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Richard Purser Harper's Surprise
Written by Richard Purser   
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“People cannot take the Prophet Muhammad as a joke and defame him like this, and many people said they would kill people who defame Muhammad in that way – they are after Danish people, they are after Norwegian people ... and they’re asking me my nationality, they’re asking every foreigner in the crowd their nationality, and being Canadian it was very good, it was a very very intense and enraged crowd.... They were very aware that it was the Danish press who printed it, and they’re very aware of which countries are printing it and which aren’t. Being Canadian was pretty much a lifesaver here.... I’m not a target.”

Those were the breathless words of an obviously frightened CBC Radio reporter, Spencer Osberg, as he covered a rioting mob attacking the Danish Embassy in Beirut on Feb. 5. His closing words underscore the wisdom of Canada’s ‘mainstream’ media – the television networks, the big-city daily newspapers and general-circulation magazines like Maclean’s – in not reproducing the notorious cartoons first published last September 30 in Jyllands-Posten, Denmark’s largest newspaper.

But let’s face it – the violent reaction in parts of the Muslim world was staged and orchestrated. Radical imams from Denmark traipsed around the Middle East in November and December for the purpose of agitation, bearing with them not only the actual cartoons but far more offensive ones – sexually offensive ones – of their own devising.

The whole dust-up is of course a reflection of our times. Five years ago, the often outrageous television cartoon show ‘South Park’ violated the Muslim shibboleth against portraying the visage of the Prophet, without any fuss resulting. But post- 9/11, when it became obvious that an element of Islam was dedicated to the death of Western civilization, everything has changed. The West, led by its principal target nation, the US, had to take on the perpetrator, Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda, in its lair – which happened to be in Afghanistan, where the ultra-extremist Taliban regime of the Mullah Omar had given it refuge.

It has since been the task of this violent element of Islam – an element described by president George Bush as having “hijacked” a great religion – to portray the war on Islamic terrorism as a war against Islam itself. This story has sold alarmingly well among peoples so often downtrodden by their own regimes and feeling left out of the modern world. The Omar tyranny was overthrown and the Taliban and al-Qaeda dispersed into internal and external exile. A new, anti-terrorist government was installed and a parliament elected, but that government’s hold on an impoverished country of tribal fiefdoms and warlords is tenuous. Some inhabitants long for the state of order that the Taliban imposed, just as some people in the former Soviet Union pine for Stalin.

Canada has been involved in Afghanistan from early on – remember the deaths of four Canadian soldiers by ‘friendly fire’ on May 17, 2002? But our role has taken on new significance as our troops’ venue has shifted from the relative security of the capital, Kabul, to Kandahar 480 kilometres to the southwest. This is dangerous, Taliban-infested country. There have already been casualties; notable incidents include the death of Canadian diplomat Glyn Berry on January 15 in the suicide-bombing of the military convoy in which he was travelling, and the axe attack at a village meeting on March 4 that resulted in grave head injuries to Lt Trevor Greene. And there was the unfortunate death of a local on March 15, when a passenger in a Kandahar taxi that got too close was shot and killed by a Canadian soldier fearing a suicide-bomb attack.

The Americans are used to these sorts of things in Iraq, and Canadians will have to get used to them in Afghanistan. We are part of a multinational effort to help the Kabul government build a better country and prevent it from slipping back into a terrorist-supporting regime. This is going to need the best morale that Canada can muster, and Prime Minister Stephen Harper made an outstanding contribution with his surprise visit to the troops on March 12-14. After that display of support, he can never let his new government become known as one that let down the troops.