By N. M. Guariglia
PajamasMedia.com
March 12, 2011
There is one silver lining to the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood in  Egypt: it will eventually force the United States to adopt an  international policy on Islam itself. Given his Cairo speech  in 2009, littered with historical inaccuracies and undue politically  correct praise of Islam, we shouldn’t expect President Obama to take  upon himself this task.  Perhaps another statesman will.  But that it  must be done — alas, ten years after 9/11 — is no longer a matter of  debate.
The national discourse is petty. Policymakers talk as though the  problem were merely 500 terrorists cave-hopping around Waziristan. This  is not so. The issue is societal. Europe is on the precipice of cultural  implosion. The issue is also imminent. The entire Persian Gulf and Arab  Levant is up for grabs. Atomic bombs are in question. Radical Islamists  have entrenched themselves in the West’s political mainstream — even  into the U.S. government. For decades, the Muslim Brotherhood has had  more power within the United States than in Egypt.

 
 
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