The National Review is a prominent neoconservative magazine which features anti-Islam commentary from Islamophobes such as Daniel Pipes, as well as from former Assistant US Attorney Andrew McCarthy, and syndicated columnist Deroy Murdock.
In 2005, it was revealed that the publication distributed an Internet advertisement for a virulently Islamophobic book that, according to the magazine, is a “guide into the dark mind of [the Prophet] Mohammed” and the “world’s most violent religion.”
National Review’s analysis of the book stated: “[The author] explains why Mohammed couldn’t possibly be a true prophet, and reveals the true sources of his ‘revelations.'” It quotes the author as claiming: “Mohammed posed as the apostle of God…while his life is marked by innumerable marriages; and great licentiousness, deeds of rapine, warfare, conquests, unmerciful butcheries, all the time invoking God’s holy name to sanction his evil deeds.” According to the National Review, the book shows how “Mohammed again and again justified his rapine and licentiousness with new ‘divine revelations.'”
Key Individuals
Andrew McCarthy (Contributor)
McCarthy is a former Assistant US Attorney from the Southern District of New York. After resigning from the Justice Department in 2003, he joined the National Review staff. Since then, McCarthy has authored hundreds of columns, including a defense of water boarding in 2007, and a book, The Grand Jihad: How Islam and the Left Sabotage America, which purportedly “offers a harrowing account of how the global Islamist movement’s jihad involves far more than terrorist attacks, and how it found the ideal partner in President Barack Obama, whose Islamist sympathies run deep.”
Deroy Murdock (Contributing Editor)
Murdock is a columnist with the Scripps Howard News Service and a contributing editor for the National Review. Murdock is perhaps most well known for his November 2007 commentary “Waterboarding Has Its Benefits,” in which he wrote that “waterboarding is something of which every American should be proud.” During the controversy surrounding the construction of the Park51 Islamic Center in Lower Manhattan, Murdock questioned whether the center should be built “anywhere in America” and authored sample apologetics on behalf of the Park51 project leader, Imam Rauf.
Daniel Pipes (Contributor)
Pipes is the founder and president of the Middle East Forum. For more on Pipes see: Middle East Forum.