Bush urged Muslim leaders to speak out against "radical extremists" [Reuters]
The US president
has said he will send an envoy to the largest grouping of Islamic
nations and called on Muslims to speak out against "extremists" he says
are Islam's "true enemy".
George Bush said
appointing an envoy would demonstrate to Muslim communities "our
interest in respectful dialogue and continued friendship".
But several American Muslims told Al Jazeera that Bush's walk did not match his talk.
They said Muslims
had been discriminated against especially since the September 11, 2001
attacks and that the country's military action was not congruent with
its rhetoric that Islam is a peaceful religion.
Bush did not say
who would be made the first US envoy to the 57-nation Organisation of
the Islamic Conference, in his latest bid to counter the tide of
anti-Americanism in the Muslim world.
But Al Jazeera's
Viviana Hurtado said he would have to be a respected American Muslim
who can articulate US foreign policy, withstand criticism at home
and scepticism from people in the Middle East who may see him as Bush's
puppet.
'True enemy'
In
his speech marking the 50th anniversary of the Islamic Centre of
Washington, Bush said that while the principles of religious freedom
have been expanding elsewhere in the world, in the Middle East there had been a rise of "extremists".
"This enemy falsely claims that America is at war with Muslims and the Muslim faith, when in fact it is these radicals who are Islam's true enemy," he said.
"We
must encourage more Muslim leaders to add their voices, to speak out
against radical extremists who infiltrate mosques, to denounce
organisations that use the veneer of Islamic belief to support and fund
acts of violence."
Asked about the
simplistic way of viewing the Middle East as having only either
moderates or extremists, Karen Hughes, the US undersecretary of state
for public diplomacy, told Al Jazeera that the distinction was to draw
a clear line between those who advocate using violence and those who do
not.
Anti-American sentiment has increased since the US-led invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan and Bush's past use of terms such as "crusade" and "Islamo-fascists" in referring to the "war on terror" and Iraq has angered many Muslims worldwide.
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