“America is everywhere," Italian novelist Ignazio Silone once observed. It is in Karachi and Paris,
in Jakarta and Brussels. An idea of it, a fantasy of it, hovers over distant
lands. And everywhere there is also an obligatory anti-Americanism, a cover
and an apology for the spell the United States casts over distant peoples and
places. In the burning grounds of the Muslim world and on its periphery, U.S.
embassies and their fate in recent years bear witness to a duality of the United
States as Satan and redeemer. The embassies targeted by the masters of terror
and by the diehards are besieged by visa-seekers dreaming of the golden, seductive
country. If only the crowd in Tehran offering its tired rhythmic chant
"marg bar amrika" ("death to America") really meant
it! It is of visas and green cards and houses with lawns and of the glamorous
world of Los Angeles, far away from the mullahs and their cultural tyranny,
that the crowd really dreams. The frenzy with which radical Islamists battle
against deportation orders from U.S. soil— dreading the prospect of returning
to Amman and Beirut and Cairo— reveals the lie of anti-Americanism that blows
through Muslim lands.
The world rails against the United States, yet embraces its protection, its
gossip, and its hipness. Tune into a talk show on the stridently anti-American
satellite channel Al-Jazeera, and you'll behold a parody of American ways and
techniques unfolding on the television screen. That reporter in the flak jacket,
irreverent and cool against the Kabul or Baghdad background, borrows a form
perfected in the country whose sins and follies that reporter has come to chronicle.
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In Doha, Qatar, Sheik Yusuf al-Qaradawi, arguably Sunni Islam's most...