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على
المسلمين المعتدلين أن يساعدوا
في محاربة عقيدة
"القاعدة" بقلم:
حسين سولومون دايلي
ستار - 17/4/2007 Moderate Muslims must help
discredit Al-Qaeda's ideology By
Hussein Solomon
Commentary
by
Tuesday,
April 17, 2007
Al-Qaeda
sprung into the popular conscience of the world with the
attacks of 9/11. Since then the organization has taken a
beating - many of its senior commanders were killed or
arrested, others are in hiding. Given the various
counterterrorism initiatives, it has proven more
difficult to source arms, to move money and to merely
communicate. Under
these circumstances, the leadership of Al-Qaeda has
become more diffuse, with local leaders in charge of
command and control while Osama bin Laden and Ayman
al-Zawahri provide merely inspirational leadership
through the odd audio and video recording. Thus, from
being a tightly knit organization, Al-Qaeda has morphed
into a loose amalgamation of independent cells that may
or may not receive direct support from the main
organization and which can operate independently from
the main organization. According
to the historian R.T. Naylor, "Al-Qaeda itself does
not exist ... [It] is a loose network of likeminded
individuals [who] pay homage to the same patron figure
who they may never have met and with whom they have no
concrete relationship. They conduct their operations
strictly by themselves, even if they may from time to
time seek advice." This
loose amalgamation of independent cell structures is
increasingly the Al-Qaeda of the future and poses
challenges to counterterrorist officials the world over.
This is not the terrorism of old. In the cases of both
the Baader-Meinhoff Gang and the Japanese Red Army,
neutralizing the leadership of the organization meant
neutralizing the entire organization. Intelligence
officials trying to penetrate the new Al-Qaeda can at
best hope to neutralize an independent cell, while other
cells continue to function. In the process, the war
against terror will be measured in years, if not
decades. Patience and perseverance will be watchwords in
this new struggle for the future of humanity. At
the same time, this new diffuse Al-Qaeda network also
challenges the "leadership" of the
organization. Bin Laden has to rely on local leaders
such as, until recently, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, with his
ruthless gang of cutthroats in Iraq. Their excesses
against both Sunnis and Shiites, however, reflect
negatively on Al-Qaeda as a whole. Another
organizational challenge confronting Al-Qaeda is that
this loose network needs glue to bind the disparate
parts together. That glue is ideology. The
broader parameters of Al-Qaeda's ideology are easily
discernible: It is anti-Western and anti-Semitic. It
seeks to destroy what it terms apostate regimes, like
those in Saudi Arabia and Egypt. It is violent, it is
opposed to tolerance and plurality and seeks the
restoration of the caliphate. This is Al-Qaedism, a form
of Islamofascism that shares many characteristics of
other totalitarian ideologies of the 20th century. Given
the importance of this ideology to the existence of the
organization, it is imperative that the struggle against
Al-Qaeda also take the form of an ideological struggle.
Here it is crucial that the Muslim ulama, or clergy,
academics, journalists and teachers all be at the
forefront of the struggle. They need to discredit the
ideology in order to reclaim the faith as their own. But
in so doing, they will also be drying up the extremists'
recruitment pool - why give up your life for something
you do not believe in? http://www.dailystar.com.lb But
it is also imperative that Western countries understand
that Al-Qaedism is nourished by real grievances. It is a
fact, as King Abdullah II of Jordan stated in his recent
address to the United States Congress, that the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict has poisoned relations
between Muslims and Jews and between Muslims and the
West the world over. Its speedy resolution is essential
for the broader struggle against terror. It
is a fact that while talking about democracy, the US has
allied itself with some of the most repressive regimes
in the Arab world. This hypocrisy only fuels anger and
magnifies the terror threat. It is also a fact that the
combined GDP of 22 countries of the Arab League is less
than the GDP of Spain; that 40 percent of adult Arabs
are illiterate; that a third of the population of the
broader Middle East live on less than $2 a day; and that
only 2 percent of the region's population has access to
the Internet. The economic development of the Middle
East is a vital necessity. History has demonstrated time
and time again that the existence of a large and vibrant
middle class is the natural bulwark against extremist
thought. In
a nutshell, Al-Qaeda can only be defeated if its
ideology is discredited by Muslims; and if the West
recognizes that this ideology, no matter how twisted and
violent it is, reflects real grievances that need to be
addressed if we are to achieve a world without terror
and fear. Hussein
Solomon lectures in the department of political science
at the University of Pretoria in South Africa, where he
is also director of the Center for International
Political Studies. This commentary first appeared at
bitterlemons-international.org, an online newsletter
that publishes views of Middle Eastern and Islamic
issues. http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=5&article_id=81509 ----------------- نشرنا
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