In an interview that aired today on CBS's Face the Nation, Cameron said the West must show that its values, like free speech, are stronger than those of Islamist extremists pursuing a "poisonous death cult narrative."
"I think in a free society, there is a right to cause offense about someone's religion. I'm a Christian. If someone says something offensive about Jesus, I might find that offensive but in a free society I don't have a right to wreak my vengeance upon them," Cameron said.
Cameron, who was interviewed after his meeting here Friday with US President Barack Obama, was responding to the pope's comments suggesting that religion should be off limits.
"There are limits," the pope said in Manila Thursday, weighing in on a debate set off in the wake of a deadly attack on French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo over caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed that have angered many in the Muslim world.
Twelve people, including some of France's best known cartoonists, were killed January 7 by two gunmen who stormed its office. In all, 17 people were killed in three days of related attacks in Paris.
"Freedom of speech is a right and a duty that must be displayed without offending."
Charlie Hebdo's new editor in chief, meanwhile, defended the caricatures in an interview with NBC's "Meet the Press."
"Every time we draw a cartoon of Mohammed, every time we draw a cartoon of prophets, every time we draw a cartoon of God, we defend the freedom of religion," the editor Gerard Biard.
"Yes, it's also the freedom of speech, but it's the freedom of religion. Religion should not be a political argument."
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