By Marc Jampole
In the latest Foreign Affairs, political scientist John M. Owen IV starts to make the case that we can compare the current state of unrest in Islamic territories to the European wars of religion of about 450 years ago, in an article titled “From Calvin to the Caliphate.” It’s a point that I’ve wanted to write about for some time now, but haven’t gotten around to yet. Reza Aslam has made a similar observation in the past.
In the latest Foreign Affairs, political scientist John M. Owen IV starts to make the case that we can compare the current state of unrest in Islamic territories to the European wars of religion of about 450 years ago, in an article titled “From Calvin to the Caliphate.” It’s a point that I’ve wanted to write about for some time now, but haven’t gotten around to yet. Reza Aslam has made a similar observation in the past.
Too bad Owen IV misconstrues what’s taking place today and
so makes the wrong comparison and draws the wrong conclusions. Owen characterizes
today’s wars in the Islamic world as a battle between secularism and Islamism,
the idea that the original religious laws as laid down by Mohamed in the Koran
should guide society and government. He compares this battle to the more than 100
years of almost constant warfare between Protestants and Catholics in the 16th
and 17th century. The comparison, as we will see, is very apt, but the terms of
comparison are incorrect. The contemporary element in the comparison is not a
war between secularism and Islamism, but between two forms of Islam, Sunni and
Shiite. In several nations we see a struggle between the secular and religious,
just as in United States and Israel, but the major wars and the larger battle
today are between two kinds of Islam.
The comparison between two eras of warfare in which the
antagonists represent two forms of the same religion resonates in many ways:
Both the Reformation era wars and the current ones between Shiites and Sunnis
in Syria, Iraq and Yemen came about 1,500 years after the original establishment
of the religion. In both cases, the religious wars begin a short time after the
war zone, once unified under a religious autocrat, broke apart; the Reformation
Wars came a hundred or so years after the emergence of nation-states from the
ruins of a Christian Europe led by the Papacy; today’s wars in Islamic
territories come about a hundred years after the breakup of the Islam-based
Ottoman Empire. In both cases, the major battles are in transitional
territories in which neither form of the religion predominates: in the 16th and
17th centuries in Europe, it was the German territories; today, the worst
battles are in a transitional zone between Sunni Saudi Arabia and Shiite Iran. In
both cases, an influx of new military technology developed in another part of
the world exacerbated the conflicts, making them more brutal and deadly: during
the Reformation it was gunpowder, imported from China; today it’s primarily
American military technology.
By asserting that the important battle today is between
secularism and religion, Owen views the current state of unrest in the Islamic
world completely from a Western perspective. Westerners of course identify with
the secular over the religious, at least when applied to other cultures.
Today’s secular world culture is, for better or worse, the American consumerist
culture, and whenever new countries embrace our model, we are bound to make a
lot of money out of it.
The opposition of the secular to Islamism enables Owen to
imply a good and a bad side to the war, but in doing so, Owen insults the Moslem
religion. Owen clearly prefers secularism, and subtly
treats Islamism as inferior. He doesn’t take sides, however, when it comes to
discussing the 17th century wars.
The illustrations that accompany the article visually
communicate that while both sides of the Reformation Wars had their reasons,
Islamists are nothing more than barbaric thugs. On the left side of the page we
see a bearded white man dressed in Renaissance garb, clutching a large white
cross to his side in one hand and raising his other hand as if to make a point.
On the opposing page we see the Islamic soldier also with one hand pointing up,
but the other hand contains an automatic weapon, and except for white sneakers,
he is clothed entirely in an ominous one-piece black outfit that covers all of
his face except his eyes. The look in the Christian’s eyes is one of fear. The
look in the Moslem’s eyes is menacing and dangerous. This conflation of a pious
scholar with a terrorist goon drains the blood from the extremely bloody
Reformation wars, while subtly delegitimizing Islamism by reducing it to
violence. Incidents of war-related barbarism were common in both the 17th
century and today, but the imagery suggests that only Islamic wars have driven
men to despicably inhumane acts.
Owen’s article is a piece of a propaganda machine that spews
out justifications for American actions in the Middle East almost on a weekly
basis. Framing Middle Eastern unrest in terms of the secular versus the
religious provides our leaders and our country with the ideological rationale
to intervene. It also allows us to take a side with which we are sympathetic,
the forces of western modernity. By contrast, focusing on the fight between two
forms of a religion which has few adherents in the United States might strike
most as not our business.
The real reasons we are fighting a series of disastrous wars
and actions in Islamic territories are economic and political: controlling
sources of oil, developing markets for our weapons industry, supporting our
Saudi and Israeli allies (who themselves are at odds), and the still unknown
real reason the Bush Administration decided to take down Saddam Hussein and
destabilize a country sewn together after World War I from three distinct
regions and cultures.
Concealing political and economic motives behind idealism
also characterized the Reformation wars, in which religion stood as a proxy for
the various economic interests of the German principalities, France, Spain,
Sweden and other countries. Behind the fight between Sunnis and Shiites stands
the geopolitical elbowing of Saudi Arabia and Iran, and probably of Egypt and
Turkey as well.
Owen ignores these points of comparison, which would help make the case for pulling out our troops and drones. His intent in “From Calvin to the Caliphate” is not to learn from the past, but to use a misreading of history to provide further justification for American imperialism.
Owen ignores these points of comparison, which would help make the case for pulling out our troops and drones. His intent in “From Calvin to the Caliphate” is not to learn from the past, but to use a misreading of history to provide further justification for American imperialism.
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