Financial Times
15th August 2006
Sir, I am glad that our open letter to the prime minister has stimulated
such a debate about the links between terror and foreign policy ("Why
Britain's Muslim leaders should think again", Martin Wolf, August 14).
However, I am less pleased with the deliberate misinterpretation of it.
While it is undoubtedly easier to refute an argument that you have
caricatured, it does not provide any insight into the issues we are all
wrestling with.
Rather than arguing for the "assuaging of extremists", the letter - signed by 40 Muslim groups,
MPs and members of the House of Lords -
was expressly written to condemn the actions of such extremists. It states
as clearly as is possible that "attacking civilians is never justified".
Neither did it call for the "abandonment of foreign policy". What it argued
for was exactly the sort of renaissance that the prime minister has talked
about, a foreign policy that can once again lead the world and show that "we
value the lives of civilians wherever they live and whatever their
religion". It is an argument for a foreign policy based on values.
Finally, neither did the letter argue that foreign policy was the "root
cause of the problem". What it did argue was that, like it or not - and I
certainly don't - recent policies over Iraq and Lebanon have made the job of
those recruiting extremists easier. This is not a truth any of us relish or
endorse but it is nevertheless areality that we all will have to acknowledge
if we are to tackle it effectively.
We will continue to fight extremists in our communities but it would help us
greatly if we all confronted these issues with a little more honesty and a
little less distortion.
Muhamed Abdul Bari,
Secretary General,
Muslim Council of Britain
The Muslim Council of Britain