 The Perfect Soldier: Special Operations, Commandos, and the Future of Us Warfare by James F. Dunnigan
More Books by James Dunnigan
|
Dirty Little Secrets
Selling Appeasement to Europeans
by James Dunnigan July 11, 2005
Discussion Board on this DLS topic
Al Qaeda, and Islamic radicals in general, would not be a world terrorism
problem were it not for global Islamic media, and media coverage in general that
treated the goals of the Islamic radicals with seriousness and respect. For
decades, Islamic radicalism only played in its own backyard, trying to replace
Islamic tyrants with Islamic religious dictatorships. These Islamic terrorists
didn’t get much publicity overseas, and what they did get was mostly negative.
Most Islamic nations were dictatorships, with the local media tightly
controlled. That changed, for a while, in the 1980s, when the fight between
Moslem Afghans, and atheist Russians, was given ample, and positive, publicity
by the media in most Moslem nations, and throughout the Western world. The
battle in Afghanistan was considered a jihad (Holy War) by Moslems, and what
good Moslem could refuse to heap praise on that. The thousands of Moslems who
went to Afghanistan (Pakistan, actually, which was where the Afghan rebels
rested between missions), were considered heroes when they returned home. Many
of these “Afghanis” soon ended up in jail, for spouting off about how great it
would be to have a little Islamic revolution at home. Moslem countries went to
war with their Islamic radicals in the 1990s, an event largely unnoticed in the
West. There was always some unpleasant violence going on in Moslem countries.
Either religion or politics would set things off, and this wasn’t news in the
West.
That changed in 1996, when al Jazeera, an international satellite
news network began. Now the millions of Moslems in the West could get news
delivered using modern, compelling methods, but with a Moslem slant. That slant
was quite different from the view of the Moslem, especially Arab, world provided
by Western news. The biggest difference was how Israel, and Islamic terrorism,
was explained. To Moslems, Israel was a great crime inflicted by the West on the
Arab world. To the Arab media, Israel did not deserve to exist, and any Western
nations that supported Israel, especially the United States, were enemies of
Islam. Extreme stuff, but the sort of line you had to run with if you wanted to
succeed as a journalist in the Arab, and Moslem world. This line was supported
by most Arab governments, because if took attention away from the fact that most
Arab governments were corrupt dictatorships that had never done much for the
Palestinian people the Israelis were accused of oppressing.
The only
large scale opposition to Moslem corruption and dictators was Islamic radicals,
especially in the form of al Qaeda. But this opposition failed in the 1990s, and
al Qaeda decided to turn its attention to targets in the West. According to al
Qaeda, the ultimate cause of all the problems in the Moslem world (the
corruption, the poverty, the dictatorships) was Western influence. Decadent
Western media, and political influence in the form of Western support for Israel
and current Moslem governments, must be destroyed before al Qaeda could clean
things up in the Moslem world. Once the Moslem world was “purified” and united
under one religious dictator, the rest of the world could be converted to Islam,
and a planet wide Islamic religious government establishment. This is what al
Qaeda wants. Does anyone believe they have any chance of achieving it? No one
does, except millions of Moslems mesmerized by the al Qaeda message, and the
thousands of al Qaeda warriors ready to die for the cause. Many of these al
Qaeda supporters were in Moslem communities in the West. Thanks to al Jazeera,
the Internet, and other satellite based media, the twisted logic of al Qaeda,
was presented as news. The rabid anti-Israeli and anti-Semitic reporting so
common in Arab media, but absent in the West, was now available anywhere in the
world.
This created an enormous “expatriate patriot” effect. This is what happens
when expatriates become more enthusiastic about violent solutions than the folks
back home. This was seen rather vividly among Irish immigrants to the United
States in the 19th century, where these Irish patriots formed armed groups, and
engaged in terrorist acts in North America, in support of liberating Ireland
from British rule. After this happened in the 1920s, the expatriate Irish still
maintained the most anti-British attitudes. In the 1970s, when Irish terrorism
began again, in Northern Ireland, which was still under British rule, much of
the monetary support came from Irish overseas. The Irish in Ireland were much
less enthusiastic about Irish terrorism than were the Irish overseas. The same
thing is now happening with Moslem support for Islamic terrorism. In Moslem
nations that have suffered from Islamic terrorists, places like Algeria, Egypt
and Iraq, al Qaeda is hated. But among Moslem communities in Europe, there is a
rather more idealized and romantic view of these Moslem “martyrs.” Recruiting is
easier in Europe, as is raising money. While only a small minority of the
expatriate Moslems support the terrorists, that amounts to over a million
supporters, and thousands of volunteers for suicide attacks and
terrorism.
There is another problem, particularly with Europe. When
confronted with a growing Moslem minority, and its enthusiastic adoption of al
Jazeera’s breathless coverage of Islamic terrorists, and the usual anti-Semitic
coverage of Israel, Europe blinked. Rather than resisting this, Europe again
went for appeasement. This didn’t work with the fascists in the 1930s, or the
Soviets during the Cold War. But appeasement is a very popular policy in Europe.
It isn’t working with Islamic radicals who, like the nazis and communists, want
to conquer the world, and are willing to kill millions to get the job done.
Appeasement is deeply embedded in the European psyche. Even after the nazis made
it clear what they were all about, and had conquered much of Europe, many
Europeans preferred to collaborate with the new tyranny. Even after the Cold War
was over, many Europeans are nostalgic for the “failed experiment” of Soviet
communism. If only someone else could come back and try it again, and do it
right this time. This same twisted logic is being applied to al Qaedas mad march
towards world conquest.
Al Qaeda lives on Moslem frustration at not
being able to deal with cultural, economic and political problems at home.
Moslem media, especially the international networks that reach the expatriate
community, prosper on reporting al Qaedas propaganda as news, rather than
nonsense. Al Qaeda killers are often described as “martyrs” and defenders of
Islam. The Arab networks, like al Jazeera, also play international politics. For
example, al Jazeera persists in describing Islamic terrorists in Iraq as
“freedom fighters,” trying to liberate Iraq from foreign (U.S.) occupation. What
al Jazeera won’t admit is that Iraq is mainly a battle between Shia Arabs who,
by and large, are seen as allies of Shia Iran and enemies of the Sunni Arab
world of the Persian Gulf and Middle East. Officially, Shia and Sunni Moslems
get along. Unofficially, Sunni Arab governments (all Arab governments, except
Iraq, are run by Sunnis) are terrified of Iran, the most powerful Shia Moslem
government in the world, and a traditional enemy of Arabs. Iraqis know that al
Qaeda is allied with the Sunni Arab minority trying to regain power, but to al
Jazeera, this battle between Sunni and Shia in Iraq does not
exist.
While no government on the planet officially supports al Qaeda,
the terrorist organization still has the support of several percent of the
Moslem population. Al Qaeda maintains the loyalty of those Moslems, especially
the wealthier and better educated expatriate Moslems, via the relatively
favorable reporting in the international Moslem media like al Jazeera. You can’t
shut down this media, which includes the Internet, but you can’t ignore it
either if you expect to deal with the terrorism. There are many historical
examples of this kind of terrorism, and the only way to deal with it is to
infiltrate the terrorist networks, hurt them as much as possible, and wait a
decade or more until popular support for the killing fades away. It will be
back, under a different banner. But that’s something for future generations to
worry about.
|
|