Politics & Government

Allen West Rewrites Two Millennia of Muslim Versus Christian History

Maryland radio station WCBM 680 posted a brief video this week of Congressman-elect Allen West that is 50 percent history lesson, 50 percent political polemic, and 100 percent terrifying. West, as it turns out, believes that the United States has been at war with Islam for a very, very long...
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Maryland radio station WCBM 680 posted a brief video this week of Congressman-elect Allen West that is 50 percent history lesson, 50 percent political polemic, and 100 percent terrifying.

West, as it turns out, believes that the United States has been at war with Islam for a very, very long time — longer even than the United States has been in existence. To Allen West, all of Christian Europe — with its Dark Ages, its religious extremism, its witch-burnings, its inquisitions, its crusades — is us. And all of Islamic history — with all its art, poetry, science, and philosophy — is them.

Here, then, is a dissection of West’s rewriting of history.

“You got to study and understand what you’re up against. And you must realize that this is not a religion that
you’re fighting against… You’re fighting against something that has
been doing this thing since 622 AD.”

If by “this thing,” West
means “praying to Allah,” he is correct. If he means “waging war,” he is
also correct, though he’s being disingenuous. By his own logic, West,
as a Western Christian, has been doing that thing for two millennia.

Like
the culture of Christendom, the culture of Islam has changed
dramatically in its many centuries of existence. West suggests otherwise by tracing the
roots of America’s present conflict to 622 A.D., or the “Golden Age of
Islam” — when Islamic culture, science, and philosophy far outstripped
that of European Christendom, which, far from experiencing a “Golden
Age,” was mired in the Dark Ages. The Renaissance, from which flowed the
Enlightenment, from which flowed the philosophies that informed the
creation of the United States of America, was due almost entirely to the
Muslim world’s safekeeping and incubation of the artistic,
philosophical, and intellectual advances of the Greeks and Romans of classical antiquity. These had been all but erased from Europe by
economic ruin and Christian extremism. No Islamic Golden Age, no
Renaissance, no America. Some enemy.

“You wanna dig up Charles Martel and ask him why he was fighting the Muslim army at the Battle of Tours in 732?”

Yes,

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let’s. Charles Martel fought because he was asked to by the elderly
Duke Odo of Aquitane. Charles Martel was not fighting “the Muslim
army,” as there was no such thing. He was fighting a very specific enemy
— the Ummayad — which was no outfit of
missionaries, but an imperial force. (The reigning religious zealot of the era, in fact,
was Martel’s own grandson, Charlemagne.) Charles Martel fought all his
life, usually against other Christians, and on one occasion against Duke
Odo himself. In the Battle of Tours, he was, very simply, a defender of
certain regions of Europe from a conquering imperial power. He was
hardly a saint: A military leader with shifting political allegiances,
he was in the habit of installing puppet kings in regions his armies had
conquered, paying fealty to them in public, and privately wielding
almost dictatorial control over their lands. He was, by any modern
classification, a tyrant. (And consider: If there had been a Charles
Martel 800 years earlier, fending off foreigners with strange
beliefs, the Roman Empire might never have rescued Europe from
barbarism. Western Civilization wouldn’t exist, and Allen West wouldn’t
have anything to defend.) Martel is hardly a useful conscript for West’s
War on
Terror — or, as he prefers, War On Islam.

“You want to ask the Venetian fleet, at Lapanto, why they were fighting a Muslim fleet in 1571?”

Sure!
The Venetians fought the Muslims over the Isle of Cyprus. The Ottomans
wanted Cyprus, even though it had been sold to Venice by the dynasty of
Guy of Lusignan, who had bought it from the Templars, who had bought it
from the English, who had taken it by force. Just like the Ottomans
meant to do. Which is why all English are just as bad as all Muslims.
Right?

“You wanna ask the Christian — er, the Germanic and Austrian knights why they were fighting at the gates of Vienna in 1683?”

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In
the Battle of Vienna, Europeans permanently drove back the Ottoman
Empire. This was good for the preservation of Christendom, whatever that
means, but it was hardly a victory against Islamic fundamentalism. It
wasn’t even a victory against Muslims per se — at least, not
Muslims as we presently think of them. The Muslims banging on Vienna’s
gates were mostly from Transylvania, Moldovea, and Crimea — hardly modern
battlefields in the War on Terror. Citing Vienna as an excuse
for increased aggression in the prosecution of America’s wars is a bit
like Palestine using Christian aggression during the Crusades to justify
war on the Catholics of Argentina. Pure silliness. Anyway, the Battle
of Vienna was prosecuted by the Ottoman Empire on political, not
religious, grounds. It was a grab for valuable real estate and for
control of the Danube. At the same time as the Austrians were busy
defending themselves from the Ottomans, France’s King Louis XIV — the
Sun King — was using the Ottoman distraction to scoop up Austrian land
while nobody was looking, just as the Ottomans would have if they could.
Should we suppose Allen West hates the French too? (Don’t answer
that.)

“You wanna ask people what happened at Constantinople, why today it’s called Istanbul? Because they lost that fight in 1453.”

Constantinople became Istanbul in 1453 and
subsequently became the most important capital of the Ottoman Empire.
While this was certainly an example of the Muslim invasion of Christian lands,
what West declines to mention is that Constantinople had been in decline
for centuries — because of constant invasion from Western European Christians. By
the time the Ottomans showed up, the city was ripe for the taking. What
followed was an era of peace, progress, and cultural advancement
greater than any the city had known since its expansion by Constantine
I, more than 1,000 years earlier. And so, despite Allen West’s use of
the fall of Constantinople in an applause line, what he’s actually
talking about is the salvation of a war-torn city full of
religious violence by culturally advanced cosmopolitans who just so
happened to be Muslim. Swap the religions, and it’s kind of like what
Allen West helped us do in Baghdad. For which we thank him.

“You
need to get into the Koran, you need to understand their precepts, you
need to read their Sura, you need to read the Hadiths, and then you need
to understand that this is not a perversion. They are doing exactly
what this book says.”

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If by “they,” Allen West refers to
militant
Wahabbist Muslims who threaten America, he is quite correct. If by
“they,” he means the peaceful Sikhs and Sufis, he is also correct. Religious books
are barbaric, rife with contradictions, and terrible guides to living
your life. That’s why religious people fight all the
time. This isn’t news.

“And I wanna close by saying this. Until
you get principled leadership in the United States who is willing to say
this, we will continue to chase our tail. Because we will never clearly
define who this enemy is.”

Right. Only when we acquire
leadership willing to pull America into an imperial struggle that racked
Europe for a millennium will we cease chasing our tails and devote
ourselves to more worthy pursuits. Such as the expansion of Christendom,
the
containment of the Caliphate, the resisting of the Turks, the recapture
of the Hagia Sophia, the protection of the Holy Roman Empire. Which may
sound like a lot to bite off. But West can handle it. Even if 1,000
years’ worth of European armies couldn’t.

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