This article originally provided by TruthOut
July 29, 2004
Jesus, Jihadis, and the Red-State Blues
By Steve Weissman
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
In this week of John Kerry's
nomination, we should all give President Bush his due. Iraq
boils up in his face. Over half his fellow Americans now
think his war wrong-footed, if not pig-headed. Spies and
other professional observers openly confirm what a few of us
amateurs warned from the start, that American troops in Iraq
give bin Laden an unbeatable banner to recruit his suicidal
Fools of God. And from within Washington's most secret
places, loose lips let slip how Team Bush consistently
misled the American people about everything from Saddam's
weapons to how the United States tortures captives around
the world while observing "the spirit of the Geneva
Conventions." Yet the stalwart Mr. Bush soldiers on,
bravely telling the same tall tales, now about Iran as well
as Iraq.
Critics accuse him of lying: I
fear worse. Either Mr. Bush still believes the intoxicating
fables that Iraqi exiles fed to Cheney, Rumsfeld, and the
neo-conservative crapologists, or else he feels no need to
get facts straight as long as he does the Lord's Work.
Having followed his "higher Father" into a
faith-based war in Iraq, the poor Prophet Bush now casts his
eye across the Euphrates, waiting for Revelation and
listening to Iranian expatriates, some of whom work with the
shadowy spies of Gen. Sharon.
Ah, Babylon. We are, it would
seem, approaching the End Time, for which millions of
American Christians fervently pray. The Israelites have
rebuilt their kingdom, as prophesied, and Jesus will soon
return to earth, where He will raise his believers bodily
into the heavens in what they call the Rapture.
That is the good news. The bad,
at least to me, is that two-thirds of the Hebrews - having
rejected Christ again - must perish in their Great
Tribulation. Satan the Anti-Christ, Armageddon, and eternal
damnation to follow.
Scoff at your peril. Apparently,
our president doth not. Nor do his fundamentalist mentors,
from the Rev. Billy Graham and son Franklin to Jerry Falwell,
Pat Robertson, and a host of others, all Christian Zionists
and staunch supporters of the Jewish State. Now we see the
hot times they have in mind for Jews.
How far does Mr. Bush go with
this "dispensational theology," as believers call
it? No one seems to know. But he swims in their Apocalyptic
current, which might explain why he so blithely gives the
Islamic jihadis the endless war they crave.
Believers in a radically
politicized jihad, or holy war, fervently seek a righteous,
rejuvenated Islam, one that recaptures all lands that
Moslems once ruled, especially those now dominated by Jews
and Christian "crusaders." Organizing themselves
for over a hundred years in clandestine groups like the
Muslim Brotherhood, the jihadis directly shaped both Hamas
and al-Qaeda. But now thanks to Mr. Bush, his overly
militarized War on Terror, his use of torture and sexual
humiliation, and his sending troops to occupy Iraq, the once
small minority has gained greater support among the world's
Moslems than anyone could have reasonably expected.
Believers in the End Time
desperately need Israel to keep hold of the Holy Land, or
else - as they read Biblical prophecy - Jesus will not
return to whisk them away. A quintessentially American
messianic movement reaching back to the 1830s, the
End-Timers historically shied away from politics. But now
they regularly mobilize the Republican faithful and boast of
a fellow-traveler in the White House. With bin Laden filling
in for the Anti-Christ, no wonder they look to the most
powerful nation on earth to give them other-worldly hope.
The two groups of holy warriors -
Islamic and Christian - reinforce each other at every turn,
holding the rest of the world hostage. Except in their often
brilliant use of political tactics, neither lives by reason.
Both threaten those of us who try.
Make no mistake: Their competing
holy wars are not - or at least not yet - a clash of
civilizations between Islam and the West. Without the
politically polarizing impact that Mr. Bush has created
among Moslems the world over, the jihadis would have little
hope of successfully hijacking Islam. Without his radically
breaching the wall that has, however inconsistently,
separated church and state in America, the End-Timers would
still have freedom to believe what they want, but no easy
way to impose it on how Washington walks in the world.
Mr. Bush makes the difference.
Believing he hears the Voice of God, he encourages two
groups of diametrically opposed religious zealots to drag us
all into their Apocalypse. Stop the World, said the
playwright. I want to get off.
To be fair, the End-Timers hardly
stand alone in pushing Mr. Bush's buttons. He also listens
to the secular neo-conservatives, who - more than anyone -
sold him on the glories of a new, beneficent, and
wonderfully profitable American empire, beginning in Iraq.
He also does the bidding of the Pentagon's favorite
base-builders and weapons-makers, the media cartels, his and
Mr. Cheney's friends in Big Oil, and a fundraisers list of
other corporate greedsters. Fit ENRON in where you will.
But, all this is American
politics as usual, and the Democrats have their own fat cats
and sacred cows. What's new - and terrifyingly different -
is the irrationality the End-Timers bring, and how Mr. Bush
answers their prayers in the Middle East.
Truly believing in a real-time
Jesus and his Rapture, the End-Timers will never willingly
walk away, no matter how much they endanger the rest of us.
Nor will the Islamic jihadis. We, their hostages, have to
stop them both, demanding nothing less than a return to
reason, both in the White House and the Middle East.
The first step, but only the
first, will come in working night and day to elect the
eminently reasonable John Kerry, who has the good grace to
keep his religious beliefs to himself, at least most of the
time. As deeply as I oppose his dangerously open-ended
commitment to keep American troops in Iraq until it becomes
secure, we would have to be as grossly irrational as Mr.
Bush, or as high as his "higher father," to leave
the present bunch anywhere near the levers of power. The
risks are much too great.
Voting in Florida in the last
election, I cast my ballot for Ralph Nader. Voting absentee
this year, but still in Florida, I hope to undo at least
some of the chaos I helped to create.
The second step begins November
3, the morning after the election. Should Bush win, those of
us who oppose his self-righteous ways must build the kind of
grassroots movement that can limit the damage he does,
whether in Iraq, Iran, or our American homeland. Should
Kerry win, we must create the same political groundswell,
forcing him to accept the reality of Iraq. No matter how
reasonable he tries to be, the nationalistic Iraqis will not
accept foreign domination, whether the occupying forces come
from America, Europe, or their Arab neighbors. And the
longer Washington tries to make Iraq secure, the stronger
the jihadis will grow.
The third step is by far the most
difficult. We must work with those Israelis and Palestinians
who seek to compromise, and find a solution that a majority
on each side can accept. The Geneva Accord is a good place
to start, and we should press Washington to support it as
part of a more even-handed approach.
If we are ever to isolate the
Islamic Fools of God, we can have no higher priority than
finding a mutually acceptable end to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, which - whether we like it or not - will mean
dividing the Holy Land between the two peoples. Without a
viable Palestinian state living in peace with Israel, the
jihadis will have a festering sore to exploit, gaining the
ear of millions of Muslims who would otherwise reject them.
Hamas and other Palestinian
terrorists, right-wing Israeli settlers, and Christian
Zionists will all object to getting only part of what they
think their due. The Palestinians and Israelis will each
have to forcefully curb their own die-hards, and we
Americans will have to gently quarantine ours. If rationally
fighting terror and making a just peace delays the return of
Jesus and his Rapture, the End-Timers had best pray for
their sins.
A
veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New
Left monthly Ramparts, Steve Weissman
lived for many years in London, working as a magazine writer
and television producer. He now lives and works in France,
where he writes for t r u t h o u t.
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