Submitted by Reuven Paz ([EMAIL PROTECTED]), June 01, 2005 at 04:42

I must admit I have not yet read the new book by David Cook. Yet, from Dr. 
Pipes' comments I can tell that the conclusions of this book seem to be 
correct and very well presented. As a scholar in the field of radical 
Islamist movements and doctrines for many years now, I would like to provide 
the following comments:

a. The radical and extremist interpretations of Jihad in our days, or in the 
past 25 years since Abdallah Azzam imported his interpretations to 
Afghanistan, opened the "Pandora box" and the "open university of Global 
Jihad," and since the killing of an Arab "infidel" president in Egypt, have 
gone only in one direction -- more extremism. "Moderate Islam and Muslims," 
and "moderate Arab and Muslim governments, and there is some misleading use 
of the term "moderate," indirectly assisted the spread of radical Islamist 
global Jihad through the attitude towards Israel in particular and Jews in 
general. A majority of Arab and Muslim governments and publics intensively 
supported the use of "suicide operations" as an ISLAMICALLY legitimate 
method of operation, and thus paved the way and opened the door for the 
legitimacy of such operations on their own soil and against MUSLIMS as well. 
One of the leading Saudi clerics of the new generation of the Islamic 
establishment in the kingdom -- Sheikh Abd al-Muhsin al-Ubaykan -- who is 
trying nowadays to lead the Saudi fight against its own extremists after 
they had opened their terrorist Jihad on Saudi soil, admitted it. In an 
interview already in 2003, he couragiously stated that "the legitimacy for 
suicide operations in Israel opened a door we could never close." Therefore, 
whether you support either side of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, this 
conflict is used by the "moderates" only to inflame the extremists and lead 
them to more radical interpretations of Jihad. Two weeks ago, 58 Pakistani 
clerics signed a fatwa that prohibited suicide operations. In the several 
hours that followed this fatwa, a spokesman of the group hurried up to 
clarify publically that the prohibition "does not include Kashmir, Iraq, and 
Palestine." The Muslim official policy of "moderates" is hypocritic and 
comes only, so far, to defend themselves but not to deal with the real 
issue.

b. Radical doctrines of Jihad are flexible and dynamic. They depend also on 
the changing definitions of the ENEMY. Yet, there is a permanent factor --  
the sense that they could never close the wide gap between them and the West 
in most fields. Therefore, they are motivated by the sense of HUMILIATION, 
and hence, the automatic tendency to through everything against the West and 
its culture, looking backwards to the glorious past of the Muslim empire of 
the Middle Ages. This sense of humiliation is shared by almost all Muslims, 
including in Muslim communities in the West. Humiliation, as wrote Franz 
Fanon in the 1960s, is a main factor in extremism and the approach to 
violence. Fanon was one of the leading ideologues of secular neo-Marxist 
terrorism, but it implies to Muslims and Islamists as well. Wether this 
sense is justified or not, the fact is that it exists and it is very 
difficult, maybe impossible to uproot it from the Muslim mindset of both 
extremists and moderates. Therefore, the answer to radical jihad is only 
through education of the future generations of young Muslims. But, not by 
imposing upon them what the West or the United States view as "correct" --  
Western terms of democracy; imposed reforms in the curriculum of their 
studies; radical and quick changes of national order such as the power given 
to the Shiites in Iraq after 500 years of Sunni rule. Fighting global Jihad 
and extremism is a very long mission and cannot be acheived in a generation 
or two. Continuing sense of humiliation through what they, including the 
"moderates," perceive as "Western cultural colonialism" could only lead to 
further support for the doctrines of global Jihad.

c. ALL the developments of the doctrines of global Jihad with no exception, 
come from the Arab world and exported to the non-Arab Muslim world, where 
the majority of Muslims and moderate forms of Islam exist. Fighting 
extremist interpretations of Jihad should start above all in the Arab world 
itself. The non-Arab Muslim world has no influence over the Arabs. Moderate 
interpretations of Islam in India, Indonesia, or Central Asia, are useless 
in the Arab world. The change could come only from within the Arabs, and 
there the focus should be.

d. One of the most helping elements for radical Jihadists is the fact that 
they are in many cases the only opposition to dictatorships, some of them 
are less cruel but not better than Sadam Husein's. Hence, Islamist groups 
became leading elements in struggling for human and civil rights, and gain 
support by youngsters who are naturally attracted to such movements of 
opposition. Jihad in their eyes is not just anger, terrorism, 
anti-Americanism or Judaism, or an attampt to blame the Western enemy for 
all their suffering. This is in many cases perceived as a struggle for 
freedom, civil rights, reformism, and values that the United States is doing 
its best to export to the Arab world. They cannot support the United States 
while she is the primary shield for the Saudi royal family. Support for 
global jihad is in many cases a very emotional element, motivated by the 
complexity and ambivalency of the socio-political situation in the Arab 
world, and the messages of the doctrines of global Jihad. Especially when 
the heart and mind of those Jihadi fighters who exiled from the Arab world 
remained in their own homelands -- Osama bin Laden in Saudi Arabia; Zawahiri 
in Egypt; Azzam in Palestine, and even Zarqawi in Jordan not in Iraq. The 
globalization of modern Jihad was also a means to bypass the difficulties of 
fighting on Arab soil. It was also a political compulsion that was covered 
by Islamist doctrines.

Thank you

Reuven Paz 




------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
What would our lives be like without music, dance, and theater?
Donate or volunteer in the arts today at Network for Good!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/pkgkPB/SOnJAA/Zx0JAA/uTGrlB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

Post message: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subscribe   :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
List owner  :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/ 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Kirim email ke