President Bush agrees. He has nominated Daniel Pipes to the board of directors of the United States Institute of Peace. Yet Pipes's nomination is being strenuously opposed by some Muslim Americans, who claim that Pipes is an "Islamophobe." That opposition is an attempt to discredit Pipes, thus effectively silencing one of the most powerful and knowledgeable voices for the energetic prosecution, at home and abroad, of the war against terror. This must not be allowed to happen. Now, Gerard Alexander, a professor of political science at the University of Virginia, with no special connection to Pipes, has circulated a petition in support of Pipes's nomination to the USIP. The petition has been signed by a number of eminent figures, including former U.N. ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick, military historian Sir John Keegan, and prominent scholars like James Q. Wilson, Harvard's Harvey Mansfield, Yale's Donald Kagan, and Cornell's Jeremy Rabkin. Most impressively, even some prominent figures who frequently disagree with Pipes have signed the statement in support of his nomination. These include the New Republic's Martin Peretz, Johns Hopkins University professor Fouad Ajami, and Yale's Paul Kennedy. The charges of anti-Muslim bigotry against Pipes, say the signers, are "systematically inaccurate and inappropriate:"
You can also find an account of the battle over Pipes's nomination, and a long series of testimonials on his behalf from public writers (myself included) at Frontpage magazine. Given the depth and eminence of this support, should the Pipes nomination be rejected, it would have very serious consequences for our public debates over the war on terror. If someone like Pipes, who has achieved this much prominence and respect, is unable to successfully serve our government, it could have a chilling effect on frank public discussion of the key issues in the battle against foreign and domestic terrorism. Congress must not allow that to happen. It must approve the nomination of Daniel Pipes to the United States Institute of Peace. Hearings on the Pipes nomination will be held Wednesday, July 23, by the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee. A website has been created to support the Pipes nomination. And you can find information on how to write a letter to the members of the committee here. Stanley Kurtz is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. |
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http://www.nationalreview.com/kurtz/kurtz072203.asp
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