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You would never guess it from the hatred it inspired, but only 4 per cent of Hebdo covers featured Islam. The satirists’ stock targets were the French National Front and the Catholic Church. But, as Fourest says, how could Hebdo use a cover picture of the Pope when Islamists were threatening to impose religious law in Libya, Tunisia and Egypt, or were beheading people in Syria? And, she might have also asked, where lay the bravery in savaging the beliefs of Catholics who would not  murder you or anyone else while giving a pass to Islamists who would do both?

The cartoons themselves were mild by the savage standards of French satire. To take one example, intellectuals and journalists said during the Arab Spring that there was no need to worry because “moderate Islamists” would come to the fore. Charlie Hebdo replied by asking what moderate Sharia would look like: stoning to death using fair-trade rocks? A religious law authorising homosexuality but forcing gays to wear the veil? For that, its offices were firebombed.

Although Fourest has many criticisms of French intellectuals, she reserves a special scorn for Anglo-Saxon journalists. Fourest describes an encounter between her friend and ally Fiammetta Venner and a “particularly vehement” BBC presenter. The BBC man damned her for failing to respect the taboo on producing likenesses of Muhammad. Venner replied that if he was so keen on respecting everything that is prohibited by Islam then he should also remove all the crucifixes and pictures of Jesus in churches in England, given that Jesus is also considered a prophet of Islam and that according to the Koran the crucifixion never took place. “The presenter thought he’d found the way to keep the peace, namely by respecting the taboos of each community. There was just one detail he had forgotten: the beliefs of some are nearly always considered blasphemous by others.”

After the November attacks on Paris, I doubt that these attitudes can continue. Europe’s free pass from the global terror wars feels as if it has reached its expiry date. It is impossible to see the future, but the relative peace that produced appeasement has been broken twice in Paris alone in 2015. If the assaults continue, we should look back on the years after 9/11 with some shame. Western countries fought radical Islamists with the most advanced weapons systems the human race has invented. They broke human rights law and the rules of war with a prison camp at Guantánamo Bay. They engaged in torture to an extent that even hardened observers found shocking. But they would not fight the religious ideas that inspired their enemies for fear of seeming insensitive, Islamophobic or racist.

To duck arguments while starting wars was the most extraordinary inversion of priorities. Instead of encouraging Muslims to break with extremism, we left liberal Muslims and ex-Muslims isolated. We adopted the language of the extremists, and censored the very arguments they needed to use against fundamentalism. Instead of damning religious totalitarianism, we invented rationales that obscured rather than enlightened.

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Mahmoud
December 27th, 2015
3:12 AM
As an ex-Muslim I can't agree more. we need more of such articles to try to awake those deluded liberals. I can't stand articles in the Guardian, Foreign policy or the daily beast anymore.

tindog13
December 26th, 2015
3:12 PM
Ooh, can't go along with that, he said nothing of the sort... that is grievously spinning someone else's words to bolster a different agenda. He said only what he said... that one attack was a specific reaction to a perceived blasphemous insult; the other was without specific provocation, random murder for terror's sake. Wow, it wouldn't even help to watch what you say anymore, you can speak clearly and still people will twist your words.

P.S.
December 23rd, 2015
12:12 PM
Dear Mr Nick Cohen, You define liberalism as abhorring any kind of prejudice. If so, this also includes the prejudice caused by vulgar drawings who offer no true criticism, to religious believers who ask for nothing more then to be left in peace. You seem th think that all those who disapprove of Charlie Hebdo's drawings and find them offensive to themselves or to others necessarily condone, or at least find excuses to, the killing of their journalists. Do you also believe all those who criticize the American policies approve the 9/11 attacks?

Anonymous
December 21st, 2015
9:12 PM
I'm still confused, I'm afraid. What is a Muslim, but a practiser of Islam? Anyone who stops practising Islam stops being a Muslim. If we talk 'semantics' therefore, Islamophobia is actually tantamount to Muslimophobia. Islamofascism however, is a different kettle of fish and those who practise this creed (and who are subset of those who practise Islam) rightly deserve our opprobrium.

craggy
December 21st, 2015
10:12 AM
Like Nick Cohen, I'm very worried about the compatibility of Islam with liberal democracy and about the regressive left's blindness to Islam's political and fascistic tendencies. However, similarly to Martin S above, I don't believe Kerry was legitimizing the Hebdo attacks. Rather, I think he was trying to draw a distinction between an attack targeting cartoonists thought to have committed a blasphempous act (ie drawing Mo) and an indiscriminate attack such as that on Nov 13th against people who've done nothing more than live in a country opposed by ISIS/Daesh.

John L
December 20th, 2015
10:12 PM
Nick Cohen makes valid points but his obvious priority is polemic against John Kerry and liberals in general. Kerry may have bungled the wording and syntax but the point he was trying to make is valid: the sympathizers of the Charly Hebdo attackers try to hide their murderous nature of this heinous crime behind the "sanctity" of their religion, a specious argument indeed. There is no such figleaf for indiscriminate killers of spectators at soccer games or at a theater performance. There is no justification for the former but our response to the Charly Hebdo killings has to include first and foremost a clear condemnation of any sort of "sanctity" of "feelings" - religious or otherwise - that supposedely trumps freedom of speech. It is not only islamists who want to impose their "taboos" on all of us. Given the opportunity all narrow minded fanatics of one creed or another will. Cohen is right when he critizes the knee jerk reaction to the noisily and violently expressed "religious sensibilities" of many adherents of Islam but he squanders what could have been a call to stiffen our spines in defense of a free and open society on personal attacks on John Kerry. After reading this article I wonder whose head is the empty one.

Charlie2015
December 20th, 2015
1:12 PM
Stop paying your licence fee and spend it on this instead: http://www.amazon.co.uk/praise-blasphemy-Charlie-islamophobic-fran%C3%A7...

Jack Shepherd
December 20th, 2015
11:12 AM
Western civilisation will either rise or sink to the occasion. At the moment, it looks like it's sinking but you never know, do you?

observer
December 19th, 2015
3:12 PM
GoJebus says that Trump is popular in America and Le Pen in France because of the failure of jelly-mould liberal politicians and a spineless media. Yet when the French electorate had their chance they chose not to support Le Pen. They opted instead for the cowardly, play-safe choice of more of the same. Perhaps they were horrified at the prospect of being considered "fascist" (that catch-all term of abuse for anyone who goes against the prevailing lib/left ethos). A society that thinks "true courage" is to engage in a relentless round of self-criticism while its enemies gather at the gates has the cultural and political leaders it deserves.

Neil Rose
December 19th, 2015
1:12 PM
What does Cohen actually want? NATO has already killed millions of Muslims over the last 25 years and laid waste to most of the middle east, whilst mainly targeting and eviscerating all secular Arab political institutions. What has been the result? and the campaign continues. So Liberals, a meaningless term of abuse these days anyway, are responsible for preventing the military from killing the right people? prevented Israel from slaughtering Palestinians, from drone attacks that have killed at least 3000 people in Pakistan and elsewhere. Prevented Muslims being the most hated minority in the UK. It must be really frustrating but most people don't hate Muslims even though hate mongers in the press and the establishment do their worst to try and inculcate hatred amongst people. Well Cohen you have failed.

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