http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-2300638,00.html
<http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-2300638,00.html>



The Sunday Times

August 06, 2006


Terrorism is rotting     the Islamic revolution it craves    
Hezbollah's men of     terror are both the strength and the Achilles
heel of a movement that seeks     to spread Islamic states, says Amir
Taheri




The scene is Beirut, some years on, when Hezbollah has driven out the
"Crusader-Zionists" and begun building the model Islamic state
it has     promised since the 1980s.

The rallying cry of     Tony Blair — for western democracies to
remain united in the global war     against terror and engage in a
battle of values — has not been heeded. The     western powers, led
by the United States, have run away from the Middle East, allowing the
Islamic republic and its newly acquired allies in     Al-Qaeda to set
the agenda.






The former American University of Beirut has been replaced by the
Iranian-sponsored Islamic University. As     teenage "volunteers for
martyrdom" chant "Allah, Koran, Khomeini", the new    
chancellor of the Islamic University prepares to read a message from    
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president.

He calls on the     Lebanese to prepare for more sacrifices because his
"jihad to wipe the     Jewish stain of shame" off the map is
only the beginning. He plans to     liberate Egypt, north Africa and
Spain.

Much has changed in Lebanon since the Party of God seized power. Women
have     been put into purdah and men forced to grow beards. Bars, pubs,
discotheques, hotels with a louche reputation, and other "places of
sin"     have been closed.

Swimming on some     beaches is allowed, though not for women, and men
are required to enter the     sea fully dressed. Gone are cinemas,
theatres, the opera, comedy saloons,     and bookshops selling
publications that are "at variance with Islamic     values".

Newspapers and     magazines that had once criticised the Party of God
or its patrons in Tehran have been banned. In accordance with the slogan
"Hizb faqat Hizballah" (Only one party: Hezbollah!), Lebanon has
become a one-party state.

All that is but a     glimpse of what Lebanon could look like if and
when Hezbollah, armed to the teeth and flush     with Iranian cash,
realises its dream of extending south Beirut to the whole of Lebanon.

The Lebanese know     what all that could mean because they have seen it
first hand in Beirut's suburbs controlled by Hezbollah. But how many
might wish to live in such a system? The answer came in Lebanon's
first free general election last year:     Hezbollah and its allies won
14 of the 27 seats allocated to the Shi'ite     community in the
128-seat national assembly. This means that some 89% of     the
Lebanese, including half the Shi'ite community, do not share
Hezbollah's     vision of an Islamic state modelled on Iran.

Much of Hezbollah's     current power and prestige is due to the
fact that it is the best funded     and best armed political-military
machine in the country, feeding thousands     of families through
employment in its businesses or with subsidies and     stipends.

Nevertheless, it     would be naive to deny the fact that the message of
Hezbollah, which is in     fact that of the Khomeinist revolution in
Iran and the various Salafist     movements in other Muslim countries,
appeals to large segments of opinion     in the Islamic world and
beyond.

The message, first     put by Hassan al-Banna, the founder of the Muslim
Brotherhood, is simple:     the modern world, a creation of
Crusader-Zionists, cannot reflect the     values and aspirations of
Muslims. It declares that Islam has the right,     indeed the duty, to
offer an alternative to the western model.

To build the Islamic     model, Muslims must expel the Crusader-Zionists
from their land, regain     control of their destiny, build powerful
states and proceed to liberate     Muslim lands lost to the
"infidel".

The same message is     put by Muhammad Khatami, Iran's former
president, in a more sophisticated way:     the modern West, a child of
the Renaissance, has led to colonialism,     imperialism and world wars,
pushing mankind to the brink of extinction     through thermonuclear
exchanges or environmental collapse. Western     civilisation has
undermined the family, done away with moral scruples,     encouraged
sexual licentiousness and promoted greed as man's highest
motivation.     It is Islam's mission to offer all nations, Muslim
or not, an alternative     vision.



Such a purely political interpretation of Islam illustrates why the West
must engage in a battle of values, as Blair suggests. For this political
interpretation has several advantages for its proponents.






It challenges western-style nationalist, liberal, democratic, socialist
and communist parties. It also prevents theological discussions that
would reveal divisions within Islam, even inside rival Sunni and
Shi'ite camps.

Inside the Muslim world rival sects persecute and murder each other
because of religious differences. The Egyptian government does not allow
Shi'ites to have a mosque in Cairo while the Khomeinist regime
denies that right to Sunnis in Tehran. Sectarian killings have become
part of daily life in some Muslim countries, most glaringly in Pakistan
and Iraq.

The more fanatical Sunnis and Shi'ites even refuse to shake hands
with one another for fear of being "sullied".

However, when it comes to hating the West and dreaming of planting the
flag of Islam on every capital, they are at one.

Another advantage of transforming Islam into a purely political
anti-West movement is that it can attract support for its various
"causes" inside the West itself.

There are many westerners who, prompted by self-loathing or as a result
of ideological passions, share the hatred that Hezbollah and Al-Qaeda
have for the "infidel" West. The problem is that while most
self-loathers in the West no longer use violence to express their views,
Islamism of the type represented by Al-Qaeda and Hezbollah is wedded to
terrorism.

But there lies both the strength and the Achilles' heel of the
Islamist movement.

Terrorism allows small groups to punch above their political weight. The
Taliban militia consisted of just 6,000 men. The Fedayeen Islam, the
backbone of the Khomeinist movement that rules Iran, originally
consisted of just a few hundred assassins and their mentors. Even if we
accept exaggerated figures presented by Israel, Hezbollah has a maximum
of 8,000 fighters.

All those groups, however, were able, and some still are, to exert
greater influence on their societies because they were ready to do
something most people would not do: to use murder as an instrument of
politics. By using systematic violence and terror, these groups hold
their societies hostage. But terrorism could also be the undoing of
Islamism.

The majority of Muslims abhor the use of indiscriminate violence even in
response to genuine grievances let alone in pursuit of dreams of world
conquest. And the history of the past three decades shows that Islamic
terrorism can be defeated.

This happened in Egypt, where Islamists fought an exceptionally vicious
campaign for a quarter of a century. It also happened in Algeria, where
Islamic terrorism claimed some 150,000 lives in a decade. Turkey has
managed to smash Islamist groups, most notably the Turkish branch of
Hezbollah.

In the past five years Saudi Arabia has also crushed several Islamist
groups, thus loosening their hold on segments of the population.
Pakistan, too, has scored significant blows against Islamists — a
fact largely ignored by the western media.

There is no doubt that force is often needed to break the terror
machines that hold whole societies hostage. Algeria could not have
returned to normal political life without defeating armed Islamists.
Lebanon cannot live in peace unless Hezbollah is disarmed and turned
into an ordinary political party.

Iraq will not know stability unless the insurgents and foreign
terrorists are militarily crushed. But the war on terror has been won in
several countries and can be won in others provided all those who wish
to defeat Islamism remain united, resolute and patient.

The defeat of Islamism, an enemy not only of the West but also of the
majority of Muslims, can be speeded up if force is complemented with
political, ideological and cultural campaigns to reveal the bankruptcy
of the Islamist doctrine. What is urgently needed is a common
understanding in the West, and among modernising forces within Islam, of
what is at stake.

This is not the first time that western values, of which many are now
universal, have been challenged by mortal foes prepared to use violence,
terrorism and war. In every previous instance those foes were defeated
because they offered despotism and despair.

There is no reason why the outcome should be different this time —
or that the Khomeinist University should ever replace the American
University of Beirut.





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