Worthwhile article, but, not unusual for the Left, it leaves out
some critical facts. C-Span had an interesting panel discussion a
couple of weeks ago about financing for militant Islamist  groups. 
These groups may not appeal to Muslim majorities but Muslim 
money-bags are not taking chances. 
 
Rich people in places like Kuwait and Dubai and Saudi Arabia send millions 
of $$ to the militants month after month. Any wonder that they can afford 
all the AK-47s and bombs and electronic devices they need?
 
This said, the massive change in public opinion may well signal
a more generalized disillusionment with Islam itself.
 
We can only hope.
 
Billy
 
------------------------------------
 
 
 
 
The limited allure of extremism
 
By Richard Wike, Special to CNN 
January 27, 2014 
Editor’s note: Richard Wike is Director of Global Attitudes Research at  
the Pew Research Center. You can follow him _@RichardWike_ 
(https://twitter.com/RichardWike) . The views  expressed are his own. 
The recent news from Fallujah and elsewhere  in the Middle East and Africa 
must be pretty encouraging for al Qaeda  sympathizers. The Islamic State of 
Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), an al Qaeda  affiliated group, has a significant 
presence in the city where the bloodiest  battle of the Iraq War took place 
nearly a decade ago. ISIS and other al Qaeda  inspired groups have also met 
with success on the battlefield in Syria, while  extremist groups who embrace 
both violence and a severe, distorted version of  Islam are on the offensive 
not just in Iraq and Syria, but in Libya,  Afghanistan, Nigeria, and 
elsewhere.   
Yet if recent history is any guide, extremists’ current momentum will 
likely  be followed by a strong backlash. After all, when it comes to hearts 
and 
minds,  al Qaeda and its ilk have repeatedly demonstrated that they have 
very limited  appeal. Indeed, generally speaking, the more people are exposed 
to extremist  violence and al-Qaeda-style rule, the less they like it. 
Take Pakistan, a country that generates lots of headlines in the U.S., few 
of  them positive. But a major trend over the last decade has been 
underreported:  declining Pakistani support for extremism. Pakistanis have seen 
violent  extremism up close, and they have rejected it. For example, in 2004, 
41 
percent  of Pakistani Muslims said suicide bombings and other forms of 
violence against  civilian targets could often or sometimes be justified. 
However, by 2013 a Pew  Research Center _poll_ 
(http://www.pewglobal.org/2013/09/10/muslim-publics-share-concerns-about-extremist-groups/)
   found that number 
had fallen to 3 percent. 
In one _study_ 
(http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1540-5907.2012.00604.x/abstract)  
 of attitudes toward militant groups in Pakistan 
published last year, the authors  found that opposition to militant groups was 
especially high among the poor who  live in urban districts that have been 
directly impacted by violence. Writing in  the American Journal of Political 
Science, the authors concluded that the  poor dislike militant groups “because 
they bear the brunt of the consequences of  militancy.” 
Another dramatic turnaround in opinion about extremists has been seen in  
Jordan. A spring 2005 Pew Research poll found a majority of Jordanian Muslims 
–  57 percent – believed that suicide bombings could often or sometimes be 
 justifiable. In November 2005, al Qaeda affiliates, led at the time by the 
 Jordanian Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, launched deadly suicide attacks on three 
hotels  in Amman, the Jordanian capital, killing dozens and wounding more 
than 100. A  few months later, a spring 2006 Pew Research Center survey found 
that support  for suicide bombing among Muslims in Jordan had tumbled to 29 
percent. And it  has continued to decline in the years since, now standing at 
just 12 percent as  of March 2013. 
Nigeria has also experienced an extremism backlash. In spring 2010, when  
suicide bombing and other extremist violence was still perhaps something of 
an  abstraction for many Nigerian Muslims, support for al Qaeda was 
surprisingly  strong: 49 percent said they had a positive view of the group. 
But in 
the years  since, Boko Haram, an extremist organization that claims links to 
al Qaeda, has  orchestrated numerous suicide attacks and tried to impose its 
version of sharia  law in the country’s Muslim dominated north. This direct 
experience with violent  extremism has led to a shift in Nigerian Muslim 
attitudes and today just 9  percent express a favorable opinion of al Qaeda. 
Support for suicide bombing has  for its part dropped from a third among 
Muslims in 2010 to 8 percent in 2013.  And Boko Haram is held in especially low 
regard – only 2 percent of the nation’s  Muslims give the extremist 
movement a positive rating. 
As George Mason University’s Audrey Kurth Cronin has _noted_ 
(http://belfercenter.ksg.harvard.edu/files/How_alQaida_Ends.pdf) ,  the 
backlash against 
extremists hasn’t been confined to Muslim nations. The Real  Irish Republican 
Army, an offshoot of the Provisional IRA that rejected the  Northern 
Ireland peace process, lost public favor after the 1998 Omagh bombing,  which 
killed 29 people, including nine children. Cronin says “the group never  
recovered in the eyes of the community.” She also suggests that public 
revulsion  
toward violence undercut support for the Basque separatist group ETA in 
Spain,  as well as Sikh separatist groups in India. 
Writing in _The New  Republic_ (http://www.newrepublic.com/node/64819)  in 
2008, Peter Bergen and Paul Cruickshank perhaps summed up  best why groups 
like al Qaeda struggle to secure widespread appeal: 
“[E]ncoded in the DNA of apocalyptic jihadist groups like Al Qaeda are the  
seeds of their own long-term destruction: Their victims are often Muslim  
civilians; they don’t offer a positive vision of the future (but rather the  
prospect of Taliban-style regimes from Morocco to Indonesia); they keep  
expanding their list of enemies, including any Muslim who doesn’t precisely  
share their world view; and they seem incapable of becoming politically  
successful movements because their ideology prevents them from making the  
real-world compromises that would allow them to engage in genuine politics.” 
Of course, in the years since Bergen and Cruickshank wrote these words, al  
Qaeda has persisted, carrying out plots and even at times controlling 
territory  in places like Mali, Iraq, and Syria. But it has largely failed on 
the 
 battlefield of ideas, and the Bergen-Cruickshank thesis is still correct: 
al  Qaeda’s ideology also sets the stage for its own demise. 
Just look at Syria, and what on the surface looks like a success story for  
extremists. New York Times correspondents Hwaida Saad and Rick Gladstone  
_wrote_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/04/world/middleeast/qaeda-insurgents-in-syria.html?_r=0)
   that Syrians increasingly resent the group’s hijacking 
of the anti-al-Assad  struggle. Sunni rebel groups are turning against 
ISIS, and protests against the  al Qaeda affiliate are spreading, as civilians 
grow “fed up with what they see  as its dictatorial behavior, which has 
included arresting, punishing and  sometimes executing anti-Assad activists who 
disagree with the goal of creating  a strict monolithic Sunni Islamic state.” 
Of course, it’s impossible to predict what path the bloodshed in Syria and  
Iraq will follow. External forces – particularly the regional competition  
between Saudi Arabia and Iran – will have a significant impact on the 
outcome in  both countries. But based on their track record, and the track 
record 
of other  extremists, al Qaeda inspired groups will have a difficult time 
selling the  Syrian and Iraqi public on their brand of radical, and violent,  
Islam.

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