Lagniappe
Reuel
Marc Gerecht: Iraq's
Jihad Myths
Among Democrats and even many Republicans, it is by now accepted
wisdom that the war in Iraq brought huge numbers of holy warriors
to the anti-American cause. But is it true? I don't think so.
Muslim holy warriors are a diverse lot, reacting with differing
intensity to the hot-button issues that define contemporary Islamic
militancy. For many fundamentalists, what is seen as an unrelenting
Western assault on Muslim male honor and female virtue is the
core infuriating offense. For others it may be the alienation
that second-generation young Muslim men encounter in an immigrant-unfriendly
Europe. And for still others, Iraq, Afghanistan, the tyranny
of U.S.-backed Muslim rulers and the Palestinian resistance can
all come together to convert individual indignities into a holy-warrior
faith.
These complexities may help explain, at least in part, why so
many secular Westerners seek relief in more easily understood
explanations for jihadism (the war in Iraq and the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict being the usual favorites) -- explanations that don't
probe too deeply into Islamic history and the militant Muslim
imagination.
Regarding the Iraq war and jihadism, two facts stand out. First,
if we make a comparison with the Soviet-Afghan war of 1979-89,
which was the baptismal font for al-Qaeda, what's most striking
is how few foreign holy warriors have gone to Mesopotamia since
the U.S. invasion in 2003.
Admittedly, we don't have a perfect grasp of the numbers involved
in either conflict. But the figure of 25,000 Arab mujaheddin
is probably a decent figure for those who went to Pakistan to
fight the Red Army. Most probably did so in the last four years
of the war, when the recruitment organizations and logistics
became well developed. In Iraq, we see nothing of this magnitude,
even though Iraq, unlike Afghanistan, is in the Arab heartland
and at the center of Islamic history. Moreover, for Arabs, getting
to Iraq isn't difficult, and once there they speak the language
and know the culture. And of course the United States, the bete
noire of Islamists, is the enemy in Iraq.
But according to the CIA and the U.S. military, we are now seeing
at most only dozens of Arab Sunni holy warriors entering the
country each month. Even at the height of the insurgency in 2006-07,
the figure might have been just a few hundred (and may have been
much smaller).
In the 1980s the Muslim Brotherhood, the largest and most well-organized
Islamist movement, was at the center of the anti-Soviet jihadist
recruitment effort. But in the case of Iraq, the Brotherhood
has largely sat out the war. Even in Saudi Arabia, the mother
ship of virulently anti-American, anti-Shiite, anti-moderate
Muslim Wahhabism, the lack of commitment has been striking. We
should have seen thousands, not hundreds, of Saudi true believers
descending on Iraq.
Throughout the Arab world, fundamentalism today is much stronger
on the ground than it was in the 1980s. Yet the fundamentalist
commitment to the Iraqi Sunni Arab insurgency pales in comparison
with that made to Sunni Afghans.
A second
striking fact about Islamism and the Iraq war is that the arrival
of foreign holy warriors is deradicalizing the local
population -- the exact opposite of what happened in Afghanistan.
In the Soviet war, the "Arab Afghans" arrived white-hot
-- their radicalization had occurred at home in the 1960s and
1970s, when Islamic fundamentalism replaced secular Arab nationalism
as the driving intellectual force. On the subcontinent, Arab
holy warriors accelerated extreme Islamism among both Afghans
and Pakistanis. We are still living with the results.
In Iraq,
as we have seen with the anti-al-Qaeda, Sunni Arab "Awakenings," Sunni
extremism is now in retreat. More important, the gruesome anti-Shiite
tactics of extremist groups, combined with the much-quoted statements
made by former Sunni insurgents about the positive actions of
the United States in Iraq, have caused a great deal of intellectual
turbulence in the Arab world.
It's way too soon to call Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda spiritual
outcasts among Arab Muslims, but they have in fact sustained
enormous damage throughout the region because of Iraq. The lack
of holy-warrior manpower coming from the Muslim Brotherhood is
surely, in part, a reflection of this discomfort with al-Qaeda's
violence, the complexity of Iraqi politics and America's not
entirely negative role inside the country. If bin Ladenism is
now on the decline -- and it may well be among Arabs -- then
Iraq has played an essential part in battering the movement's
spiritual appeal.
Iraq could still fall apart (and if an American president starts
withdrawing troops haphazardly, it probably will). The country's
descent into chaos and renewed sectarian strife would likely
reenergize Islamic extremism. But it is certainly not too soon
to suggest that Iraq could well become America's decisive victory
over Osama bin Laden, al-Qaeda and all those Muslims who believe
that God has sanctified violence against the United States.
Reuel
Marc Gerecht is
a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and
a former case officer for the CIA. Petroleumworld does
not necessarily share these views
Editor's
Note: This commentary was originally published by The Washington
Post, on Sunday, February 17, 2008; Page B07 . Petroleumworld
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News 02/20/08
Copyright© 2008
Reuel Marc Gerecht . All rights reserved.
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