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Front-Page News The following article, titled "The Terrorists Zealotry
Is Political Not Religious" by MHCs Sohail Hashmi, Associate
Professor of International Relations on the Alumnae Foundation, appeared
in the September 30 issue of the Washington Post. The men who perpetrated the carnage on September 11 left a trail
of clues about how they accomplished their mission, but virtually
nothing about why. They left behind no suicide notes explaining what
motivated them to kill thousands and die in the process, only the
vaguest exhortations to be steadfast in the quest of paradise. But
if they were indeed inspired by Osama bin Laden and his supporters,
as the Bush administration promises to demonstrate, then they probably
died for no more than an idea, the idea of jihad. This term invokes for many in the West the notion of a holy war conducted
by zealots in the name of their God with the aim of imposing their
beliefs on recalcitrant unbelievers. Since September 11, we have heard
this idea repeated by public officials. In his address to Congress,
President Bush described the goal of al Qaeda as "remaking the
world and imposing its radical beliefs on people everywhere." Yet it would be a mistake to view the attacks on the Pentagon and
the World Trade Center as the latest phase of an Islamic holy war
to convert or subjugate unbelievers. Based on the most illuminating
of the few available statements of its mission, al Qaedas goals
appear to be far more mundane than religious, more political than
theological. Whats more, the organizations tactics bore
all the characteristics of a guerrilla attack, in which the infiltrators
blended into the society they were attempting to terrorize, including,
we are told, some of them spending one of their last nights drinking
in a barhardly what could be expected of holy warriors. The stated grievances of the bin Laden network fit a pattern familiar
to students of Islamic activism over the past two centuries. In a
fatwa [edict] released in February 1998 (and echoed last week by the
Taliban), bin Laden and leaders of extremist groups in Egypt, Pakistan,
and Bangladesh specified that their war was a defensive struggle against
Americans and their allies who had declared war "on God, his
messenger, and Muslims." The "crimes and sins" perpetrated
by the United States were threefold. First, it had "stormed"
the Arabian peninsula during the Gulf War and continued "occupying
the lands of Islam in the holiest of places" (i.e., Mecca and
Medina in Saudi Arabia); second, it continued a war of annihilation
against Iraq; and third, it supported the state of Israel and its
continued occupation of Jerusalem. The only appropriate Muslim response, according to the statement,
was a defensive jihad to repulse the aggressor. According to virtually
all classical and modern scholars, such a warunlike the expansionist
jihadis a moral obligation incumbent upon all true Muslims. This list of grievances is certainly not unique to bin Ladens
group. The general complaint that the West is attacking Muslim countries
has been heard repeatedly before, as has the goal of fighting the
aggressors to compel their "armies to move out of all the lands
of Islam, defeated and unable to threaten any Muslim." The notion
of jihad involved here is not the one formed during the period of
Arab expansion in the seventh century or the Ottoman Turkish expansion
of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, but the one formed over
the past two centuries as Muslims struggled to respond to the expansion
of the West. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the
aggressor nations would have been the British, the French, the Russians.
Since the end of World War II, the United States has increasingly
occupied this position, and all the more so after it became the guardian
of the Persian Gulf during the late 1980s and 1990s. The fact that American support of Israel comes third on the list
should not diminish its importance, as defenders of Israel have assiduously
claimed in the past two weeks. The widespread perceptions that the
United States provides carte blanche support to Israel even as the
Jewish state occupies Jerusalem and large tracts of the West Bank
and Gaza, that American-made weapons are used to kill Palestinians
opposing the occupationall while the sanctions against Iraq
remain in place ten years after the Gulf Warspark the rawest
emotional responses. These complaints require no elaboration in the
fatwa; they are immediately understood by the statements intended
Muslim audience. If we accept the fatwa as articulating the ideas that drive bin Laden
and his supporters, then there is nothing at all remarkable about
his group. They selectively quote from the Koran to establish the
basis for their jihad, but their motivations appear to spring primarily
from the same sort of anti-imperialism that motivates religious and
non-religious groups in the Middle East and other parts of the world.
They may view themselves as the vanguard of an ideological movement
that will ultimately overturn the societies of the rich and powerful
West, but their words and actions indicate they are astute enough
to realize this is a remote possibility. Although they sometimes appear to be fired by the religious zeal
of the puritanical Wahhabi movements that twice swept Arabia, their
targets to date have not been offending religious or cultural institutions,
but political, military, and economic targets: American embassies
in Africa, military barracks in Saudi Arabia, the USS Cole, the Pentagon,
and the World Trade Center. Moreover, the long-term planning and coordination
required for the September 11 attacks demonstrate that al Qaeda is
a far cry from Hamas and Islamic Jihad in the Palestinian territories.
Whereas the Palestinian suicide bombers are recruited from mosques
or the street just days or hours before they die, the attacks in the
United States required several years of advance planning. Most people, including many Arabs and Muslims, probably consider
bin Ladens avowed goal of driving the United States out of the
Middle East to be impractical and even imprudent. Still, many people
of good faith, Muslims and non-Muslims, Americans and non-Americans,
may share the general concerns with U.S. policies in the region that
al Qaeda has outlined as the basis for its jihad. No principle is more clearly outlined in the Koran than this, that
even in the midst of battlea realm of human activity where moral
constraints are often loosenedconstraints must be maintained.
In one of the first verses outlining a military aspect to jihad, the
injunction is clear: "Fight in the cause of God those who fight
you, but do not transgress limits, for God loves not the transgressor"
(2:190). Commenting on this verse, the prominent Syrian scholar Wahba
Zuhayli writes: "Do not fight anyone unless they fight you. Fighting
is thus justified if you fight the enemy and the enemy fights you.
It is not justified against anyone who does not fight the Muslims,
and it is necessary [in this event] to make peace." Zuhayli clearly
rules out the possibility of collective responsibilitythat all
citizens belonging to a perceived foe are somehow responsible. The presumption of Islamic teachings on right conduct in war is that
individuals are innocent and therefore not subject to harm unless
they demonstrate by their actions that they are a threat to the safety
of Muslims. On this basis, the overwhelming majority of Muslim scholars
have for Osama bin Laden and his supporters give a brutally simple response
to the weight of the jihad tradition: "We do not differentiate
between those dressed in military uniforms and civilians," he
has said. Because "U.S. aggression is affecting Muslim civilians,
not just the military," all Americans "are targets in this
fatwa." In the name of retaliation, they claim, there are no innocents. This logic must also be rejected. It leads us into the infernal and morally vacuous exercise of assigning blamea process of tit-for-tat that leads, ad infinitum, into the past and holds the potential for disastrous consequences in the future if the spiral is unbroken. |
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