11 Nov 2009
Rebecca Bynum
Somehow I don't think option "c" (obtain a rock-solid fatwa declaring that the Muslim enemies of the US are not true Muslims at all, so they can lawfully be killed) is realistic. Option "a" looks better to me, but is not realistic in our current climate either.
11 Nov 2009
Artemis
"Major Hasan was right to present this material in the context of psychiatric care of soldiers. It is tragic that his superiors apparently did not take his message seriously."
I'm sure they had no comprehension of how a presentation of mainstream Islamic beliefs was in any way related to the psychiatric health of (Muslim) soldiers.
If Hasan had presented the viewpoint of Quakers or other pacifists, it might have made some sense to his superiors. We accept that some religions are more pacifist than mainstream Christianity; we don't accept that some religions are more warlike. Hasan was clearly saying, "As a Muslim, I am commanded by my Allah to kill you (non-Muslim soldiers)". They didn't know how to process that information. The cognitive dissonance caused them to disregard the presentation, and to treat it as if it were inappropriate to talk about religion when dealing with mental health issues.
Hasan's statements about Islam were noted when he was assigned to Walter Reed. His superiors were unsettled by his statements, but felt that to punish him or report him would be religious bigotry on their part. So, instead their criticism found an outlet by ascribing his statements to "mental illness." They could not criticise him for being a devout Muslim, so they criticised him for being "schizoid," to use their verbage. "Schizoid," not "schizophrenic." No one has yet offered the slightest evidence that Hasan was actually diagnosed with schizophrenia. Their use of the slang term "schizoid" is meant to infer general mental illness, since they know they cannot use the medical term "schizophrenia."
In fact, Hasan shows no signs of actual mental illness. It is simply that his religious statements could not be processed by his superiors. They "know" that Islam is the Religion of Peace; Hasan was talking about jihad and a religious obligation to kill non-Muslims, ergo Hasan must be mentally ill.
Even following Hasan's attack, the military and the government are floundering with how to handle men like Hasan; calm, rational, devoutly religious Muslims who understand that their religion demands them to kill and be killed in the struggle to spread Allah's dominion over all people for all time.
Denial and reference to "mental illness" are inadequate responses. Major Hasan was not the first Muslim U.S. soldier to kill his fellow soldiers, and he will not be the last.
12 Nov 2009
Mark Durie
Option (c) is not so odd-ball as it might seem. When Muslim groups fight each other - as they have been known to do - this is normally the way it works. For example in the Iraq-Iran war, the Iraqis said the Iranians weren't true Muslims, and vice versa. Likewise for Shi'ite-Sunni conflicts in Iraq today.