Kurt Nicklas
2008-06-05 10:43:49 UTC
Al Qaeda's Struggles
By Jamie Weinstein
North Star Writers Group | Thursday, June 05, 2008
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=CE58A104-6915-41B9-BBD4-981120ADBF0B
"On balance, we are doing pretty well," CIA Director Michael Hayden
told The Washington Post last week, speaking about America's war
against Al Qaeda. "Near strategic defeat of Al Qaeda in Iraq. Near
strategic defeat for Al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia. Significant setbacks
for Al Qaeda globally – and here I'm going to use the word
'ideologically' – as a lot of the Islamic world pushes back on their
form of Islam."
Hayden's assessment comes on the heels of two very important articles
published last week in The New Republic, by Peter Bergen and Paul
Cruickshank, and in The New Yorker, by Lawrence Wright, on the turning
sentiment in the Muslim world against Al Qaeda and its gruesome
tactics.
Taken together with Hayden's assessment, one cannot help but feel a
sense of optimism.
Writing a lengthy article in The New Yorker, the Pulitzer Prize-
winning author Wright – whose book The Looming Tower is a must read
for anyone interested in understanding Al Qaeda, its leaders and its
intellectual foundations – told the tale of Dr. Fadl.
Fadl, who has gone by many different names over his life, was for a
time the leader of Al Jihad, an Egyptian terrorist group dedicated to
overthrowing the Egyptian government and creating an Islamic state.
More importantly, he was the mentor of Al Qaeda's number two man Ayman
al-Zawahiri and a part of the original core of Al Qaeda. In the
mid-1990s, when he was in Sudan with Osama Bin Laden, Fadl wrote one
of the most important books forming the Jihadist world-view, The
Compendium of the Pursuit of Divine Knowledge.
"Few books in recent history have done as much damage," Wright writes
in his article. One source quoted by Bergen and Cruickshank described
Fadl as like "the big boss in the Mafia in Chicago."
But now in a recently published book, Rationalization of Jihad, Fadl,
who currently languishes in an Egyptian prison, has turned against Al
Qaeda, Zawahiri and global Jihad. Modifying and rejecting some of his
previous writings, Fadl's book has caused a stir in the Muslim world,
especially amongst Jihadists.
"Whatever the motivations behind the writing of the book, its
publication amounted to a major assault on radical Islamist theology,
from the man who had originally formulated much of the thinking,"
Wright explains.
Similarly, in a comparatively shorter article in The New Republic,
authors Bergen and Cruickshank document this trend of former Jihadists
turning against Al Qaeda.
A large "group of religious scholars, former fighters, and militants
who had once had great influence over Al Qaeda's leaders, and who –
alarmed by the targeting of civilians in the West, the senseless
killings in Muslim countries, and Al Qaeda's barbaric tactics in
Iraq," they write, "have turned against the organization, many just in
the past year."
What makes these intellectual attacks on Al Qaeda most striking is
that they come from those with street cred, or perhaps more fittingly,
cave cred. In many cases, these are former Jihadists who participated
in violence. Others, like Dr. Fadl, have been among the intellectual
foundations upon which Al Qaeda has rested.
What this means is that potential terrorists may think twice about
joining Al Qaeda or similar Jihadist groups. If they begin to doubt
that their deeds are sanctioned by Islam and they may not get 72
virgins after all, well, that may be somewhat of a disincentive. Al
Qaeda operatives may not find themselves welcome in many areas of the
Muslim world, as we have recently seen throughout Iraq. And those who
were so willing to finance Al Qaeda's operations may now reconsider.
This is not to say that those who are now condemning Al Qaeda's
tactics are savory figures. I wouldn't want to break bread with them.
Many of their views remain despicable. While they speak out against
Jihad, against Western targets and the killing of innocent civilians,
both articles make clear that those now speaking out deem resistance
to American troops in Iraq as legitimate. But we have to take what we
can get. And what these figures are saying could profoundly help
America in its war against terror.
We also cannot say that American policy is predominantly responsible
for this great turn of events. In tennis parlance, you may say that Al
Qaeda has committed unforced errors. It is their tactics that have
turned former intellectual travelers against them. Their carnage,
their sadism, their medieval vision. Combined with America's muscular
response to the Sept. 11 attacks, we may have found the strategy that
will help us win this long war.
Nonetheless, terrorism experts like Bruce Hoffman of Georgetown
University caution us not to overlook the threat Al Qaeda still poses.
This heartening development should not lull us into a state of
complacency. Al Qaeda continues to seek weapons of mass destruction to
hit us on the home front. They have created a relative safe haven in
the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan. America must
continue to be vigilant and proactive.
Still, we do have something to cheer. While conceding that Al Qaeda
remains a serious threat in the short term, Bergen and Cruickshank
write that "encoded in the DNA of apocalyptic Jihadist groups like Al
Qaeda are the seeds of their own long-term destruction: their victims
are often Muslim civilians; they don't offer a positive vision of the
future (but rather the prospect of Taliban-style regimes from Morocco
to Indonesia); they keep expanding their list of enemies, including
any Muslim who doesn't precisely share their world view; and they seem
incapable of becoming politically successful movements because their
ideology prevents them from making the real-world compromises that
would allow them to engage in genuine politics."
The writers aptly conclude, channeling Winston Churchill, that "this
is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is,
perhaps, the end of the beginning."
Let us hope that it is so.
By Jamie Weinstein
North Star Writers Group | Thursday, June 05, 2008
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=CE58A104-6915-41B9-BBD4-981120ADBF0B
"On balance, we are doing pretty well," CIA Director Michael Hayden
told The Washington Post last week, speaking about America's war
against Al Qaeda. "Near strategic defeat of Al Qaeda in Iraq. Near
strategic defeat for Al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia. Significant setbacks
for Al Qaeda globally – and here I'm going to use the word
'ideologically' – as a lot of the Islamic world pushes back on their
form of Islam."
Hayden's assessment comes on the heels of two very important articles
published last week in The New Republic, by Peter Bergen and Paul
Cruickshank, and in The New Yorker, by Lawrence Wright, on the turning
sentiment in the Muslim world against Al Qaeda and its gruesome
tactics.
Taken together with Hayden's assessment, one cannot help but feel a
sense of optimism.
Writing a lengthy article in The New Yorker, the Pulitzer Prize-
winning author Wright – whose book The Looming Tower is a must read
for anyone interested in understanding Al Qaeda, its leaders and its
intellectual foundations – told the tale of Dr. Fadl.
Fadl, who has gone by many different names over his life, was for a
time the leader of Al Jihad, an Egyptian terrorist group dedicated to
overthrowing the Egyptian government and creating an Islamic state.
More importantly, he was the mentor of Al Qaeda's number two man Ayman
al-Zawahiri and a part of the original core of Al Qaeda. In the
mid-1990s, when he was in Sudan with Osama Bin Laden, Fadl wrote one
of the most important books forming the Jihadist world-view, The
Compendium of the Pursuit of Divine Knowledge.
"Few books in recent history have done as much damage," Wright writes
in his article. One source quoted by Bergen and Cruickshank described
Fadl as like "the big boss in the Mafia in Chicago."
But now in a recently published book, Rationalization of Jihad, Fadl,
who currently languishes in an Egyptian prison, has turned against Al
Qaeda, Zawahiri and global Jihad. Modifying and rejecting some of his
previous writings, Fadl's book has caused a stir in the Muslim world,
especially amongst Jihadists.
"Whatever the motivations behind the writing of the book, its
publication amounted to a major assault on radical Islamist theology,
from the man who had originally formulated much of the thinking,"
Wright explains.
Similarly, in a comparatively shorter article in The New Republic,
authors Bergen and Cruickshank document this trend of former Jihadists
turning against Al Qaeda.
A large "group of religious scholars, former fighters, and militants
who had once had great influence over Al Qaeda's leaders, and who –
alarmed by the targeting of civilians in the West, the senseless
killings in Muslim countries, and Al Qaeda's barbaric tactics in
Iraq," they write, "have turned against the organization, many just in
the past year."
What makes these intellectual attacks on Al Qaeda most striking is
that they come from those with street cred, or perhaps more fittingly,
cave cred. In many cases, these are former Jihadists who participated
in violence. Others, like Dr. Fadl, have been among the intellectual
foundations upon which Al Qaeda has rested.
What this means is that potential terrorists may think twice about
joining Al Qaeda or similar Jihadist groups. If they begin to doubt
that their deeds are sanctioned by Islam and they may not get 72
virgins after all, well, that may be somewhat of a disincentive. Al
Qaeda operatives may not find themselves welcome in many areas of the
Muslim world, as we have recently seen throughout Iraq. And those who
were so willing to finance Al Qaeda's operations may now reconsider.
This is not to say that those who are now condemning Al Qaeda's
tactics are savory figures. I wouldn't want to break bread with them.
Many of their views remain despicable. While they speak out against
Jihad, against Western targets and the killing of innocent civilians,
both articles make clear that those now speaking out deem resistance
to American troops in Iraq as legitimate. But we have to take what we
can get. And what these figures are saying could profoundly help
America in its war against terror.
We also cannot say that American policy is predominantly responsible
for this great turn of events. In tennis parlance, you may say that Al
Qaeda has committed unforced errors. It is their tactics that have
turned former intellectual travelers against them. Their carnage,
their sadism, their medieval vision. Combined with America's muscular
response to the Sept. 11 attacks, we may have found the strategy that
will help us win this long war.
Nonetheless, terrorism experts like Bruce Hoffman of Georgetown
University caution us not to overlook the threat Al Qaeda still poses.
This heartening development should not lull us into a state of
complacency. Al Qaeda continues to seek weapons of mass destruction to
hit us on the home front. They have created a relative safe haven in
the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan. America must
continue to be vigilant and proactive.
Still, we do have something to cheer. While conceding that Al Qaeda
remains a serious threat in the short term, Bergen and Cruickshank
write that "encoded in the DNA of apocalyptic Jihadist groups like Al
Qaeda are the seeds of their own long-term destruction: their victims
are often Muslim civilians; they don't offer a positive vision of the
future (but rather the prospect of Taliban-style regimes from Morocco
to Indonesia); they keep expanding their list of enemies, including
any Muslim who doesn't precisely share their world view; and they seem
incapable of becoming politically successful movements because their
ideology prevents them from making the real-world compromises that
would allow them to engage in genuine politics."
The writers aptly conclude, channeling Winston Churchill, that "this
is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is,
perhaps, the end of the beginning."
Let us hope that it is so.