Nice thought but sheer and utter nonsense.

 

Nothing unusual about bin Laden's "legacy" .it was straightforward Islam.
Nothing un-Islamic about the so-called "Arab Spring".the revolutions were
AGAINST secular leaders in favor of ISLAM.  What you will get in every
country whose government falls: Egypt, Libya, Yemen, Syria, etc.will be an
Iranian-type Muslim government.just what the world needs.

 

Austin Bay is indeed a fiction writer.

 

B



 

http://townhall.com/columnists/austinbay/2011/05/11/time_to_smash_bin_ladens
_legacy/print

 

Time to Smash Bin Laden's Legacy 

By Austin Bay

5/11/2011

 

The Arab Spring popular revolts caught al-Qaida by surprise. The revolts are
not al-Qaida's operational handiwork, and they certainly do not fit the
ideologically driven historical narrative spun by al-Qaida elites, such as
the late Osama bin Laden. 

Of course, militant Islamists are exploiting the revolts. Egyptian Islamist
extremists have launched attacks on Coptic Christians, seeking to ignite a
sectarian civil war and derail Egypt's transition process. Al-Qaida's Musab
al-Zarqawi attempted the same ploy in Iraq, pitting Sunnis against Shias. 

However, demands for jobs and freedom swamp calls for a caliphate. 

Bin Laden's death at any time would have been a coup, but his death now, in
this fascinating Arab Spring, provides Arab modernizers with a political
tool to challenge the utopian poppycock of militant Islamist extremists and
forward the goal of marginalizing them in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and Syria. 

Al-Qaida has always been first and foremost an information power whose most
potent weapons are psychological manipulation, ideological influence and
media exploitation. 

Bin Laden's death gives the entire civilized world an opportunity to attack
al-Qaida's strengths. 

Al-Qaida's dark genius was to link the Muslim world's angry, humiliated and
isolated young men to a utopian fantasy extolling the virtues of violence.
Al-Qaida's appeal to perceived grievance and its promise to redress 800
years of Muslim decline (by forging a global caliphate) made it a regional
information power. The 9-11 attacks made al-Qaida a global information
power. Sept. 11 was bin Laden's international advertising campaign. He was
al-Qaida's CEO, corporate spokesman and AK-47 armed icon, all in one. His
message: Young Muslims could believe in his courage and rectitude. 

He failed to create his caliphate, however -- and, oh, he wanted one, so
desperately. The worldly power of the Islamic empire he envisioned would
confirm the divine sanction of bin Laden-interpreted religious law. 

It didn't happen. He's dead. And Muslim extremists won't bring jobs to
Egypt, either. 

Bin Laden's also failed -- utterly -- to buckle America. America, according
to Osama's narrative, was ultimately to blame for the wretchedness of Muslim
lands. The U.S. supported corrupt governments, both feudal kingdoms (Saudi
Arabia) and authoritarian regimes (Hosni Mubarak's Egypt). 

Bin Laden would take the war to the U.S., the distant enemy. Sept. 11 and
subsequent attacks would expose America's cowardice, brittleness, colossal
ineptitude and -- here's the crucial propaganda point -- its weakness of
will and spirit. America would quail. As America took casualties, it would
flee, like it did in Somalia. The West would retreat from Muslim nations.
Al-Qaida would take control of Saudi Arabia and Egypt. 

It didn't happen. America didn't quit. U.S. Navy SEALs found Osama in a
bedroom then shot him, man-to-man. Crack American combat troops had the
weapons and the will. 

In September 2008, I wrote a column arguing that bin Laden's reputation had
already suffered a long, slow rot that in a curious way worked to America's
advantage. Al-Qaida's insistent murder of Muslim civilians had damaged its
standing in the Arab world. Bin Laden retained a "gangsta" appeal, but mere
survival was not his goal -- he had big plans based on the calculated
marriage of apocalyptic violence and theological conviction. 

Bin Laden's legacy of failure establishes a counter-narrative to militant
extremists who claim an armed theocracy is the Arab Muslim future. Now is
the time to emphasize his great historical flops. 

Over the past week, the U.S. government has selectively released videos
seized in the SEAL raid. If bin Laden's reputation is fractured statuary,
some of the imagery is a sledgehammer for smashing it to dirty powder. Bin
Laden in his Pakistan pad isn't an Allah-inspired warrior bearing an assault
rifle. One video outs him as a narcissist with a TV remote control, seated
on pillows and watching himself on Al-Jazeera. But where's the suicide bomb
belt, Osama? Oh, right, he's not wearing one. Those are for the expendable
faithful. 

Osama bin Laden, violent visionary? No -- he's a pathetic, self-absorbed,
gray-headed old man squinting beneath a bad light. 

 

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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