Political Islam and the United States
A Study of U.S. Policy towards Islamist Movements in the Middle East
by María do Céu Pinto
Reading, U.K.: Ithaca, 1999. 340 pp. £35.
Reviewed by Daniel Pipes
Middle East Quarterly
https://www.danielpipes.org/58/political-islam-and-the-united-states
Translations of this item:
After giving a fair summary of the two arguments, Pinto, herself firmly planted in the accommodationist camp, can stand it no longer and blows off the confrontational approach as nothing but the "fabrication" of a threat. In her view, everyone knows the Islamist threat does not really exist but some go along with its being conjured up by distraught defense planners who need a new enemy, presumably one that justifies their ample budgets. With this sorry excuse for a premise, Pinto then goes on to review official American policy toward Islamism, a survey that lacks any reliability or utility, based as it is on such biased assumptions. To understand just how unreliable she is, here are two quotes: she blames "the origin of Lebanon’s descent into chaos" on Israel’s 1982 invasion, somehow forgetting that the civil war began in 1975 and completely absolving both the Palestinians and the Syrian government for their roles in this tragedy. Even more spectacularly deceitful is her description of Usama bin Ladin as merely "the Saudi businessman who served as an Islamic recruitment agent for Afghanistan and maintains an office in Sudan."
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