---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jinoy Jose <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Feb 18, 2006 12:39 AM
Hi,

See our Stanly has commented upon the recent Hamas victory in The Pioneer Daily.

Read.
Jinoy Jose

http://www.dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?main_variable=EDITS&file_name=edit4%2Etxt&counter_img=4

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Vote for Islamism

Stanly Mambilly

With the triumph of Hamas in last month's election in Palestine,
politics in Islamic countries has taken a historic turn. In an
international scenario in which Islamic polity, or Islamism, poses
cultural challenges to the West, the victory of Hamas seems to have
redrawn the political landscape of the region, challenging the US's
"democratisation" process. Many commentators are of the opinion that
the Hamas triumph harks back to the so-called Iranian revolution of
1979.

The Islamists had overthrown the monarchy of Mohammad Reza Shah
Pahlavi in 1979. The Iranian society that was reasonably secular under
Shah did not have an option but to live under repressive mullahs.

A declared objective of Iranian foreign policy was to export
'revolution' to other Islamic countries. But the worried West Asian
monarchs along with the US put an effective check on the mullahs. The
eight-year long Iran-Iraq war was a planned one. The chosen scapegoat,
the self-declared saviour of the Arab cause, Saddam Hussein, fought
against Iran on behalf of the Americans and the Islamic monarchs.

In the early 1990s, Islamism had become less of a threat. Iran had
come out of its revolutionary nostalgia, and become pragmatic. But
post 9/11, Islamism has burst onto the world scene with vengeance.

Islamism has had two versions: One, the Al-Qaeda-type terrorism and
the other, mass movements led by the Muslim Brotherhood. Both these
factions are militant, rigid in religious matters and offer resistance
to a common enemy: Democratic plulalism. The recent election result in
West Asia shows the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood to new heights. Now
an isolated Iran is not able to spread Islamism in other countries.
Yet, Islamist governments are coming to power in its neighbourhood,
that too through the democratic process. This is the biggest challenge
that the US and other liberal democracies are facing in West Asia.

In a municipal election held in Saudi Arabia last April Wahhabi
Islamists emerged victorious. The Muslim Brotherhood, brutally
suppressed since Nasser's time, performed remarkably well in the
Egyptian parliamentary election held last December. Following the US's
biggest blunder in West Asia, Iraq became the first country in the
world that elected Islamists to power. The Shia-led Supreme Council
for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) coalition swept the 2005
December election. The SCIRI has close links with Iran and is inimical
to the US and all liberal democracies.

Therefore, Hamas' victory is just the continuation of the Islamists'
triumph in West Asia. Hamas is universally recognised as a terrorist
organisation. And this terrorist organisation has been elected to
power ironically through democratic means. This is the paradox that
the US confronts. If it goes ahead with its so-called democratisation
process, it will see Islamist Governments coming to power in the
entire region.

Anti-Americanism lies at the core of the illiberal and fundamentalist
philosophy Islamism in modern times. In addition Islamists are sworn
enemies of Israel. If the US goes after its next target which is Iran,
Islamism will only grow in political strength.With this the
international community confronts a new scenario. It has to make a
distinction between terrorism and Islamist movements. How else can it
deal with the new Islamist Governments that have come to power.

-------
Anivar Aravind
GAIA

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