitive Muslims who declare that
"Islamofascism" is a slur? The Washington Post of August
14 quoted a speaker at a pro-Hezbollah demonstration in
Washington, as follows: "'Mr. Bush: Stop calling Islam "Islamic
fascism,' said Esam Omesh, president of the Muslim American
Society, prompting a massive roar from the crowd. He said
there is no such thing, 'just as there is no such thing as
Christian fascism.'"
These curious comments may be parsed in various ways.
Since President Bush used the term "Islamic fascists" to refer
to a terrorist conspiracy, did Mr. Omesh (whose Muslim American
Society is controlled by the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood) intend
to accept the equation of Islam with said terrorism, merely
rejecting the political terminology he dislikes? Probably
not. But Mr. Omesh's claim that "there is no such thing as
Christian fascism" is evidence of profound historical ignorance.
Leading analysts of fascism saw its Italian and German forms as
foreshadowed by the Ku Klux Klan in the U.S. and the Russian
counter-revolutionary mass movement known as the Black Hundreds.
Both movements were based in Christian extremism, symbolized by
burning crosses in America and pogroms against Jews under the
tsars.
The fascist Iron Guard in Romania during the interwar period and
in the second world war was explicitly Christian -- its official
title was the "Legion of the Archangel Michael;" Christian
fascism also exists in the form of Ulster Protestant terrorism
and was visible in the (Catholic) Blue Shirt movement active in
the Irish Free State during the 1920s and 1930s. Both the
Iron Guard and the Blue Shirts attracted noted intellectuals;
the cultural theorist Mircea Eliade in the first case, the poet
W.B Yeats in the second. Many similar cases could be
cited. It is also significant that Mr. Omesh did not deny
the existence of "Jewish fascism" -- doubtless because in his
milieu, the term is commonly directed against Israel.
Israel is not a fascist state, although some marginal,
ultra-extremist Jewish groups could be so described.
I will conclude with a summary of a more obscure debate over the
term, which is symptomatic of many forms of confusion in
American life today. I noted at the beginning of this text
that I am neither modest nor neutral on this topic. I
developed the concept of Islamofascism after receiving an e-mail
in June 2000 from a Bangladeshi Sufi Muslim living in America,
titled "The Wahhabis: Fascism in Religious Garb!" I then
resided in Kosovo. I put the term in print in The
Spectator of London, on September 22, 2001. I was soon
credited with it by Andrew Sullivan in his Daily Dish and after
it was attributed to Christopher Hitchens, the latter also
acknowledged me as the earliest user of it. While working
in Bosnia-Hercegovina more recently, I participated in a public
discussion in which the Pakistani Muslim philosopher Fazlur
Rahman (1919-88), who taught for years at the University of
Chicago (not to be confused with the Pakistani radical Fazlur
Rehman), was cited as referring to "Islamic fascists."
If such concerns seem absurdly self-interested, it is also
interesting to observe how Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia,
dealt with the formulation of Islamofascism as an analytical
tool. After a long and demeaning colloquy between me and a
Wikipedian who commented negatively on an early book of mine
while admitting that he had never even seen a copy of it,
Wikipedia (referring to it collectively, as its members prefer)
decided it to ascribe it to another historian of Islam, Malise
Ruthven. But Ruthven, in 1990, used the term to refer to
all authoritarian governments in Muslim countries, from Morocco
to Pakistan.
I do not care much, these days, about Wikipedia and its
misapprehensions, or obsess over acknowledgements of my work.
But Malise Ruthven was and would remain wrong to believe that
authoritarianism and fascism are the same. To emphasize,
fascism is something different and much worse, than simple
dictatorship, however cruel the latter may be. That is a
lesson that should have been learned 70 years ago, when German
Nazism demonstrated that it was a feral and genocidal aberration
in modern European history, not merely another form of
oppressive rightist rule, or a particularly wild variety of
colonialism.
Similarly, the violence wreaked by al Qaeda and Hezbollah and by
Saddam Hussein before them, has been different from other
expressions of reactionary Arabism, simple Islamist ideology, or
violent corruption in the post-colonial world. Between
democracy, civilized values, and normal religion on one side and
Islamofascism on the other, there can be no compromise; as I
have written before, it is a struggle to the death.
President Bush is right to say "young democracies are fragile
... this may be [the Islamofascists'] last and best opportunity
to stop freedom's advance." As with the Nazis, nothing
short of a victory for democracy can assure the world's
security.
Stephen Schwartz is a frequent contributor to
The Weekly Standard

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copyright Beckwith 2007
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