Malaysian Leader: 'Jews Rule World by Proxy'
Published October 16, 2003
Associated Press
Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad on
 Thursday told a summit of Islamic leaders that "Jews rule the world by 
proxy" and the world's 1.3 billion Muslims should unite, using 
non-violent means for a "final victory.
His speech at the Organization of the Islamic Conference summit, which he was hosting, drew criticism from Jewish leaders, who warned it could spark more violence against Jews.
Mahathir, who is known for his outspoken, 
anti-Western rhetoric, criticized what he described as Jewish domination
 of the world and Muslim nations' inability to adequately respond to it 
as he opened the meeting of Islamic leaders from 57 nations.
"The Europeans killed 6 million Jews out of 12 
million, but today the Jews rule the world by proxy," Mahathir said. 
"They get others to fight and die for them."
Malaysia, a democratic nation which has a large
 non-Muslim population and does not enforce strict Islamic law, has long
 been a critic of Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories and of 
U.S. policy in the Middle East, including the war in Iraq and its strong
 backing of the Jewish state.
Mahathir, 77, who is retiring on Oct. 31, has 
used almost every international podium to lambaste the West for two 
decades, winning a reputation as an outspoken champion of Third World 
causes.
"For well over half a century we have fought 
over Palestine. What have we achieved? Nothing. We are worse off than 
before," he said. "If we had paused to think, then we could have devised
 a plan, a strategy that can win us final victory."
The prime minister, who has turned his country 
into the world's 17th-ranked trading nation during his 22 years in 
power, said Jews "invented socialism, communism, human rights and 
democracy" to avoid persecution and gain control of the most powerful 
countries.
Mahathir added that "1.3 billion Muslims cannot
 be defeated by a few million Jews," but he suggested using political 
and economic tactics instead of violence.
Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Jonathan Peled expressed disappointment in the remarks but said he wasn't surprised.
"It is not new that in such forums there is 
always an attempt to reach of the lowest common denominator which is 
Israel bashing," he said in Jerusalem. "But obviously we'd like to see 
more moderate and responsible kind of declarations coming out of such 
summits."
Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in
 Los Angeles, said Mahathir has used anti-Israel statements in the past 
to prove he's tough on the West. But, he said, Thursday's speech was 
still worrisome.
"What is profoundly shocking and worrying is 
the venue of the speech, the audience and coming in the time we're 
living in," Cooper said during a visit to Jerusalem. "Mahathir's speech 
today is an absolute invitation for more hate crimes and terrorism 
against Jews. That's serious."
U.S. Ambassador to Malaysia Marie Huhtala 
declined to comment on Mahathir's speech. Washington was angered over a 
speech he made in February, as host of the Non-Aligned Movement of 117 
countries, in which he described the looming war against Iraq as racist.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai said he supported
 Mahathir's analysis, which also included steps for how Muslim nations 
can develop economically and socially.
"It is great to hear Prime Minister Mahathir 
speak so eloquently on the problems of the ummah (Muslim world) and ways
 to remedy them," Karzai said. "His speech was an eye-opener to a lot of
 us and that is what the Islamic world should do."
The summit is the first since the Sept. 11, 
2001, terror attacks reshaped global politics and comes at a time when 
many Muslims -- even U.S. allies -- feel the war on terrorism has become
 a war against them.
"It is well known that the Islamic community is
 being targeted today more than at any other time before in its creed, 
culture and social and political orientation," said Qatar's ruler, 
Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, who hosted the U.S. headquarters in 
the Iraq war.
The status of Iraq also proved a divisive 
issue. Malaysia resisted inviting the U.S.-picked Iraqi Governing 
Council, describing it as a puppet of American occupation. But Arab 
countries that have recognized the interim body prevailed and council 
representatives were attending the summit.
Leaders attending the summit included Jordan's 
King Abullah, Syrian President Bashar Assad, Morocco's King Mohammed VI,
 Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and Indonesian President Megawati 
Sukarnoputri.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Philippine
 President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo are attending as special observers 
because of their large Muslim minorities.
 
 

 
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