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Chris Seiple Doha Speech - The Institute for Global Engagement

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Give Religion its Legitimate Seat at the International Relations TableBecause it is so difficult to grasp the role that religion plays from a personal perspective, ouranalytic thinking suffers. Too many international relations experts worship at the wailing wall of“church-state separation”—often ignoring religion altogether—to their own detriment and thepeople they advise. A kind of secular “fundamentalism” in our government has prevented religionfrom having its legitimate seat at the table of international relations.In April 2003, be<strong>for</strong>e U.S. interagency teams went into Iraq to advise the various Iraqi ministries,there was debate about what to do with the “Ministry <strong>for</strong> Religion.” One official simply stated: “Wedon’t do religion.” As a result, when the leader of Iraq’s Shi’a majority issued a religious edict inJune 2003 regarding American plans <strong>for</strong> elections, it was ignored. By November, however,Ambassador Paul Bremer was called home <strong>for</strong> emergency consultations because the U.S. plan wasnot working. <strong>The</strong> American leaders had finally realized that they had to find a way to incorporatethe Shi’a leader and the 60 percent of the population that he represented.We must find a way to bring together people who operate at the intersection of religion andrealpolitik and invest in them. <strong>The</strong>se “bilingual” ambassadors exist; and we need them more thanever be<strong>for</strong>e.Only Good <strong>The</strong>ology Overcomes Bad <strong>The</strong>ologyOver the past four-plus years, we have responded to 9/11 in two ways. First, we have definedsecurity in a defensive manner, focusing on gates, guns and guards. Natural enough after suffering ahorrific attack, the explicit purpose has been keeping “them” out and “us” protected. Second, wehave asked ourselves why “they” hate us. Our response here has been to yell louder, over the wallswe have built, explaining why we are such good people—just ask us!<strong>The</strong> problem with this approach, however, is that it remains about us. We have made no sustainedef<strong>for</strong>t to understand “them.” If we cannot begin to grasp the general Muslim worldview—includingits historical and cultural manifestations in particular places around the world—then we will neverbe able to communicate.In order to communicate, we must understand that the Muslim worldview is inherently rooted in“theology.” (This is a <strong>Chris</strong>tian term, but I use it to communicate the simple idea that Muslims thinkabout and study God as much as <strong>Chris</strong>tians.) Islam is, of course, on the agenda of every securityexpert, but almost always in a way that is limited to the ideological dimensions of militant Islam. Ifwe treat it only as an ideology, we will continue to swat at symptomatic flies and not deal with thereal issues.We must understand the theology behind Islam if we are to appropriately come alongside thosegood Muslims who are battling <strong>for</strong> the soul of Islam. This is where the so-called “war of ideas” willbe won. For starters, we need anthropologists and theologians at the National Security Council, theState Department, and the Department of Defense.We’d Better Learn to Speak Abrahamic<strong>The</strong> children of Abraham have something in common: a God-based worldview. While there areobvious differences, some of them irreconcilable, this God-based worldview does include commonconcepts of Justice and Mercy. Moreover, this worldview’s bedrock belief that we are each made inthe image of our Creator provides a firm foundation <strong>for</strong> the concept of universal and equal humandignity. As a result, international experts who take their faith seriously are better able to discuss thecommon problem of militant Islam.

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