Pipes Doesn't Pander
by Katherine Mangu-Ward
Weekly Standard
August 22, 2003
http://www.danielpipes.org/article/1217
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/003/043ggnhm.asp
DANIEL PIPES, a prominent scholar of Islam and Middle East
politics, is giving the administration heartburn, but he'll have
a seat on the board of the
U.S. Institute of Peace before
the Senate gets back after Labor Day.
After the White House announced Pipes's nomination to the
Institute of Peace, it was surprised to find that, in addition
to the expected full-throated opposition from Democrats (most
notably Ted Kennedy, Tom Harkin, and Chris Dodd), several
Republicans threatened to flake out on the confirmation vote.
This prompted the administration's decision to install Pipes
during the August recess in order to circumvent the Senate.
Pipes's refusal to back away from radical positions has
earned him a respectable cast of enemies. First among them is
the
Council on American Islamic Relations,
a Muslim advocacy group which has expressed support for
terrorists. Kennedy, Harkin, Dodd, and others (not a bad list of
enemies in their own right) have signed on to CAIR's
efforts to block the
appointment.
Fortunately, Pipes enjoys strong support from Karl Rove,
Elliott Abrams, and Condoleezza Rice--he even got the nod from
Colin Powell. He is undoubtedly "controversial," as opponents of
his appointment claim, and even administration officials
acknowledge that "he goes overboard occasionally."
But the White House will stick with Pipes, even though the
appointment process has been difficult. Muslim advocates and
lefty Democrats have done their share to make trouble, but Pipes
isn't going out of his way to make the process easier--or to
guarantee the administration's continued support.
"When it comes to the Saudi-American relationship, the White
House should be called the 'White Tent'," wrote Pipes in the
Winter 2002/2003 issue of the National Interest.
Two weeks ago, Pipes wrote in the Jerusalem Post: "Two of [CAIR's]
former employees, Bassem Khafagi and Ismail Royer, have recently
been arrested on charges related to terrorism . . . Despite this
ugly record, the U.S. government widely accepts CAIR as
representing Islam. Nationally, the White House invites it to
functions."
In fact, Pipes regularly impugns the White House's guest
lists. In November 2002 he wrote: "The White House would not
consider inviting Baghdad's apologists to festive functions. But
it welcomed many of militant Islam's sympathizers at a Ramadan
dinner hosted by the president earlier this month."
So why would the White House go to all this trouble for
someone who hasn't been particularly friendly?
Pipes has often hinted, suggested, and even said outright
that the Bush administration is overly beholden to Muslims and
the interest groups that claim to represent them. His
appointment to the U.S. Institute of Peace over serious
opposition from those very groups, and in the face of his
refusal to moderate his message, speaks volumes about just how
little pandering the administration is planning on in the near
future.