An inadvertent boost to Bannon by Ruthie Blum

http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=18351

In yet another attempt to discredit U.S. President Donald Trump’s chief strategist, Steve Bannon, The Washington Post inadvertently did just the opposite.‎

In a piece on Friday, national reporter Matea Gold revealed that she had obtained a draft ‎of a movie proposal written in 2007 by Bannon — at the time a Hollywood filmmaker — ‎aimed at warning viewers about radical Muslims turning the U.S. into the “Islamic States ‎of America.” ‎

According to Gold, the envisioned three-part documentary, titled “Destroying the Great ‎Satan: The Rise of Islamic Fascism in America,” was to open with a scene showing ‎the flag on the U.S. Capitol building emblazoned with a crescent and star, while chants of ‎‎”Allahu akbar” emanate from inside. Quoting from the film’s ‎outline, she said its purpose was to caution not only against jihadists, but against the “enablers among us.”‎

Gold said Bannon wrote that these unwitting Americans, with the “best intentions,” ‎were the media, the Jewish community and government agencies engaged in appeasing ‎Islamism and paving “the road to this unique hell on earth.”‎

She made sure to remind readers that the author is the ‎same Bannon who helped Trump forge his executive order restricting entry into the U.S. ‎of citizens of certain Muslim-majority countries. This unsubtle juxtaposition was supposed ‎to give credence to the claim, widely circulated prior to and since Trump’s election, that ‎Bannon is both an anti-Semite and an Islamophobe. ‎

But the stab at a double whammy fell flat on its face. If anything, Gold’s account was ‎cause for optimism about Bannon’s role in the administration that is taking shape in ‎Washington. ‎

Indeed, anybody outside Israel who grasped 10 years ago that radical Islamism was a ‎force not only to be reckoned with but guarded against in the West is a person who has ‎been paying attention. Despite the national trauma caused by the attacks on the World ‎Trade Center and Pentagon in 2001, Americans quickly covered themselves in ostrich ‎feathers and put their heads in the proverbial sand, hoping that the war against al-Qaida that was ‎being fought far from their homestead would remain something they might catch a ‎glimpse of on the nightly news, but not feel, smell and taste. ‎

Unlike Israelis — virtually all of whom are soldiers even when in civilian clothes — citizens ‎of the United States are blessed with a choice about the extent of their involvement in ‎matters of national security and defense. As a result, many can and do go through life ‎without ever encountering men and women in uniform, let alone marching alongside them. ‎

This is a true mark of freedom that should be cherished. But when forces bent on ‎destroying the country and everything it stands for rear their ugly heads, resting on one’s ‎laurels is not an option, nor is having a commander-in-chief in the Oval Office who lives ‎in liberal la-la-land. Yet that is precisely what American voters opted for — twice — in the ‎past eight years. Talk about begging to be lulled into pre-9/11 complacency.‎

Bannon is by no means the only American who saw the writing on the wall. But he is ‎among the few today with access to the president’s ear. That he realizes the threat posed ‎by both radical Islamists and their Jewish and other “fellow travelers” is a help, not a ‎hindrance, at a time when the greatest state sponsor of global terrorism has just received ‎billions of dollars with which to build nuclear weapons.‎

It is too early to tell whether Team Trump is up to the monumental task at hand, or how ‎much influence Bannon will have on the course of events. But two things bode well: The ‎Washington Post’s expose of his unmade film, and the satire show Saturday Night Live’s ‎portrayal of him as the Grim Reaper.‎

Ruthie Blum is the managing editor of The Algemeiner.‎

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