WHAT IS MODERATE ISLAM? DR. RICHARD BENKIN IN CONVERSATION WITH SHAURYA RITWIK

(Originally published in The Charticle, December 26, 2017)

http://thecharticle.in/moderate-islam-dr-richard-benkin-conversation-shaurya-ritwik/

IN AN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW DR. RICHARD BENKIN SHARED HIS VIEWS WITH SHAURYA RITWIK , MANAGING EDITOR, THE CHARTICLE ON HIS LATEST PUBLISHED BOOK WHAT IS MODERATE ISLAM?, RADICAL ISLAMIC TERRORISM, DONAL TRUMP ADMINISTRATION, HIS ROLE IN ADVOCACY OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN BANGLADESH AND A LOT MORE.

Dr. Benkin, first of all I would like to congratulate you on your new book ‘What is Moderate Islam?’, which I firmly believe to be an important topic the world should address. It was my pleasure to attend the book launch event in New Delhi. It is great that you have taken the initiative to start a discussion in this direction. Kindly let our readers know more about your book. What this book is all about? Is this book exclusively for Muslims or is it significant for Non-Muslims too?

Thank you Shaurya Ritwik, I appreciate your good work as well. The book’s rationale is very straightforward: Radical Islamists are the greatest source of international instability in the 21st century; and we’ve got to defeat them—not understand them, or find a way to live with them; but to defeat them. Yet, we have not developed any strategy for doing so. I believe this is in large part due to censorship or self-censorship of free speech. On the one hand, we cannot continue failing to distinguish between Islam and Radical Islam. Doing so is not only morally wrong, it is factually incorrect and a ridiculous strategy. So is curtailing free speech and closing off your mind because you are afraid of being called “communal” or “racist.” We must ask the tough questions about links between Islam and terrorism.

We also have seen how allowing these extremes of thought at the expense of truth gives people space for the most ridiculous statements, whether the falsehood that all Muslims are jihadis or the equally stupid idea that talking about the link between Islam and terror is somehow being prejudice.

What is Moderate Islam brings together activists and scholars, Muslims and non-Muslims to begin that—often uncomfortable discussion. In fact, that’s what it is: a beginning, one that sparks further open discussion.

There are chapters by and about the Baloch and their practice of Islam in opposition to that of the radicals; Dr. Daniel Pipes has a chapter with a methodology and questions designed to get below the surface for, as he puts it, “smoking out Islamists” and not letting false moderates fool us; there are chapters about Indian Muslims; and chapters about Malaysia and Bangladesh. One Pashtun Muslim writes about his experience in a Taliban madrassa, and in another chapter, I interview a Pashtun woman living in exile.

This book is intended for everyone; in fact, it is critical that Muslims and non-Muslims alike read it and engage in this discussion without limits on free speech or free thought.

There are two streams of thoughts dominating the terrorism scenario currently. First is that Islamic extremists are the flag bearer of terrorism all across globe, due to orthodox theology of Islam; and even a person with an Islamic name is seen as a potential terrorist. Secondly a large section of people believe Muslims to be the biggest victim of terrorism, and they claim Islamophobia is induced in media by the western world for their political game. They believe ISIS and other terrorist groups are being fueled by the United States and Israel. Where do you find the truth between these two claims?

First of all, both of those theories are just idiotic; and anyone who spouts off about either is intellectually lazy and prefers easy answers to correct ones. Why in the world would the United States and Israel want to support ISIS? You would say that only if you are coming from the belief that both are irredeemably evil and coordinated in their actions—which is simply untrue. Challenge anyone who does to come up with good and validated information not rumor and conspiracy theory. Similarly, the only reason to condemn all Muslims is because conducting a real analysis is too difficult for you. I’ve spent enough time on the front lines of this fight to know that there is a difference between radical Islamists and the many Muslims who put their lives in jeopardy fighting for our freedom.

The only way to help people get away from these two simple-minded extremes is to have open dialogue where no one is afraid of being charged with offending anyone else’s sensibilities; or being called communal or racist, or an appeaser. That’s the only way to find the reality between the extremes and develop an effective strategy for victory.

We cannot shy away from the fact that radicalisation of Muslims is going on large scale, and it is first step for Islamic terrorism. How do you suggest checking and neutralizing the speedy growth of Wahhabi ideology among Muslims, which teaches that Muslims can never co-exist with infidels unless they convert them, even if they have to do it forcefully?

This is the question of our time. Let us begin by recognizing the three factors most responsible for successful Islamist recruitment: (1) the promise of being effective in getting things done, while others are ineffective; (2) providing young people with a sense of purpose; and (3) providing a sense of worth and belongingness to those who feel alienated. So how do we counteract those things? That is our challenge.

(1) I work closely with the Baloch and we frequently talk about this. We believe we have only a limited amount of time to achieve our goals through moderate means. Even now, radicals are trying to attract young Baloch by pointing to the fact that the existing authorities have not been able to re-gain Baloch independence or freedom from Pakistani human right atrocities. We need to support efforts like that of the Baloch so that the youth will see that the “old” ways of doing things are effective, and while it’s easy for Islamists to say what they would do, we have a proven track record. They don’t. We must find the obstacles to effectiveness and get rid of them—disunity due to personal interests, bureaucracy, fear and so on. But we need to do this now or the opportunity will be lost.

(2) I also work with Pashtun. They are experiencing some troubles, however, they feel they can bear them because the struggle for Pashtun freedom from Pakistani occupation gives them a real sense of purpose—to help save their people and bring about a real Pakhtunistan. All of these people are practicing Muslims; most qualify as youth; all have rejected the radical Islamists because they find meaning and expect to be effective without turning to the promise of jihad, which likely will end in their deaths after a short life. They are Muslims who recognize the importance of their national identity over the “Muslim ummah.” These are examples. In this case, national identity and the struggle for it provides meaning.

(3) This is the most difficult challenge. Each of us has a role to play in helping to create societies that are inclusive and that value all of us equally. It’s called democracy, and we know that the society planned by the jihadis is anything but that. Expose it, in articles, individual conversations, and with action. Work for a just society, even if the first step is simply lending a friendly hand to one who is marginalized due to religion, race, sexuality, political views, or anything else.

So, while it’s good question, we need to ask it another way. It’s not how to stop Islamist recruitment, because there’s nothing attractive about the terrible life they offer. Rather, they fill the gap where we have failed: failed to be effective in doing the things we say we must do; failed to provide youth with a meaningful experience that promises a sense of purpose; failed to create a just society because of corruption, bigotry, and placing personal interest above the social good. This is our challenge, and we will meet it one person at a time, one issue at a time.

You have always been an advocate for human rights. Your work in Bangladesh for Hindu minority is exceptional in itself. Can you please elaborate to our readers regarding the ethnic cleansing of Hindus in Bangladesh and your firsthand experience there? Do you feel ethnic cleansing of minorities in Pakistan and Bangladesh are a blot on a modern world that talks of democracy, liberty, and freedom? Is it the perfect example for a failed system of government?

As a Jew growing up in the decades not long after World War II, I learned about the Nazi Holocaust against my people, and continued to study and analyze it in detail. And the more I did, the more I realized that the Nazis were not the problem. Of course, they were terrible people, but they could not do all this alone. Those responsible for the Holocaust were all those “good” Europeans and others who stood by and did nothing while their neighbors were being brutalized and killed. And I swore that I NEVER would be that person and stand by silently, which is why I do what I do.

Of course, Bangladesh is not Nazi Germany, and Sheikh Hasina is not Adolf Hitler. But the lesson is the same. The real blot on humanity is that most people are fine with others being killed so long as they are not. Moreover, we also must remember what the Dalai Lama said: “It is not enough to be compassionate. You must act.” I ask those reading this, “Are you taking action?”

It’s not just a few of us anymore; the ethnic cleansing of Hindus in Bangladesh is now a big issue. I believe as we now hear more voices raised on behalf of the Bangladeshi Hindus, and we are hearing them, the government of Bangladesh will stop allowing this human rights atrocity to occur. But I ask each reader again, “Are you taking action.” What are you doing to help those oppressed?

What is your analysis of the major difference between Former President Barack Obama and President Donald Trump with regard to their government’s commitment to fight against terrorism? President Trump’s election campaign focused primarily on cracking down Islamic terrorism. How do you assess the arms deal between the Trump government and Saudi Arabia, a country accused of being the flag bearer of human rights violations and the financier of Islamic terror outfits?

I believe that both Presidents—and all those who came before them—share a basic approach to international conflicts: defeat when you must, contain when you can; also, go to war only when you must, use other means (sanctions, diplomacy) when you can. In that regard, there is no difference. There certainly is a difference in form; for instance, President Obama would not allow his administration to use the term “radical Islamic terror,” or anything like that. President Trump very prominently uses it, and is more confrontational than conciliatory in his expression.

Trump has made clear that his foreign policy breaks from Obama’s in two critical ways. First, he believes that over the past eight years, actual and potential friends stopped seeing the United States as a reliable ally. The most often cited example was President Obama’s encouragement of Iranian dissidents only to abandon them when they faced the wrath of the mullahs. I can tell you from personal experience that Trump is correct. Friends and foes alike need to know that we will do as we say; and allies like the Iranian dissidents need to know that we will support them when things get tough for them. Trump’s second principle was for the United States to stop making “bad deals”: such as US aid to Pakistan even though it is well known that Pakistan uses the aid to suppress the Baloch, Sindhi, and others; and to attack India. Trump also favors bi-lateral deals between the US and one country at a time, as opposed to multi-lateral deals such as the Paris climate change accord that he pulled out of earlier this year. Focus on these two principles in Trump foreign policy rather than his rhetoric.

The accord with Saudi Arabia is much more complicated. First, the Saudis and the Gulf States have formed, along with Egypt, a Sunni alliance to block Iranian imperialism in the Middle East. They even are working with Israel as they now recognize Iran to be a real threat and Israel not one. You also need to think things all the way to their conclusion. The Saudi economy is based entirely on oil, and oil prices have been dropping significantly over the past several years. They will not rise again, except perhaps temporarily during a crisis. Several nations, including India, are moving ahead and developing alternate energy sources, and more sources of fossil fuels are discovered all the time. If Saudi Arabia does not find another basis for its economy, it will experience something close to complete economic collapse, and we can expect civil unrest and perhaps worse. With no democratic traditions in Arab world, we cannot expect a less radical regime to take power; and it is no secret that Iran and its allies are just waiting to pounce on such an opportunity. Thus, supporting Saudi Arabia now might be the only way to prevent a really radical Islamist and aggressively jihadist government from replacing the royal family. There already are signs that the Saudis are moderating.

How do you see future of our world and the future of Islam with all socio-political changes going on? And importantly what role you think India can play in combating Islamic extremism?

The answer to that question will depend, more than anything else, on the internal struggle within Islam. Let us remember that Islam is a religion dating back fourteen centuries, Islamism or radical Islam is a political philosophy dating back less than two. Many Muslims and non-Muslims alike fail to make that distinction sufficiently. To the extent that continues, we will continue to face a struggle both within and without Islam.

Militarily, there is no question that the radicals will lose—eventually; and we want to minimize the death and destruction that occurs until that time. History has shown us that time and again. Even if right now, geopolitical struggles among the United States, Russia, and China interfere with a clear strategy that will change. In World War II, the western democracies made temporary peace with Joseph Stalin to defeat a more immediate threat in Nazi Germany. In the 1980s, the US supported Saddam Hussein in his fight against Iran. And Asian nationalists fighting colonizers allied with tyrannical regimes in China and the Soviet Union, even though almost all became capitalist and democratic once they won their struggles.

India, however, has a unique role to play. Reviewers have commented that the focus on South Asia in What is Moderate Islam is a significant step forward in the debate. Most western analyses focus on the Middle East, which I long held is a side show—a deadly one, but still as side show compared with South Asia where several Islamist groups have been conducting terror and recruitment actions for decades. South Asia has four and a half times as many Muslims as the Middle East and one of every five people on the planet. Especially with the ascension of Narendra Modi as Prime Minister, India is taking its place as both an economic and geopolitical power. With a fifth of its population Muslim, India has by far the world’s largest minority Muslim population. Indian Muslims as a group show a great deal of diversity that can encompass the radical Deobandi School as well as Sultan Shihan’s New Age Islam. Large populations of Hindus from Kashmir, Bangladesh, and territories occupied by Pakistan have found refuge in India; as have large Muslim populations from those same Pakistani-occupied territories. Refugees aside, Indian Hindus and Muslims both play significant roles in the life of the nation, the culture, and the economy. No country has a greater interest in leading the world in distinguishing Muslim friends and neighbors from radical Islamists and those who provide them with support and ideological cover. Neither does any country have as many Muslim and non-Muslim resources to carry on that struggle.

If I were to make one friendly recommendation to that great nation of India laws stifling free speech and open inquiry hurt progress. Calling something “communal” does not help enhance understanding or stop the ideas being labeled. Democratic institutions protect us against many evil actions; but they do not protect us from being “offended.” You want me to tell you how frequently my people, the Jews, have our religious sensibilities offended—even at the UN and by those who consider themselves guardians of fairness? But that does not lead us to call for laws muzzling free speech.

So after ‘What is Moderate Islam’ should we be expecting more books from you revolving around the biggest problem the world is facing today, Islamic terrorism? The problem is vast so the ideological battle will be vast too. I hope intellectuals will ponder the questions, issues, and relevance of Moderate Islam raised by you and will wait for many more books to come.

I wrote What is Moderate Islam to begin a very badly needed dialogue and public inquiry. I do not agree with everything each contributor wrote in the book—but that’s okay. The point is to get out all the different ideas and points of view without forcing people to be anything less than completely truthful. So, let us see where this endeavor takes us.

That being said, I am working on ideas for at least two more books. The first is another anthology, this one about the Baloch. There are some chapters in What is Moderate Islam about the Baloch because they are a predominantly Muslim people whose essential principles reject radical Islam; and they have lived by this code. I work closely with the Baloch and feel their struggle to re-gain their independence from Pakistan keenly. Moreover, their primary identity seems to be nation, not religion. As such, they provide an important object lesson for distinguishing between Muslims and jihadis. Their struggle also has consequences for the most important geopolitical elements we face. Right now, I’m trying to gather the right group of Baloch to author individual chapters.

I’m also planning a book with about India’s development. My colleague Amitabh Tripathi would write from the “inside,” that is as an Indian; and I would write from the “outside,” that is as a non- Indian. India sits at the center of the struggle to defeat radical Islamists.

Thank you.

Dr. Richard Benkin is a reputed American Jewish Human rights activist, co-founder of ‘Interfaith Strength’, journalist, writer and lecturer. He’s also a member of Folks Magazine’s Editorial Board.

One single pro-US, pro-Israel Pakistani stands up against his countrymen

(Originally published December 24, 2017 in American Thinker)

By Richard L. Benkin

Earlier this month, the Pakistani National Assembly (N.A.) slavishly followed suit with most of the Muslim world and the United Nations (U.N.) General Assembly in condemning United States president Donald Trump's declaration that recognized Jerusalem as Israel's capital. "Debate" on the resolution was characterized by threats of violence and knee-jerk condemnation of the U.S. and Israel. The resolution itself called the U.S. move "a direct attack on the Muslim Ummah," which is a significant term for it to use. Ummah is an Arabic word meaning "community" and is used to refer to a single, supranational community of Muslims with common interests that supersede any others. Its use implies that all Muslims would have the same or similar positions regarding the U.S. recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital.

Legislator after legislator dutifully condemned Pakistan's major benefactor (the U.S.). Former – and disgraced – prime minister Nawaz Sharif cried: "To hand over [to Israel] the holy city of Jerusalem, known historically for over millenniums [sic] as Al Quds Al Sharif, is to add salt to the wounds of the people who have been suffering untold miseries for 70 years." How misguided. The U.S. government did not hand over anything to anybody. Jerusalem is Israel's capital, and as U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley said, the announcement was "just reality" and something "the American people have asked for." That's how it works in a democracy but not how it works in places like Pakistan, where people are commanded to take the same position on every issue because they belong to the same, religious community.

Even in a country where dissent often carries a de facto death sentence, however, one member of Pakistan's N.A. and that Muslim Ummah rose in opposition to the resolution. Mahmood Khan Achakzai, leader of the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, dared to stand and speak truth to the lie that all Muslims find Israel odious and are "outraged" to the point of violence by American recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital. Pakistan's semi-official newspaper Dawn did indeed report that Achakzai "ridiculed" the resolution, but it and the Pakistani government tried to sanitize his comments and ignore his open support for Israel and the United States – for that opposition contradicts the narrative they are trying desperately to promote. Dawn led with a banner headline reading, "NA unanimously assails US move on Jerusalem" (it was not unanimous), and it attributed Achakzai's opposition to mere procedural matters and his (and his party's) stance of neutrality on all international matters and focus on Pakistan's serious domestic issues. How can "a house that could not save the country's Constitution save the Palestinians"?

According to my Pakhtun (Pashtun) sources, however, "his speech was stopped and cameras turned down." His fellow party members told me he frequently responds to statements about "oppressed Palestinians" by pointing out that it is the Jews who face oppression and that the real focus should be how "Pashtuns are oppressed under the Pakistani army[.] ... Gaza and West Bank [are] none of our concern." That's heresy for those who demand fealty from all members of the Muslim Ummah. In fact, one notable distinction between non-radical and radical Muslims, including people who may not throw bombs but provide ideological cover for those who do, is the latter's insistence that Islam is a Muslim's single identity of consequence. Achakzai's public life has been devoted to the cause of self-determination for Pakistan's various nationalities, as opposed to the single Pakistani state that was created on the basis of religion and is officially an Islamic Republic.

This is not the first time Achakzai has bucked Pakistan's anti-U.S., anti-Israel wave in Pakistan's parliament. When the rest of the Pakistani parliament rushed to condemn Israel for its war with Hamas in Gaza, Achakzai said Pakistan itself had become a Gaza and cited "human rights violations, internal strife, aerial bombardment and displacement of tens of thousands of people from North Waziristan Agency." He refused to support Hamas and the Palestinians over Israel. According to other members of the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, his recent actions showed the resolution on the U.S. action and "support for Palestinians [to be] a laughing stock." 

Pakistan is rife with ethnic conflict and insurgencies. Baloch, Sindhi, Pashtun, Kashimris, and others contend that the Pakistani government commits ongoing human rights violations against their people; attempts to suppress their national identity; and is trying to change the demography of their lands by flooding them with Islamists and Punjabis, Pakistan's dominant ethnic group. Achakzai and the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party represent Pakistan's Pashtun population, which is located in places like Waziristan and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, where Afghan terrorists often find safe haven. Although many Pashtun fill the ranks of Islamist groups in the region, the majority of Pashtuns oppose the radicals and are often their victims. In fact, the latest incarnation of the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party specifically excluded Islamist parties. The party's official position demands equal rights for all ethnic groups in Pakistan and control over the resources in their territories. Many Pashtun, however, seek independence from Pakistan. They tend to be very positive about the United States, with the exception of aid to the Pakistani government and military.

Dr. Benkin was helped with this article by Umar Daud Khattak, a young Pashtun Muslim, who works extensively for Pashtun freedom and strong ties with the United States and Israel.

Pakistanis try to Silence Pro-US, Pro-Israel Voice : Dr. Richard L. Benkin

By Dr. Richard L. Benkin

Earlier this month, the Pakistani National Assembly (NA), slavishly followed suit with most of the Muslim world and the United Nations (UN) General Assembly in condemning United States President Donald Trump’s declaration that recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. “Debate” on the resolution was characterised by threats of violence and knee-jerk condemnation of the United States (US) and Israel. The resolution itself called the US move “a direct attack on the Muslim Ummah,” which is a significant term for it to use. Ummah is an Arabic word meaning community, and is used to refer to a single, supranational community of Muslims with common interests that supersede any others. Its use implies that all Muslims would have the same or similar positions regarding the US recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. Nonsense!

Legislator after legislator dutifully condemned Pakistan’s major benefactor (the US). Former—and disgraced—Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s cried: “To hand over [to Israel] the holy city of Jerusalem, known historically for over millenniums [sic] as Al Quds Al Sharif, is to add salt to the wounds of the people who have been suffering untold miseries for 70 years.” How misguided. The US government did not hand over anything to anybody. Jerusalem is Israel’s capital; and as US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley said, the announcement was “just reality”; and something “the American people have asked for”; That’s how it works in a democracy, but not how it works in places like Pakistan where people are commanded to take the same position on every issue because they belong to the same, religious community.

Even in a country where dissent often carries a death sentence, however, one Member of Pakistan’s National Assembly (NA), also a member of that Muslim Ummah rose in opposition to the resolution. Mahmood Khan Achakzai, leader of the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, dared to stand and speak truth to the lie that all Muslims find Israel odious and are “outraged” to the point of violence by American recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. Pakistan’s semi-official newspaper Dawn did indeed report that Achakzai “ridiculed” the resolution, but it and the Pakistani government tried to sanitize his comments and ignore his open support for Israel and the United States; for that opposition contradicts the narrative they are trying desperately to promote. Dawn led with a banner headline reading “NA unanimously assails US move on Jerusalem” (it was not unanimous); and it attributed Achakzai’s opposition to mere procedural matters and his (and his party’s) stance of neutrality on all international matters and focus on Pakistan’s serious domestic issues. How can “a house that could not save the country’s Constitution, save the Palestinians.”

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According to my Pakhtun (Pashtun) sources, however, “his speech was stopped and cameras turned down.” His fellow party members told me that he frequently responds to statements about “oppressed Palestinians” by pointing out that it is the Jews who face oppression, and that the real focus should be how “Pashtuns are oppressed under the Pakistani army… Gaza and West Bank is none of our concern.” That’s heresy for those who demand fealty from all members of the Muslim Ummah. In fact, one notable distinction between non-radical and radical Muslims, including people who may not throw bombs but provide ideological cover for those who do, is the latter’s insistence that Islam is a Muslim’s single identity of consequence. Achakzai’s public life has been devoted to the cause of self-determination for Pakistan’s various nationalities, as opposed to the single Pakistani state that was created on the basis of religion and is officially and Islamic Republic.

This is not the first time Achakzai has bucked Pakistan’s anti-US, anti-Israel wave in Pakistan’s parliament. When the rest of the Pakistani parliament rushed to condemn Israel for its war with Hamas in Gaza, Achakzai said that Pakistan itself had become a Gaza and cited “human rights violations, internal strife, aerial bombardment and displacement of tens of thousands of people from North Waziristan Agency.” He refused to support Hamas and the Palestinians over Israel. According to other members of the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, his recent actions showed the resolution on the US action and “support for Palestinians [to be] a laughing stock.”

Follow The Charticle at Twitter: thecharticle.in

Pakistan is rife with ethnic conflict and insurgencies. Baloch, Sindhi, Pashtun, Kashimris, and others contend that the Pakistani government commits ongoing human rights violations against their people, attempts to suppress their national identity, and is trying to change the demography of their lands by flooding them with Islamists and Punjabis, Pakistan’s dominant ethnic group. Achakzai and the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party represent Pakistan’s Pashtun population, which is located in places like Waziristan and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, where Afghan terrorists often find safe haven. Although many Pashtun fill the ranks of Islamist groups in the region, the majority of Pashtuns oppose the radicals and are often their victims. In fact the latest incarnation of the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party specifically excluded Islamist parties. The party’s official position demands equal rights for all ethnic groups in Pakistan and control over the resources in their territories. Many Pashtun, however, seek independence from Pakistan. They tend to be very positive about the United States, with the exception of aid to the Pakistani government and military.

– Dr. Benkin is an American human rights activist who is working with Baloch, Sindhi, Pashtun, and others to help them achieve self-determination. He is also spreading information about the Pakistani government’s human rights atrocities against these people, as well as it suppression of their nationalities, looting of their lands’ resources, and attempt to make them minorities in their own nations by flooding them with radical Islamists and others. He was helped with this article by Umar Daud Khattak, a young Pashtun Muslim, who works extensively for Pashtun freedom and strong ties with the United States and Israel.

Address by Dr. Richard Benkin, Read at World Hindu Federation

Address by Dr. Richard Benkin

Read at World Hindu Federation

Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India

18 December 2017

To my Brothers of the World Hindu Federation, Namaskar.

It is my loss that the invitation came with too little time for me to attend the conference. I would, however, like to participate in a small way through this written message.

The premise of this effort--that success will depend on our own actions--is key to moving forward. This history of my own, Jewish people often was one of depending on one powerful person or another; only to be betrayed in the end when we did not suit the purposes of that power. Now, we take power into our own hands; more than that, take responsibility into our own hands; and we have been more successful as a result. The question before us, however, is what action to take.

There is a saying that goes, "Success has a thousand fathers; failure is an orphan." We do not require the participation of millions; just enough to succeed, which requires that we think strategically. We are not going to change radical Islamists; hatred is their essential stock in trade. We cannot protect the ordinary people from them. We can, however, target the government of Bangladesh which is complicit in the persecution. As my dear Brother and colleague, Rabindra Ghosh will tell you, that complicity consists largely of inaction when Hindus are persecuted, despite the flowery words in the Bangladeshi constitution--of not affording Hindus equal protection under the law and its failure to enforce the rule of law when it threatens the parties' political calculations. So, that is where our actions must target--and the Bangladeshi government has so many vulnerabilities that can be used to get it to do the right thing: an economy inordinately dependent on garment exports, a shrinking land base, dependence on UN peacekeeping receipts that can be stopped, water issues, a colossal need to maintain an image of "moderation," an much more.

I know many in the government and believe they can be brought to do the right thing, however, not because it is the right thing to do. They will do it because we have made it in their interests to do it.

My friends, that is all that matters--saving the victims, stopping the slaughter. All else is patting ourselves on the back while others continue suffer. Hindus in Bangladesh are not free to do all that we can; we must take advantage of the freedom we have to act or we are betraying them. Fear, passivity are no longer options for us. We can do this if we think, plan, and act strategically. There are people in Washington who will help us; I know what to do. In conjunction with giants like Rabindra Ghosh, we can make it happen. So, work with me. I'll even lead missions to Bangladesh and against our enemies. But we must take action. Everyday we do not act, we consign another Bangladeshi Hindu to a horrible fate.

Let us from today dedicate ourselves not just to fighting, but to winning.

Dhanyavaad.

Countering Pakistan's Duplicity

(Originally published November 3, 2017 in American Thinker)

By Mushtaq M. Rahim with Richard L. Benkin

After Osama Bin Laden was discovered and killed in Pakistan, only 1.3 kilometers from Pakistan Military Academy, it should become clear to those who still denied it, that Pakistan was not the ally in the war on terror that it claimed to be. Congressional voices like those of Ted Poe (TX) and Dana Rohrabacher (CA), calling for an end to US support for Pakistan, have been raised Americans elected a President who made no bones about his dislike for Pakistani duplicity. Little has changed. With the exception of recent cuts in US aid (which is cyclical anyway), Pakistan continues to operate as it has, supporting terrorists while pretending be an ally of the United States. What should be done about this?

Pakistan is an artificial state, cobbled together by outsiders on the basis of a majority religion. It threw together distinct national groups in an oppressive state with little concern for their own aspirations; little more than a convenience for the colonial powers at the expense of the indigenous peoples: Baloch, Pashtun, Sindhi, and others.

Like other artificial agglomerations, Pakistan is inherently unstable. We saw the results of that kind of instability in the breakup of the former Yugoslavia, created by the victorious powers of World War I, into its six constituent states. We saw it when Czechs and Slovaks threw off their artificial bonds, forced on them by the same outside powers, splitting up Czechoslovakia.

Are Kurds gaining independence from a state created by the League of Nations and British colonizers, Iraq? In his January 29, 2002 State of the Union address, US President George W. Bush called Iraq part of the “axis of evil,” and fourteen months later, that country’s fate was sealed with the start of the Iraq War. On August 22, President Donald Trump called out Pakistan. Will that country’s demise begin by October 2018?

Pakistan’s elites do not find a true alliance with the US in their interests and never have. And neither would the United States not Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru thrown his lot in with the USSR during the Cold War. For years before the September 11, 2001 terror attacks on the United States, Pakistan nurtured the very regime in neighboring Afghanistan responsible for them part of its “Strategic Depth” agenda. Even after those attacks, according to former Pakistani dictator Pervez Musharraf, Pakist continued to support the Taliban and other Afghan radicals while pretending to ally with NATO in its Afghanistan war. Its Int Service Intelligence (ISI) even facilitated safe passage of militants to the Himalayan Mountains in Nepal, which almost led to Islamist takeover in Bangladesh.

Between September 11 and October 7, 2001 it tried to avoid US intervention by sending then ISIS chief Lieutenant Mahmud Ah to convince Taliban head Mullah Omar to hand over 9/11’s perpetrators. In a last gasp effort to avoid the inevitable conflict, the Musharraf regime suggested trying the 9/11 culprits elsewhere. When that did not work, Pakistan joined the war on terror because it wanted to defeat radical Islamist terror, but out of fear. In his memoir, Musharraf admitted that the Pakistanis were terribly frightened of ending up on the wrong side of the equation in Washington’s retaliation after Secretary of State Colin Po told him, “You are either with us or against us”; and Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage warned the ISIS Chief that if Pakistan remained allied with the terrorists, it should be prepared to be bombed back to the stone age.

Musharraf turned the threat into an opportunity, securing status as a non-NATO ally in the war, which helped it secure $34 bill over the course of last decade and a half as part of Coalition Support Fund. Add this to the commercial use of Pakistani geography for NATO supplies and it becomes a hefty financial gain for the economically struggling country.

Besides the financial bonanza, the Pakistanis used the opportunity to void pre-2001 arrangements that prevented the military fr entering certain area in order to curb nationalist movements in the North West Frontier Province (currently Khayber Pakhtunkh and Baluchistan. With nationalist sentiment strong in both provinces, the Pakistani military and the ISI used their operations t expose nationalist leaders who threatened the extremist groups. Once they were identified, the Islamists relentlessly targeted t on both sides of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, which is also known as the Durand Line after the British diplomat who drew Between 2005 and 2010, there were over 100 attacks against tribal elders in FATA, killing 149 influential local leaders. The situation in Balochistan, Sindh, and elsewhere in Pakistan were similar. Right now, it looks to many youths in these regions th terrorist groups are the only ones capable of strong action; that is, the window for mobilizing young people to fight for freedom secularism is closing.

Although we are encouraged that the West recognizes Pakistan’s duplicity, we have yet to see real action that will change its duplicitous behavior. There is a treasure trove of potential allies on the ground in the areas where the US and NATO have little effective presence -- and keep in mind, the Durand line separating Pakistan from Afghanistan is artificial. It was drawn by colonizers with no regard to the fact that various tribes occupy both sides of it. That means it is not only the Islamists who do recognize the current boundary as organic. The challenge for the West is to identify democratic elements who, if properly arm and financed, will provide a formidable force opposing both the Pakistani military and the radical groups the latter continues to support. That is also the best way to lessen the attractiveness of radicalism for youth in the area and provide them with an effe alternative.

Westerners consider Waziristan, Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), and other regions in Pakistan and Afghanistan a strongholds for al Qaeda and other radicals. They are, however, at the same time, home to more people who are their victims.

Mushtaq M. Rahim (Twitter: @mushtaq_rahim) is an independent analyst and commentator on international af airs and regional security. He has been working in Afghanistan for the last 14 years on post conflict reconstruction, peacebuilding, promotion of good governance with significant focus on security sector reforms. He has a Master’s of Conflict, Peace and Security.

Save Net Neutrality; Net Neutrality Saves Lives

Dr. Richard L. Benkin

In 2003, I received an email from a Bangladeshi journalist bemoaning the biased coverage of Israel in his country.  As a journalist, he wanted to change that; and he asked me if I could help, which I did.  I connected him to a wider array of news sources and information; he helped get me published in Bangladesh.  We worked together for months, generated a lot of interest both positive and negative, and even attracted the Prime Minister’s attention.  Unfortunately, it attracted the attention of others, as well.  One day, as he was about to board a plane for Bangkok and eventually Tel Aviv, the authorities grabbed him.  They ransacked his belongings, stole valuables, and secreted him away for hours in a dark, cramped cell with neither food nor water.  By the time they moved him to the Dhaka Central Jail, word of his seizure had gotten out and supporters gathered the airport.  My friend saw his brother in the crowd and yelled to him:  “Call Dr. Benkin in America; ask him to save me.”

How can you turn your back on that?  I knew I had to do something, but what?  I had never done anything like this before.  So, I did what I knew and went back to my computer.  I set up a web site and connected with others through theirs.  That allowed me to gain enough of a following to make this a pretty big issue; and with the help of former Senator (then Congressman) Mark Kirk, I was able to free him after 17 months of torture and imprisonment for blasphemy.  Since then, I have been successful in several other human rights endeavors, and am now fighting to stop the persecution of millions of Hindus in Bangladesh and Baloch and Sindhi Muslims in Pakistan.

None of it would have been possible, however, without net neutrality:  the principle that owners of the networks that compose and provide access to the Internet should not control how consumers lawfully use that network, and they should not be able to discriminate against content provider access to that network.  That is, it keeps Internet service providers from charging fees for better service; fees, many fear, that smaller users like me will not be able to afford, and which will favor large companies and limit the content that people see.

Governments generally believe they can get away with human rights violations because people either won’t know about them or care enough to do something; and I had neither the influential voice nor the wealth to change the Bangladeshis’ calculations.  But I did have an inexpensive way to strengthen that voice and reach millions of people who might be able to act.  The internet allowed me to tell my story and get others involved.  If my site was too slow, they would not have kept coming to it; if it was too expensive, I could not have started it.  It is only because of an internet that made my site the equal of the major media—left and right—that I was able to free this political prisoner.

All of that, however, is in serious jeopardy; and we have only a limited time to act.  On December 14, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is expected to approve FCC Chairman Ajit Pai’s proposal to repeal net neutrality.  Without net neutrality, providers will be able to charge fees to customers for faster

You don’t make money doing human rights work—and you really shouldn’t or people question your motives.  (They do anyway, but this way, there is no substance to back up their suspicions.)  That means you take advantage of every low cost and free service you can.  A free and equal internet turns lone voices like mine into forces that can save lives.  An internet that does not discriminate based on wealth gives every cause a chance to compete in the marketplace of ideas.

I might be just a guy with a day job, and people like me do not have the resources of, for instance, an Amnesty International or StandWithUs; however, even for them and other human rights and not-for-profit organizations, every dollar in fees is a dollar less that goes to do the work that actually helps those who cannot help themselves.

If we inundate our lawmakers, and the FCC, with calls and faxes (letters take too long to get through security protocols and emails tend to be ignored); they will delay or stop the action.  You might target two commissioners in particular, currently yes votes for repeal, either one of whom can change the outcome.  They are Brendan Carr and Michael O’Reilly.  When Vice President Mike Pence was an Indiana Congressman, he once said that any Members of Congress or the Senate who receive five or more calls on an issue from constituents will sit up and take notice—call staff meetings and not buck the voters.  It does not matter if your lawmaker is a Democrat or Republican, liberal or conservative.  When I fight for human rights, I engage lawmakers of all stripes—of both parties and the multiple factions within them.  Human rights is a bi-partisan issue that touches on our basic values of freedom and equality.  So is net neutrality, and we need to let them know that.  They need to know that repealing net neutrality is a death sentence for many heroes worldwide.

Act to save net neutrality.  Act to save lives.

Dr. Richard L. Benkin is an independent human rights activist who has been called a “one man army” and “the voice of the Bangladeshi Hindus in the USA.”  His most recent book is What is Moderate Islam.

Pakhtun Relevance

Pakhtun Relevance

Address to Afghan/Pakhtun Gathering

Anti-Durand Line

Dr. Richard L. Benkin

October 27, 2017

London, England, U.K.

The past century has been a time when freedom’s children have lurched from one epic struggle to another; struggles which freedom survived: against kings, nobility, and the notion of a divine right to rule; against fascism and ideas of superior and inferior peoples; against communism and the belief that the end justifies the means, any end so long as it’s mine; any means so long as I am the one to use it. Today, as we battle radical Islam, we fight all three of those notions.

  • Against Imams and Ayatollahs who claim that their rights to despotism come from Allah.

  • Against those who consider non-Muslims kaffirs and infidels who have no rights, and Muslims unlike themselves as apostates and heretics.

  • And against those who cower behind the idiotic notion that “one man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter."

    In that epic struggle, those here today—my Pukhtun brothers—can be the key to freedom’s victory; or can be completely irrelevant. And let me explain what I mean by that.

As we look around the room today, we see allies; but that is not what the rest of the world sees. If Westerners know anything about the Pakhtun, it is that they fill the ranks of South Asia’s Islamist groups. Like it or not, the perception is real; like it or not, we cannot deny that Pakhtun are over represented among the terrorists. So we can allow the radical fringe to define us, or we can do something about it—define ourselves and change this inaccurate perception. And we do this with aggressive outreach and education; and with action.

The outreach program requires several elements:

  • Experts, good speakers and writers who will go where needed to educate.

  • A coherent theme, not a dry recitation of facts, slogans, or things people already know.

  • A coherent message in addition to a theme. Some of our adversaries have done well by hammering a false message wrapped in words we all support. They have co-opted the language of human rights, and we can take it back with a message worthy of the words.

  • A definite audience: politicians, religious communities, schools, media.

  • Being ready to respond when events trigger opportunities (e.g., a terrorist attack, the bombing of a mosque, Pashtun bravery against radicals, Pakistani duplicity).

    As an American, I believe that our chances for justice depend on winning American support, which is something I know how to do; but it’s not easy. One day several years ago, I went to see a Congressman who was working with me on a human rights issue. When I entered the office, I saw his Chief of Staff with a human rights activist who was showing her videos on his laptop. The videos were heart wrenching: victimized minorities; ransacked homes; scenes that I have seen close-up. But that’s not she saw. She and others on Capitol Hill see similar tragedies all the time. This was nothing she hadn’t seen before. This person is not unfeeling. She’s is acutely aware of the plight of minorities, and has extended herself many times to help. I also know the human rights activist. He is a good man who puts himself in danger constantly to save those who are being persecuted. The things he was showing were accurate, as was the point he wanted to make. Unfortunately, he never got a chance to make that point effectively because while they were important to him, it was not clear why the Congressman should devote his limited resources to that cause over others.

    Making that case is critical, and if the cause is just, which ours is, there are many ways to do it, but you need to understand the immediate priorities of the American people and how supporting you promotes them. Since 9/11, much of US foreign policy has been driven by the need to defeat radical Islam. Yet despite the initial action in Afghanistan and the ongoing conflict there; most attention on it has been in the Middle East; recently, the impending defeat of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS); the growing alliance of Sunni Muslim nations, often working with Israel to stop Iranian expansion; and the geo-political roles played by the United States and Russia.

    Increasingly, however, American policy-makers are recognizing that South Asia is the next important arena for this struggle. As I have said numerous times, though we will defeat ISIS and run it out of the Middle East, the terrorist group already has found a welcoming home in South Asia. Add to that, the rise of a friendly India, the decline of US-Pakistan relations, and China’s expansion in the region; and there are further opportunities to cast the issues we face in a context that advances American interests, as well.

    If you are not an American, you might well ask, “Why should I care whether or not I further US interests?”

    And there is no reason in and of itself; but if you want US officials to select your cause over others and US taxpayers to spend their hard-earned dollars on it, you have a very good reason to care. So what are those interests and priorities, and how do they relate to South Asia? 

    First, to prevent Afghanistan and South Asia from again becoming terror havens our enemies can plan attacks on the United States. Not doing this risks a return to pre-9/11 Afghanistan, home to the Taliban and Al Qaeda; to Mullah Mohammad Umar and Osama bin Laden. Americans have not forgotten that the attack on them was planned and prepared in Afghanistan, and its mastermind and terrorist leader was sheltered for years after the attack in Pakistan. There has not been any significant military action on the US homeland since the US Civil War in the mid-nineteenth century, and Americans want to keep it that way. Threats against the US posed by radical Islamists are unacceptable to Americans, and eliminating them is the number one priority in our foreign policy. Show how you can further that and you will get a serious hearing.

  • Second, to defeat radical Islam; the open and active terrorists, and those who give them shelter, support, or ideological cover. This is not a battle against Islam, which is a religion that goes back 14 centuries. It is a war to defeat radical Islam, which is a political philosophy dating back less than two. Being able to tell who represents one vs. the other is a critical component that victory. Muslim allies represent the best in that quest to Americans, and we are getting better at not letting false “moderates” fool us into thinking they are our friends. The need to distinguish those who wish us ill from those who do not is the essence of my book What is Moderate Islam. How can you help us in that?

  • Third, to maintain some level of US influence in South Asia even after the withdrawal of NATO forces from Afghanistan. US influence is waning in Pakistan; growing in India. What about Afghanistan and the various peoples struggling to break free from Pakistani occupation? Can Pakhtun, Baloch, and Sindhi unite? That’s also something I’m working on this week.

  • Fourth, to stop Chinese expansion in the region, which has been proceeding slowly but consistently during the years of a less aggressive US foreign policy. Examples of Chinese expansionism in the region are: the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC); Chinese troops occupying of parts of Kashmir and Arunachal Pradesh in India; Chinese control over major sources of Afghan mineral wealth; and the Chinese workers (as opposed to local ones) that are flooding into areas of CPEC activity.

  • Fifth, to stop Iranian expansion in the region. Iran is an open exporter of terror whose leaders have articulated a foreign policy that seeks the destruction of the United States of America, and its most critical ally, Israel. Iran has meddled in internal Afghan matters in an attempt to exploit Sunni-Shia divides, and Taliban terrorists fall right into their trap with attacks on Hazara and other Shiites. CPEC will make Pakistan a Chinese proxy, and its successful completion threatens to bring about an alliance between Iran and China. Gaining US aid and support requires that requests be cast in a compelling argument that shows how it will further one or more of the above priorities.

    Let’s take for example, several predominantly Muslim nationalities struggling for their rights— Pashtun, Baloch, and Sindhi. Umar Duad Khattak is a Pashtun activist from Khyber Pashtunkhwa. When he was eight years old, his father—a Taliban supporter—enrolled him in a madrassa where he spent ten years. In my book, What is Moderate Islam, he writes that radical Islam’s “current target… is to defeat nationalism among the Muslims who do not want to be merged into a global Islamic Caliphate.” Muslims like others have multiple elements to their identity—country, ethnic group, and religion among others. Radical Islam wants everything but Islam to be incidental in a Muslim’s identity; for Muslims to see themselves first to last as Muslim. Our efforts on behalf of Pashtun directly threaten what radicals want to impose on everyone else. Empowering these people and supporting them in their struggle is one of the most effective ways to defeat radical Islamists and their ideology of a supreme Muslim ummah; and presenting potential supporters with a plan that does so is likely to get a fair hearing. Do you see how that works?

    President Donald Trump has said that he wants to work with others to defeat our common enemies; to defend American interests without US troops or misguided attempts at nationbuilding. We are “not nation-building again,” he said. “We are killing terrorists.” He also has clarified tighter and better defined US expectations of the Afghan and Pakistani governments. The speech and recent US actions emphasized our priorities; and supporting a detailed plan for minority empowerment in both countries will further the aims of current US foreign policy.

    Americans have no desire to determine how South Asians rule themselves. We are not looking to do what European colonizers previously did in creating nations according to their interests. When the terrorists are defeated—and they will be so don’t be on the wrong side of a fight— and artificial states like Pakistan are re-constituted so justice applies equally to all peoples living there; what will this part of the world look like? What sort of political and geo-political structures will replace those currently in place? That is up to the peoples of South Asia, not the Europeans who threw together the current countries and drew maps that satisfied their interests.

    Thank you.

UNDERSTANDING US REACTIONS OF EVENTS IN SOUTH ASIA

(Originally published on the Afghanistan Diplomacy Studies Organization website, September 20, 2017)

Dr. Richard L. Benkin

Several years ago, I was at the United States (US) Congress, and after one meeting went to see a Congressman who was working with me on a human rights issue.  When I entered his outer office, I saw the Congressman’s Chief of Staff, sitting on the couch with a human rights activist who was showing her videos on his laptop.  The videos were heart wrenching:  victimized minorities crying and forlorn; their ransacked homes; scenes that I have seen close-up.  That, however, is not what the Congressman’s staff person was getting from it.  She and others on Capitol Hill see these tragedies all the time.  They were not unique, nothing she had not seen before; and now something that was taking her from duties that would help others.  As soon as she saw me enter the room, she looked up with plaintive eyes that cried, ‘please get me out of here.’  And she did use my entrance as an excuse to break away from the videos and escort me into the Congressman’s office.

I know the staff person.  She is not at all unfeeling.  Rather she is acutely aware of the plight of minorities, and has extended herself many times to help.  I also know the human rights activist.  He is a good man and someone who puts himself in danger constantly to save persecuted minorities.  He is effective in his home country; and the things he was showing were accurate, as was the point he wanted to make.  Unfortunately, he never got a chance to make that point effectively.  The reason was not any deficiency on his part or the lack of valid evidence.  The reason is that the Congressman and his staff did not see how this related to the US and why the activist was coming to him specifically.

Justice and human rights are indeed part of US foreign policy by law; and yes, the cause was a worthy one.  We must understand, however, that most US lawmakers receive requests for help from so many worthy causes; and since minorities face terrible treatment almost everywhere around the world, the sort of thing on the activist’s laptop was nothing new.  As much as many would like to do so, they cannot support all of them.  They have only so much time, psychic energy, and resources, and they must meet their commitments to the voting public and to the United States.   Why should they devote those limited resources to one cause rather than another?  What makes any particular cause compelling?

Making that case is critical, and if the cause is just, there are many ways to do that.  This article focuses on the most basic thing people need to know if they are to have any chance of success in getting US support:  What are US interests?  What are the immediate priorities (and opportunities)?  What concerns the American people?  And how might any particular cause relate to them?

For those of us championing South Asian issues, this is a most opportune time.  We are seeing a sea change in US foreign policy from that which dominated most of this century, and an especially sharp turn from that which characterized the past eight years.  Since 9/11, much of US foreign policy has been driven by the need to defeat radical Islam.  Yet despite the initial action in Afghanistan and the ongoing conflict there; most attention on radical Islam has been in the Middle East, most recently the military successes over and impending defeat of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS); the growing alliance of Sunni Muslim nations, often working with Israel to stop Iranian expansion; and the intricacies of the roles played by the United States and Russia in the region.

Increasingly, however, American policy-makers are recognizing that South Asia is the next important arena for this struggle.As I have said numerous times, though we will defeat ISIS and run them out of the Middle East, it already has found a welcoming home in South Asia.  Add to that, the rise of a friendly India, the decline of US-Pakistan relations, and China’s expansion in the region; and there are further opportunities to cast the issues we face in a context that advances American interests, as well.

If you are not an American, you might well ask, “Why should I care whether or not I further US interests?”

And there is no reason in and of itself.  If you want US officials to select your cause over others and US taxpayers to spend their hard-earned dollars on it, you have a very good reason to care.  So what are those interests and priorities, and how do they relate to South Asia?

  • First, to prevent Afghanistan and South Asia from again becoming terror havens that give shelter to our enemies and become places where they plan and launch attacks on the United States. This would be a return to pre-9/11 Afghanistan, home to the Taliban and Al Qaeda; to Mullah Mohammad Umar and Osama bin Laden. Americans have not forgotten that the attack on them was planned and prepared in Afghanistan, and its mastermind and terrorist leader was sheltered for years after the attack in Pakistan. There has not been any significant military action on the US homeland since the US Civil War in the mid-nineteenth century, and Americans want to keep it that way. Threats against the US posed by radical Islamists are unacceptable to Americans, and eliminating them is the number one priority in our foreign policy. Show how you can further that and you will get a serious hearing.

  • Second, to contain and defeat radical Islam; the open and active terrorists, and those who give them shelter, support, or ideological cover.This is not a battle against Islam, which is a religion that goes back 14 centuries. It is a war to defeat radical Islam, which is a political philosophy dating back less than two centuries. Being able to tell who represents one vs. the other is a critical component that victory. True Muslim allies represent the best in that quest to Americans, but we are getting better at not letting false “moderates”fool us into thinking they are our friends. The need to distinguish those who wish us ill from those who do not is the essence of my book <a href=”http://www.akshayaprakashan.com/index.php?p=sr&Uc=9788188643653”>What is Moderate Islam.

  • Third, to maintain some level of US influence in South Asia even after the withdrawal of NATO forces from Afghanistan. US influence is waning in Pakistan; growing in India. What about Afghanistan and the various peoples struggling to break free from Pakistani occupation?

  • Fourth, to stop Chinese expansion in the region, which has been proceeding slowly but consistently during the years of a less aggressive US foreign policy. Examples of Chinese expansionism in the region are: the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC); Chinese troops occupying of parts of Kashmir and Arunachal Pradesh in India; Chinese control over major sources of Afghan mineral wealth; and the Chinese workers (as opposed to local ones) that are flooding into areas of CPEC activity.

  • Fifth, to stop Iranian expansion in the region. Iran is an open exporter of terror whose leaders have articulated a foreign policy that seeks the destruction of the United States of America, and its most critical ally, Israel. Iran has meddled in internal Afghan matters in an attempt to exploit Sunni-Shia divides, and Taliban terrorists fall right into their trap with attacks on Hazara and other Shiites. CPEC will make Pakistan a Chinese proxy, and its successful completion threatens to bring about an alliance between Iran and China.

Gaining US aid and support requires that requests be cast in a compelling argument that shows how it will further one or more of the above priorities.

The people of Afghanistan and adjacent areas are positioned to make that case most effectively by supporting several of the currently suppressed national groups in the region. Umar Duad Khattak is a Pashtun activist from Khyber Pashtunkhwa.  When he was eight years old, his father—a Taliban supporter—enrolled him in a madrassa where he spent ten years.  In his contribution to What is Moderate Islam, he writes that radical Islam’s “current target… is to defeat nationalism among the Muslims who do not want to be merged into a global Islamic Caliphate.”  Muslims like others have multiple elements to their identity—country, ethnic group, and religion among others.  Radical Islam wants everything but Islam to be incidental in a Muslim’s identity; for Muslims to see themselves first to last as Muslim.  The efforts of predominantly Muslim South Asian peoples, struggling for independence from Islamic states like Pakistan and Iran—Baloch, Sindhi, Pashtun, and others—are a direct threat to the ethic radicals want to impose on everyone else.  Empowering these peoples and supporting them in their struggle is one of the most effective ways to defeat radical Islamists and their ideology of a supreme Muslim ummah; and presenting potential supporters with a plan that does so is likely to get a fair hearing.

From the early days of his campaign for President through his current foreign policy as President, Donald Trump’s has said that he wants to work with others to defeat our common enemies; to defend American interests without US troops or misguided attempts at nation-building.  Even while announcing a small increase in US troops in Afghanistan recently, Trump declared that we are “not nation-building again… we are killing terrorists.”  He also has clarified tighter and better defined US expectations of the Afghan and Pakistani governments.  The speech and recent US actions emphasized our priorities; and supporting a detailed plan for minority empowerment in both countries will further the aims of current US foreign policy.
Americans have no desire to determine how South Asians rule themselves.  We are not looking to do what European colonizers previously did in creating nations according to their interests.  When the terrorists are defeated—and they will be so don’t be on the wrong side of a fight—and polyglot states like Pakistan are re-constituted so justice applies equally to all peoples living there; what will this part of the world look like?  What sort of political and geo-political structures will replace those currently in place?  That is up to the peoples of South Asia, not the Europeans who threw together the current countries and drew maps that satisfied their interests.

Dr. Richard L. Benkin (twitter: @drrbenkin) is an American human rights activists with strong ties in Washington. His latest book, What is Moderate Islam is available at http://www.akshayaprakashan.com/index.php?p=sr&Uc=9788188643653.  To contact him for speeches, meetings, or about his services, email him at drrbenkin@comcast.net.

WHY SHOULD THE US PAY ATTENTION TO BALOCHISTAN?

(Originally published on the now defunct Balochistan Project website, April 17, 2017)

IN AN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW DR. RICHARD BENKIN SHARED HIS VIEWS WITH SHAURYA RITWIK , MANAGING EDITOR, THE CHARTICLE ON HIS LATEST PUBLISHED BOOK WHAT IS MODERATE ISLAM?, RADICAL ISLAMIC TERRORISM, DONAL TRUMP ADMINISTRATION, HIS ROLE IN ADVOCACY OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN BANGLADESH AND A LOT MORE.

Dr. Richard L. Benkin, President of The Balochistan Project

During his campaign for the American Presidency, Donald Trump often said that once in the White House, he would help bring about improved relations with Russia. This was such an important theme, that his adversaries still allege that the government of Russian Premier Vladimir Putin worked to help him win the election. Just as frequently, Trump called out China as perhaps the greatest foe of the United States: a “currency manipulator” and a military expansionist. Events in April, however, seem to have turned things on their head. President Trump has said of late that US-Russia relations might be at an “all time low,” and on April 12 said that “Right now we’re not getting along with Russia at all.”

The week before, at the same time that U.S. cruise missiles were raining down on Russian ally Syria, the President was hosting Chinese President Xi Jinping and talking about the start of a “very, very great relationship.” The following week, China threatened the North Koreans with “unprecedented ferocity” if they went ahead with a planned nuclear test. Though the North Koreans showed off their military hardware on its most important national holiday (the birth founder Kim Il Sung), they nonetheless refrained from the test.

This does not mean that Donald Trump now “hates” the Russians and sees the Chinese as allies. To conclude as much would be naïve and miss the very nature of this American President. What it does signal is that Donald Trump will not be locked into any positions. Rather, he will continue to evolve as events do and assess them through a single prism of what he believes is best for the United States. He is willing to change as that assessment does.

And he can find support for his America First agenda in Balochistan.

The occupied nation of Balochistan straddles Pakistan and Iran; two nations that are high on his enemies list and occupy key geo-political positions. Iran is the foremost exporter of radical Islamist terror; and Pakistan for years has been taking U.S. money meant to fight that terror and using it instead to attack India and its own minorities, including the Baloch. Iran likes to pose as a nation united by the mullahs, however it is rife with divisions and ripe for revolution. Iran is only about 40 percent Persian, and much of the remaining 60 percent is composed of restive minorities, including the Baloch. How well could they concentrate on foreign adventures and supporting terror attacks if Iran was facing wholesale revolt by its minorities?

Returning to the United States-Russia-China ménage-a-trois, a passive and quiet Balochistan is critical if China is to complete its western expansion through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). CPEC also cuts off the Russians from access to South Asia, especially with traditional ally India now ruled by a conservative and effective Prime Minister in Narendra Modi. Pakistani planners also expect that once completed, CPEC will relieve their nation of any dependence on U.S. largesse; and that will curtail U.S. influence in the region.

Finally, the Baloch are living proof that an uncompromising fight against terrorist groups like ISIS and Al Qaeda is consistent with the sentiments of many Muslims—a message that will resonate worldwide and elevate the image of both the United States President and the Baloch; a message that the Western World has been dying to see in action perhaps above all others.

As President of The Balochistan Project, I urge President Trump to meet us, work with us. It will be clear that supporting the national aspirations of the Baloch is at the same time supporting the advance of freedom and prosperity worldwide.

BREXIT AT BAY

(Originally published in the American Thinker, January 25, 2017 )

Richard L. Benkin

The expressed will of the voters in the United Kingdom has been put on hold. On June 23, 2016, the British people stunned experts and the political establishment when they voted to leave the European Union, an act popularly dubbed Brexit. At the time, thencandidate Donald Trump praised it and said the British people “took their country back.” Many commentators, in fact, have seen the same popular revolution in both the Trump and Brexit victories. On January 24, 2017, however, the British Supreme Court told the people, in effect, “Not so fast!” Before the prime minister can “trigger Article 50” of the Treaty on European Union that would start the “Brexit” process and take the United Kingdom out of the European Union, it said, the raucous and divided Parliament must vote to let it happen. Evidently, in Britain, the will of the people is not enough. As David Davis, the Brexit minister, reminded Parliament after the ruling, that very body voted to put it in the hands of the people by a vote of six to one. More evidence? Gina Miller, the investment manager who was the lead claimant in the case, said, “Only Parliament can grant rights to the British people and only parliament can take them away”. The sentiment that the government “gives” the people rights is alien to American thinking, and the thought that government can take rights away from the people is just plain frightening. Evidently, even our very special friend does not believe that the will of the people is supreme – something we need to remember and make sure we do not blithely accept for ourselves