Listen to Talk Show America 24/7 - 365 Here!
Listen To TSA On:

Listen to Talk Show America on internet talk radio

Powered by TalkShoe

Subscribe To TSA
Enter your Email


Preview | Powered by FeedBlitz
  • Share Podcast
  • Add to Google
  • addtomyyahoo4
  • Subscribe to THE TALK SHOW AMERICAN on your cell phone
  • conservative Blogs
  • Republican Party Blog Directory
  • Subscribe to
    Posts [Atom]

  • Links
  • US Armed Forces News Service
  • This site is Gunny Approved
  • The Best Military Sites on the Internet - BestMilitarySites.com ConList - Best Conservative Blogs on the Internet
    Conservative Blog
  • Blog Roll
    Blogroll Me!


  • Four years after 9/11, terror's hold is loosening
    Tuesday, August 30, 2005
    Next week will mark the fourth anniversary of Al Qaeda's aerial attack on two New York skyscrapers and the Pentagon in Washington.
    Let's take stock of what has happened so far in the war on terrorism triggered by those acts:

    The Taliban in Afghanistan have been decimated and the people of that country have been freed and are moving down the road to some form of democracy. Osama bin Laden remains at large, as do pockets of his Al Qaeda followers, but many hundreds have been eliminated.

    In Iraq, Saddam Hussein has been toppled and millions of liberated Iraqis have elected for freedom. Saddam's old guard, fearing the force of democracy, seeks to thwart that process and its suicide-bombers and gunmen are killing a sizable number of American troops, and many more Iraqis. Amid chaos and danger, Iraqi politicians have been struggling to produce a constitution acceptable to the diverse political and religious factions of their country, and have so far been unable to get Sunnis to sign on to it.

    In part because of what has happened in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Arab Islamic world is in ferment. Intellectuals are speaking up against despotism. Opposition parties are burgeoning, although they must maneuver carefully. The press is becoming cautiously more adventuresome. Freedom is in the air and rulers in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Kuwait, and even Iran are wrestling with its meaning - and in some cases taking small steps to support it.

    For President Bush, spreading democracy and waging war against terrorism go hand in hand. Last month Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair called on Muslim leaders to combat terrorism's "twisted logic." Last week Pope Benedict XVI urged Muslims in Germany to oppose the "cruel fanaticism" of terrorism "that shows contempt for the sacred right to life."

    The Pew Foundation surveyed six Muslim countries and found that support for terrorism in defense of Islam has declined dramatically. Moreover, in testing support for democracy in these countries, respondents in Lebanon, Morocco, Jordan, and Indonesia were overwhelmingly (in the 77-83 percent category) in favor of it.

    Donna Lee Bowen, a professor of political science and chair of the Middle East studies program at Brigham Young University in Utah, has collected 31 pages of statements by many Muslim leaders condemning the violence. The condemnation comes from followers of Islam in the Arab world, as well as from countries outside the region. She says the vast majority of devout Muslims are deeply troubled by the perversion of their faith.

    Those who have spoken out include Sheikh Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi, grand imam of the Al-Azhar Seminary in Cairo, a highly respected Islamic authority. He's been quoted as saying the Koran "specifically forbids the things the Taliban and Al-Qaeda are guilty of," and that Osama bin Laden's "jihad" against the US "is invalid and not binding on Muslims."

    After the London bombings, Britain's largest Sunni Muslim group issued a fatwa, or religious edict, condemning the suicide attacks. The Koran, said the Sunni Council, forbids them. In Spain, where some 250,000 Muslims live, leading Muslim clerics issued a fatwa against Osama bin Laden, declaring him an apostate who has forsaken Islam. In Russia, where Muslims number some 20 million, High Mufti Talgat Tadjuddin called for the extradition of bin Laden.
    posted by Jay Are @ 10:16:00 PM  
    1 Comments:

    Post a Comment

    << Home
     

    Jay Are's Facebook Profile

    Click here to join Talk Show America Group Subscribe to me on FriendFeed


    Visit Talk Show America

    Previous Posts
    Archives
    Powered by
    hit counter
    hit counter
    Web Statistics BLOGGER