Robert R. Reilly


Robert R. Reilly is a writer and senior fellow at the American Foreign Policy Council.
He has published on topics of US foreign policy and "war of ideas." Reilly is also widely known as a classical music critic who has written for periodicals including High Fidelity, Musical America, Schwann/Opus, and American Record Guide.
During 1968 to 1970, he served as tank platoon leader in the 1/18th Armored Cavalry at Fort Lewis, Washington.
He worked in the private sector 1977 to 1981, and for The Heritage Foundation the U.S. Information Agency and as Special Assistant to Ronald Reagan during the latter's first term.
He was Senior Advisor for Public Diplomacy at the US Embassy in Berne, Switzerland.
He produced and hosted a weekly talk-show on foreign policy, On the Line, for Voice of America & Worldnet TV and was director of Voice of America.
He acted as Senior Advisor for Information Strategy in the Office of the Secretary of Defense during 2002 to 2006 and as Senior Advisor to the Iraqi Information Ministry during Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003.
In 2007 he was Assistant Professor of Strategic Communications, School for National Security Executive Education, National Defense University.
Reilly in 2010 published The Closing of the Muslim Mind, published by the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. In the book, he draws a connection between the decline of the "rational" theological school of Mu'tazila in favour of the rise of Ash'arism, which would become the mainstream Sunni theology, in the 10th century. In this the author sees an act of "intellectual suicide", the nucleus of the end of the Islamic Golden Age and the decline of Islamic civilization into a "dysfunctional culture based on a deformed theology" locked in determinism, occasionalism and ultimately fatalism.
In his review of the book, Frank Griffith describes it as "war literature", and "a Catholic refutation of Ash'arite Muslim theology", complaining that Reilly constructs an undue equation between Ash'arism and contemporary Jihadism, while most Jihadists in fact follow Salafism and are hostile towards Ash'arism.

Publications