Greg Flakus | Houston (VOA)
The plan to build an Islamic Center and mosque two blocks from
the former site of the World Trade Center in New York City has drawn widespread
opposition and, as a result, many Muslims feel they are being unfairly blamed
for the actions of the terrorists who brought down the two skyscrapers on
September 11, 2001. They have an ally in the editor of a widely read energy
industry publication who says strident rhetoric produced by the controversy is
un-American and harmful to US interests in the Muslim world.

www.ogj.com
The Oil and Gas Journal is not the magazine where one
would normally find debate about such an issue as the proposed mosque in New
York City. It is a trade publication that often weighs in on energy issues or
the recent BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. But, in the latest issue, Editor
Bob Tippee says people in the energy industry should be concerned about the
rancorous dispute in New York.
In an editorial titled The Mosque and Oil, Tippee says The oil and gas
industry has strong interests in the ugly controversy. He goes on to condemn
politicians who he says have appeared xenophobic and mean-spirited as well as
those who continually support expensive and, in his view, ill-advised plans to
achieve energy independence.
In a VOA interview, Tippee criticizes politicians who tout energy independence
by claiming foreign oil exporters are enemies.
"There are antagonistic regimes in the oil exporting community and I name two of
them, Venezuela and Iran, but the other exporters are, One, solid business
partners and, Two, not any more antagonistic than any other trading partners,"
said Bob Tippee. "We have our differences with all trading partners. The fact
is, in the modern oil market, the exporters need the importers as much as the
reverse."
Part of the problem stems from Saudi Arabia's role in the 1973 oil embargo and
the involvement of some Saudi citizens in the September 11 attacks. Bob Tippee
says many Americans who want to reduce oil imports use the same rhetoric as
those who oppose the New York mosque, portraying Arabs and Muslims in general in
a negative light.
"I do really think that when a lot of people pick up that line of argument they
are thinking 19 attackers, what was it, 15 of which were from Saudi Arabia and
Saudi Arabia is the biggest producer and, therefore, Saudi Arabia is against us
and that does not hold water [is not true]," he said. "But a lot of people
believe that or want to believe that."
Tippee's editorial has not stirred much comment yet from people in the energy
sector, but some who have read it agree with the notion that anti-Muslim
prejudice, in the case of the mosque and on the issue of oil imports, should be
resisted.
Amy Myers Jaffe of the Energy Forum at Rice University's Baker Institute for
Public Policy says she agrees with Tippee's defense of oil-producing nations
like Saudi Arabia. What Americans should know, says Jaffe, is that Saudi Arabia
has often worked closely with the United States to the benefit of the world at
large.
"In the aftermath of September 11, so that there would be no panic in the
markets and because they had been our ally for 30 years, Saudi Arabia actually
increased its oil production to make sure that the September 11 event did not
cause an unstable oil market," said Amy Myers Jaffe. "They did not advertise it,
but they did it."
But Jaffe does not believe the Oil and Gas Journal editorial will have
much impact on the mosque debate or the issue of whether or not the United
States should be dependent on foreign energy producers. But she says the
sometimes strident rhetoric is unlikely to have any significant impact on US
relations with oil-producing countries in the Middle East.
"It would only have an impact if it was our official government position," said
Jaffe. "Do we sit around and make our policies based on what some nutcase
[insane person] says on Al-Jazeera TV? No. Are they going to make their policies
based on what some nutcase says on XYZ TV station in the United States? No."
While Jaffee steers clear of making any judgment on where the mosque should or
should not be built in New York, she concurs with Tippee's editorial view that
Americans should not blame Arabs or Muslims in general for what a few terrorists
did. She says she has seen ugly instances of anti-Muslim behavior.
In the weeks following the September, 2001 attacks, she had to make special
arrangements to transport the oil minister of a Middle Eastern nation from the
Houston airport to an energy conference at Rice University so as to avoid any
confrontation with angry people. She says the debate over the mosque will
continue because people upset by the plan have a right to express their opinion.
What she says is not in dispute, however, is the official US government position
that backers of the mosque have a right to build it.
... Payvand News - 09/02/10 ... --