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لقد
أوجد الغرب أرضية خصبة لنمو
القاعدة بقلم:
سمية غنوشي الجارديان
- 21/6/2007 لقد ساعد الاحتلال و انسداد أفق
السلام بتمهيد الطريق لهذا
الحضور المرعب الجديد في فلسطين The
west has created fertile ground for al-Qaida's growth The
occupation and obstruction of peace has helped to pave
the way for this terrifying new presence in Palestine Soumaya
Ghannoushi Thursday
June 21, 2007 The
Guardian It
seems that al-Qaida's dream is on its way to turning
into reality. At last it has found a foothold on the
Palestinian scene. Witness the kidnapping of BBC
reporter Alan Johnston in Gaza by the al-Qaida
affiliated Jaish al-Islam 100 days ago yesterday, and
the heated battles in Nahr al-Barid refugee camp between
the Lebanese army and al-Qaida sympathisers Fatah
al-Islam over the past month. And with Gaza and the West
Bank sliding further into anarchy, with Hamas and Fatah
turning on each other after a year of crushing siege,
this new presence can only grow stronger.
Since
declaring jihad in 1998, al-Qaida has aspired to acquire
the legitimacy of representing the Palestinian cause,
well aware of its rich symbolism within the Arab and
Islamic collective conscience. Ever since the eruption
of the Arab-Israeli conflict in 1948, Palestine has
offered vital legitimacy to a great many political
movements and regimes, from nationalist Nassirites and
Ba'athists to liberals and Islamists. It is this moral
authority that gave the late Yasser Arafat the status he
enjoyed not only among Palestinians, but across the Arab
world and beyond.
Palestine
is the mirror in which the Arab political scene is
reflected. Fatah was an expression of the rise of the
left and nationalism; Hamas of the shift towards
political Islam. And that is precisely why events in
Gaza and Lebanon's Palestinian refugee camps today
should not be taken lightly. They are ominous harbingers
of what could lie ahead. When Osama bin Laden and his
lieutenant Ayman al-Zawahiri issued their "Jihad
against Jews and Crusaders" statement on February
28 1998, responses to their declaration varied from
apathy to amusement. They were an obscure group lost in
the faraway emirate of the Taliban, a pathetic remnant
of the fight against the USSR during the cold war. Their
role looked historically defunct and their discourse
archaic. Things
could not be more different now. Al-Qaida has become an
intensely complex global network, with a decentralised,
flexible structure that enables it to spread in all
directions, across the Arab world, Africa, Asia and
Europe. Whether pursuing active cells or searching for
sleeping ones, the security world is haunted by
al-Qaida's ghost. Like bubbles, these cells are
autonomous, bound together neither by hierarchy nor by a
chain of command. It only takes a few individuals who
subscribe to its ideology and terrorist methods for
al-Qaida to extend its reach to a new part of the globe. With
the Middle East moving from one crisis to another, this
small organisation saw itself miraculously transferred
from periphery to centre. In its founding statement,
al-Qaida defined its mission as a jihad aimed at
cleansing the Arabian peninsula of the American
"locusts, eating its riches and wiping out its
plantations", and liberating Palestinian land from
Zionist occupation. With the invasion of Iraq in 2003,
al-Qaida was offered a firm foothold in the Middle East
and the unique chance to implement its "resistance
against Jews and crusaders" project. The
organisation's penetration of Palestinian politics is
the climax of a long, still unfolding process. Rapidly
expanding from one location to another, al-Qaida
currently boasts branches throughout the Arab region.
These developments are worrying not only from the point
of view of ruling governments and their western allies,
but from that of mainstream Islamic movements too. The
defeat of Nasserite nationalism in 1967 saw these
movements turn into the principal active players on the
political map. Nationalist demands and aspirations of
liberation of Palestine, independence from foreign
dominance, and sovereignty over resources, began to be
spoken with an Islamic voice, in a region where the
national and the Islamic have always been intimately
intertwined.
With
the severe restrictions imposed on them by their
western-backed governments and the evaporation of
American promises of reform and democratisation, this
"democratic Islam" currently finds itself in
the grip of a crisis. The greatest beneficiary is
al-Qaida. In the Middle East, its battles are fought on
two fronts: against "traitor" regimes and
their western backers on the one hand, and against
popular Islamist oppositions deemed "deviant from
the true path of jihad" on the other. In a speech
recently broadcast on the al-Jazeera satellite channel,
al-Zawahiri scolded Hamas for straying from the path of
resistance by participating in the political process.
Events
on the ground give further credibility to al-Zawahiri's
words. Arabs have watched with horror as Palestinians
have been severely punished for their electoral choices,
isolated, starved, and propelled towards the bottomless
pit of internecine feuding. The message from Washington
and London seemed to be: don't bother with the ballot
box - only through bombings and violence is change
possible. Between occupation and obstruction of peaceful
change, the US is creating the ideal environment for
al-Qaida to flourish, the product of a sick geopolitics
and a deformed view of the region and its needs. But
one thing is certain: the smoke rising from Nahr
al-Barid's ruined camp will not be the last the region
will see, and the flames will not stop at the Middle
East's borders, or consume its people alone. •
Soumaya
Ghannoushi is director of research at IslamExpo http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/story/0,,2107801,00.html ----------------- نشرنا
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