The Talibanization of US
When Religion Enters the War Room By Wahab Raofi When a nation’s senior military officials begin quoting scripture to justify the use of force, something fundamental has shifted — not just in rhetoric, but in the relationship between government and the governed. Forceful language can inspire, but it is not the language of statesmanship. It is the language of those seeking conviction rather than consequence. And when that language is religious, deployed in the context of war, it raises questions that go far beyond political preference. Over the past two decades, a quiet but persistent pattern has emerged in certain corners of American public life. The Military Religious Freedom Foundation, an advocacy organization that monitors religious influence within the U.S. armed forces, has documented hundreds of complaints from active-duty service members alleging that commanders used explicitly Biblical language — including imagery from the Book of Revelation — when discussing milit...