British conservatives send the wrong message in the war on terror.
The appointment by the Conservative party of Sayeeda Warsi as
shadow minister for Community Cohesion sends the wrong signal at a
time when Britain is fighting a global war against Islamic
terrorism and extremism, both domestically and internationally.
Mrs. Warsi has been a fierce critic of British antiterror policy,
stating that antiterrorism legislation had turned Britain into a
"police state."
According to the London Times, in a 2006 article
for the Asian newspaper Awaaz, written while
serving as vice chairman of the Conservative party, Warsi described
the government's antiterror proposals as "enough to tip any normal
young man into the realms of a radicalized fanatic." She also wrote
that "if terrorism is the use of violence against civilians, then
where does that leave us in Iraq?"
In a BBC-reported press conference outside Downing Street in 2005
just days after the 7/7 bombings, Warsi urged the British government to engage with
Islamic extremist groups:
We must engage with, not agreeing with, the radical groups who we have said in the past are complete nutters. We need to bring these groups into the fold of the democratic process. As long as we exclude them and don't hear them out, we will allow them to continue their hate. It may not achieve results immediately, but it may stop the immediate violence.
Warsi also dismissed the idea that pressure should be placed
upon British Muslims to root out extremists within their midst,
commenting that "when you say this is something that the Muslim
community needs to weed out, or deal with, that is a very dangerous
step to take." She also urged a public debate over the possible
linkage between issues such as the American Guantanamo Bay
detention facility and the Iraq war, and the 7/7 bombings:
"Although the government may not accept that these were the causes
for 7 July, to go into denial mode is not the way forward."
Sayeeda Warsi has been highly critical of the war in Iraq, and
called upon former Prime Minister Tony Blair to apologize for the
war, an extraordinary statement at a time when thousands of British
soldiers are putting their lives on the line every day. She has
also made a series of other controversial foreign-policy statements
in recent years, on issues ranging from Hamas to Kashmir. In a
January 2006 BBC Any Questions? debate, Warsi
welcomed the election of Iranian-backed terrorist organization
Hamas, a brutal movement officially proscribed as a terrorist group
by the British government. Hamas murdered 377 Israelis in 425 terrorist attacks
between September 2000 and March 2004, including 52 suicide
attacks. Despite Hamas's track record, as part of the BBC panel
Warsi told her audience:
I think what's happened in the Middle East with the election of Hamas is actually an opportunity and I think that's the way we've got to see it. When groups that practice violence are suddenly propelled into power through a democratic process they get responsibility and responsibility can be a tremendously taming factor. And I think that Hamas, when it realizes that it wants a safe and stable and prosperous Palestine for its people, will realize that the way to deal with that is through dialogue and democracy and not through violence… I actually think that Hamas has been given a mandate and I think it will now hopefully adopt a responsible position because that is the only way.
Warsi has also entered the fray over the highly sensitive issue of Kashmir and, according to the Press Association, suggested in a July 2005 BBC One Politics Show interview that new antiterror laws should not prevent support among Britons for "freedom fighters" in Kashmir. Comparing Islamic rebels in the disputed province with Nelson Mandela and the ANC, Warsi observed that:
We have a community in Britain, a Pakistani and Kashmiri community, who holds a very, very strong view about Kashmir and the scope of freedom-fighting in Kashmir. It would concern me if… the definition of terrorism was to cover maybe (the) legitimate freedom-fight in Kashmir.
It should be noted that Britain currently outlaws no less than six Kashmiri terrorist
organizations: Harakat Ul-Jihad-Ul Islami,
Harakat-Ul-Mujahideen/Alami and Jundallah, Harakat Mujahideen,
Jaish e Mohammed, Khuddam Ul-Islam and splinter group Jamaat
Ul-Furquan, and Lashkar e Tayyaba. It is hard to see how such
extreme views will actually enhance "community cohesion" in
Britain's inner cities, and it is difficult to think of a more
explosive issue than Kashmir in fomenting tensions between British
citizens of Pakistani and Indian origin.
As Britain faces a mounting terrorist threat in the coming months
from al-Qaeda-linked Islamic terrorist groups, it is imperative
that leaders across the political spectrum unequivocally condemn
all forms of terrorism, whether it be in London, Kashmir or the
Palestinian territories. At the same time they should refuse to
engage with or appease radical groups that have sympathies for
terrorist groups and the use of violence. If Britain is to win the
war against Islamic terrorism, there must be a united front in
defeating the greatest threat to national security since the Second
World War. Unfortunately, Sayeeda Warsi's appointment does little
to advance that cause.
Nile Gardiner
is the director of the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom andSally McNamara is senior
policy analyst in European affairs, at the Heritage
Foundation.
First appeared in the National Review