http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/11/AR2010011103063.html?wpisrc=nl_opinions

We need a smarter way to fight the jihadi elite
      
      Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi, right, appears in a Taliban video with 
Hakimullah Mehsud, the leader of the Pakistani Taliban. (Associated Press) 
     
By Anne Applebaum
Tuesday, January 12, 2010 


Somehow, he conned the Jordanian secret service into thinking he was their 
agent. Then he conned the CIA into thinking he was their agent, too. After 
that, he conned both the Jordanians and the Americans -- his "enemies," he told 
al-Jazeera -- into believing he could track down leaders of al-Qaeda. 
Nevertheless, by far the most intriguing thing about Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal 
al-Balawi -- the suicide bomber who killed eight people at a CIA base in Khost, 
Afghanistan, two weeks ago -- is his wife, Defne Bayrak. 

"My husband was anti-American; so am I." That was what Bayrak told the editors 
of Newsweek's Turkish edition last week. Bayrak is a 31-year-old Turkish 
journalist and Turkish-Arabic translator who says she met her late husband in 
an Internet chat room. Her publications include articles for Islamist 
publications and a book called "Bin Laden: Che Guevara of the East." Unlike 
others in her family, she wears a black chador, which in Turkey is not merely 
religious clothing but also a political symbol. She is no shrinking wallflower. 
"I am proud of my husband, he carried out a great operation in this war. I hope 
Allah will accept his martyrdom, if he has become a martyr," she told reporters 
in Istanbul. 

Bayrak is a shining example of what might be called the international jihadi 
elite: She is educated, eloquent, has connections across the Islamic world -- 
Istanbul, Amman, Peshawar -- yet is not exactly part of the global economy. She 
shares these traits not only with her husband -- a doctor who was the son of 
middle-class, English-speaking Jordanians -- but also with others featured 
recently in the news. Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, for example, grew up in a 
wealthy Nigerian family and studied at University College London before trying 
to blow up a Northwest Airlines plane on Christmas Day. Ahmed Saeed Omar Sheikh 
("Sheikh Omar") was born in Britain and studied at elite high schools there and 
in Pakistan and dropped out of the London School of Economics before murdering 
American journalist Daniel Pearl in Pakistan in 2002. Army Maj. Nidal Hasan was 
born in Arlington, graduated from Virginia Tech and did his psychiatric 
residency at Walter Reed before killing 13 people in a shooting rampage at Fort 
Hood. 

These people are not the wretched of the Earth. Nor do they have much in 
common, sociologically speaking, with the illiterate warlords of Waziristan. 
They haven't emerged from repressive Islamic societies such as Iran, or been 
forced to live under extreme forms of sharia law, as in Saudi Arabia. On the 
contrary, they are children of ambitious, "Westernized" parents who sacrificed 
for their education -- though they are often people who, for one reason or 
another, didn't "make it," or didn't feel comfortable, in their respective 
societies. Perhaps it sounds strange, but they remind me of the early 
Bolsheviks, who were also educated, multinational and ambitious, and who also 
often lacked the social cachet to be successful. Lenin's family, for example, 
clung desperately to its status on the lowest rung of the czarist aristocracy. 

Bayrak herself draws a similar kind of comparison, by linking the names of 
jihadist guerrilla Osama bin Laden and communist guerrilla Che Guevara. Alas, I 
haven't read her book, but I can see what she means: Both Osama and Che have 
claimed to fight in the name of the poor and oppressed, while simultaneously 
appealing very deeply to the wealthy and disgruntled. 

In recent years, the emergence of this international jihadi elite has often 
been blamed on European immigration and assimilation policies or, rather, the 
lack of them: Several of the Sept. 11 bombers were radicalized in Hamburg; the 
2005 London Tube bombers were born in Britain. There are other European 
examples. But the case of Bayrak, who was educated in a secular Muslim society 
-- and that of Hasan, who is American -- suggests that this elite has a much 
broader base and radical Islam potentially a much wider appeal. 

The case of Bayrak and her ilk also suggests the need for another kind of 
anti-terrorism strategy. Too often, we still consider public diplomacy to be a 
sort of public relations activity, the "promotion" of American values. Instead, 
we should think about it as an argument. The Bayraks and Balawis of this world 
are engaged in constant debates -- in Internet chat rooms, in the halls of 
publishing houses, in mosques. Are they hearing enough counterarguments? Are we 
helping the people who make the counterarguments? I suspect that they don't and 
I'm certain that we aren't -- nearly a decade after Sept. 11 -- and that has to 
change. Intellectuals may wear glasses and read books, but neither prevents 
them from throwing bombs -- or from strapping them inside their underwear. 

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