Leader says Islam is inferior to West
Gaffe threatens fragile alliance
By Uli Schmetzer, Tribune foreign correspondent. Tribune news services
contributed to this report
September 28, 2001
ROME -- When Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi contended that Western
civilization was superior to Islamic culture, he jolted an already fragile
global anti-terrorist alliance.
His ill-timed comments embarrassed Europe and the United States at a time when
the Bush administration and its European allies are attempting to forge a broad
coalition with Islamic nations to unite against international terrorism.
Speaking to Italian journalists at a news conference in Berlin on Wednesday,
Berlusconi said: "We should be conscious of the superiority of our
civilization, which consists of a value system that has given people widespread
prosperity in those countries that embrace it, and guarantees respect for human
rights and religion. This respect certainly does not exist in the Islamic
countries."
The Italian prime minister added that he hoped "the West will continue to
conquer peoples, like it conquered communism."
Muslims furious
The reaction from Muslims was swift and furious.
Berlusconi's comments reinforced growing Muslim belief that the anti-terrorism
campaign is a Western crusade against Islam.
The Arab League immediately labeled his statement "racist" and
demanded a retraction and an apology.
"His remarks crossed the limits of reason," said Amr Moussa,
secretary general of the 22-nation Arab League, in Cairo. "We don't
believe there is a superior civilization, and if he said so he's utterly
mistaken."
In Bahrain, a gulf nation that has been a loyal supporter of the United States
and is home base to the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet, the English-language Bahrain
Tribune said in a front page editorial that Berlusconi's comments "prove
that the man is shallow and racist and does not merit the post he is
holding."
"The world is on the brink of a crucial war against terrorism, with
countries supporting one another and old foes ironing out their differences to
accomplish the task. But Berlusconi chose to launch a grotesque war against
Islam and Muslims," the newspaper said.
In Turkey, the traditionally anti-Western Islamist newspaper Akit called
Berlusconi "a new Mussolini."
But the prime minister's spokesman defended Berlusconi, saying the leader could
not be accused of insulting Islam after having "fought for the
participation of moderate Arab countries in the alliance against
terrorism" and called for a solution to the crisis in the Middle East.
The Italian billionaire's gaffe illustrated how difficult it has become to
maintain cohesion in a coalition that includes moderate Muslim countries as
well as Saudi Arabia, Russia, China and Western countries.
Berlusconi is notorious for his ham-handed remarks and for accepting Italy's
neo-fascists as partners in government.
Reassuring Muslims
Berlusconi's comments came as President Bush sought to reassure nervous Muslims
that the war against terrorists would not be a Christian campaign against
Islam.
Aware of how sensitive the situation has become, Bush apologized for saying he
was on a "crusade" against terrorism.
Crusades elicit memories of Christian rampages centuries ago to conquer the
Holy Land from Muslims.
Meanwhile, European leaders, all with strong contingents of immigrant Muslims
in their own countries, immediately distanced themselves from Berlusconi's
comments on so-called Western superiority.
Belgian Foreign Minister Louis Michel, heading a European mission to gain
anti-terrorist support from Arab nations, said Berlusconi's contention "is
totally contradicting the values in which we believe."
Added Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt: "Such words can be
dangerous, because they can instill a feeling of humiliation at a time when we
need dialogue and cooperation between the West and the world of Islam."
Verhofstadt and Belgium hold the EU's rotating presidency. He was speaking as
he left for talks with Bush in Washington.
Media weighs in
Italy's media, though largely owned by mogul Berlusconi, had a field day
reprinting his comments.
"Inferior Civilization," said the banner headline on the front page
of the left-wing Il Manifesto. One of Italy's leading philosophers and former
mayor of Venice, Massimo Cacciari, pointed out that Western civilization owed
much to Arab science, architecture, art and thought.
Former Prime Minister Massimo D'Alema described Berlusconi's remark as "a
grave error" and "a racist comment."
© 2001, Chicago Tribune