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         Rent-A-Riot
          ABCS New York Post 
 
          "A BLESSING from God": So have Iran's leaders, starting with
          President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, described the controversy over the
          Danish cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad.
         
        
          
          A closer look at the row, however, shows that the whole rigmarole was
          launched by Sunni-Salafi groups in Europe and Asia, with Ahmadinejad
          and his Syrian vassal, President Bashar al-Assad, belatedly playing
          catch-up.  God had nothing to do with it.
         
        
          
          To see how the whole thing was manufactured to serve precise political
          ends, consider the chronology of events:
         
        
          
          The cartoons were published last September and, for more than three
          months, caused no ripples outside small groups of Salafi militants in
          Denmark.
         
        
          
          In December, a group of Danish Muslim militants filled their suitcases
          with photocopies of the cartoons and embarked on a tour of Muslim
          capitals.
         
        
          
          They failed to get to Tehran: The Iranians, being Shi'ites, saw them
          as Sunni activists bent on mischief. But they managed to go to Cairo,
          Damascus and Beirut and, were allowed to send emissaries to Saudi
          Arabia.
         
        
          
          The Danish Muslim group also did something dishonest — it added a
          number of far more derogatory cartoons of the Prophet to the 12
          published by the Jyllands-Posten newspaper, and misled its
          interlocutors in Muslim capitals into believing that all had appeared
          in the Danish press.
         
        
          
          In Cairo, the Muslim Brotherhood told the Danish group that this was
          not the time to kick a fuss over the cartoons. The brotherhood was
          busy plotting its election strategy and pretending to be a
          "moderate" political party. The last thing it wanted was to
          be branded as a rabid anti-West force. The brotherhood leaders
          suggested that the matter be put on ice until January.
         
        
          
          The Danish militants also received a negative reply from Hamas, the
          Palestinian radical movement. Hamas was busy trying to win a general
          election and needed to reassure at least part of the Palestinian
          middle classes. The Hamas advice was: Wait until after we have won.
         
        
          
          The emissaries found a more sympathetic audience in Qatar — where
          the satellite-TV channel Al Jazeera (owned by the emir) specializes in
          inciting Muslims against the West and democracy in general. The
          channel's chief Islamist televangelist, Yussuf al-Qaradawi (an
          Egyptian preacher who is also a friend of Ken Livingstone, the mayor
          of London), was all too keen to issue a "fatwa" to light the
          fuse. He then mobilized his network of Muslim Brotherhood militants in
          Europe to attack the cartoons and claim, falsely, that images were not
          allowed in Islam and that the Danish paper had violated "an
          absolute principle of The Only True Faith."
         
        
          
          Thus the call for Jihad received its supposed "theological"
          green light. (Ironically, the section of the brotherhood headed by al-Qaradawi
          is financed by the European Union as a non-governmental organization.)
         
        
          
          As the first rent-a-mob crowds appeared on global TV screens,
          Ahmadinejad realized that here was a cow worth milking.
         
        
          
          For Denmark is set to assume the rotating presidency of the U.N.
          Security Council — at the very time that the International Atomic
          Energy Agency (IAEA) is expected to refer Iran to the Security Council
          and demand sanctions. What better, for Tehran's purposes, than to
          portray Denmark as "an enemy of Islam" and mobilize Muslim
          sympathy against the Security Council?
         
        
          
          To regain the initiative from the Sunni-Salafi groups, Ahmadinejad
          quickly ordered a severing of commercial ties with Denmark, thus
          portraying the Islamic Republic as the Muslim world's leader in the
          anti-Danish campaign.
         
        
          
          Syria was next to jump on the bandwagon, again for mercenary reasons.
         
        
          
          The United Nations wants Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and five of
          his relatives and aides, including his younger brother, for
          questioning in the murder of Lebanon's former premier, Rafiq al-Hariri.
          (Assad has tried to negotiate immunity for himself and his brother in
          exchange for handing over the others — but the U.N. wouldn't play.)
          As with Iran's nuclear program, the Syrian dossier will reach the
          Security Council under Danish presidency.
         
        
          
          To portray Denmark as "an enemy of the Prophet" would not be
          such a bad thing when the council, as expected, points the finger at
          Assad and his regime as responsible for a series of political murders,
          including that of Hariri.
         
        
          
          The Danish-cartoons cow will also be milked in another way: Tehran and
          Damascus have launched a diplomatic campaign to put the issue of
          "protecting religions against blasphemy" on the Security
          Council agenda. If that were to happen, issues such as Iran's quest
          for the atomic bomb and Syria's murder machine in Lebanon might be
          pushed aside, at least as far as world public opinion is concerned.
         
        
          
          People watching TV news may think that the whole Muslim world is
          ablaze with righteous rage translated into "spontaneous
          demonstrations." The truth is that the overwhelming majority of
          Muslims, even if offended by cartoons which they have not seen, have
          stayed away from the street shows put on by the radicals and the
          Iranian and Syrian security services.
         
        
          
          The destruction of Danish and Norwegian embassies and consulates
          happened in only two places: Damascus and Beirut. Anyone who knows
          Syria would know that there are no spontaneous demonstrations in that
          dictatorship. (Even then, the Syrian secret police failed to attract
          more than 1,000 rent-a-mob militants.) And the Syrian government
          refused the Norwegian Embassy's request for additional police
          protection. It was clear that the Syrians wanted the embassies sacked.
         
        
          
          The rent-a-mob attacks in Beirut were more cynical. The Syrian Ba'ath
          - which has been murdering, imprisoning or deporting Sunni-Salafi
          militants for years — was suddenly transformed from a radical
          secular and Socialist party into "the Vanguard of the
          Faith." The mob that committed the atrocities in Beirut was bused
          from Syria and consisted of Muslim Brotherhood militants who are never
          allowed to demonstrate on their own account.
         
        
          
          The Muslim crowds that have demonstrated over the cartoons seldom
          exceeded a few hundred; the Muslim segment of humanity is estimated at
          1.2 billion. And only three of Denmark's embassies in 57 Muslim
          countries have been attacked.
         
        
          
          The Danish Muslim gang who lied by adding cartoons that had never been
          published has done more damage to the Prophet and to Islam than the 12
          controversial cartoonists of Jyllands-Posten.
         
        
          
          The fight between Denmark and its detractors is not between the West
          and Islam. It is between democracy and a global fascist movement
          masquerading as religion.
         
        
          
          Iranian author Amir Taheri is a member of Benador Associates.
         
        
          
          =====================================================
         
        
          
          It is rapidly becoming clear that the "cartoon Intifada" is
          a hoax.
         
        
          
          It is not the spontaneous rage of offended Moslems. It is a faux
          crisis fabricated by the Danish Imams and Syria, whose goals are to
          create:
         
        
          
          a.) intimidation to squash western free speech and any artistic
          creativity that might be critical of Moslem terrorism.
         
        
          
          b.) a smokescreen to take Iran off of the front pages, and diffuse the
          international movement against its WMD designs.
         
        
          
          c.) a high-profile incendiary show of fervent support and protection
          for Islam by any regime, especially a secular one like Syria that
          wants to out-extreme the extremists.
         
        
          
          Consider the following:
         
        
          
          1.)  The original cartoons are not anywhere near as horrific as
          the cartoons that have appeared regularly in Moslem press throughout
          the world for decades, demonizing Jews, Israel and Christians. 
          Yet there are no Moslems apologizing for these hate-laden cartoons.
         
        
          
          No civilized nation can contend that it has the right to insult anyone
          but then deny that same right to everyone else.
         
        
          
          2.)  The Danish Imams that brought the cartoons to the attention
          of political leaders in Arab countries forged three new cartoons,
          pretending that these too were part of the Danish collection. 
          These forged cartoons were indeed insulting characterizations of
          Mohammed as a pig, having sex with children, and being anally
          penetrated by a goat  -- far more horrific than the rather mild
          Danish spoofs.
         
        
          
          The Imams knew that the Danish cartoons were not so bad.  So they
          had to forge some fake really bad ones in order to get the desired
          response from their audiences.
         
        
          
          3.) The assertion that Islam bans pictures of Mohammed is a lie. 
          There is a centuries-old tradition of depicting Mohammed in art. 
          Cf. <http://www.zombietime.com/mohammed_image_archive/>
          for a collection of hundreds of years of Moslem art depicting
          Mohammed.  Moreover, none of the figures in the cartoons are
          necessarily Mohammed.  This lie was necessary in order to
          fabricate an explanation for the extreme Moslem rage.
         
        
          
          4.)  The hypocrisy of these violent demonstrations has not found
          expression in western media, but it should.  This hypocrisy
          belies the sincerity of these demonstrations.  How can any
          civilized society be passive, or even supportive, when their leaders
          kill millions of their own (Saddam Hussein killed c. 1,300,000 Moslems
          in his 32 years of violent despotism), or when their co-religionists
          bomb mosques with hundreds of Moslem worshippers inside them (as have
          the Sunni terrorists in Iraq).....and yet that same society explodes
          into paroxysms of violence, murder, threats of genocide, and outraged
          self-righteous fury when a Qur'an is purported to be mishandled, or a
          newspaper publishes harmless cartoons?
         
        
          
          5.)  The timing is odd.  The cartoons were first published
          in September.  They were re-published in an Egyptian journal, El-Farg,
          with provocative headlines, on October 17; but elicited no response.
          Only after a summit meeting in Mecca in December did the cartoon issue
          go ballistic.  In Syria and Iran, that meant heavy press coverage
          in official news media and virtual government approval of
          demonstrations that ended with Danish embassies in flames.
         
        
          
          6.)  As the issue catapulted from a local Danish kafuffle to an
          international incident of incendiary proportions in December, the
          Danish imams were at it again: this time with lies that the Danish
          newspaper had actually published not just 12 but 120 cartoons, that
          the paper was a government mouthpiece, that the Danish government was
          sponsoring a massive Qur’an burning party, and that the government
          was planning to make a movie blaspheming Mohammed.
         
        
          
          All pure fiction  --  but very effective in heightening the
          furore and inciting the Moslem “street” to even greater violence
          and hatred.
         
        
          
          7.)  In a later publication, El-Farg editors wrote, in
          opportunistic hindsight, that "…It would have been better that
          this [current] holy war against Denmark been launched during the holy
          month of Ramadan (October) …This irrelevant….timing is but a sign
          that this violent response to the cartoons is politically motivated by
          Muslim extremists in Europe and the so-called secular governments of
          the Middle East.”.
         
        
          
          So, at least to the editors at El-Farg, the ‘cartoon Intifada’ is
          a jihad, which should have started in October.  And the delay is
          evidence that the current “holy war against Denmark” is a
          political ploy.
         
        
          
          In sum, the current "cartoon Intifada", with its death (to
          date, at least 10 Moslems have been killed in Afghanistan riots, a
          Catholic priest murdered, and scores injured) and destruction, threats
          of genocide and terrorism, hatred and intimidation, is all the product
          of Moslem leaders' manipulation.
         
        
          
          Now, why would anyone do that?
         
        
          
          The anti-Syrian coalition in Lebanon has accused the Syrian government
          of starting the riots.  Young Bashir is deeply beholden to Iran. 
          So one must look to Iran as the source of the conspiracy-like process
          that has set the Moslem world aflame.
         
        
          
          But, what could be Iran's motives?
         
        
          
          Thanks to a recent USA/EU/UN/Egyptian agreement for a nuclear-free
          Middle East, Iran will now be able to link its compliance with UN/EU/USA
          demands for a halt to its nuclear ambitions to the West’s pressuring
          Israel to dismantle, or at least disclose to the IAEA, Israel's own
          nuclear program.  That is what a nuclear-free Middle East means.
         
        
          
          The obvious question that Iran and other Moslem countries can now
          raise is:  why are you attacking Iran about its embryonic nuclear
          program which they say is meant for peaceful usages; when you let
          Israel get away with building a whole arsenal of nuclear WMDs with
          delivery systems which are clearly, and avowedly, for military
          purposes?   Curtail Israel and Iran will stand down.
         
        
          
          Brilliant.  Ahmedi-Nejad may be crazy, but he is not stupid.
         
        
          
          And the cartoon crisis explodes with perfect timing.
         
        
          
          Thanks to this new “jihad against Denmark”, the West is shown very
          clearly just what it means to get the Moslem world angry.  If
          this is how they act when some cartoonists blaspheme, how  do you
          think they will act if the West does not follow through and show 
          'even handedness' and 'fairness' by pressuring Israel just as much, or
          more,  than it pressures Iran?
         
        
          
          Now that the West knows what price there is to pay for stoking the ire
          of the Moslem world, not only will all western cartoonists be far more
          circumspect and self-censuring, but so will other artists,
          journalists, analysts, historians, Middle East scholars, diplomats,
          and governments.
         
        
          
          When the Egyptian Ambassador to Denmark departed, following Egypt's
          decision to cut off diplomatic relations in the wake of the cartoon
          crisis, his parting words were "Denmark must do something to
          appease the Moslem world!”
         
        
          
          What sort of appeasement might he have in mind?  What could
          Denmark do that would calm the savage wrath of the Moslem world whose
          delicate religious sensibilities have been ravaged by these cartoons?
         
        
          
          Will we soon see Denmark leading a diplomatic charge in the UN to
          suspend action against Iran until Israel has divested itself of its
          WMDs?
         
        
          
          David Meir-Levi 
        9 February 2006 
          
          873 Santa Cruz Avenue (#202)
         
        
          
          Menlo Park, CA USA 94025
         
        
          
          650 566 3811, 650 322 6638
         
        
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