Trump is merely extrapolating from Bush’s policies, and keeping his voter base happy.

Donald Trump is the best president for the Muslim world

Bush was a far more menacing threat to Muslims than Trump;he carried out not one but two wars against Muslim countries

Faiza Iqbal February 25, 2018
Donald Trump wins no awards for decorum or propriety. He is undoubtedly odious, temperamental and has an incredibly fragile ego as evinced from his continued Twitter spats. In no way do I endorse Trump as a good president, because he has bullied, intimidated and lied his way towards winning the most coveted and powerful seat in the world. However, despite it all, I still think he is the best president for the Muslim world. 

Why? Because he has singlehandedly jolted Muslims from a stupor that has plagued our countries for long. We have played the victim card to America’s ills for far too long, without even glancing at the self-made problems which exist closer to home. Consider George W Bush, who was a far more menacing threat to Muslims than Trump. He carried out not one but two wars against Muslim countries, with one of the wars being conducted entirely under false pretences.

When Trump declared his infamous Muslim ban as part of his election manifesto, Muslims throughout the world were in uproar about it, purely because it was seen as Islamophobic, xenophobic and quite pointless in the fight against terrorism. However, in December 2017, Christian worshippers were torn to shreds by a suicide bomber in Quetta simply for believing in a different religion. Where was the outrage then? This is not even the first incident to occur against Christians living in Muslim lands. There have been numerous bombings at churches where Christianity and Islam coincide, namely against Coptic Christians living in Egypt. Critics could argue that similar ‘bombings’ have happened in Muslim mosques in western countries, but those have been instigated by disgruntled individuals on a much smaller scale, and punishment is always meted out to the perpetrator.

Similarly, when Trump blamed mental health as the cause of gun crime in America, critics stated that his eerie silence against “white” terrorism was hypocritical. However, Ahmadis, Shias, Hindus and Christians are killed on a daily basis throughout the Muslim world and no one bats an eyelid or causes such uproar. What about Mashal Khan? A Muslim man who was killed by his fellow Muslims because of alleged and unproven ‘blasphemy’? Poverty or illiteracy cannot be blamed for his horrific death, because those who murdered Mashal were university students. Will his death, or Salman Taseer’s, make any difference in our psyche? Will we recognise Ahmadis as human beings worthy of kindness and acceptance?

Recently, Trump made the incredibly incendiary decision to declare Jerusalem as the Israeli capital, thereby undoing years of supposedly neutral American foreign policy with regards to the Middle Eastern conflict.  This was, unsurprisingly, met with much resistance both from Palestinians and the United Nations General Assembly. However, the Muslim world has been shockingly quiet about the on-going war Saudi Arabia has been waging in Yemen. While Yemen is on the brink of collapse and emaciated children are being denied the basics of life, Mohammad bin Salman is adamant that Houthi rebels must be taught a lesson.

Trump has also signed an executive order to not shut down Guantanamo Bay, which is a detention camp for suspected terrorists that Bush opened during his tenure. It has been a highly contentious issue amongst human rights organisations, who argue that inhumane treatment is meted out to the individuals who reside therein. Obama promised to close down the detention centre, but wholly failed to do so. Trump is merely extrapolating from Bush’s policies, and keeping his voter base happy. If Bush hadn’t instigated the building of this camp, it would never need to be extended by Trump today.

We all know Trump is a buffoon, but his scathing anti-Muslim sentiment has given me time to reflect and think about our behaviour as a community. Corruption, sexual harassment, honour killings, female genital mutilation (FGM), sectarian violence and blasphemy-related killings are widespread in our cleansed and godly societies, and yet our criticism of western values is scathing and omnipresent.

Let’s also not forget that Trump has not initiated a war against any Muslim country, he has merely denied entry to the US from certain Muslim countries. Bush went to war in Iraq on the pretence that there were weapons of mass destruction which could imminently destroy the West, but this turned out to be completely false. Instead, millions of men, women and children were killed in a senseless war that decimated Iraq’s economy and drowned it in years of sectarian killings, a war that created space for the formation of the Islamic State (IS).

While Iraq is still struggling to recover from the scars of over a decade of war, Afghanistan hasn’t fared any better. The Taliban are back in action despite years of American attempts to ‘free’ Afghanistan from their barbarous rule. A recent bombing in an ambulance killed more than a 100 people, proving that the war is not abetting anytime soon.

Introspection is a very valuable skill to have and it is something we sorely lack. We can no longer blame Trump or his country for the woes of our own. Trump is full of hot air, and not in any way an insidious threat as perceived by the Muslim world. As a society, our unhealthy obsession with conspiracy theories is putting blinders on our perspectives and clouding our judgment. It is time we clear the fog and try to mend our fractious communities for the better to get some respite from Trump and terrorists alike; otherwise we will drown in religious anarchy.
WRITTEN BY:
Faiza Iqbal A law graduate from King's College, London Nottingham Law School. Having worked at Mandviwalla & Zafar as an Associate, she now writes freelance articles and is trying to qualify as a barrister in Canada.
The views expressed by the writer and the reader comments do not necassarily reflect the views and policies of the Express Tribune.

COMMENTS (27)

abhi | 6 years ago | Reply I think once the the overdependence on oil finishes terrorism will also die down.
F. Khan | 6 years ago | Reply I think the writer has very strong observations and reflected the true picture of prevailing circumstance in Pakistan. Citizens trying to kill citizens in the name of religion. False accusations, trumped up charges, blasphemy law and its misuse, courts and politicians fighting, corruption at its highest level, killings, rape, forced conversations, kidnapping and forcibly marrying minority girls, political turmoil and Uno e all zero national spirit. How can a nation succeed? Right-wing clerics bringing cities to standstill, one coming from Canada and threatening. This is the state of the nation. Those in the government looting, those left looted and those hungry wolves trying to get power to loot more. Still you do not understand, digging the grave of the country every day.
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