Posted by
Darko Trifunovic on Saturday, April 12, 2008 12:48:27 PM
U.S., West Need To Fight The ‘Stealth Jihad’,
Terrorism Experts Tell Intelligence Panel
Source: Matt
Korade, CQ Politics, 9 April
As al Qaeda transforms from discrete
terrorist network to a franchising organization for frustrated, religious-inspired
nationalists, the need to counter Islamist, anti-Western propaganda grows ever
more urgent, three terrorism experts told the House Intelligence Committee on
Wednesday.
And yet it is in “the War of Ideas” in which the
U.S. government has performed the poorest, said
Robert Grenier, the former chief of the CIA’s
Counterterrorism Center .
“It is widely understood that in a contest in which our enemy is more
properly understood as a popular movement, countering the enemy’s
propaganda and undermining his popular appeal become critical elements in the
strategic battle,” Grenier said. “Otherwise, we run the risk of
waging a highly competent and effective tactical struggle at the potential cost
of strategic defeat.”
While
killing or capturing Osama bin Laden no doubt would dispirit al Qaeda, his
removal would probably not be fatal because the al Qaeda rallying cry has today
become as fluid as rhetoric itself, Grenier said. Examples abound of
nationalistic, terrorist groups taking on the al Qaeda banner, including al
Qaeda in the Maghreb and Egyptian Islamic
Jihad, agreed Steven Emerson, executive director of the Investigative Project
on Terrorism. A common theme in their rhetoric is that the West is out to
destroy Islam.
Such messages have spread rapidly through Europe, which was late to see
the problems associated with the rapid importation of Islamist ideologies
through unrestricted immigration, said Peter Bergen, senior fellow at the New
America Foundation and an adjunct lecturer at
Harvard University ’s
Kennedy School of Government. Attacks from London
to Madrid ,
and numerous foiled attempts, have followed.
Although
it has gained less traction in the United States ,
radicalization is prevalent here, as was revealed in the nearly 100,000
documents released after the trial of the Holy Land Foundation, a Muslim
charity accused by the government of funneling donations to terrorist groups in
the Middle East , said Emerson. A number of
seemingly mainstream Muslim groups in the
United States had their progenitor
in the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamic fundamentalist group from which many of
these terrorist groups have derived their ideologies, whose stated goal is to
subjugate and overthrow the Western world from within, Emerson said. “I
call this almost the stealth jihad,” Emerson said. And unless the
United States
sees the equal importance of battling al Qaeda and the radicalization that
gives rise to such groups, it cannot win the war, he said.
The
radical propaganda espoused by such groups serves to obscure the goal of
terrorism movements, which in the near term is to overthrow secular regimes as
part of the struggle for the Islamic world, Grenier said. Al Qaeda and its
spin-offs have focused on the West to remove the main prop of unpopular Muslim
governments and prepare the way for Islamist domination. The West is depicted
as broadly anti-Muslim, not just attacking Muslims in
Iraq and Afghanistan
but also supporting non-Muslim oppressors in such places as Palestine ,
Kashmir , Bosnia
and Chechnya ,
he said. The West thus becomes a common enemy against which different terrorist
groups can rally and also serves as a broader focus of criticism around which
more moderate Muslims can agree, Grenier said. This has the effect of forcing
allied Muslim governments to act covertly in dealing with the
United States and also makes the
larger Muslim population ambivalent toward the West.
And
yet, Grenier said, it’s important to understand that the problem of
Islam’s relationship with the West isn’t just one of Muslim
perceptions, but also policy. While the Muslim world is rife with conspiracy
theories regarding the motives of the West, the environment from which these
ideas spring is nurtured by the absence of definitive action from the United
States and other Western nations to resolve decades-old problems such as the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the India-Pakistan dispute over Kashmir.
“If U.S. policy were more clearly oriented, both rhetorically and
substantively, toward addressing instances of fundamental injustice in the Islamic
world and elsewhere,” Grenier wrote in his submitted testimony, “it
could have a profound impact in countering the [al Qaeda] narrative. Again,
this does not necessarily mean bringing about a solution to endemic conflicts
which meet maximalist Muslim goals, but it does mean solving them in a manner
which fairly addresses fundamental needs and concerns of the Muslims.”
Democracy,
he wrote, should be another watchword, and its promotion should be modified in
different ways to meet the differing situations from one country to the next.
Not doing so leads to cynicism in the Islamic world. Such actions, coupled with
a program to counter Islamist rhetoric, would help to tilt the ideological
battle in America ’s
favor. “While the need for engagement is widely understood, from my
perspective, there has been little coherent, realistic, or effective thought
given to the issue within government, and still less effective policy
implementation,” Grenier said.