Thursday, April 29, 2010

Obama And The American-Muslim Community

Let there be no doubt, Islam is a part of America.
President Obama
Fox News has a post on its White House blog about how President Obama's Relationship with American Muslims is a Quiet One:
Monday, nearly 11 months after addressing the Muslim world from Cairo, President Obama delivered a major speech to Muslims in this country. But his audience was a group of entrepreneurs, investors and educators from more than 50 countries where Muslims are a majority of the population. The speech launched a two-day summit aimed at expanding business ties between the U.S. and the Muslim world.

Obama has yet to deliver a major speech to the American Muslim community and yet Muslim leaders in the U.S. say relations with the White House have never been better. At the same time, some conservatives say White House sensitivity to issues that might offend Muslims, is compromising U.S. security.


In Cairo, Obama said "let there be no doubt, Islam is a part of America." But in post 9/11 America it remains a politically sensitive part.

Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., says "the fact is we are fighting terrorism today but terrorism is coming primarily from the Muslim world and the Muslim community."
Because of the sensitivity of the situation, Obama's outreach to the American-Muslim community has been quiet and behind the scenes--and the American Muslim consensus is, understandably that things are better now than they were during the Bush administration. James Zogby, of the Arab American Institute, goes so far as to say that under Bush "there was not a single Arab American briefing."

2 interesting points raised:

The Obama is walking a thin line between maintaining good relations with the American-Muslim community on the one hand and dealing with terrorist attacks in the US on the other:
In a February speech at New York University, John Brennan, the president's counterterrorism advisor, said American Muslims have endured "surveillance that has been excessive" and "over-inclusive no-fly lists," among other grievances. Muslim leaders say frequent contact with administration officials is changing that. They point to the relatively short period of time that passengers from 14 Muslim countries were subjected to extra airport scrutiny, following the failed Christmas Day airline bombing attempt.
Still, some of the Obama administration's efforts to avoid offending Muslims have attracted sharp criticism, particularly the decision to drop the Bush administration phrase "war on terror."

Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn., one of two Muslim members of Congress, feels the Bush administration approach was too simplistic. Ellison said "You can't just have this mono-statement where you say, 'we denounce terrorism' and rattle our sword." But Lisa Curtis, of the Heritage foundation, says sensitivity constrained the White House response to last November's bloody massacre at Ft. Hood, Texas, when a gunman identified as a Muslim Army Major killed 13 people and wounded 30 more.

"I think there was too much attention given to trying to downplay the fact that this was an act of terrorism." In fact it was two months after the incident before administration officials called it terrorism.

And today, Ct. Senator Joe Lieberman, Chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, announced the administration has failed to provide some of the information his committee has subpoenaed and has provided none of the witnesses he wants to interview, to determine if the shootings could have been prevented.
President Bush's outreach to the Arab community is not recognized:
Ellison also says former President Bush doesn't get enough credit for his outreach to Muslims. He notes Bush launched the tradition of holding Iftar dinners at the White House during Ramadan. Ellison says "in many ways some of the good things he tried to do were overshadowed by Iraq and Afghanistan."

President Bush also named the first American representative to the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC). President Obama's OIC representative, Rashad Hussain, drew sharp criticism from conservatives for calling the prosecution of some terror suspects "politically motivated," a comment both Hussain and the White House initially denied.
Left unmentioned is Zalmay Khalilzad, whom Bush appointed as US ambassador to the UN

Apparently Obama is using a more nuanced approach towards the Muslim community than what John Conyers proposed.

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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Daled Amos - can you please contact me

thanks

Calev Ben Dor (Reut Institute)

calev@reut-institute.org