Excerpt:
This just in: Islam is a religion of peace. So said Barack Obama yet again on Sunday in India. Even though he was repeating conventional boilerplate that he has repeated many times in the past, and that the Bush Administration repeated before him, his statements in Mumbai signaled his determination to keep the United States firmly committed to the policy errors that flow from this mistaken assumption.
Obama was visiting St. Xavier's College in Mumbai, just a short walk away from the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, one of the sites of the November 26, 2008 jihad attacks in which Islamic supremacists murdered 173 people and wounded another 308. Given the setting, it was not surprising that a student at St. Xavier's asked Obama this question: "What is your take or opinion about jihad? Or jihadi, whatever is your opinion, what do you think of them?"
Obama initially seemed taken aback, fumbling for an answer: "Well…" Pause. "You know, uh…" Pause. Then he fell back on some clichés from back in Great World Religions class: "The phrase Jihad has lot of meanings within Islam, and is subject to a lot of different interpretations. But I will say that first, Islam is one of the world's great religions." Having begun mining the boilerplate, he finally hit something resembling a stride: "And, uh, more than a billion people who practice Islam, the overwhelming majority, uh, view their obligations to their religion as ones that reaffirm peace and justice, and fairness and tolerance. I think all of us recognize that this great religion in the hands of a few extremists has been distorted to justify violence against innocent people that is never justified."