Religion and American foreign policy

American foreign policy will more effectively counter Islamist terrorism if it more effectively counters the terrorists' invocation of Islam. The indirect promotion of religious tolerance in the Muslim world, rather than direct promotion of Western-style democracy, is the key. To that end, the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Survival
Main Author: Miles, Jack 1942- (Author)
Format: Print Article
Language:English
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Published: Routledge 2004
In: Survival
Year: 2004, Volume: 46, Issue: 1, Pages: 23-37
Further subjects:B Religious identity
B Usa
B Terrorism
B Islam
B Violence
B Foreign policy
B Cause
B Fundamentalism
B Example
B Religion
B Population group
B Struggle against
Description
Summary:American foreign policy will more effectively counter Islamist terrorism if it more effectively counters the terrorists' invocation of Islam. The indirect promotion of religious tolerance in the Muslim world, rather than direct promotion of Western-style democracy, is the key. To that end, the United States must cultivate Muslim human-rights activists and intellectuals as assiduously as it did their Soviet counterparts during the Cold War. First, however, it must reassert the constitutional separation of church and State that some Americans seem eager to blur. No velvet revolution impends in any case: the Muslim political future will probably look more like Yugoslavia than Czechoslovakia. But long-running internecine conflicts may have left the umma in a state of exhaustion analogous to Europe's at the end of the Thirty Years War. Ihere is, in short, a moment to be seized if American diplomacy can muster the cultural sophistication to seize it. (Survival / SWP)
ISSN:0039-6338
Contains:In: Survival