Daniel Pipes

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Daniel Pipes

Born September 9, 1949 (1949-09-09) (age 58)
Boston, Massachusetts
Occupation Commentator; Distinguished Visiting Professor at Pepperdine University (Spring '07); Director of Middle East Forum
Nationality United States
Subjects Middle East, Islamic terrorism, Islamism
Relative(s) Richard Pipes

Daniel Pipes (born September 9, 1949) is a neoconservative[1] American historian and political commentator who specializes in the Middle East and Islam.

Pipes has taught at Harvard and University of Chicago, served as a member of the board of the U.S. Institute of Peace, and is the founder and director of the Middle East Forum, a think tank, as well as the founder of Campus Watch, an organization which critiques what it characterises as poor scholarship concerning the Middle East.

Pipes has written or co-written 18 books and is a columnist for the New York Times News Service/Syndicate. He has had his work published by many newspapers across North America, including the Washington Post, New York Times, and Wall Street Journal. Pipes is frequently invited to discuss the Middle East on American network television, as well as by universities and think tanks, has appeared on the BBC and Al Jazeera, and has lectured in 25 countries.[1] He has served as an advisor to Rudolph Giuliani's 2008 presidential campaign.[2]

According to the New York Times, "Among his supporters, Mr. Pipes enjoys a heroic status; among his detractors, he is reviled."[3] The Forward, a Jewish publication, named Pipes as one of America's "50 Most Influential Jews",[4] while 02138, a Harvard-focused magazine, named him one of the hundred most influential living Harvard alumni.[5]

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Pipes was born in Boston, Massachusetts, the son of Harvard historian Richard Pipes[4] and his wife Irene (née Roth), and grew up in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Both Pipes' parents were from assimilated Polish Jewish families that fled from Poland in 1939. The couple met in the United States in 1944 and married two years later. Pipes was their first child.

[edit] Education

Pipes attended the Harvard pre-school, then received a private school education, partly abroad. He enrolled in Harvard University, where his father was then still a professor, in the fall of 1967; for his first two years he studied mathematics, but has said: "I wasn't smart enough. So I chose to become a historian."[6] He said he "found the material too abstract."[7] He credits visits to the Sahara Desert in 1968 and the Sinai Desert in 1969 for piquing his interest in the Arabic language,[6] and visits to Niger and Tunisia for piquing his interest in the Islamic world, and he changed his major to Middle East history.[7] For the next two years Pipes studied Arabic and the Middle East, obtaining a B.A. in history in 1971; his senior thesis was titled A Medieval Islamic Debate: The World Created in Eternity, a study of Al-Ghazali.[6] After graduating in 1971, Pipes spent nearly two years in Cairo. He learned Arabic and studied the Quran, which he said gave him an appreciation for Islam. [7]

[edit] Career in academia

Pipes returned to Harvard in 1973 and obtained a Ph.D. in medieval Islamic history[4] in 1978. His Ph.D. dissertation eventually became his first book, Slave Soldiers and Islam, in 1981. He studied abroad for six years, three of which were spent in Egypt, where he wrote a book on colloquial Egyptian Arabic which was published in 1983. He switched his academic interest from medieval Islamic studies to modern Islam in the late 1970s.[4]

He taught world history at the University of Chicago from 1972 to 1982, history at Harvard from 1983 to 1984, and policy and strategy at the Naval War College from 1984 to 1986. In 1983, Pipes served on the policy-planning staff at the State Department.

[edit] Post-academia

Pipes largely retired from academia after 1986, though in 2007 he taught a course titled "International Relations: Islam and Politics" as a visiting professor at Pepperdine University.[8] Pipes told an interviewer from Harvard Magazine that he has "the simple politics of a truck driver, not the complex ones of an academic. My viewpoint is not congenial with institutions of higher learning."[6]

From 1986 on, Pipes worked for various think tanks. From 1986 to 1993 he was director of the Philadelphia-based Foreign Policy Research Institute (FPRI) and editor of its journal, Orbis. In 1990 he organized the Middle East Forum as a unit of FPRI; it became an independent organization with himself as head in 1994.[citation needed] Pipes edits its journal, the Middle East Quarterly. In 2002, he established Campus Watch as a project of the Middle East Forum.

In 2003, President George W. Bush nominated Pipes for the board of the United States Institute of Peace. After a controversy including a filibuster by Democratic Senators,[9] Pipes obtained the position by recess appointment.[6]

[edit] Campus Watch

Main article: Campus Watch

Pipes' think tank the Middle East Forum established a website in 2002 called Campus Watch, which identified what it saw as five problems in the teaching of Middle Eastern studies at American universities: "analytical failures, the mixing of politics with scholarship, intolerance of alternative views, apologetics, and the abuse of power over students." According to the New York Times, Campus Watch is the project for which Pipes is "perhaps best known."[3]

Through Campus Watch, Pipes encouraged students and faculty to submit information on "Middle East-related scholarship, lectures, classes, demonstrations, and other activities relevant to Campus Watch".[10] The project was accused of "McCarthyesque intimidation" of professors who criticized Israel when it published "dossiers" on eight professors it thought "hostile" to America. In protest, more than 100 academics demanded to be added to what some called a "blacklist". In October 2002 Campus Watch removed the dossiers from their website.[11][12][13][14]

[edit] Views on Islam

Pipes is a harsh critic of what he views as Islamic radicalism, for which he has attracted both opprobrium as a bigot and praise as a prophetic figure.

Pipes' ally Jeff Jacoby writes: "To hear his critics tell it, Pipes is an 'Islamophobe' and an anti-Muslim bigot whose ignorance about Islam is matched only by his hostility toward it." But in Jacoby's view, "these are gross and vicious libels."[15]

Tashbih Sayyed, editor of the Muslim World Today and the Pakistan Times, calls Pipes "a Cassandra. He must be listened to. If there is no Daniel Pipes, there is no source for America to learn to recognize the evil which threatens it... Muslims in America that are like Samson; they have come into the temple to pull down the pillars, even if it means destroying themselves."[6]. Sheikh Dr. Ahmed Subhy Mansour, a former visiting fellow at Harvard Law School, writes, "We Muslims need a thinker like Dr. Pipes, who can criticize the terrorist culture within Islam."[6]

However, in The Nation, Kristine McNeil describes Pipes as an "anti-Arab propagandist" who has built a career out of "distortions...twist[ing] words, quot[ing] people out of context and stretch[ing] the truth to suit his purpose."[14] James Zogby argues that Pipes possesses an "obsessive hatred of all things Muslim", and that "Pipes is to Muslims what David Duke is to African-Americans."[15] Christopher Hitchens, a fellow supporter of the Iraq War and critic of political Islam, has also criticized Pipes, arguing that Pipes pursues an intolerant agenda, "confuses scholarship with propaganda", and "pursues petty vendettas with scant regard for objectivity", making him a "poor if not useless ally".[16]

Pipes' views gained widespread public attention when they triggered a filibuster in the United States Senate against his nomination by President George W. Bush to the board of the United States Institute of Peace.[9] Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA) explained that he was offended by Pipes' comments on Islam, and that while "some people call [Pipes] a scholar... this is not the kind of person you want on the USIP."[17] While defending Pipes' nomination, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer distanced Bush from Pipes' views, saying that Bush disagrees with Pipes about whether Islam is a peaceful religion.[18]

In addition, Pipes has sparked local controversies as an invited speaker at college campuses. When Pipes was invited to speak at the University of Toronto in March 2005, a letter from professors, staff and students asserted that Pipes had a "long record of xenophobic, racist and sexist [speeches] that goes back to 1990."[19] University officials said they would not interfere with Pipes' visit.[20]

[edit] Radical and moderate Islam

Pipes has long expressed concern about the danger, as he sees it, of radical or militant Islam to the Western world. In 1985, he wrote in Middle East Insight that "[t]he scope of the radical fundamentalist's ambition poses novel problems; and the intensity of his onslaught against the United States makes solutions urgent."[21] In the fall 1995 issue of National Interest, he wrote: "Unnoticed by most Westerners, war has been unilaterally declared on Europe and the United States."[22] He wrote this in the aftermath of the Oklahoma City bombing; investigative journalist Steven Emerson had said in the aftermath of the bombing that it bore a "Middle Eastern trait." Pipes agreed with Emerson and told USA Today that the United States was "under attack" and that Islamic fundamentalists "are targeting us."[4] Four months before the September 11, 2001 attacks, Pipes and Emerson wrote in the Wall Street Journal that al Qaeda was "planning new attacks on the U.S." and that Iranian operatives "helped arrange advanced ... training for al Qaeda personnel in Lebanon where they learned, for example, how to destroy large buildings."[23]

Pipes believes that moderate Muslims "constitute a very small movement", but a "brave" one, which the U.S. government should "give priority to locating, meeting with, funding, forwarding, empowering, and celebrating".[24] He suggests that "radical Islam is the problem and moderate Islam the solution".[25]

Pipes has praised Mustafa Kemal Atatürk in Turkey and the Sudanese thinker Mahmud Muhammad Taha.[26]

[edit] Muslims in Europe

In 1990, Pipes wrote in the National Review that "Western European societies are unprepared for the massive immigration of brown-skinned peoples cooking strange foods and maintaining different standards of hygiene...All immigrants bring exotic customs and attitudes, but Muslim customs are more troublesome than most." After these sentences attracted controversy[27], Pipes, when reprinting the article on his website, said "my goal in it was to characterize the thinking of Western Europeans, not give my own views. In retrospect, I should either have put the words 'brown-skinned peoples' and 'strange foods' in quotation marks or made it clearer that I was explaining European attitudes rather than my own."[28]

In response to the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy, Pipes wrote that the "key issue at stake" was whether the "West [would] stand up for its customs and mores, including freedom of speech" and the "right to insult and blaspheme". He supported Robert Spencer's call to "stand with resolutely with Denmark." He lauded Norway, Germany and France for their stance on the cartoons and freedom of speech. But he criticized Poland, Britain, New Zealand and the United States for giving statements he interpreted as "wrongly apologizing."[29]

[edit] Muslims in the United States

According to the New York Times, Pipes has "enraged" many American Muslims by advocating that Muslims in government and military positions be given special attention as security risks and by claiming that mosques are breeding grounds for militants.[18]

In October, 2001 Pipes said, before the convention of the American Jewish Congress. "I worry very much, from the Jewish point of view, that the presence, and increased stature, and affluence, and enfranchisement of American Muslims, because they are so much led by an Islamist leadership, that this will present true dangers to American Jews."[30][31]

The New York Times cited as Pipes helping to "lead the charge" against Debbie Almontaser, a woman with a "longstanding reputation as a Muslim moderate" whom Pipes viewed as a representative of a new movement of "lawful Islamists." Almontaser resigned under pressure as principal of an Arabic-language high school in New York City, which Pipes initially described as a "madrassa", though he later said that his use of the term had been "a bit of a stretch."[3] Pipes explained his opposition: "It is hard to see how violence, how terrorism will lead to the implementation of sharia... It is much easier to see how, working through the system — the school system, the media, the religious organizations, the government, businesses and the like — you can promote radical Islam.”[3]

Pipes wrote an article for FrontPage Magazine entitled "Confirmed: Barack Obama was a Muslim." According to Pipes, "this matters" because Democratic presidential candidate Obama "is now what Islamic law calls a murtadd (apostate), an ex-Muslim converted to another religion who must be executed", and as president this would have "large potential implications for his relationship with the Muslim world."[32] Media Matters describes Pipes' article as promoting a "falsehood".[33]

Pipes has criticized the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), which he says is an "apologist" for Hezbollah and Hamas, and has a "roster of employees and board members connected to terrorism".[34] CAIR, in turn, has written of Pipes that his "agenda-driven polemic... only serves to fan the flames of ignorance and prejudice. But perhaps that is his intent."[35]

[edit] Views on Foreign Policy

The Wall Street Journal has called Pipes "an authoritative commentator on the Middle East."[36] Michael Moran of MSNBC described him as one of the best-known "Mideast policy luminaries".[37] CNN referred to him as one "of the country’s leading experts" on the Middle East.[citation needed]

Pipes was a firm supporter of the Vietnam War, and when his fellow students occupied the Harvard administration building to protest it in the 1960s, he sided with the administration.[4] Pipes had previously considered himself to be a Democrat, but after anti-war George McGovern gained the 1972 Democratic nomination for president, he switched to the Republican Party.[4]

[edit] Iraq

In 1987, Pipes encouraged the United States to provide Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein with upgraded weapons and intelligence,[38] to counterbalance Iran's successes in the Iran-Iraq War. In April 1991, when a debate was raging about the desirability of a U.S. intervention against the Saddam Hussein regime, Pipes wrote in the Wall Street Journal about the prospect of U.S. forces occupying Iraq, "with Schwartzkopf Pasha ruling from Baghdad": "It sounds romantic, but watch out. Like the Israelis in southern Lebanon nine years ago, American troops would find themselves quickly hated, with Shi'as taking up suicide bombing, Kurds resuming their rebellion, and the Syrian and Iranian governments plotting new ways to sabotage American rule. Staying in place would become too painful, leaving too humiliating."[39]

In 2002 and 2003, Pipes was a strong backer of the Iraq War, saying that Saddam Hussein posed an "imminent threat" to the United States.[4] In a New York Post article published April 8, 2003, Pipes expressed his opposition to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's concerned prediction that "[the] war [in Iraq] will have horrible consequences...Terrorism will be aggravated...Terrorist organizations will be united...Everything will be insecure." Though this concern was echoed by various other politicians and academics cited by Pipes in his article, Pipes argued that "the precise opposite is more likely to happen: The war in Iraq will lead to a reduction in terrorism."[40]

[edit] Israel-Palestine conflict

Pipes is a supporter of Israel in the Israel-Palestine conflict and an opponent of a Palestinian state. He wrote in Commentary in April 1990 that "there can be either an Israel or a Palestine, but not both... to those who ask why the Palestinians must be deprived of a state, the answer is simple: grant them one and you set in motion a chain of events that will lead either to its extinction or the extinction of Israel."[41]

[edit] Iran

In 1980, Pipes wrote that "Iran made the transition to a post-oil economy. It is the only major oil exporter to abandon the heady billions and return to live by its own means."[42]

Pipes has advocated that the U.S. "unleash" the Mujahedeen-e Khalq (MEK) against Iran.[43] Though MEK is listed as a terrorist group by the United States, the European Union, Canada, Iraq and Iran,[44] Pipes describes this listing as a "sop to the mullahs". He writes, "the MEK poses no danger to Americans or Europeans, and has not for decades. It does pose a danger to the malign, bellicose theocratic regime in Tehran."[43]

[edit] Saudi Arabia

Pipes believes that Saudi Arabia is neither a "friend" nor a "foe" of the United States, but a "rival".[45]

Pipes believes that what he views as Saudi Arabia's "massive implication in the death of 3,000 Americans on 9/11... is reason for the victims and their families to consider suing it for compensation."[46]

[edit] Awards and honors

On March 11, 2006, Daniel Pipes was awarded the "Free Speech Award" from the Danish organisation Free Press Society of 2004 (Trykkefrihedsselkabet af 2004).[47]

Pipes has been awarded honorary doctorates from universities in Switzerland and the United States.[1]

In May 2006, Pipes received the Guardian of Zion Award.

[edit] Books and policy papers

[edit] See also

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Pipes, Daniel. Biography of Daniel Pipes. Retrieved on 2008-05-12.
  2. ^ "Giuliani style evokes concern among critics", Reuters, November 19, 2007. 
  3. ^ a b c d Elliot, Andrea. "Critics Cost Muslim Educator Her Dream School", The New York Times, April 27, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-03. 
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Press, Eyal. "Neocon man: Daniel Pipes has made his name inveighing against an academy overrun by political extremists but he is nothing if not extreme in his own views.", The Nation, May 2004. Retrieved on 2007-08-17. 
  5. ^ Daniel Pipes Called One of Harvard's Most Influential Living Alumni. Middle East Forum (October 20, 2006). Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Tassel, Janet. "Militan About "Islamism"", Harvard Magazine, January-February 2005. Retrieved on 2008-05-12. 
  7. ^ a b c Ballon, Marc. "Daniel Pipes fights the worldwide threat of Islamism - from Malibu", Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles, March 6, 2007. Retrieved on 2008-05-12. 
  8. ^ School of Public Policy Announces 2007 Distinguished Visiting Professor: Daniel Pipes. Pepperdine University. Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
  9. ^ a b "A Misdirected Attack: Editorial", Los Angeles Times, August 17, 2003. Retrieved on 2008-05-12. 
  10. ^ Keep Us Informed. Campus Watch.
  11. ^ Schevitz, Tanya. "Professors want own names put on Mideast blacklist - They hope to make it powerless", San Francisco Chronicle, September 28, 2002. Retrieved on 2008-03-12. 
  12. ^ Ayloush, Hussam (December 1, 2002). Column a slur on Muslim community. Orange County Register. Retrieved on 2008-03-01.
  13. ^ Schevitz, Tanya. "'Dossiers' dropped from Web blacklist", San Francisco Chronicle, October 3, 2002. Retrieved on 2008-03-12. 
  14. ^ a b McNeil, Kristine. "The War on Academic Freedom", The Nation, November 11, 2002. 
  15. ^ a b Pipes's effective route to peace. Daniel Pipes.
  16. ^ Hitchens, Christopher (August 11, 2003). Pipes the propagandist. Slate. Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
  17. ^ "Daniel Pipes nomination stalled in committee", Baltimore Chronicle, July 23, 2003. Retrieved on 2008-05-13. 
  18. ^ a b Stevenson, Richard. "For Muslims, a Mixture Of White House Signals", The New York Times, April 28, 2003. Retrieved on 2007-11-29. 
  19. ^ Alphonso, Caroline. "Visit by pro-Israeli prof causes uproar at UofT", The Globe and Mail, March 29, 2005. 
  20. ^ Open Letter. Science for Peace.
  21. ^ Pipes, Daniel. ""Death to America" in Lebanon", Middle East Insight, March/April 1985. Retrieved on 2008-03-01. 
  22. ^ Pipes, Daniel. "There Are No Moderates: Dealing with Fundamentalist Islam", National Interest, Fall 1995. Retrieved on 2008-03-01. 
  23. ^ Emerson, Steven; Daniel Pipes. "Terrorism on Trial", Wall Street Journal, May 31, 2001. Retrieved on 2008-05-13. 
  24. ^ Pipes, Daniel. "Bolstering Moderate Muslims", New York Sun, April 17, 2007. 
  25. ^ Pipes, Daniel. "A Million Moderate Muslims on the March", New York Sun, May 8, 2007. 
  26. ^ Pipes, Daniel. "A democratic Islam?", Jerusalem Post, April 16, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-13. 
  27. ^ Whitaker, Brian. "US pulls plug on Muslim websites", The Guardian, 09-10-2001. 
  28. ^ Pipes, Daniel (November 19, 1990). The Muslims are Coming! The Muslims are Coming!. National Review. Retrieved on 2008-03-13.
  29. ^ Pipes, Daniel. "Cartoons and Islamic Imperialism", New York Sun, February 7, 2006. Retrieved on 2008-05-13. 
  30. ^ Pipes, Daniel (January 5, 2004). A French lesson for Tom Harkin. World Net Daily. Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
  31. ^ Ferguson, Barbara. Daniel Pipes Continuing His Campaign Against Muslims. Arab News.
  32. ^ Pipes, Daniel (January 7, 2008). Confirmed: Barack Obama Practiced Islam. FrontPage Magazine. Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
  33. ^ Daniel Pipes relied on disputed LA Times article to revive Obama-Muslim falsehood. Media Matters for America (January 2, 2008). Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
  34. ^ Daniel Pipes; Sharon Chadha (Spring 2006). CAIR: Islamists Fooling the Establishment. Middle East Quarterly.
  35. ^ Who is Daniel Pipes? (by CAIR). Media Monitors Network (December 1, 2000). Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
  36. ^ Steigerwald, Bill. "Pipes calls war a success", Pittsburgh Tribune Review, April 1, 2006. 
  37. ^ Moran, Michael. "The evolution of peacemaking", MSNBC, November 21, 2001. 
  38. ^ Mughrabi, Maher. "This is not the way to tackle anti-Semitism", The Age, February 8, 2005. Retrieved on 2008-05-13. 
  39. ^ Pipes, Daniel (April 11, 1991). Why America Can't Save the Kurds. Wall Street Journal with alterations by Daniel Pipes, reprinted on DanielPipes.org. Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
  40. ^ Pipes, Daniel. "100 Bin Ladens on the Way?", New York Post, April 8, 2003. 
  41. ^ Pipes, Daniel (April 1990). Can the Palestinians Make Peace?. Commentary with alterations by Daniel Pipes, reprinted on DanielPipes.org. Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
  42. ^ Pipes, Daniel. "Iran's Good Fortune", Washington Post, July 10, 1980. 
  43. ^ a b Pipes, Daniel. "Unleash the Iranian Opposition", New York Sun with alterations by Daniel Pipes, reprinted on DanielPipes.org, July 10, 2007. 
  44. ^ See Mujahedeen-e Khalq.
  45. ^ Pipes, Daniel. "Saudi Arabia: Not Friend or Foe", New York Post, May 14, 2002. 
  46. ^ Pipes, Daniel. "Make the Saudis Pay for Terror", New York Post, April 15, 2002. 
  47. ^ Rabinowitz, Beila. "Dr Daniel Pipes To Be Awarded Danish "Free Speech Prize"", PipeLine News, March 8, 2006. 

[edit] External links

[edit] Official websites

[edit] Profiles

[edit] Audio and video


Persondata
NAME Pipes, Daniel
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION U.S. neoconservative columnist, author, counter-terrorism analyst, and scholar of Middle Eastern history
DATE OF BIRTH 9 September 1949
PLACE OF BIRTH Boston, Massachusetts
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH
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