Winchester, England. -- If the terrorist plot
involving young Muslim Britons to blow up nine airliners with
liquid explosives were not enough to spark some rethinking here in
Britain among the Muslim community about their own role and
responsibilities, it is hard to see what would be.
Today, a week after the British police and security services
arrested 24 persons for plotting one of the most fiendishly clever
attacks in the annals of terrorism, an intense debate is taking
place about its causes. The silver lining is that the problem of
the "enemy within" has started to be taken seriously in the British
media, where political correctness and misplaced so-called
tolerance has previously ruled out any frank discussion of the
Muslim community's role, even after the subway bombing of last
summer.
Clearly it is incumbent on Muslims in Britain, indeed in Europe,
to denounce the insanity being planned and perpetrated in their
name. The reaction to the news of the terrorist plot among
Britain's Muslims spans those who fear being blamed or victimized
themselves, those who blame the British government's foreign policy
and those who point to the influence by radical Muslim preachers,
who are taking hold where traditional mosques are failing to reach
young people.
Shahid Malouf, a prominent Muslim Labor MP, accused British
Muslims of being in denial about terrorism and focused on
conspiracy theories. Britain's Muslim community is, he said,
"Immersed in the victim narrative." He said the influential Muslim
Council of Britain has failed to address the challenge of
identifying and isolating the community's extremists.
"We have to create a zero-tolerance attitude to views that are
unacceptable in a decent society, to say that the 7/7 bombers are
not martyrs going to heaven but sinners going to hell,'"Mr. Malouf
said. At the same time, however, four members of parliament,
including Mr. Malouf himself, and 38 Muslim groups published a
letter in British weekend papers blaming the Blair government's
foreign policy for the attacks.
Britain, which appeared to be well ahead of the rest of Europe
in the integration of its 1.8 million-strong Muslim population, not
only uncovered this wide-ranging and well-coordinated plot, but
also has 70 other investigations underway with more than 100
suspects under surveillance, according to media reports.
Like the subway bombers of last July, the young men who have
been arrested are not foreigners - at least not technically
speaking - but British citizens. They are mostly second-generation
immigrants, whose parents came here to seek a better life. But the
life they have found has produced in some cases alienation so
severe in their children that radical Muslim clerics preaching
hatred and destruction of the West have had an open field among the
youth.
The demographics would seem to favor the clerics, unfortunately.
Thirty percent of Britain's Muslim population is under 15; 92
percent is under 50. About half are of Pakistani origin, and about
half of the younger population does not feel allegiance to Britain
as their native country. Instead many dream of the coming of the
Muslim caliphate, which they expect will transform Europe, and
introduce Shariah law.
Particularly Britain's university campuses are fertile
recruiting grounds for terrorist cells. Among the 24 detained in
the airline plot was a chemistry student at London Metropolitan
University. Five of the suspects had been to bomb-making training
grounds in Pakistan, where they had watched "martyrdom videos."
The fact that the unravelling of the plot could not have taken
place without help from British Muslims and Pakistani authorities
is highly encouraging. And according to a recent poll by the Pew
Center Global Attitudes poll, support for terrorism is declining
among Europe's Muslim populations. In Britain, 70 percent say that
suicide bombings are never justified. In Germany, the number is 83
percent, France 64 percent and Spain 60 percent.
A heavy responsibility rests on Muslim leaders in Europe to
contribute to eliminating the cancerous growth of terrorist cells
in their communities. There could not be more than one
interpretation of last week's uncovered plot. The nine planes were
full of holiday travelers with families of all sorts of
nationalities, ethnicities and faiths, including obviously fellow
Muslims. Everybody on board would have been sacrificed to the
plotters' demented cause - men, women, children, infants - as were
the victims of September 11. The message that needs to be delivered
loud and clear is this: Evil simply does not come more clearly
defined.
Helle
Dale is director of the Douglas and
Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies at the Heritage
Foundation.