Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Security vs Political Correctness Revisited

Marc Lynch wrote Ft. Hood and the Clash of Civilizations: Security vs political correctness revisited

"Since the Ft Hood atrocity, I've seen a meme going around that it somehow  exposed a contradiction between 'political correctness' and 'security.'  The avoidance of Nidal Hassan's religion out of fear of offending anyone, goes the argument, created the conditions which allowed him to go undetected and unsanctioned in the months and years leading up to his rampage.  American security, therefore, demands dropping the 'political correctness' of avoiding a  confrontation with Islamist ideas and asking the 'tough questions' about Islam as a religion and the loyalty of Muslim-Americans. 

 This framing of the issue is almost 100% wrong.    There is a connection between what these critics are calling 'political correctness' and national security, but it runs in the opposite direction.   The real linkage is that there is a strong security imperative to prevent the consolidation of a narrative in which America is engaged in a clash of civilizations with Islam, and instead to nurture a narrative in which al-Qaeda and its affiliates represent a marginal fringe to be jointly combatted.  Fortunately, American leaders -- from the Obama administration through General George Casey and top counter-terrorism officials -- understand this and have been acting appropriately."

Worth a quick read.

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