While it has continued to invoke Islam and Jihad to rally support and to 
incite against non-Muslims, in reality its organisation and outreach, 
whether through the web or the use of modern technology, has been at the 
heart of its appeal as a global network.

Be that as it may, the physical death of bin Laden will no doubt lead to 
a serious psychological and inspirational setback for al-Qaeda fighters 
and their causes.

But for the Muslim world, bin Laden has already been made irrelevant by 
the Arab Spring that underlined the meaning of peoples power through 
peaceful means.

It is also worth recalling that bin Laden's al-Qaeda and its affiliates 
have killed far more Arabs and Muslims than they did Westerners.

And it was only after they failed to garner real support in the Arab 
world that they ran back to Afghanistan and began to target the West.

After long hijacking Arab and Muslim causes through its bloody attacks 
on Western targets, al-Qaeda has been discredited since 9/11 and its 
organisational capacity diminished by Western counter terror measures.

Al-Qaeda's bin Laden has provided the Bush administration with the 
excuse to launch its disastrous and costly wars in the greater Middle East.

As expected, Washington's wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan 
continued to provide al-Qaeda with fresh recruits and support in the 
Muslim world and perpetuate a cycle of violence that ripped through the 
region for the last decade.

However, it has been the more implicit and less costly US and Western 
intelligence services that succeeded to a large degree in curtailing 
al-Qaeda activities, limiting the movement of its leaders 
that eventually led to his killing.

So what will this mean for the US war in Afghanistan and Pakistan? 
Certainly Washington has less reason or justification to wage a war in 
Afghanistan now that bin Laden is no more.

It might also find more readiness among certain Taliban leaders in the 
absence of the thorniest issue of al-Qaeda, to make a deal that 
insures a power sharing arrangement in favour of the Taliban in return 
for curbing the use of Afghanistan by al-Qaeda to export "terrorism".

Bin Laden will continue to be a distraction for the short term, and 
especially if some of al-Qaeda groups muster revenge attacks.

But in the long term, it is the historical transformations in the Arab 
and Muslim world that will eventually close the book on al-Qaeda.


Source:
Al Jazeera



--- StripMime Report -- processed MIME parts ---
multipart/alternative
  text/plain (text body -- kept)
  text/html
---

_______________________________________________
Post Messages to: [email protected]
Subscription Maintenance: http://leafe.com/mailman/listinfo/profox
OT-free version of this list: http://leafe.com/mailman/listinfo/profoxtech
Searchable Archive: http://leafe.com/archives/search/profox
This message: http://leafe.com/archives/byMID/profox/[email protected]
** All postings, unless explicitly stated otherwise, are the opinions of the 
author, and do not constitute legal or medical advice. This statement is added 
to the messages for those lawyers who are too stupid to see the obvious.

Reply via email to