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Saudi Arabia is the mainspring of Islamic radicalism

 

 

Nauman Sadiq, on The Saker, 22 December 2015

 

If we look at the evolution of Islamic religion and culture throughout the
20th and 21st centuries, it hasn't been natural. Some deleterious mutations
have occurred somewhere which have negatively impacted the Islamic societies
all over the world. Social selection (or social conditioning) plays the same
role in the social sciences which the natural selection plays in the
biological sciences: that is, it selects the traits, norms and values which
are most beneficial to the host culture. Seen from this angle, social
diversity is a desirable quality for social progress; because when diverse
customs and value-systems compete with each other, the culture retains the
beneficial customs and values and discards the deleterious traditions and
habits.

 

A decentralized and unorganized religion, like Sufi Islam, engenders diverse
strains of beliefs and thoughts which compete with one another for gaining
social acceptance and currency. A highly centralized and tightly organized
religion, on the other hand, depends more on authority and dogma rather than
value and utility. A centralized religion is also more ossified and less
adaptive to change compared to a decentralized religion.

 

When we look at the phenomena of religious extremism and the consequent
militancy and terrorism in the Af-Pak region in particular and the Islamic
world in general, it is not a natural evolution of religion, some
deleterious mutations have occurred somewhere which have negatively affected
the whole of Islamic world. Most Pakistani political commentators blame the
Pakistani security establishment for deliberate promotion of religious
extremism and militancy throughout the '80s and '90s in order to create a
Jihadi narrative which suited the institutional interests and strategic
objectives of the Pakistani military.

 

There is no denying of this evident fact that the Pakistani security
establishment had wantonly nurtured Islamic radicalism and militancy in the
Af-Pak region but the Pakistani military's support for Islamic jihadism
during the Cold War is only one factor in an array of factors in order to
reach a comprehensive understanding of the phenomena of Islamic radicalism
and the agents that are responsible for it; because the phenomena of Islamic
extremism is not limited to the Af-Pak region, the whole of Islamic world
from Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria to Indonesia, Malaysia and even the Muslim
minorities of Thailand, China and Philippines have also become the victims
of this phenomena and obviously the region-specific security establishments
do not have any influence over all the geographically separate and remote
regions of the Islamic world.

 

In my opinion, the real culprit behind the rise of Islamic extremism and
jihadism in the Islamic world is Saudi Arabia. The "Aal-e-Saud" (the
descendants of Saud) have no hereditary claim to "the Throne of Mecca" since
they are not the descendants of the prophet, nor even from the tribe of
Quresh (there is a throne of Mecca which I will explain later.) They were
the most primitive and marauding nomadic tribesmen of Najd who defeated the
Sharifs of Mecca violently after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire in the
First World War. Their title to the throne of Saudi Arabia is only de facto
and not de jure, since neither do they have a hereditary claim to the Saudi
monarchy nor do they hold elections to ascertain the will of the Saudi
people. Thus, they are the illegitimate rulers of Saudi Arabia and they feel
insecure because of their illegitimacy, a fact which explains their
heavy-handed and brutal tactics in dealing with any kind of dissent,
opposition or movement for reform in Saudi Arabia.

 

The phenomena of religious extremism and jihadism all over the Islamic world
is directly linked to the Wahhabi-Salafi madrassahs which are generously
funded by the Saudi and Gulf's petro-dollars. These madrassahs attract
children from the most impoverished backgrounds in the Third World Islamic
countries because they offer the kind of incentives and facilities which
even the government-sponsored public schools cannot provide: such as, free
boarding and lodging, no tuition fee at all, and free of cost books and
stationery.

 

Apart from madrassahs, another factor that promotes the Wahhabi-Salafi
ideology in the Islamic world is the ritual of Hajj and Umrah (the
pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina.) Every year millions of Muslim men and women
travel from all over the Islamic world to perform the pilgrimage in order to
wash their sins. When they return home to their native countries after
spending a month or two in Saudi Arabia, along with clean hearts and souls,
dates and "zamzam," they also bring along the tales of Saudi hospitality and
their "true" and puritanical version of Islam, which some Muslims,
especially the rural-tribal folk, find attractive and worth-emulating.

 

Authority plays an important role in any thought system; the educated people
accept the authority of the specialists in their respective field of
specialty; similarly, the lay folk accept the authority of the theologians
and clerics in the interpretation of religion and scriptures. Aside from
authority, certain other factors also play a part in an individuals'
psychology: like, purity or the concept of sacred, and originality and
authenticity, as in the concept of being closely corresponding to an ideal
or authentic model. Just like the modern naturalists who prefer organic food
and natural habits and lifestyles, because of their supposed belief in "the
essential goodness of nature" (naturalistic fallacy,) or due to their
disillusionment from the man-made fiascoes, the religious folks also prefer
a true version of Islam which is closer to the putative authentic Islam as
practiced in Mecca and Medina: "the Gold Standard of Petro-Islam."

 

Yet another factor which contributes to the rise of Wahhabi-Salafi ideology
throughout the Islamic world is the immigrant factor. Millions of Muslim
men, women and families from all over the Third World Islamic countries live
and work in the energy-rich Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Kuwait and Oman. Some
of them permanently reside there but mostly they work on temporary work
permits. Just like the pilgrims, when they come back to their native
villages and towns, they also bring along the tales of Arab hospitality and
their version of "authentic Islam." Spending time in Arab countries entitles
one to pass authoritative judgments on religious matters, and having a
cursory understanding of Arabic, the language of Quran, makes one equivalent
of a Qazi (a learned jurist) among the illiterate village folk; and they
simply reproduce the customs and attitudes of the Arabs as an authentic
version of Islam to their communities.

 

The Shi'a Muslims have their Imams and Marjahs (religious authorities) but
it is generally assumed about Sunni Islam that it discourages the authority
of the clergy. In this sense, Sunni Islam is closer to Protestantism, at
least theoretically, because it prefers an individual and personal
interpretation of scriptures and religion. It might be true for the educated
Sunni Muslims but on a popular level of the masses of the Third World
Islamic countries "the House of Saud" plays the same role in Sunni Islam
that the Pope plays in Catholicism. By virtue of their physical possession
of the holy places of Islam - Mecca and Medina - they are the ex officio
"Caliphs of Islam." The title of the Saudi King:
"Khadim-ul-Haramain-al-Shareefain" (Servant of the House of God), makes him
a vice-regent of God on Earth; and the title of "the Caliph of Islam" is not
limited to a single nation state, he wields enormous influence throughout
"the Commonwealth of Islam: the Muslim Ummah."

 

Now, when we hear slogans like "no democracy, just Islam" on the streets of
the Third World Islamic countries, one wonders that what kind of an imbecile
would forgo his right to choose one's government through a democratic and
electoral process? This confusion about democracy is partly due to the fact
that the masses often conflate democracy with liberalism without realizing
that democracy is only a political process of choosing one's representatives
and legislators through an electoral process, while liberalism is a cultural
mindset which may or may not be suitable for a backward Third World society
depending on its existing level of social evolution. From an evolutionary
perspective a bottom-up, gradual and incremental social change is more
conducive and easily adoptable compared to a top-down, sudden and radical
approach.

 

One feels dumbfounded, however, when even some educated Muslims argue that
democracy is un-Islamic and that an ideal Islamic system of governance is
Caliphate. Such an ideal Caliphate could be some Umayyad or Abbasid model
that they conjure up in their minds, but in practice the only beneficiaries
of such an anti-democratic approach are the illegitimate tyrants of the Arab
World who claim to be the Caliphs of Islam albeit indirectly and in a
nuanced manner: that is, the Servants of the House of God and the Keepers of
the Holy places of Islam.

 

The illegitimate, and hence insecure, tyrants adopt different strategies to
maintain and prolong their hold on power. They readily adopt the pragmatic
advice of Machiavelli to his patrons: "Invent enemies and then slay them in
order to control your subjects." The virulently anti-Shi'a rhetoric of the
Gulf-based Wahhabi-Salafi preachers, who are on the payroll of the Gulf's
petro-monarchies, appears to be a cunning divide-and-rule strategy on the
lines of Machiavelli. The Arab petro-sheikhs cannot construct a positive
narrative that can delineate their achievements, that's why they espouse a
negative narrative that casts the "evil Other" in a bad light.

 

The Sunni-Shi'a conflict is essentially a political and economic conflict
which is presented to the lay Muslims in a veneer of religiosity. Saudi
Arabia has the world's largest "proven" petroleum reserves, 265 billion
barrels, and its daily crude oil production is 10 million barrels
(equivalent to 15% of the global crude oil production.) However, 90 % of the
Saudi petroleum reserves and infrastructure is situated along the Persian
Gulf, but this sparsely populated region comprises the Eastern Province of
Saudi Arabia which has a significant and politically active Shi'a minority.
Any separatist tendency in this Achilles heel of Saudi Arabia is met with
sternest possible reaction. Saudi Arabia sent thousands of its own troops to
help the Bahraini regime quell the Shi'a rebellion in the wake of "the Arab
Spring" uprisings in the Shi'a-majority Bahrain, which is also
geographically very close to the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia.

 

Al-Qaeda inspired terrorism is a threat to the Western countries but the
Islamic countries are encountering a much bigger threat of inter-sectarian
conflict. For centuries the Sunni and Shi'a Muslims have coexisted in
relative peace throughout the Islamic World but now certain vested interests
are deliberately stoking the fire of inter-sectarian strife to distract
attention away from the Home Front: that is, the popular movements for
democracy and enfranchisement in the Arab World.

 

Islam is regarded as the fastest growing religion of the 20th and 21st
centuries. There are two factors that are primarily responsible for this
atavistic phenomena of Islamic resurgence: firstly, unlike Christianity
which is more idealistic, Islam is a more practical religion, it does not
demands from its followers to give up worldly pleasures but only aims to
regulate them; and secondly, Islam as a religion and political ideology has
the world's richest financiers. After the 1973 collective Arab oil embargo
against the West in the wake of the Arab-Israeli war, the price of oil
quadrupled; the Arab petro-sheikhs now have so much money that they don't
know where to spend it? This is the reason why we are witnessing an
exponential growth of Islamic charities and madrassas all over the world and
especially in the Islamic World.

 

Although the Arab sheikhs of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait and some emirates
of UAE, excluding the comparatively liberal Dubai, generally sponsor the
Wahhabi-Salafi brand of Islam but the differences between numerous sects of
Sunni Islam are more nominal than substantive. The Islamic charities and
madrassas belonging to all the Sunni denominations get generous funding from
the Gulf Arab states as well as private donors. Therefore, the genie of
petro-Islamic extremism cannot be contained until and unless that financial
pipeline is cut off. And to do that we need to promote the moderate
democratic forces in the Arab world even if they are moderately Islamic.

 

The moderate and democratic Islamism is different from the
monarcho-theocratic Islamism of the Gulf variety, because the latter is an
illegitimate and hence an insecure regime; to maintain its hold on power it
needs subterfuges and external rivals to keep the oppositional internal
threats to its survival under check. Takfirism (labelling others as
infidels) and jihadism are a manifestation of this Machiavellian trend. In
the nutshell, Islam is only a religion, just like any other cosmopolitan
religion, be it Christianity, Hinduism or Buddhism; we don't have to find
any 'exceptionalist' justifications to explain the phenomena of Islamic
resurgence; it's the petro-Islamic extremism and the consequent phenomena of
Takfirism and jihadism, which is like a collision of the continental
tectonic plates that has engulfed the whole of Islamic world from the Middle
East and North Africa region to Af-Pak and Southeast Asia.

 

Some people are under the impression that democracy and Islam are
inconsistent. But I don't see any contradiction between democracy and Islam,
as such. Though, I admit that there is some friction between Islam and
liberalism. When we say that there is a contradiction between Islam and
democracy, we make "a category mistake" which is a very serious logical
fallacy. There is a big difference between democracy and liberalism.
Democracy falls under the category of politics while liberalism falls in the
category of culture. We must be precise about the definitions of the terms
that we employ.

 

Democracy is simply a representative political system that ensures
representation, accountability, the right of the electorate to vote
governments in and to vote governments out. In this sense when we use the
term democracy we simply mean a multi-party representative political system
that confers legitimacy upon a government which comes to power through an
election process which is a contest between more than one political parties
in order to ensure that it is voluntary. Thus democracy is nothing more than
a multi-party representative political system.

 

Democracy is not the best of systems because it is the most efficient
political system. Top-down authoritarian dictatorships are more efficient
than democracies. But democracy is a representative political system that
brings about grass roots social change. Enfranchisement, representation,
transparency, accountability, checks and balances, rule of law and the
consequent institution-building, nation-building and consistent long-term
policies are the hallmarks of a representative and democratic political
system.

 

Immanuel Kant had famously said that moral autonomy produces moral
responsibility and maturity. In my opinion this axiom also applies to
politics and governance. Political autonomy, democracy and self-governance
leads to political responsibility and social maturity. A top-down political
system is dependent on the artificial, external force that keeps it going.
The moment you remove that force, the society reverts back to its old state
and the system collapses. But a grass roots, bottom-up political system
evolves naturally and intrinsically. We must not expect from the movements
for democracy and enfranchisement in the Arab World to produce results
immediately. The evolution of the Western culture took place over a course
of many centuries; the movements for political reform in the Arab World are
only the beginning of a long and arduous journey.

 

In order to explain this phenomena by way of an allegory, democracy is like
a school and people are like children. We only have two choices: one, to
keep the people under paternalistic dictatorships; two, to enroll them in
the school of representative democracy and let them experience democracy as
a lived reality rather than some stale and sterile theory. The first option
will only produce half-witted retards, but the second option will give birth
to an educated human resource that doesn't just consume resources but also
creates new resources. We are on a historic juncture in the Arab World in
particular and the Islamic World in general. This is the beginning of a new
era; this is the beginning of the Islamic Renaissance and Enlightenment.

 

 

About the author:

 

Nauman Sadiq is an Islamabad-based attorney, blogger and geopolitical
analyst who has a particular interest in the politics of Af-Pak and MENA
regions, energy wars and Petro-imperialism.

 

 

From: http://thesaker.is/saudi-arabia-the-mainspring-of-islamic-radicalism/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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