Thursday, April 15, 2010


*Comments posted on Daniel Pipes website over his Book Review of Jeffery
Herb’s “Nazi propaganda for the Arab World”.*



“More has been done by the Zionist occupation after 1948 to hurt and
antagonize not only the Palestinians but the entire Arab and Muslim world
than any propaganda by the Nazis. Writers and propagandists have to earn
their bread and butter to whip up fresh line of Islamic phobias merely to
detract the world attention from the atrocities and war crimes committed by
IDF in occupied lands. The world is not blind to the virulent nature of
Israeli policies to wipe out Palestinians from the lands that they rightly
or wrongly claim as their own. Those middle age brutalities are no longer
tenable in modern times of globalization and free democracies. While time
has come to focus on the peace moves to solve the problem, it is sad to find
that propagandists are hard at work to prolong the enmity between Israel and
the Muslim world at large. Nobody knows how the events unfold in the near
future. If peace arrives, all such bogus propaganda will be thrown in the
dust bins.”



Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai

[email protected]

www.GhulamMuhammed.Blogspot.com





http://www.danielpipes.org/8257/nazi-propaganda-for-the-arab-world


Nazi Propaganda for the Arab World

*by Jeffrey Herf
Yale University Press, 2009, 352 pages

**Reviewed by Daniel Pipes**
Commentary<http://www.commentarymagazine.com/viewarticle.cfm/nazi-propaganda-for-the-arab-world--by-jeffrey-herf-15406>

*

*April 2010*


[Differs slightly from the published version]

The impact of National Socialism in the Middle East used to appear brief and
superficial. Unlike with Communism, whose local parties and outside
influence through the Soviet bloc lasted over many decades, the Nazis'
moment lasted about six years, 1939-45, and they had little regional
presence beyond Rommel's armies in North Africa and a fleeting pro-Nazi
regime in Iraq.

But two powerful, important books have set the record straight. *Djihad und
Judenhass* <http://www.matthiaskuentzel.de/contents/djihad-und-judenhass>
(2002)
by Matthias Küntzel, translated into English in 2007 as *Jihad and
Jew-Hatred: Islamism, Nazism and the Roots of
9/11*<http://www.telospress.com/main/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=324>,
shows the continuing influence of Nazi ideas on Islamists. *Nazi Propaganda
for the Arab 
World*<http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300145793>
 by Jeffrey Herf focuses on an earlier time, the 1930s-40s, and the major
effort by Hitler and his minions to transmit their ideas to the Middle East.
After reading Küntzel and Herf, I realize that my education about the modern
Middle East was lacking a vital ingredient, the Nazi one.

A specialist in modern German history at the University of Maryland, Herf
brings a new corpus of information to light: summary accounts of Nazi
shortwave radio broadcasts in the Arabic language that were generated over
three years by the U.S. embassy in Cairo. This cache reveals fully, for the
first time, what Berlin told the Arabs (and to a lesser extent, the
Iranians). As page after page of *Nazi Propaganda for the Arab World*
establishes
in mind-numbing but necessary detail, the Germans above all pursued two
themes: stopping Zionism and promoting Islamism. Each deserves close
consideration.

Nazi propaganda in Arabic portrayed World War II, history's largest and most
destructive war, as focused primarily on the sliver of land between the
Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River. This interpretation both flattered
Arabs and extended Hitler's grand theory that Jews wanted to take over the
Arab countries and eventually the whole world, that the Allied powers were
but pawns in this Zionist conspiracy, and that Germany was leading the
resistance to them.

Palestine was the key, according to these broadcasts. If Zionists took it
over, they would "control the three continents: Europe, Asia, and Africa.
Thus they will be able to rule the whole world and spread Jewish
capitalism." Such an eventuality would lead to Arabs oppressed and Islam
defunct. "Should Bolshevism and Democracy be victorious," announced Nazi
radio, "the Arabs will be dominated forever and all traces of Islam will be
wiped out." To avoid this fate, Arabs had to join with the Axis.

As the war progressed, Berlin's incitement became ever more furious. "You
must kill the Jews before they open fire on you. Kill the Jews" went a July
1942 broadcast. Herf notes the bitter irony: "At this moment of complete
Jewish powerlessness, the Arabic broadcasts from Berlin skillfully adapted
the general Nazi propaganda line about Jewish domination of the anti-Hitler
coalition to a radical Arab and Islamic view."

At the same time, the Nazi regime developed an approach to Muslims that
largely ignored the *Protocols of the Elders of Zion*, *Mein Kampf*, and
other European sources in favor of selected passages from the Koran.

Hitler's propagandists assured Muslims, first, that Axis countries "respect
the Koran, sanctify the mosques, and glorify the prophet of Islam." It cited
the respectful work of German Orientalists as an important sign of goodwill.
Second, it argued for what Heinrich Himmler called the "shared goals and
shared ideals" of Islam and National Socialism. These included monotheism,
piety, obedience, discipline, self-sacrifice, courage, honor, generosity,
community, unity, anti-capitalism, and a celebration of labor and warfare.

In addition, Muslims were told that they and the Nazis were purportedly both
fighting a "great struggle for freedom" against the British, the most
important colonial power in the Middle East. The regime drew a parallel
between Muhammad and Hitler and presented the umma as roughly analogous to
its own notion of a totalitarian *Volksgemeinschaft* ("people's community").

Nazis portrayed Islam as an ally and, accordingly, called for its revival
while urging Muslims to act piously and emulate Muhammad. Radio Berlin in
Arabic went so far as to declare "Allahu akbar! Glory to the Arabs, Glory to
Islam." The Germans held that Muslims who were not righteous enough (i.e.,
not following the Nazi ideological model) were causing the *umma* to
languish: "Muslims, you are now backward because you have not shown God the
proper piety and do not fear him." And not just backward, but also "invaded
by merciless tyrants." Specifically for Shi'ites, the Nazis hinted at Hitler
being the awaited Twelfth Imam or the Muslim eschatological figure of Jesus,
who will fight the anti-Christ (namely, the Jews) and bring on the end of
days.

The Nazis noted the parallel between sayings from the Koran (Sura 5:82, "You
will meet no greater enemy of the believers than the Jews") and the words of
Hitler ("By resisting the Jews everywhere, I am fighting for the Lord's
work") and turned the Koran into an anti-Semitic tract whose primary purpose
was to call for eternal hatred of Jews. They even falsely claimed that
Muhammad ordered Muslims to fight the Jews "until they are extinct."

In the Nazi telling, Jewish-Muslim enmity dated back to the 7th century.
"Since the days of Mohamed, the Jews have been hostile to Islam" went one
broadcast. "Every Moslem knows that Jewish animosity to the Arabs dates back
to the dawn of Islam" declared another. "Enmity has always existed between
Arab and Jew since ancient times" insisted a third. The Nazis built on this
premise to establish the basis for a Final Solution in the Middle East,
instructing Arabs to "make every effort possible so that not a single Jew …
remains in Arab countries."

Herf emphasizes the remarkable symbiosis of German and Middle Eastern
elements: "As a result of their shared passions and interests, they produced
texts and broadcasts that each group could not have produced on its own."
Specifically, Arabs learned "the finer points of anti-Semitic conspiracy
thinking," while Nazis learned the value of focusing on Palestine. He
describes the coming together of Nazi and Islamic themes in Berlin as "one
of the most important cultural exchanges of the twentieth century."

Having detailed Nazi propaganda in Arabic, Herf then traces its impact. He
begins by documenting the great energy and expense devoted to these
messages—the quality of the personnel devoted to it, their high-level Nazi
patronage, the thousands of hours of radio transmissions, and the millions
of pamphlets.

He then rounds up assessments of the Axis impact, all pointing to its
success. Allied estimates from 1942, for example, found that "the people
were saturated with Axis talk," that "upwards of three-fourths of the Moslem
world are in favor of the Axis" and that "90% of the Egyptians, including
their government, believe that the Jews are mainly responsible for shortages
and high prices of essentials." A report from 1944 found that "practically
all Arabs who have radios … listen to Berlin."

Allied reluctance to contradict Nazi propaganda also points to Axis success.
Fearful of alienating Middle Easterners, the Allies stayed humiliatingly
silent about the genocide taking place against the Jews; failed to refute
allegations about Jews dominating London, Washington, and Moscow; did not
dispute the distorted Koranic interpretations; and shied away from endorsing
Zionism. Merely to dispute Nazi accusations, the Allies worried, would only
confirm Nazi claims about Britain, America, and Russia being stooges of
Jewish power. An internal U.S. directive in late 1942 acknowledged that "the
subject of Zionist aspirations cannot be mentioned, inasmuch as … [this]
would jeopardize our strategy in the Eastern Mediterranean."

Thus, when two leading U.S. senators, Robert Taft of Ohio and Robert Wagner
of New York, proposed a resolution in 1944 endorsing a Jewish national home
in Palestine, Berlin radio in Arabic called this an attempt "to erase
Islamic civilization" and "to eradicate the Koran." Panicked, the entire
weight of the Executive Branch came down on the senators, who felt compelled
to withdraw their resolution. Clearly, Nazi offerings resonated deeply in
the Middle East.

They continued to do well after the Nazi collapse and the war's conclusion.
The defeat of Nazi General Erwin Rommel's aggressive push into North Africa
meant that Nazi ambitions in the Middle East, in particular the Final
Solution to annihilate its million or so Jews, were never implemented. But
years of hate from radio and pamphlets and the repetitive, grotesque,
ambitious, anti-Semitic, and Islam-based message detailed by Herf had taken
root. Not only did the Middle East's Nazis emerge nearly invulnerable to
prosecution, but they also prospered and were feted. An example: in 1946,
Hasan al-Banna, founder of the Muslim Brethren, lavished praise on Hitler's
favorite Arab, Haj Amin el-Husseini, calling him "a hero … a miracle of a
man." Banna added for good measure: "Germany and Hitler are gone, but Amin
el-Husseini will continue the struggle." Acknowledging el-Husseini's exalted
status, a British officer in 1948 described him as "the one hero in the Arab
world."

Ideas the Nazis spread in the Middle East have had an enduring twofold
legacy. First, as in Europe, they built on existing prejudices against Jews
to transform that prejudice into something far more paranoid, aggressive,
and murderous. One U.S. intelligence report from 1944 estimated that
anti-Jewish materials constituted fully half of German propaganda directed
to the Middle East. The Nazis saw virtually all developments in the region
through the Jewish prism and exported this obsession.

The fruits of this effort are seen not only in decades of furious Muslim
anti-Zionism, personified by Arafat and Ahmadinejad, but also in the
persecution of ancient Jewish communities in countries like Egypt and Iraq,
which have now shriveled to near-extinction, plus the employment of Nazis
such as Johann van Leers and Aloïs Brunner in important government
positions. Thus did the Nazi legacy oppress Jewry in the Middle East
post-1945.

Second, Islamism took on a Nazi quality. As someone who has criticized the
term Islamofascism on the grounds that it gratuitously conflates two
distinct phenomena, I have to report that Herf's evidence now leads me to
acknowledge deep fascist influences on Islamism. This includes the Islamist
hatred of democracy and liberalism and its contempt for multiple political
parties, preference for unity over division, cult of youth and militarism,
authoritarian moralism, cultural repression, and illiberal economics.

Beyond specifics, that influence extends to what Herf calls an "ability to
introduce a radical message in ways that resonated with, yet deepened and
radicalized, already existing sentiments." Although a scholar of Europe by
training, Herf's detective work in the U.S. archives has opened a new vista
on the Arab-Israeli conflict and Islamism, as well as made a landmark
contribution more broadly to an understanding of the modern Middle East.

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