At Harry's Place, they've posted this:
The BBC have invited reactions from the public on the video statement made by London tube bomber Mohammad Sidique Khan who admitted his inspiration was Osama Bin Laden and who described the death of 52 people and the maiming of many more as "a slap to the policy of British Prime Minister Tony Blair".
Khan's stated rationale for his acts comes under attack on the site:
His comments would be easier to stomach if it weren't for the fact that his heroes Al Zarqawi and Bin Laden are the ones wreaking havoc on "his brothers and sisters" in Iraq.
Jonathan Roos, Cambridge, UK
Sidique Khan says that our democratically elected governments have been involved with the murder, bombing, gassing and torture of Muslims worldwide - but what, I wish I could ask him, was Saddam Hussain doing to his fellow Muslims for decades? Why was he never opposed by these people?
Kelvin Walker, Glos, UK
The problem with these comments is that, while they are correct, they don't address the real issue, or they pretend that a real issue doesn't exist. Yes, Muslims who moan about the evil west while not speaking out as vociferously against their own evil despots are hypocrites, but is pointing that out going to win you a pony? No, it just gives you a chance to vent. And it ignores soemthing much more germane: the notion of "us and them", and how incredibly central this is to the whole problem. To a great many Muslims, interference from non-Muslim sources is clearly far worse than despotism practiced by Muslims against other Muslims.
Now, I think that people who feel this way are wrong, but me pointing that out isn't going to change their beliefs. The fact will still remain that a great many Muslims do believe this, and that some of the ones who believe this are prepared to kill because of it. This is the problem we face, and it's the reality of what we are contending with.
It's more than a little tricky. They don't want us to intervene in Muslim politics, yet ince Muslim politics do affect the larger world, we have to, at least to some degree. The key is to figure out how to do so not in a way that shows we're right and proves that those who disagree with us are hypocrites - the key is to do it in a way that works as best as possible. Iraq was clearly a fool's errand - even if many of those who are against the occupation are fools themselves.
I guess part of the problem is that we are used to thinking in terms of nationalism, but Islam transcends national borders in a way that socialism thought it would (but didn't) in the 20th century. This means that Muslims everywhere get pissed off about what the west does to Muslims anywhere. That's a tough situation to deal with, but it's the situation we're in. And shouting "hypocrite" over and over isn't going to change that.
If you go to war with the army you have, as Rummy famously said, it should also be pointed out that it helps to go to war against the enemy you have, not his shadow.