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Samuel Huntington, "The Age of Muslim Wars," (2011) Worth repeating
Dec. 2011 | Samuel P. Huntington

Posted on 10/09/2011 5:33:35 PM PDT by Righting

Samuel Huntington, "The Age of Muslim Wars," Newsweek, December 17, 2001

Quoted widely.

Newsweek: Volume 138 - Newsweek, Inc., 2001 - pp. 140-144

The Age of Muslim Wars
By Samuel P. Huntington

Contemporary global politics is the age of Muslim wars. Muslims fight each other and they fight non-Muslims far more often than do peoples of other civilizations. Muslim wars have replaced the cold war as the principal form of international conflict. These wars include wars of terrorism, guerrilla wars, civil wars and interstate conflicts. These instances of Muslim violence could congeal into one major clash of civilizations between Islam and the West or between Islam and the Rest. That, however, is not inevitable, and it is more likely that violence involving Muslims will remain dispersed, varied and frequent.

The age of Muslim wars began as the cold war was winding down in the 1980s. In 1980 Iraq invaded Iran, and the ensuing war produced at least 500,000 deaths and hundreds of thousands of wounded. At the same time, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan generated vigorous Afghan resistance, which by 1989 compelled the Soviets to withdraw. This victory was made possible by American technology, Saudi and American money, Pakistani support and training, and the participation of thousands of fighters from other, mostly Arab, Muslim countries. Then in 1990 Saddam Hussein invaded and attempted to annex Kuwait, and the United States organized an international coalition, including several Muslim countries, to defeat him.

In the 1990s violence occurred between Muslims and non-Muslims in Bosnia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Chechnya, Azerbaijan, Tajikistan, Kashmir, India, the Philippines, Indonesia, the Middle East, Sudan and Nigeria. Mujahedin fighters from the Afghanistan war were central participants in many of these conflicts as well as in Muslim terrorist organizations in countries throughout the world. In the mid-1990s, roughly half the ethnic conflicts in the world involved Muslims fighting each other or non-Muslims. In one inventory by The Economist, Muslims were responsible for 11 and possibly 12 of 16 major acts of international terrorism between 1983 and 2000. Five of the seven states listed by the U.S. State Department as supporting terrorism are Muslim, as are a majority of foreign organizations listed as engaged in terrorism. In counter-actions between 1980 and 1995, the U.S. armed forces engaged in 17 military operations against Muslims. According to the International Institute of Strategic Studies, 32 armed conflicts were underway in 2000; more than two thirds involved Muslims. Yet Muslims are only about one fifth of the world�s population.

The "new war" as U.S. administration officials termed the violence that began September 11, is thus not so new. It is a continuation and escalation of previous patterns of violence involving Muslims. Earlier Muslim terrorism had, however, been sporadic and in comparison relatively limited: 299 people killed in the 1983 attack on the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, 270 on Pan Am Flight 103 in 1988, 224 in the 1998 attacks on U.S. African embassies. Different Muslim groups and states were involved in these incidents. Beginning in 1993, however, the principal attacks on Americans and American facilities all appear to have originated with Osama bin Laden. September 11 revealed the existence of his sizable global terrorist network with cells in perhaps 40 countries and with the expertise and resources to attempt well-planned simultaneous attacks. Also for the first time, the network struck with devastating effect within the United States, its actions highlighting the likelihood of chemical and biological attacks, with the more distant possibility of nuclear weapons. The age of Muslim wars had come home to America.
[...]
Tribal. Religious, ethnic, political and cultural divisions within the Muslim world stimulate violence between Muslims. They also promote violence between Muslims and non-Muslims because different Muslim groups and governments, such as those of Saudi Arabia and Iran, compete with each other in promoting their own brand of Islam and have supported Muslim groups fighting non-Muslims from Bosnia to the Philippines. If one or two states dominated the Muslim world, which has not been the case since the end of the Ottoman Empire, less violence would occur among Muslims and, probably between Muslims and non-Muslims.

http://books.google.com/books?id=CfomAQAAIAAJ&q=inventory
http://books.google.com/books?id=CfomAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Muslims+fighting+each+other+or+non-Muslims%22

Samuel P. Huntington
http://www.iasc-culture.org/HHR_Archives/America/5.1CHuntington.pdf

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See also:
The new dimension of international terrorism - Pages 59-60 - Stefan M. Aubrey - vdf Hochschulverlag AG, 2004 - Political Science - 312 pages
http://books.google.com/books?id=VJJG14mHbGAC&pg=PA59
http://books.google.com/books?id=VJJG14mHbGAC&pg=PA60

Islam's Mandate- a Tribute to Jihad: The Mosque at Ground Zero - Mr. Pat (Patrick J. Roelle, Sr.) - AuthorHouse, 2010 - History - 520 pages - Page 123
http://books.google.com/books?id=KL0RTx77lrwC&pg=PA123

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In these days, you can add: Russia, China, Lebanon, Israel-Palestine, Egypt (especially against Christians) and other regions where Musims' violence is rampant.


TOPICS: Islam
KEYWORDS: clashofcivilizations; islam; islamofascism; jihad; muslimwars; religion; rop; violence; war
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To: caww

“Oh he understands but he reneged on the issue after pressure for Cair and other Muslim organizations.....he shouldn’t have....by doing so he showed he will not be direct about this threat if he gets the Presidency. “

Either you understand basic principals or you don’t...and we both agree he understands Islam.

AFTER you get elected is the time to put that into practice. If he tries doing that now, he’ll be relegated to a Ron Paul type-wing of the party - a nice circus act, but nowhere near fit for the top job.

So we may disagree here...but I look at raw politics too.


21 posted on 10/09/2011 9:18:40 PM PDT by BobL (I want a Conservative for 2012, not Perry)
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To: caww

“WHat????.....You better “hope” Cain intends to clear them out of Washington not hire them on. We already know there are Muslims working in our Gov. who are directly tied to the Muslim Brotherhood. We don’t need to add to their population in our government.....are you forgetting the Islam in our country is political Islam??? “

You do have a point. But in the political world, he’ll probably have to bring some in...but I’m not worried about them having any critical role, or access to classified information to pass to their buddies overseas. Since he understands Islam, he’ll (hopefully) give them jobs in Utah, or somewhere, working in Forestry.


22 posted on 10/09/2011 9:20:55 PM PDT by BobL (I want a Conservative for 2012, not Perry)
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To: BobL

I understand political moves...which is what Cains apology was about. I’m not convinced he understands the Islamic threat.....or how much he would compromise with what he does know.

The fact you have mentioned him not taking a direct stand on this also indicates we are in serious trouble when our politicians cannot or will not tell it like it is.

Col. West has been very clear, and without apology, where he stands on Islam....not just terroists...but Islam itself and he does not bend....yet he still won his election.


23 posted on 10/09/2011 9:24:54 PM PDT by caww
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To: BobL

You need to be worried and not brush this off as not happening....they are IN our Government and they do pass information. Muslims will and do put pressure on one another...”for the sake of Islam”....no matter how “moderate” they may appear to us or each other.

And no he won’t be sending them “out there” somewhere. Again the fact they are already in our governement ...and they need to be rooted out not appeased.


24 posted on 10/09/2011 9:29:23 PM PDT by caww
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To: caww

“You need to be worried and not brush this off as not happening...”

I really don’t think I need to be anymore worried about Islam than I already am.

But you certainly need to look at this from a raw politics standpoint. To put it simply, it does ZERO GOOD to be right on Islam, but then fail to get elected. Maybe a few more people get the message, but future politicians will be SCARED TO DEATH to then deal with it.


25 posted on 10/09/2011 9:44:29 PM PDT by BobL (I want a Conservative for 2012, not Perry)
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To: caww

“I understand political moves...which is what Cains apology was about. I’m not convinced he understands the Islamic threat.....or how much he would compromise with what he does know.”

I’m about done for tonight, so I’ll just say this. If you want a presidential candidate as outspoken as you wish on these types of issues, you’ll get another Alan Keyes, and he’ll do just as well as Keyes. So that’s it for me on this topic. Catch you on some later stuff.


26 posted on 10/09/2011 9:47:42 PM PDT by BobL (I want a Conservative for 2012, not Perry)
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