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What
Do The Terrorists Want?
Ignoring the truth about jihad...
[by
Daniel Pipes] 7/29/05
What do Islamist
terrorists want? The answer should be obvious, but it is not.
A generation
ago, terrorists did make clear their wishes. Upon hijacking
three airliners in September 1970, for example, the Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine demanded, with success,
the release of Arab terrorists imprisoned in Britain, Switzerland,
and West Germany. Upon attacking the B'nai B'rith headquarters
and two other Washington, D.C. buildings in 1977, a Hanafi
Muslim group demanded the canceling of a feature movie, Mohammad,
Messenger of God," $750 (as reimbursement for a fine),
the turning over of the five men who had massacred the Hanafi
leader's family, plus the killer of Malcolm X.
Contributor
Daniel Pipes
Daniel
Pipes is director of the Middle
East Forum, a member of the presidentially-appointed
board of the U.S.
Institute of Peace, and a prize-winning columnist
for the New York Sun and The Jerusalem Post.
His most recent book, Miniatures: Views of Islamic
and Middle Eastern Politics (Transaction Publishers)
appeared in late 2003. His website, DanielPipes.org,
the single most accessed source of information specifically
on the Middle East and Islam, offers an archive and a
chance to sign-up to receive his new materials as they
appear. [go to Pipes index] |
Such "non-negotiable demands" led to wrenching hostage dramas
and attendant policy dilemmas. "We will never negotiate with
terrorists," the policymakers declared "Give them Hawaii but
get my husband back," pleaded the hostages' wives.
Those days are so remote and their terminology so forgotten
that even President
Bush now speaks of "non-negotiable demands" (in his case,
concerning human dignity), forgetting the deadly origins of this
phrase.
Most anti-Western terrorist attacks these days are perpetrated
without demands being enunciated. Bombs go off, planes get hijacked
and crashed into buildings, hotels collapse. The dead are counted.
Detectives trace back the perpetrators' identities. Shadowy websites
make post-hoc unauthenticated claims.
But the reasons for the violence go unexplained.
Analysts, including myself, are left speculating about motives.
These can relate
to terrorists' personal grievances based in poverty, prejudice,
or cultural alienation. Alternately, an intention to change international
policy can be seen as a motive: pulling "a Madrid" and getting
governments to withdraw their troops from Iraq; convincing Americans
to leave Saudi Arabia; ending American support for Israel; pressuring
New Delhi to cede control of all Kashmir.
Any of these motives could have contributed
to the violence; as London's Daily Telegraph puts
it, problems in Iraq and Afghanistan each added "a new pebble
to the mountain of grievances that militant fanatics have erected." Yet
neither is decisive to giving up one's life for the sake of
killing others.
In nearly all cases, the jihadi terrorists have a patently self-evident
ambition: to establish a world dominated by Muslims, Islam, and
Islamic law, the Shari'a. Or, again to cite the Daily Telegraph,
their "real project is the extension of the Islamic territory
across the globe, and the establishment of a worldwide ‘caliphate'
founded on Shari'a law."
Terrorists openly declare this goal. The Islamists
who assassinated Anwar el-Sadat in 1981 decorated their holding
cages with banners
proclaiming the "caliphate or death." A biography of one of the
most influential Islamist thinkers of recent times and an influence
on Osama bin Laden, Abdullah
Azzam declares that his life "revolved around a single goal,
namely the establishment of Allah's Rule on earth" and restoring
the caliphate.
Bin
Laden himself spoke of ensuring that "the pious caliphate
will start from Afghanistan." His chief deputy, Ayman
al-Zawahiri, also dreamed of re-establishing the caliphate,
for then, he wrote, "history would make a new turn, God willing,
in the opposite direction against the empire of the United
States and the world's Jewish government." Another Al-Qaeda
leader, Fazlur
Rehman Khalil, publishes a magazine that has declared "Due
to the blessings of jihad, America's countdown has begun. It
will declare defeat soon," to be followed by the creation of
a caliphate.
Or, as Mohammed Bouyeri wrote in the note
he attached to the corpse of Theo van Gogh, the Dutch filmmaker
he had just assassinated, "Islam will be victorious through
the blood of martyrs who spread its light in every dark corner
of this earth."
Interestingly, van Gogh's murderer was frustrated by the mistaken
motives attributed to him, insisting
at his trial: "I did what I did purely out of my beliefs.
I want you to know that I acted out of conviction and not that
I took his life because he was Dutch or because I was Moroccan
and felt insulted."
Although terrorists state their jihadi
motives loudly and clearly, Westerners and Muslims alike
too often fail to hear them. Islamic organizations, Canadian
author Irshad
Manji observes, pretend that "Islam is an innocent bystander
in today's terrorism."
What the terrorists want is abundantly clear. It requires monumental
denial not to acknowledge it, but we Westerners have risen to
the challenge. tRO
This piece
first appeared at FrontPageMagazine
copyright
2005 Daniel Pipes
§
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