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    What's in a name

    What should the war be called?

    Global War On Terror?
    The War Against Terror?
    The Long War?

    http://www.reason.com/rauch/041706.shtml

    April 17, 2006

    A War on Jihadism, Not 'Terror'
    Defining an enemy and an ideology
    Jonathan Rauch

    Speaking to reporters last week, Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware, the ranking Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, made a striking admission. The Bush administration, Biden said, defines the threat that the country now faces "too broadly and inaccurately." But the president, continued Biden, is in good company. "I have never been able to define the threat, and my party hasn't been able to define the threat, either."

    After four and a half years, the Civil War was over, World War II was over, and the Revolutionary War was winding down. The Cold War lasted four decades, but everyone understood from the beginning that the enemy was a particular ideology, communism. The current war, plainly, is a more muddled affair. In last month's National Security Strategy, the administration declared, "America is at war." But who precisely is the enemy? "Terrorism." And "terrorists." And "terrorist networks." As in: "a terrorist enemy that is defined by religious intolerance." Factions of the Irish Republican Army might qualify.

    On a few occasions, albeit inconsistently, President Bush has been more specific. In a speech last October, he said, "Some call this evil Islamic radicalism; others militant jihadism; still others, Islamo-fascism." Having ventured three religious terms in one sentence, he then hastened to add, "Whatever it's called, this ideology is very different from the religion of Islam," and its adherents "distort the idea of jihad."

    British Prime Minister Tony Blair, the West's most eloquent spokesman, has been only slightly more forthcoming. In a speech last month, he maintained that the terrorists are not "proper Muslims," their extremism "not the true voice of Islam." Still, "To say [the terrorist's] religion is irrelevant is both completely to misunderstand his motive and to refuse to face up to the strain of extremism within his religion that has given rise to it." In the context of today's debate, Blair's statement counts as blunt talk.

    "I think defining who the enemy is is a real problem in this war," says Mary Habeck, a military historian at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies. "If you can't define who's a real threat and who's just exercising free speech, it's a problem." As it happens, Habeck is the author of one of three new books that, taken together, suggest the time is right to name the battle. It is a war on jihadism.

    Jihadism is not a tactic, like terrorism, or a temperament, like radicalism or extremism. It is not a political pathology like Stalinism, a mental pathology like paranoia, or a social pathology like poverty. Rather, it is a religious ideology, and the religion it is associated with is Islam.

    But it is by no means synonymous with Islam, which is much larger and contains many competing elements. Islam can be, and usually is, moderate; Jihadism, with a capital J, is inherently radical. If the Western and secular world's nearer-term war aim is to stymie the jihadists, its long-term aim must be to discredit Jihadism in the Muslim world.

    No single definition prevails, but here is a good one: Jihadism engages in or supports the use of force to expand the rule of Islamic law. In other words, it is violent Islamic imperialism. It stands, as one scholar put it 90 years ago, for "the extension by force of arms of the authority of the Muslim state."

    In her new book, Knowing the Enemy: Jihadist Ideology and the War on Terror, Habeck sets out to map the ideological contours of Jihadism. The story begins, but does not end, with religion. "Western scholars have generally failed to take religion seriously," she writes.

    "Secularists, whether liberals or socialists, grant true explanatory power to political, social, or economic factors but discount the plain sense of religious statements made by the jihadis themselves." Pretending that Islam is incidental, she notes, is not just incorrect, it is patronizing.

    Jihadists, she writes, are not merely angry about U.S. policies. They believe that America is the biggest obstacle to the global rule of an Islamic superstate. Ultimately, in the Jihadist view, "Islam must expand to fill the entire world or else falsehood in its many guises will do so." Violence is by no means mandated, but it is assuredly authorized.

    And always has been. The point that Bush, Blair, and others understandably finesse is that the ideology of Jihadism traces its lineage to the very beginning of the religion of Islam. It has "roots in discussions about Islamic law and theology that began soon after the death of Muhammad and that are supported by important segments of the clergy (ulama) today," Habeck writes.

    Two other new books strikingly document the connection. One is The Legacy of Jihad: Islamic Holy War and the Fate of Non-Muslims. Edited by Andrew G. Bostom, it provides more than 700 pages of source material on jihadist doctrine and practice (including many fascinating translations from Arabic). A second is Islamic Imperialism: A History, by Efraim Karsh, a political scientist and historian who heads the Mediterranean studies program at King's College (part of the University of London).

    "The birth of Islam," writes Karsh, "was inextricably linked with the creation of a world empire, and its universalism was inherently imperialist." Karsh cites, for example, the Prophet's farewell address to his followers: "I was ordered to fight all men until they say, 'There is no god but Allah.' " Muhammad, Karsh writes, spent his last decade fighting to unify Arabia under his reign; within a decade of his death, Islamic conquest had already built an Arab-Muslim empire, "one of the most remarkable examples of empire-building in world history."

    Karsh makes no attempt to analyze Muslim theology; his interest is in the worldly politics of Islam, especially in the Middle East. Islam has, he notes, two distinct but intermingling mainstreams. One is aggressively imperialistic; the other, pragmatic and compromising. To bridge the two, Middle Eastern rulers and Islamist ideologues have accommodated Western power while holding out to themselves and their followers the promise of future empire. "The Islamic imperial dream of world domination has remained very much alive in the hearts and minds of many Muslims," Karsh writes. From the Ottoman Empire of a century ago to modern Iraq, Iran, and Palestine, Karsh continues, the dream of Islamic empire has borne consistently tragic fruits.

    Enter Osama bin Laden. His tactics and ambitions are audacious -- not even Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini dared to unleash frontal war on America -- but he is, says Karsh, quite orthodox in his goals: "Declaring a holy war against the infidel has been a standard practice of countless imperial rulers and aspirants since the rise of Islam." If Karsh is correct, then bin Laden and other jihadists are not "hijacking" Islam, as President Bush and others (including me) have said; they are renewing an ancient strand of Islamic tradition, and hoping to marginalize or even obliterate its pragmatic rival.

    "This is a struggle over Islam and who's going to control Islam," Habeck says. "If you can't talk about that, you can't talk about most of the story." Specifying that the war is against Jihadism -- as distinct from terrorism or Islam (or Islamism, which sounds like "Islam") -- would allow the United States to confront the religious element of the problem without seeming to condemn a whole religion. It would clarify for millions of moderate Muslims that the West's war aims are anti-jihadist, not militantly secular.

    In any case, says Habeck, "people are not buying the administration's claim that this has nothing to do with Islam." A recent Washington Post/ABC News poll finds that the proportion of Americans saying that Islam helps stoke violence against non-Muslims has more than doubled (to 33 percent) since January 2002, when 9/11 memories were still vivid. If anything, the tendency of Bush, Blair, and other Western leaders to sweep Jihadism under the rug is counterproductive and fuels public suspicion of those leaders and of Islam itself.

    Habeck cites one other reason to call the enemy jihadists: "This is what they call themselves." The word "jihad," scholars say, is theologically multifaceted, with nonviolent and defensive aspects. But when Umm Nidal, a Palestinian legislator, says, "A Muslim mother should raise her children on prayer, good deeds, and, of course, on jihad," she is not talking about spiritual struggle or peaceful protest. Ceding the word "jihad" to violent Islamic imperialists may be a pity, but they are the ones who chose it.

    And so our enemies offer Sen. Biden the clarity he seeks. From now on, the West should take them, literally, at their word.
    "So little pains do the vulgar take in the investigation of truth, accepting readily the first story that comes to hand." Thucydides 1.20.3

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    well the four letter acronym for 'The War Against Terror' is, err... unfortunate.

    personally i think the way to win 'it' is not to describe it as a war (mainly for the protection of the west) but as a moral campaign - much like the ending of slavery.

    we can't stop the flow of angry young men into the warped message of AQ and its franchises until the average muslim around the world lives in a liberal democracy (in its widest sense) with the rule of law and clean water - in order to win therefore we have to radically improve the lives of an oppressed people.

    we have to be their deliverers from oppression and corruption - and poverty.

    such things are rarely brought by war in its narrowest sense, crusade is out - struggle? no, sounds bad in German, campaign? hmmm... not very sincere, politicians have campaigns.

    jihad is a good word, it means both personal struggle to be a better person and a much wider societal movement.

    the freedom jihad? the jihad against oppression?

    perhaps Asim can help?
    before criticizing someone, walk a mile in their shoes.................... then when you do criticize them, you're a mile away and you have their shoes.

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    What should the war be called?

    a. Global War On Terror?
    b. The War Against Terror?
    c. The Long War?
    d. None of the above?

    I'll go with d; none of the above.

    Not all "radical muslims" are not a threat to the US and all threats to the US are not "radical muslims.

    The war should have been on al Qaeda and not some overreaching smorgusboard of real threats, barely threats, and threats of politically induced paranoia.

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    Quote Originally Posted by dave angel
    we can't stop the flow of angry young men into the warped message of AQ and its franchises until the average muslim around the world lives in a liberal democracy (in its widest sense) with the rule of law and clean water - in order to win therefore we have to radically improve the lives of an oppressed people.

    we have to be their deliverers from oppression and corruption - and poverty.
    Dave,

    While I agree that the above may be a necessary condition, it is not a sufficient condition. Many of the leading terrorists hold advanced degrees. For example, Zawahiri is a doctor. I know that many of the 9/11 hijackers didn't come from lower class families (although they did come from an Islamic state). Certainly the 2nd generation Muslim immigrants in Europe that find radical Islam attractive and have acted didn't benefit from the above.
    "So little pains do the vulgar take in the investigation of truth, accepting readily the first story that comes to hand." Thucydides 1.20.3

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    Quote Originally Posted by SalemPoor
    What should the war be called?

    a. Global War On Terror?
    b. The War Against Terror?
    c. The Long War?
    d. None of the above?

    I'll go with d; none of the above.

    Not all "radical muslims" are not a threat to the US and all threats to the US are not "radical muslims.

    The war should have been on al Qaeda and not some overreaching smorgusboard of real threats, barely threats, and threats of politically induced paranoia.
    If the war were solely against AQ, what is the benchmark for victory?
    "So little pains do the vulgar take in the investigation of truth, accepting readily the first story that comes to hand." Thucydides 1.20.3

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    Ray
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    Jinns are at work!

    **************

    I was re-reading Brig Richard E Simpkin's book "Race to the Swift".

    The first edition was published in 1985.

    He wrote:

    "Western Europe, and mutatis mudandis the Soviet Union and her satellites as well, face the serious threat from Islam militant, on a front stretching unbroken from Algeria to Afghanistan, with outposts further east. This threat was economic in the seventies; it has become one of revolutionary warfare in the eighties. Two, or probably three Islamic nation states have nuclear weapons already; so there is no reason whatever to suppose that, by the turn of the century, the thread will not become one of organised forces with nuclear backup. The trouble is that the Koran provides these cultures with standards of humaneness on a par with those of the most brutal periods of the Middle Ages, coupled with a total readiness to embark on, and die in a jihad....."

    This was written if I remind again, in the 80s!
    Last edited by Ray; 24 Apr 06, at 21:13.


    "Some have learnt many Tricks of sly Evasion, Instead of Truth they use Equivocation, And eke it out with mental Reservation, Which is to good Men an Abomination."

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    "If the war were solely against AQ, what is the benchmark for victory?"

    Destruction of the Taliban, and al Qaeda forces in Afghanistan, the capture or elimination of al Qaeda's leadership, cadre and supporters. The antithetical question of course is what the are the benchmarks for victory in a nebulous "War on Terror?" Exactly who then constitutes the enemy? Are Kasmiri terrorist a threat to American interest and security? How about Nepalese or any number of other home grown terrorist who are of little concern to US security?

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    Ray
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    It matters not if not all radical Moslems are a threat to the US or not.

    The issue is are radical Moslems a threat to the world and in turn to US global interests, strategic, economic and otherwise?

    The US, by a chance of history, has become the sole global superpower and hence it becomes her business to see that the cancer is removed before it spreads and becomes a threat to the US and the world!

    If it is allowed to fester in any form, there is a good possibility that it would strike US interests (which is separate from the US mainland).


    "Some have learnt many Tricks of sly Evasion, Instead of Truth they use Equivocation, And eke it out with mental Reservation, Which is to good Men an Abomination."

    I don't have to attend every argument I'm invited to.

    HAKUNA MATATA

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    "It matters not if not all radical Moslems are a threat to the US or not."

    Oh, but it does to me.

    "The issue is are radical Moslems a threat to the world and in turn to US global interests, strategic, economic and otherwise?"

    If you can cogently demonstrate that each and every "radical moslem" is a threat to the world, then I am all ears (or in this case eyes) but you need to go down organization by organization to prove that to me.

    "The US, by a chance of history, has become the sole global superpower and hence it becomes her business to see that the cancer is removed before it spreads and becomes a threat to the US and the world!"

    Sole superpower or not, it is now a condition that automatically assume the position of global police force.

    "If it is allowed to fester in any form, there is a good possibility that it would strike US interests"

    You need to do a significant amount of convincing that all "radical islamist" are some form of global cancer. This is a Cold War argument that was never an apropro analysis for every "Marxist" movement of the last century and I doubt that it is a very sophisticated analysis for Islamic movements for the 21st.

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    Ray
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    Quote Originally Posted by SalemPoor
    "It matters not if not all radical Moslems are a threat to the US or not."

    Oh, but it does to me.

    "The issue is are radical Moslems a threat to the world and in turn to US global interests, strategic, economic and otherwise?"

    If you can cogently demonstrate that each and every "radical moslem" is a threat to the world, then I am all ears (or in this case eyes) but you need to go down organization by organization to prove that to me.

    "The US, by a chance of history, has become the sole global superpower and hence it becomes her business to see that the cancer is removed before it spreads and becomes a threat to the US and the world!"

    Sole superpower or not, it is now a condition that automatically assume the position of global police force.

    "If it is allowed to fester in any form, there is a good possibility that it would strike US interests"

    You need to do a significant amount of convincing that all "radical islamist" are some form of global cancer. This is a Cold War argument that was never an apropro analysis for every "Marxist" movement of the last century and I doubt that it is a very sophisticated analysis for Islamic movements for the 21st.
    If he is a radical Moslem, he will have radical thoughts and these thoughts he shall pass to those who will get indoctrinated; that is, if he himself does not want to die in a jihad (like the mullahs).

    Therefore, the radical Moslem does play a role in making others radical and violent.

    If you lived in India I would not have to explain or convince you on radical Moslems being a cancer.

    If you indicate the country you are in, maybe I will try to indicates some examples.


    "Some have learnt many Tricks of sly Evasion, Instead of Truth they use Equivocation, And eke it out with mental Reservation, Which is to good Men an Abomination."

    I don't have to attend every argument I'm invited to.

    HAKUNA MATATA

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    Quote Originally Posted by shek
    Dave,

    While I agree that the above may be a necessary condition, it is not a sufficient condition. Many of the leading terrorists hold advanced degrees. For example, Zawahiri is a doctor. I know that many of the 9/11 hijackers didn't come from lower class families (although they did come from an Islamic state). Certainly the 2nd generation Muslim immigrants in Europe that find radical Islam attractive and have acted didn't benefit from the above.
    absolutely, but look at Marxism - its groups are populated mainly by the middle and skilled working class but they are motivated by what they see as the plight of the (unskilled) working class.

    radical Islam is - IMV - similar, in that the educated see it as their duty to safeguard (their veiw of) Islam and its adherants in a way that most of those adherants are unable to do for themselves, being poor, uneducated and under repressive and/or westernised governments.

    the London bombers all had homes, rights and jobs, but what made them angry was not their condition, but the condition of those with whom they feel they share a brotherhood - namely Palestinians, Iraqis and Chechens to name but a few.

    remove the injustice and remove the anger, remove the anger and you negate the need to find a conduit for revenge. AQ et al isn't attractive in itself, its just the only game in town for angry young men.
    before criticizing someone, walk a mile in their shoes.................... then when you do criticize them, you're a mile away and you have their shoes.

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    "If you lived in India I would not have to explain or convince you on radical Moslems being a cancer."

    If I lived in India would you need to explain radical Hindus? I think that it might be as helpful.

    Where I live is irrelevant and does not negate your need to articulate your argument.

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    Quote Originally Posted by shek
    What should the war be called?
    The War For A Free World...
    No man is free until all men are free - John Hossack
    I agree completely with this Administration’s goal of a regime change in Iraq-John Kerry
    even if that enforcement is mostly at the hands of the United States, a right we retain even if the Security Council fails to act-John Kerry
    He may even miscalculate and slide these weapons off to terrorist groups to invite them to be a surrogate to use them against the United States. It’s the miscalculation that poses the greatest threat-John Kerry

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    Quote Originally Posted by SalemPoor
    "It matters not if not all radical Moslems are a threat to the US or not."

    Oh, but it does to me.
    Ah yes, the old "the problems of others are not our concern" stance. The same stance that brought us most of the tyrants, dictators and terrorists in existance today...
    No man is free until all men are free - John Hossack
    I agree completely with this Administration’s goal of a regime change in Iraq-John Kerry
    even if that enforcement is mostly at the hands of the United States, a right we retain even if the Security Council fails to act-John Kerry
    He may even miscalculate and slide these weapons off to terrorist groups to invite them to be a surrogate to use them against the United States. It’s the miscalculation that poses the greatest threat-John Kerry

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    Arzi Hukumat-e-Azad Hind Senior Contributor Tronic's Avatar
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    most of the tyrants, dictators and terrorists in existance today exist because of the selfishness of the US... when it is time to take them out, the US supports them, when the US looses it's control or fullfills it's own national interests it takes them out... As part of the global comunity and as a super power, i'm pretty sure that the US has a responsibility of making the world better to live in, but it doesn't act upon that. It acts on its own self interests. That is also fine.. sometime... but being a superpower, the US has more responsibilities and it has to act as a model that other countries can follow... and defying the UN and attacking Iraq just makes any other country say, heck! why are we still listening to the UN???
    Nabha Sparasham Deeptam
    -Touch The Sky With Glory

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