Bin Laden and the Hydra of War

by Raymond Ibrahim
Hudson NY <http://www.hudson-ny.org/2090/killing-of-osama-bin-laden-effects> 
May 3, 2011

http://www.meforum.org/2896/bin-laden-and-the-hydra-of-war

As we ponder the significance of Osama bin Laden's death, it is well to reflect 
that Islamists are not the cause of hostilities; they are but symptoms of a 
much greater cause. Individually killing them off—which is nice—is like a 
doctor temporarily treating a sick patient's symptoms without eliminating the 
cause of sickness. Ayman al-Zawahiri, now al-Qaeda's de facto leader, once 
summarized this phenomenon well. Asked in an interview about the status of bin 
Laden and the Taliban's Mullah Omar, he confidently 
replied:http://www.meforum.org/pics/large/151.jpg

Jihad in the path of Allah is greater than any individual or organization. It 
is a struggle between Truth and Falsehood, until Allah Almighty inherits the 
earth and those who live in it. Mullah Muhammad Omar and Sheikh Osama bin Laden 
— may Allah protect them from all evil — are merely two soldiers of Islam in 
the journey of jihad, while the struggle between Truth [Islam] and Falsehood 
[non-Islam] transcends time ( 
<http://astore.amazon.com/harvard-20/detail/076792262X> The Al Qaeda Reader, 
p.182).

Believing that the death of any individual Islamist leader—who is seen as a 
"martyr" living in eternal bliss—will somehow be a devastating blow 
<http://globalpublicsquare.blogs.cnn.com/2011/05/02/al-qaeda-is-dead/?hpt=T2>  
to Islamists is no less erroneous than thinking the death of any individual 
American president will be a devastating blow to the American way of life.

Yet that is precisely how many of America's leaders behave. Even before bin 
Laden, U.S. leaders triumphed over the killings of lesser, virtually unknown 
al-Qaeda players: when Abu Omar al-Baghdadi and Abu Ayub al-Masri were killed a 
year ago, Vice President Joe Biden 
<http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jKb1hEEG-DqS0Dx5VMMSryvgt9YA>
  said the slayings were "devastating blows to Al Qaeda in Iraq;" when al-Qaeda 
leader Abu Laith al-Libi was killed in early 2008, Congressman Peter Hoekstra 
<http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/01/31/alqaeda.death/index.html>  issued a statement 
saying al-Libi's death "clearly will have an impact on the radical jihadist 
movement."

And who could forget all the hubbub surrounding the 2006 killing of 
head-chopping Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Then, almost every major politician 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/08/AR2006060800114.html>
 , including President Bush, exulted.

The fact is, history is replete with examples of Islamist leaders dying only 
for the movements they started to continue growing in strength.

Consider the progress of the Muslim Brotherhood, the world's largest and oldest 
Islamist organization. Founded in 1928 in Egypt by Tariq Ramadan's 
<http://frontpagemag.com/2010/04/12/the-return-of-tariq-ramadan/>  grandfather, 
Hasan al-Banna, it originally boasted only six members. In the following 
decades, in part thanks to the radical writings of Sayyid Qutb—an al-Qaeda 
favorite—the Brotherhood, though constantly clashing with Egypt's government, 
grew steadily.

As leaders, both Banna and Qutb were eventually targeted and killed by the 
Egyptian regime. Yet the Brotherhood continued to thrive underground. Then, to 
the world's surprise, the partially-banned, constantly-suppressed Brotherhood 
managed to win 88 out of 454 seats in Egypt's 2005 parliamentary 
elections—making it the largest opposition bloc in the government.

After two of its most prominent leaders were killed, and after thousands of its 
members have been harassed, jailed, or otherwise eliminated, today, with the 
ouster of Hosni Mubarak, the Brotherhood is poised to take over Egypt.

Palestinian Hamas, itself an offshoot of the Brotherhood, furnishes another 
example. Founded in 1987 by Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, Hamas has been labeled a 
terrorist organization by several governments, including the U.S., most notably 
for Hamas's suicide operations against Israel. Yassin was eventually 
assassinated in March 2004.

The result? Far from fizzling away, Hamas, like the Brotherhood, went on to win 
a major landslide election in the January 2006 Palestinian parliamentary 
elections, establishing it even more strongly than before.

Then of course there is the Ayatollah Khomeini—the original poster-boy of 
radical Islam. Overthrowing Iran's secular government in 1979, Khomeini 
transformed Iran into a theocratic state—precisely what all Islamists yearn to 
see for the rest of the world. From precipitating the American hostage crisis, 
to issuing a fatwa condemning a novelist to death, to taunting the U.S.—which 
he dubbed "the Great Satan"—for a decade, Khomeini was the bane of the West.

Today, over twenty years after his death, not much has changed in Iran: Sharia 
law still governs; Sharia-endorsed enmity towards the West still thrives. The 
only real difference is that Iran's nuclear aspirations are nearly fulfilled.

There are countless other historical examples, both past and present, in which 
popular Islamist leaders were either killed or died naturally, only for their 
Islamist movements to grow and consolidate even greater power.

The West would therefore do well to take a lesson from Hercules's legendary 
encounter with the multi-headed Hydra-monster. Every time the mythical 
strongman lopped off one of its serpentine heads, two new ones grew in its 
stead. To slay the beast once and for all, Hercules had to cauterize the stumps 
with fire, thereby preventing any more heads from sprouting out.

Similarly, while the West continues to lop off Islamist "monster-heads"—most 
recently, bin Laden's—to achieve true and lasting victory, the ideologies that 
generate these monster-heads must first be identified and cauterized.

 <http://www.meforum.org/staff/Raymond+Ibrahim> Raymond Ibrahim is associate 
director of the Middle East Forum

 



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