*** Rupanya Gedung Putih dan 10 Downing Street membaca jalan pikran Holy 
Uncle, mulai memakai istilah 'teroris al Qaeda' dan 'ekstrimis Muslim'.

***Si ABB boleh dikeluarkan dari penjara (amnesti 17 Agustus 2005), biar 
MUI, Ahmadiyah, NU, Muhamadiyah...direformasi oleh Kementerian Agama, 
diawasi SBY...

Al-Qaida is now an idea, not an organisation

Bin Laden may not be capable of organising terror attacks directly, but then 
he does not need to

Jason Burke
Friday August 5, 2005
The Guardian

So another blast and, a month or so later, another tape. This time it is 
Ayman al-Zawahiri, the Egyptian militant who has been the professional 
partner of Osama bin Laden for the best part of 15 years, who has surfaced 
on our screens.

The iconography is relatively easy to decode. The gun to his right is a more 
potent looking weapon than usual, with a grenade launcher fixed to its 
barrel, indicating a desire to reinforce the threat of violence. The black 
turban like that worn by the Taliban suggests a concern to show solidarity 
with the rump of the movement still fighting, just about, in Afghanistan.

The white robes are fairly standard but, combined with the long white beard 
and the military props, indicate a warrior-statesman or a fighting cleric, 
an archetype familiar to anyone with an interest in Islamic political 
history.

Al-Zawahiri is not saying much that is new. The London bombs are an 
opportunity to restate what is, with certain variations, the standard 
Islamist extremist argument: that the west is oppressing Muslims around the 
world, America and its allies are set on the humiliation, subordination and 
division of the lands of Islam and that this justifies self-defence by many 
different means, including suicide bombing.

The only real difference with what has gone before is the explicit focus on 
the UK. This does not indicate any direct link with the London bombs. 
Whenever there has been an attack there has been a knee-jerk search for 
overseas links or for some kind of overall mastermind. No investigations 
into the London bombs, or indeed into almost all of those attacks committed 
in recent years, have revealed any such connections.

Instead, we need to face up to the simple truth that Bin Laden, al-Zawahiri 
et al do not need to organise attacks directly. They merely need to wait for 
the message they have spread around the world to inspire others. Al-Qaida is 
now an idea, not an organisation.

The focus on the UK might also concentrate the minds of those in government 
who, in the face of all evidence to the contrary, deny a link between the 
attacks and Britain's role in Iraq.

The UK has rapidly ascended the list of preferred jihadi targets in the past 
two years. A threat against the UK existed before 2003, but our involvement 
in Iraq made it very much worse.

Propaganda (and we should remember the origins of the word in the faith 
campaigns of the counter-reformation Catholic church) has always been the 
mainstay of al-Zawahiri's, and thus al-Qaida's, strategy.

Al-Zawahiri is only a little older than Bin Laden but, when the two met in 
Pakistan in the late 1980s, he was a far more experienced militant. He had 
been imprisoned and tortured in his native Egypt and had thought deeply 
about the tactics that would bring a militant group success. He recognised 
that activists were a minority, and, in a way that would be familiar to many 
revolutionary leftists, blamed the "false consciousness" of the Egyptian 
masses for their failure to rise up.

Ten years later, al-Zawahiri's horizons had broadened and he, along with Bin 
Laden, was now interested in radicalising and mobilising a bigger community: 
the ummah, or global nation of Islam.

The terrorist attacks organised directly by al-Qaida, most of which took 
place between 1998 and 2002, had two aims. One was wounding the enemy, 
America and its allies, but another, equally important, was to use carefully 
choreographed acts to impress, amaze and inspire those in the Islamic world 
who had yet to heed the call to arms.

In a book published in 2002, al-Zawahiri laid out his aims. "We must 
mobilise the nation in the battle of Islam against unbelief ... We caution 
against the risk of Muslim vanguards being killed in silence."

The bombers of Madrid, Casablanca, Istanbul, Riyadh and now London have 
heeded that call. We now have a situation where autonomous cells carry out 
attacks on targets and at times of their own choosing, which are then 
applauded by al-Qaida leaders of global infamy but limited practical ability 
to execute or organise strikes. This is exactly as al-Zawahiri and Bin Laden 
had hoped. This is a virtual terrorist network, not a real one.

In 2001, Bin Laden said his "life or death did not matter" because "the 
awakening has started".

There may have been no mass uprising in the Islamic world, something that is 
due to the sense and humanity of the vast bulk of the world's 1.3 billion 
Muslims rather than any counter-terrorist strategy pursued by the west, but 
there are an increasing number of angry people who have answered the call.

Al-Zawahiri portrayed himself as a warrior and a statesman in the video 
broadcast yesterday. He did not need any props to demonstrate his 
extraordinary gift for media manipulation.

ยท Jason Burke is chief reporter of the Observer and the author of Al-Qaeda: 
The True Story of Radical Islam

http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,1542897,00.html




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