Barack Obama’s First 100 days – for the Muslim World

To the Muslim world, we seek a new way forward, based on mutual interest and mutual respect.” When President Barack Obama said that during his January 2009 presidential inaugural address, he sent a clear message to the world’s 1.3 billion Muslims.

 A few weeks ago in Ankara, he fulfilled his promise to give a major foreign policy speech from a capital in a Muslim-majority country in the first 100 days of his presidency. Obama told the Turkish Parliament that, “The United States is not, and will never be, at war with Islam.”

So President Obama has done a remarkable job in his outreach to the greater Muslim world, where perception of the United States had suffered immensely from the garbled rhetoric and actions of the George W. Bush administration.

 And many American leaders are following suit to bridge the diplomacy gap with the greater Muslim world. A group of 34 — including former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and former Republican Congressman Vin Weber — suggested in a recent report, Changing Course: A New Direction for U.S. Relations with the Muslim World, some ways to improve US-Muslim relations. Moroccan Ambassador Aziz Mekouar called the report “a most constructive blueprint for building relationships of cooperation between the United States and the Muslim world.”

 The report suggests that the U.S. partner with governments, multilateral institutions and philanthropic organizations to make education a more powerful engine for employment and entrepreneurship in the Muslim world. The U.S. and Muslim governments can “gain credibility and help transform a high-risk youth generation into a broad and deep pool of skilled workers.”

 Albright spoke about the report at a dinner with about 80 ambassadors, journalists and political leaders on the state of US-Muslim relations within the Obama administration. The event was hosted by Moroccan Ambassador Mekouar, and included a remarkable range of players, from former Bush National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley, to Syrian Ambassador to the United States Imad Moustapha to Dr. Richard Land of the Southern Baptist Convention.

 “When I became Secretary of State, we did not have Muslims employed in the State Department,” Albright said that evening. “I went back to my notes, when I was writing my book…and I had various notes which read, ‘Learn more about Islam’.”

 Albright gave Obama an “A+” for his engagement with the Muslim world, but said better engagement “cannot be done without the people in this room.” Laughing, she added, “We have our work cut out for us.”

 We do indeed, Madame Secretary.

 Job creation and economic development are two ways Obama can expand his reach. Investing here could reduce the threat of extremism by providing youth with opportunities for employment. Supporting effective governments and civic participation, as the report suggests, will help, too.

 As Obama moves forward, it is imperative that his administration ensure that his words to the Muslim world turn into tangible policy changes on the ground.

 As we Americans consider the first 100 days of his presidency, let’s work together so that his words become a collective “audacity of hope” in every corner of the world for the next 100 days, months and years.

 This column was originally published on CNN Anderson Cooper 360

Arsalan Iftikhar is an international human rights lawyer, founder of www.TheMuslimGuy.com and is a contributing editor for Islamica magazine in Washington.

About arsalan.iftikhar

Arsalan Iftikhar is an international human rights lawyer and Contributing Editor for Islamica magazine; a contemporary global affairs magazine headquartered in Los Angeles and with editorial offices in London, Amman and Cambridge, Massachusetts. He is also the founder of www.TheMuslimGuy.com and a regular weekly contributor on the Barbershop segment for the National Public Radio (NPR) show ‘Tell Me More’ with Michel Martin.

His interviews, commentaries and analyses have regularly appeared in virtually every major media outlet in the world including: CNN, BBC World News, The TODAY Show, National Public Radio (NPR), FOX News Channel, MSNBC, Associated Press, C-SPAN,  Voice of America (VOA), Al-Jazeera, Agence France-Presse (AFP), USA TODAY, NBC Nightly News, The Washington Post, ABC World News Tonight, Los Angeles Times, CBS News Up to the Minute, The New York Times, Rolling Stone, TIME, The Economist and Newsweek magazines (among dozens others worldwide).

He is also a regular contributor to CNN's Anderson Cooper 360 blog at AC360.com and his opinion columns have appeared in major publications such as: USA TODAY, CNN.com, Houston Chronicle, Detroit Free Press, The Providence Journal, San Diego Union-Tribune, Charlotte Observer, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Kansas City Star, Miami Herald and many more.

In March 2008, Arsalan was one of four international debaters selected to participate in The Doha Debates on BBC World Television. The Doha Debates are broadcast to over 300 million people worldwide on BBC World Service Television and its stage has been shared with the likes of Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Desmond Tutu and former United States President Bill Clinton.

In addition to The Doha Debates, some of Arsalan’s other international speaking venues have included: Harvard University, Stanford University, Georgetown University, Johns Hopkins University, University of Pennsylvania, The George Washington University Elliott School of International Affairs, University of Michigan School of Law, The Rockefeller Foundation, The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) and The British Museum in London.

Additionally, Arsalan was cast as a Hollywood movie ‘featured extra’ in the Warner Brothers spy movie thriller Body of Lies (October 2008) starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe. He was also a contributing author to Keeping Out the Other (Columbia University Press) and Taking Back Islam (Rodale Press); winner of the 2003 Wilbur Communications Award for Religion Book of the Year. In 2006, the French Ambassador to the United States personally named him to the Personnalités d’Avenir (Personalities of the Future) World Leader Program in Paris sponsored by the French Foreign Ministry.

Arsalan graduated from Washington University in St. Louis in 1999 and received his law doctorate from Washington University School of Law in 2003. A native of Chicago, he specializes in international human rights law and is licensed to practice law in Washington DC.

Arsalan's Global Website: www.TheMuslimGuy.com

Arsalan on Facebook: www.Facebook.com/TheMuslimGuy

Arsalan on Twitter: www.Twitter.com/TheMuslimGuy

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2 Responses to Barack Obama’s First 100 days – for the Muslim World

  1. CaliMom May 1, 2009 at 6:26 pm #

    Well written Arsalan. I think life really is about building relationships. Maybe now with President Obama extending his hand towards the Muslim world, friendships will develop rather than so called "enemies."

  2. salwa May 2, 2009 at 1:26 am #

    Yes, I think this was very important step..people everywhere need to know more about Islam, for it is mainly concerned about peace on earth..

    Thanks