The Clipboard The Clipboard: Terrorism is a Tool of a Greater Danger

Al-Muhajabah's Islamic Blogs Home
« Denying the Troops a Secret Ballot | The Clipboard archives | Israel killed 436 Palestinians in past 'quiet' six months »
Trackbacks (0 in, 0 out) | 

Email this link | Print this article | RDF

Further Reading | Elsewhere | Search Options
Add this entry to your hotlist (View your hotlist)

Terrorism is a Tool of a Greater Danger

Date: September 03, 2004 | 18 Rajab 1425 Hijriah
Subjects: terrorism

From an article1:

President Vladimir Putin of Russia is in grave difficulty because he has refused to acknowledge the real nature of the challenge to his government in Chechnya. The terrible hostage crisis in North Ossetia and the bombings of recent days are the result of his unwillingness to recognize the implications of defying nationalism - not mere "terrorism" - in the Caucasus.

Putin is making the same mistake that President George W. Bush and the U.S. government made after the Sept. 11 attacks. Like Putin, they insisted they were merely dealing with terrorists or criminals.

They were actually dealing with terrorism and crime in the service of nationalism and religion, which is entirely different. In the political circumstances of today, nationalism and radical religion have come to compete and overlap in Chechnya, as in Iraq and Afghanistan.
(link)

Terrorism is a tactic that is used by people in the service of their cause. People rarely commit terrorist acts just for the sake of doing so, they do it in the service of their cause. The idea of a "war on terrorism" is stupid. It's like declaring a war on bombing. You can't declare war on a tactic. You can declare war on a country or a group of people, but if you want to understand why the country or people are fighting, you have to look at what cause they believe in. Most terrorism is committed in the service of what are considered to be national liberation struggles against an occupying or invading force. Trying to deal with a tactic without dealing with the underlying grievances is not likely to be successful.

Complete text of the article, Terrorism is a Tool of a Greater Danger, by William Pfaff

President Vladimir Putin of Russia is in grave difficulty because he has refused to acknowledge the real nature of the challenge to his government in Chechnya. The terrible hostage crisis in North Ossetia and the bombings of recent days are the result of his unwillingness to recognize the implications of defying nationalism - not mere "terrorism" - in the Caucasus.

Putin is making the same mistake that President George W. Bush and the U.S. government made after the Sept. 11 attacks. Like Putin, they insisted they were merely dealing with terrorists or criminals.

They were actually dealing with terrorism and crime in the service of nationalism and religion, which is entirely different. In the political circumstances of today, nationalism and radical religion have come to compete and overlap in Chechnya, as in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Nationalism has been a driving force in the Caucasus since the 18th century. The Chechens fought Czarist imperial expansion from 1818. After 1917, they fought the Bolsheviks. They rose again when the German offensive reached Chechnya in 1942, and in revenge Stalin deported many to Central Asia.

When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the Chechens again demanded independence, and President Boris Yeltsin sent troops against them.

Putin, too was foolish enough to think that he could crush the Chechens. He renewed the war against them to win votes. He won Bush's favor in 2001: Were the Chechens not terrorists? Were they not America's enemies, too? But now Chechen terrorism is undermining Putin. Like Bush, he has promised to "win," but he is not winning.

In invading Iraq, the Bush administration made a gift of Iraqi nationalism to the Islamic fundamentalists. Without nationalism, the fundamentalist cause is weak. The aim of its jihad is to recreate the fundamentalist intellectuals' idealized notion of medieval Islamic society. Recovering a golden age is an idea that recurs in weak societies suffering the crises of development.

A segment of society, usually young, often Western-educated and from privileged circumstances, experiences a puritan reaction against the dominant materialism, moral disorder, licentiousness and abuse of power that it sees in the West.

This is a common phenomenon. The "Maoist" terrorists of western Europe in the 1970s and early 1980s included pastors' daughters and former seminarians motivated by moral outrage against capitalism.

Young Muslims who mobilized to fight Russian aggression in Afghanistan moved on to fight corruption and heresy elsewhere - in Egypt, Algeria and Bosnia. The people in those countries, however, did not follow them. Just as in the case of Europe's "Maoists," the radicalized young had believed that ordinary people were ready for revolution, and were mistaken.

When the people won't follow, the next step for the radical, in Europe and the Islamic world, is terrorism - "terrible" acts meant to awaken Muslims to the truth, and to terrify enemies by invoking God's liberating wrath. That brings us to Al Qaeda.

Fundamentalism and nationalism were parallel forces at work in the Caucasus and the Middle East well before the new fundamentalists came home from Afghanistan. Nationalism, with terrorism a part of it, drove the Zionists' war against the British and the Palestinians before Israel was created. Palestinian terrorism has been part of the war against Israel ever since.

Whatever Washington thought it was doing - and there seems to have been little responsible thought about what it was doing - it made a basic error by declaring a "war on terror" after the Sept. 11 attacks and then attacking the Taliban regime in Afghanistan and invading Iraq.

It created the circumstances in which nationalism and "terrorism" are now at war with the United States. The Iraq insurrection's essential motivation is nationalism. Thus, sooner or later, the United States will be forced out of Iraq.

Nationalism has been the most important force in modern history, resisting and outlasting all totalitarianisms. It easily merges with religious fundamentalism, which is another way to affirm identity. It makes use of terrorism because this is the weapon of the weak. But nationalism is what it is all about. After all, what has driven U.S. policy since Sept. 11, 2001, if not outraged nationalism?

reference=http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0903-05.htm
~ Posted by Al-Muhajabah, a fair and balanced niqabi, at 04:08 PM

Trackbacks

What is trackback?
You Pinged Me

Here's who's pinging me:

(no pings yet)


Further reading

Recent entries

The following is a list of the ten most recent entries in The Clipboard as of Mar 16, 2006:

View a list of all entries in The Clipboard

Related entries

This entry has been tagged as covering the following subjects: terrorism. The following is a list of the ten most recent entries in Al-Muhajabah's Islamic Blogs that share any of these tags:

A semantic analysis of this entry also suggests the following keywords to search for related content on: service cause, declare war, terrorism, war, people, service, nationalism, dealing, tactic, cause, putin, Putin, chechnya, President, declare, president, country, Chechnya, government, religion, Terrorism

What links here: View a list of other entries in this blog (if any) that link to this entry

Deepen your understanding of the issue of terrorism by reading Controversial Issues About Islam: Terrorism.

Or look generally for informational pages on my website tagged with terrorism

Results of Semantic Search

A semantic search of Al-Muhajabah's Islamic Blogs suggests the following as the ten entries most closely related to this entry:



Elsewhere

External resources

Check out other web pages (if any) that I've bookmarked via del.icio.us that share the same tags: terrorism

Explore reference materials from Answers.com about these subjects: terrorism

Read news stories at Common Times about these subjects: terrorism

View search results at gada.be metasearch service for these subjects: terrorism

Find books at Amazon.com on these subjects: terrorism

Other views

Want to see what other bloggers have to say about the article I cited above? Check these resources to see lists of blogs (if any) with entries that are about this article or have linked to it.

Check Waypath for blog entries generally related to this entry, or Technorati or Bloglines for blog entries that link to this entry.

Technorati tags: View blog entries, bookmarks and photos tagged by others with the same subjects as this entry:



Search options

     

For external resources on the topic of this entry, you can run a search for its title terrorism is a tool of a greater danger (Google, DayPop, Feedster) or keyword(s) terrorism (Google, DayPop, Feedster). Or search for pages related to the cited article. DayPop is a search engine similar to Google that focuses on searching news sources and blogs. Feedster searches blogs via RSS feeds.