Arab Americans and American Muslims
won a small but important moral victory in the
battle against bigotry last week. A U.S. Senate
committee declined to vote on the confirmation of a
controversial anti-Muslim polemicist who has been
appointed by the Bush Administration to serve on the
Board of the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP).
The USIP is a Washington based think tank created by
an act of Congress in 1984 to "promote the prevention, management,
and peaceful resolution of international conflicts."
Members of the USIP board and its visiting scholars
share the Institute's goals and promote its objectives. Over the
years the Institute has hosted a number of distinguished Americans
and international scholars who have produced forums and studies
dedicated to seeking the peaceful resolution of conflicts and
promoting reconciliation among embattled peoples.
The current board nominee in question, Daniel Pipes,
has on the other hand, pursued a career devoted largely to defaming
Arabs and Muslims, inciting against them and promoting conflict
between the West and the Muslim world.
His extensive body of writings, for example,
displays a near perverse obsession with all things Arab and Muslim.
In a long piece entitled, "The Muslims are coming! The Muslims Are
Coming!" written over a decade ago, Pipes warns about the dangers of
an influx of Muslim immigrants to the West. He notes:
"All immigrants bring exotic customs and
attitudes, but Muslim customs are more troublesome than
most....Fears of a Muslim influx have more substance than the
worry about jihad. West European societies are unprepared
for the massive immigration of brown-skinned peoples cooking
strange foods and not exactly maintaining Germanic standards of
hygiene. Muslim immigrants bring with them a chauvinism that
augurs badly for their integration into the mainstream of the
European societies."
More recently he has been criticized for an article
he co-authored on Muslim immigrants in Denmark in which he is
accused of characterizing them as " being parasites on the society,
being disproportionately engaged in criminal behavior, having
'unacceptable customs,' seeking to take over the country and being
rapists."
But this is not all. Pipes further warns that
Muslim converts are a serious problem and in a June 2000 article he
appears to approvingly quote a Ku Klux Klan leader who in 1959
outrageously observed that "if we fail to stop the Muslims now, the
sixteen million niggers of America will soon be Muslims, and you
will never be able to stop them."
As a result of his contempt for the culture of
Muslims and his obsessive fear of their attitudes, it is no surprise
that Pipes warns government agencies to beware of Muslims. Just
this year he wrote:
"There is no escaping the unfortunate fact that
Muslim government employees in law enforcement, the military,
and the diplomatic corps need to be watched for connections to
terrorism, as do Muslim chaplains in prisons and the armed
forces. Muslim visitors and immigrants must undergo additional
background checks. Mosques require a scrutiny beyond that
applied to churches, synagogues and temples."
And this is only a taste of the substantial body of
work produced by Pipes all of which points to a career based on
incitement and contempt for Arabs and Muslims.
In any case, when it was announced that the vote on
Pipes' nomination was to take place last week, Arab Americans and
American Muslim organizations lobbied Congress hard against
confirmation. At first, we were told that it would be impossible to
block the effort. While some Democrats would oppose Pipes, it was
said that Republicans had enough votes to push through the
nomination. The situation became even more dire when it became known
that AIPAC (the pro-Israel lobby) had, at the last minute, entered
the fray and was pressing hard for confirmation.
However, after reviewing Pipes'critiques, some
Democratic and Republican Senators became so troubled that they felt
compelled to publicly express their outrage and concern. At the
committee meeting that was scheduled for the vote, Senator Ted
Kennedy (Democrat of Massachusetts) led the charge. He noted that
the statements and writings of Dr. Daniel Pipes were the opposite of
the principles of the USIP. And after quoting from some of Pipes'
more outrageous writings, Kennedy concluded:
"The views of this nominee are longstanding,
well known - and decidedly one-sided. And they are not the words
of one committed to bridging differences and bringing peace.
There is a deep and rich reservoir of distinguished Americans
with experience in bringing peoples together and ending
conflict. Surely we can find someone better to serve on the
Board of the United States Institute of Peace. I urge my
colleagues to oppose this nomination."
Kennedy was joined by Senator Christopher Dodd of
Connecticut who added the, "purpose of the USIP is to seek solutions
to conflict without recourse to violence. Mr. Pipes writes that
'diplomacy rarely ends conflicts'." Due to Pipes' views, Senator
Dodd continued, "Mr. Pipes will not be able to direct colleagues in
the mission of the USIP."
Then came Senator Tom Harkin (Democrat of Iowa), one
of the principal founders of the USIP, who spoke passionately about
the need to respect diversity. In the report on Harkin's comments
issued by the Muslim Public Affairs Council, Harkin is quoted as
saying, "some people call [Pipes] a scholar...but this is not the
kind of person you want on the USIP." Senator Harkin added, "My
state has the very first Mosque ever built in the United States...
in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Muslims are a vibrant part of our diverse
community."
Citing Mr. Pipes' quote: "['The] increased stature,
and affluence, and enfranchisement of American Muslims...will
present true dangers to American Jews.'" Appearing exasperated,
Senator Harkin said,
"Enfranchisement? Mr. Pipes is talking about
voting!...Mr. Pipes' fears of Muslim enfranchisement fall on
deaf ears when it comes to this Senator...if Mr. Pipes' views on
Muslims were true, than what we would have in Iowa would be
exactly the opposite of what we have today...American Muslims
who are lawyers, union members, doctors...Muslims who are
thoroughly Americanized."
Senator Harkin concluded, "When [Pipes] talks about
Muslims being funny looking, maintaining different standards of
hygiene...I don't know why we are even considering this person, Mr.
Chairman."
As other Senators joined in opposition it became
clear that the nomination of Pipes was not assured. After senior
Republican Senators left the committee room, it became clear that if
one more Senator left the room, there would be no quorum to vote.
Senator Kennedy then left the room denying the committee a quorum
and effectively postponing the vote.
Having successfully delayed action on the
confirmation, Arab Americans have turned their attention to the
White House, appealing to the President to withdraw Pipes' name from
consideration noting that his views were counter to the President's
own efforts to promote respect for Islam and for the Arab American
and American Muslim communities.
The White House may decide to press forward with the
case for Pipes or even wait until the Senate goes into recess and
then give the controversial nominee what is known as a "recess
appointment" putting him on the Institute's Board against the wishes
of the Senate.
That, however, would be viewed as a deep and hurtful
insult to the USIP, the Senate and the Arab American and American
Muslim communities.
Dr. James J. Zogby is President of Arab
American Institute in Washington, DC and a
regular contributor to
Media Monitors
Network (MMN).