As Pakistani journalist Umer Farooq observed, “The War In Gaza Is Changing The Muslim World”—and not in a good way. There is a widespread anger, he argues, that “will boost fundamentalist tendencies in Muslim societies,” and perhaps incubate new terrorist groups.
Why this outrage? Because millions of people are watching the horrific scenes from Gaza every single day—often on live television. Whole neighborhoods are bombed, with the dead bodies of babies and children protruding from the rubble. Innocent civilians are shot to death, even in the relatively calmer West Bank. Local health authorities report that more than 28,000 Palestinians have been killed so far, most of them women and children; 90 percent of Gazans have been displaced from their homes, and they are at the brink of starvation and disease.
Many Muslims then look at what Western leaders, such as U.S. President Joe Biden, are saying about all this. All that they hear is about Israel’s right to defend itself. All they see are more U.S. dollars and weapons being granted to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right government to continue the campaign.
Of course, Israel has a right to defend itself, as any fair-minded observer would accept. Any country has that right against terrorists that target its innocent civilians. But why would a so-called war on terror that kills dozens of times more innocent civilians than terrorism itself be legitimate? How can a horrific death rate, worse any other conflict in recent history, along with the widespread deprivation of food, water, and medicine, be excused as collateral damage? The brutal battle to dislodge the Islamic State from Mosul, Iraq—another densely populated city—killed far fewer civilians.
To many people, especially in the Muslim world, the answer seems to be that Israeli lives matter more, much more, than Palestinian lives.
And that comes across as a historic denial of the liberal values that Western governments have championed since the end of World War II: universal human rights and the inherent dignity of all human life. Some would say that these lofty ideals were never fully pursued, as national interests, alliances, and hypocrisy often led to double standards.
But past examples—such as U.S. support for friendly Arab dictators, or CIA-backed coups in Iran or elsewhere—were hardly ever this blatant or so in-your-face.
THE LOSS OF FAITH IN WESTERN NORMS is not just affecting those already inclined to be anti-American or critical of the Western-led order. Among them are liberal-leaning Muslims who have long admired the political values of the West and often pointed to them, but now feel that the standard-bearer has betrayed its own principles. One of them is Turkish journalist Nihal Bengisu Karaca, who wrote a sad piece on “the suicide of the West.”
“From now on, on this side of the world,” she asked, “Who can refer to ‘global values,’ ‘Western liberal democracies’… Who would listen to them?”
Another liberal Muslim lamenting “the West’s credibility crisis” is Pakistani diplomat Hina Rabbani Khar, who was hailed globally in 2011 as the nation’s first female foreign affairs minister. “I believe that the West has much to celebrate in its human rights and development records,” she wrote in Al Jazeera in January, only to add: “But I also know that the West has shown glaring disregard for these principles outside of its own geography.” She then issued a warning: “Washington’s stance today would not only undermine efforts to promote it as the only reliable world power, but would also sabotage its ability to play the role of a peace builder in the future.”
Others are even more repelled by the West, renouncing it categorically. A dramatic example was a message posted by a Mauritanian professor of philosophy, Al-Mustafa ould Klaib, which reportedly went viral on Arab social media. “I have become ashamed before my students whom I have taught, over decades, the Enlightenment and modern Western philosophies,” the professor wrote. He apologized for “glorifying” Western notions like “humanism,” “progress,” and “liberty,” only to add: “The West is the biggest lie history has known.”
Among American Muslims, too, most of whom appreciate the liberties and opportunities they have enjoyed in the United States, the carnage in Gaza, with Washington’s backing, has created an unprecedented disappointment. The popular feeling was expressed by the prominent Imam Omar Suleiman, who, outraged by the images of children killed in Gaza, declared, “any semblance of international law or standard for humanity is dead.” To those who usually pontificate about them, he added: “Don’t ever lecture us on morality again. Your hearts are dead.”