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THE US, THE UN AND IRAQ, TENTH THREAD.

 
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 08:55 am
On how setting priorities, and acting on them, is so revealing, and so important.

Below is one paragraph from today's editorial in The Washington Post:

Quote:
Which bring us to Mr. Goss. He has taken no disciplinary action against CIA personnel identified by his inspector general as having played a part in the failure to prevent the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. He has taken no action against CIA interrogators known to have participated in the torture and killing of foreign detainees, or against those who knowingly violated the Geneva Conventions in Iraq. He has driven a host of senior managers from the agency. Now he would have the country believe that one of the CIA's biggest problems -- worthy of an unprecedented internal investigation he personally oversaw -- is unauthorized leaks to the press. His setting of priorities seems unlikely to improve the CIA's success rate in judging foreign programs of weapons of mass destruction or preventing the next terrorist attack.
0 Replies
 
hamburger
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 10:49 am
the u.s. , the u.n.
walter wrote : "Sauerkraut and sausage washed down with a cold German beer to the sounds of a tuba honking out Bavarian folk tunes ."

now , i'd say , that's the only way to combat the terrorists ! if the sauerkraut won't get them , the blasmusik surely will .
(i know i shouldn't make fun of a serious situation , but what else can i do about it ? nobody wants to listen to serious suggestions , so i might as well make fun of it .) hbg
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revel
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 12:20 pm
U.S.: More Than 600 Implicated in Detainee Abuse

Quote:
Among the key findings released today:

• Detainee abuse has been widespread. The DAA Project has documented more than 330 cases in which U.S. military and civilian personnel are credibly alleged to have abused, tortured or killed detainees. These cases implicate more than 600 U.S. personnel and involve more than 460 detainees.

• Only a fraction of the more than 600 U.S. personnel implicated in these cases - 40 people - have been sentenced to prison time.

• Of the hundreds of allegations of abuse collected by the DAA Project, only about half appear to have been adequately investigated.

• In cases where courts-martial - the military's equivalent of criminal trials - have convened, the majority of prison sentences have been for less than a year, even in cases involving serious abuse. Only 10 U.S. personnel have been sentenced to a year or more in prison.

• No U.S. military officer has been held accountable for criminal acts committed by subordinates under the doctrine of command responsibility. Only three officers have been convicted by court-martial for detainee abuse.

• Although approximately 20 civilians, including CIA agents, have been referred to the Department of Justice for criminal prosecution for detainee abuse, the Department of Justice has shown minimal initiative in moving forward in abuse cases. The Department of Justice has not indicted a single CIA agent for abusing detainees; it has indicted only one civilian contractor.

Recommendations In order to remedy the serious failures of accountability that the DAA Project research documents, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice, Human Rights Watch and Human Rights First recommend that:

• Congress should appoint an independent commission to review U.S. detention and interrogation policy and operations worldwide.

• The secretary of defense and the attorney general should order their departments: (1) to move forward promptly with investigations of allegations of torture and other abuse of detainees in U.S. custody abroad; (2) to initiate prosecutions where the evidence warrants; and (3) to instruct relevant authorities to ensure that appropriate criminal action is taken against all persons implicated in killings, torture, and other abuse, whatever their rank or position.

• The secretary of defense should appoint a single, high-level, centralized authority who can convene and prosecute courts-martial across the branches of the military to investigate all U.S. military personnel - no matter their rank - who participated in, ordered, or bear command responsibility for war crimes or torture, or other prohibited mistreatment of detainees in U.S. custody.

• Congress should implement a check on officer promotions, by requiring that each branch of the military certify, for any officer whose promotion requires Senate confirmation, that the officer is not implicated in any case of detainee torture, abuse, or other mistreatment, including through the doctrine of command responsibility.
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 01:52 pm
hbg, Sorry we missed you in BA. ehBeth told me we missed you by one week - or so. We'll have to coordinate our trips better next time. LOL
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:27 pm
Senate switched funds earmarked for Iraq to border security (AP).
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:56 pm
from the April 27, 2006 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0427/p06s02-woiq.html

"Zarqawi message: 'I'm still here'
Iraqis react negatively to video of terror leader, who was until now seen by many as fictional.

By Dan Murphy | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

BAGHDAD - After years of operating in Iraq as a shadowy force who was sometimes heard but never seen, the Jordanian-born militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi stepped out of the shadows with a video released on the Internet Tuesday that showed him planning operations against US forces and walking freely about the desert of what was claimed to be Iraq's Anbar Province.

Mr. Zarqawi, whom Iraqi officials blame for dozens of suicide attacks inside Iraq as well as terrorist attacks in his native Jordan, was even at this late date seen as a mythical figure by many Iraqis, a fiction designed to spread fear and put a face on the Sunni Arab insurgents who have spread so much terror here.

"Before, I thought there was no Zarqawi, he was just a fiction. But now I believe in him. He's really out there,'' says Thalib Jabbar, a businessman in Baghdad. "Zarqawi wants to show his power and frighten people. But in reality, he's the one who should be afraid. We want him dead."

That's a common sentiment among many ordinary Iraqis, one played on by Iraqi officials Wednesday who condemned Zarqawi as a foreigner trying to destroy their country. Their strong response highlights the risk such a video poses for Zarqawi: The effort to show his strength within the insurgency also puts a foreign face on the movement, leaving an opening for his opponents to appeal to national unity.

Yet experts say he remains hugely popular among hard-core insurgents particularly in Sunni-dominated Anbar Province - and point out that the video shows him as calm and in control, despite a massive US manhunt for him.

At its most basic level, analysts say the point of the slickly produced half-hour video was for Zarqawi to say "I'm still here,'' much like the audiotape released Sunday by Osama bin Laden. US military propaganda and some Iraqi sheikhs have claimed recently that many of Zarqawi's past admirers had turned on him, and that he was on the run.

Most Iraqis, particularly the Shiites and Kurds whom he reviles, view him with loathing. "This terrorist is bombing all of the Iraqis. He never discriminates between any people. Christians, Muslims, women, children,'' says Mohammed Jemaah, a 24-year-old policeman in Baghdad. "If he was a real man, he would fight like a man, show himself, and not use car bombs."

Zarqawi is shown in the video, claimed to have been made last Friday, strolling among dozens of masked followers, pouring over maps and tactics with masked insurgents said to be from the Anbar city of Ramadi, and in a Rambo-moment emptying round after round from a bulky large-caliber machine gun into the desert.

"He shows himself as healthy and able to walk around outside, surrounded by loyal legions of followers, which counters the rumors that he's afraid, he's running and hiding and has no friends left,'' says Evan Kohlmann, author of "Al-Qaida's Jihad in Europe" and a terrorism consultant. "There was a lot of speculation that he was out of the picture. And he needed to respond to that, to show that he's still there, still in charge, and there's nothing to stop him from putting together military operations."

Also noteworthy is the ease with which he can get his message out. While analysts speculate it takes weeks for Mr. bin Laden to transmit tapes or other messages to the outside world, Iraq's urban battleground makes logistics for terrorists much easier.

Zarqawi's tape was released less than a day before US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice flew into Baghdad for surprise visits designed to show support for Iraq's newly named Prime Minister Jawad al-Maliki. Mr. Maliki, a religious Shiite who fought hard for Islamic law provisions to be included in Iraq's Constitution, told Ms. Rice that his top priority is reducing ethnic and sectarian animosities.

But those old hatreds are precisely what Zarqawi and his followers have been trying to stoke, in the hopes of sparking a full-scale civil war that would destabilize Iraq for years to come and give him what he imagines is his best chance at eventual success.

In his video, the powerful and chipmunk-cheeked Zarqawi said the Iraqi government, "whether made up of the hated Shiites or the secular Zionist Kurds or the collaborators among the Sunnis, will be tools of the crusaders and a poison dagger in the heart of the Islamic nation."

Speculation that Zarqawi's role in the insurgency was weakening has grown since Jan. 15, when a statement posted on insurgent websites announced the formation of the Majilis Shura al-Mujahdin, or the Mujahidin Shura Council (MSC), as an umbrella for Sunni insurgent groups who share Al Qaeda's ideology and goal of turning Iraq into a state governed by Sunni religious law.

Subsequent statements named an Iraqi militant with the nom de guerre of Abdullah Rashid al-Baghdadi as the group's leader, which some took to mean that Zarqawi had lost stature.

But insurgent sources say the move was mostly to put an Iraqi face on the operations of the self-styled holy warriors, and to counter US claims that foreign fighters, not Iraqis, were leading much of the violence, particularly in the volatile Anbar Province. They say Zarqawi has all along been their most respected operational commander.

The new group also makes it harder for him to be painted as a meddling foreigner, while also giving more face and respect to his Iraqi comrades. Zarqawi's video begins with a full screen shot of the MSC logo, and a smaller version remains on screen for the whole tape.

"It seems pretty clear that he's still the boss,'' says Mr. Kohlmann. "When the MSC chose to highlight their leadership, guess who's the star? It's an indication that the MSC is a propaganda front."

Kohlmann argues the MSC, which has at least eight member organizations, is sort of like a jihadi NATO.

"When we've got a coalition operation, we go under the NATO flag, because it helps the smaller nations feel they belong, it creates a sense of equality, and that's what the MSC is for: It gives the Iraqi [fighters] the sense that they're in control of their own jihad." "
0 Replies
 
revel
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 06:15 am
Quote:
Sister of Iraqi Vice President Killed

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - A sister of Iraq's new Sunni vice president was killed in a drive-by shooting in Baghdad on Thursday, police said.

Mayson Ahmed Bakir al-Hashimi, a sister of Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi, was shot and killed by unidentified gunmen in a BMW sedan as she was leaving her home at 8 a.m. with her bodyguard in southwestern Baghdad, said police Capt. Jamel Hussein.

The bodyguard also died in the shooting, Hussein said.

It was the second killing in Tariq al-Hashimi's immediate family in two weeks. On April 13, his brother, Mahmoud al-Hashimi, was shot dead while driving in a mostly Shiite area of eastern Baghdad.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-5783603,00.html
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 09:42 am
A direct threat from Iran:

TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS
Iranian Leader Warns U.S. Of Reprisal
PARIS, April 26 -- Escalating the threats between Washington and Tehran, Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, warned Wednesday that his country would strike U.S. targets around the world in the event it is attacked over its refusals to curb its nuclear program.
(By Molly Moore and Thomas E. Ricks, The Washington Post)
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 09:59 am
I have to believe that the Iranian leader's words and posturing is largely for at home consumption. He appears, now, to be doing it almost on a daily basis, without anything coming out of Bushco to be responding to.
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revel
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 10:06 am
Between Iran's leader and ours; they might just talk themselves into Armageddon sort of a self fulfilling prophesy. Every word both say just feed the hawks of all concerned nations and individuals who seem to be itching for a war to end all wars between United states, Arab/Muslim states and Israel. I hope I am dramatizing it.
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 10:26 am
revel, I'm reading the current situation between Bush and Homanie(sp) in the same light as you; they're both loose canons ready to explode the world.
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 10:31 am
Really, c.i.? Unlike Kim, neither one of them is uneducated or demented. Both have to be aware of the consequences. I think that scratching the ground, like a dog or a bull, is more likely.
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 10:37 am
sumac, Have you been keeping up with the real facts about Iraq, Korea, illegal wiretaps, torture of prisoners, intelligence leaks, FEMA, Katrina, illegal immigrants, Haliburton, Abramoff, cuts in benefits for vets, DeLay, etc., etc., etc.?
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 10:45 am
Yes, c.i., I have. But I won't attribute it to dementia. Stupidity, incompetence, too much interjection of religious values, the new world view of neocon enthusiasts, etc., etc., - all with horrendous consequences. But Occam's Razor........
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 10:55 am
"Stupidity, incompetence, too much interjection of religious values, ..." are the perfect ingredients for disaster.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 10:59 am
Can't argue with that.

Let's hope that both systems have saner minds in the decision-making processes, and ones who are strong in their convictions.
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 11:04 am
"Saner minds" in this country have all gone underground. Where are they?
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 11:19 am
Perhaps a lot of the better, more balanced minds, do not feel empowered to make a difference, as individuals. But feeling strongly about the topics, we rant and rave on a2k or on blogs. Preaching to the choir in some instances. Totally impotent.

Politicians and so-called leaders haven't stepped forth. Retired military (with admittedly mixed agendas) have started to speak out.

Where are the business people, the academicians, the youth, the retired, mainstream America?

Why are so many people essentially silent? All those people polled who say that the country is headed in the wrong direction. To what? From where? Has any polling organization tried to get into any complexity? Have we receded into a nation of simpletons?
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Thu 27 Apr, 2006 11:46 am
Somebody pointed out that those retired generals spoke out after they had nothing to lose of their own benefits. Why they failed to speak out during active duty is the big 64 million dollar q. We all understand that military people are trained only to follow orders, but when the lower ranking soldiers aren't protected by the generals, there's nobody else to speak in their interest. That's the reason why 80 percent of marines that got killed were sacrificed needlessly. They're a bunch of chumps looking out for their own welfare.
0 Replies
 
ican711nm
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Apr, 2006 02:30 pm
Brought to you by the American Committees on Foreign Relations ACFR NewsGroup No. 703, Friday, April 28, 2006.
Quote:
Islam’s Imperial Dreams
Commentary, April 2006

Efraim Karsh

When satirical depictions of the prophet Muhammad in a Danish newspaper sparked a worldwide wave of Muslim violence early this year, observers naturally focused on the wanton destruction of Western embassies, businesses, and other institutions. Less attention was paid to the words that often accompanied the riots—words with ominous historical echoes. “Hurry up and apologize to our nation, because if you do not, you will regret it,” declared Khaled Mash’al, the leader of Hamas, fresh from the Islamist group’s sweeping victory in the Palestinian elections:

This is because our nation is progressing and is victorious. . . . By Allah, you will be defeated. . . . Tomorrow, our nation will sit on the throne of the world. This is not a figment of the imagination but a fact. Tomorrow we will lead the world, Allah willing. Apologize today, before remorse will do you no good.

Among Islamic radicals, such gloating about the prowess and imminent triumph of their “nation” is as commonplace as recitals of the long and bitter catalog of grievances related to the loss of historical Muslim dominion. Osama bin Laden has repeatedly alluded to the collapse of Ottoman power at the end of World War I and, with it, the abolition of the Ottoman caliphate. “What America is tasting now,” he declared in the immediate wake of 9/11, “is only a copy of what we have tasted. Our Islamic nation has been tasting the same for more than 80 years, of humiliation and disgrace, its sons killed and their blood spilled, its sanctities desecrated.” Ayman al-Zawahiri, bin Laden’s top deputy, has pointed still farther into the past, lamenting “the tragedy of al-Andalus”—that is, the end of Islamic rule in Spain in 1492.

These historical claims are in turn frequently dismissed by Westerners as delusional, a species of mere self-aggrandizement or propaganda. But the Islamists are perfectly serious, and know what they are doing. Their rhetoric has a millennial warrant, both in doctrine and in fact, and taps into a deep undercurrent that has characterized the political culture of Islam from the beginning. Though tempered and qualified in different places and at different times, the Islamic longing for unfettered suzerainty has never disappeared, and has resurfaced in our own day with a vengeance. It goes by the name of empire.

“I was ordered to fight all men until they say, ‘There is no god but Allah.’” With these farewell words, the prophet Muhammad summed up the international vision of the faith he brought to the world. As a universal religion, Islam envisages a global political order in which all humankind will live under Muslim rule as either believers or subject communities. In order to achieve this goal, it is incumbent on all free, male, adult Muslims to carry out an uncompromising “struggle in the path of Allah,” or jihad. As the 14th-century historian and philosopher Abdel Rahman ibn Khaldun wrote, “In the Muslim community, the jihad is a religious duty because of the universalism of the Islamic mission and the obligation [to convert] everybody to Islam either by persuasion or by force.”

As a historical matter, the birth of Islam was inextricably linked with empire. Unlike Christianity and the Christian kingdoms that once existed under or alongside it, Islam has never distinguished between temporal and religious powers, which were combined in the person of Muhammad. Having fled from his hometown of Mecca to Medina in 622 c.e. to become a political and military leader rather than a private preacher, Muhammad spent the last ten years of his life fighting to unify Arabia under his rule. Indeed, he devised the concept of jihad shortly after his migration to Medina as a means of enticing his local followers to raid Meccan caravans. Had it not been for his sudden death, he probably would have expanded his reign well beyond the peninsula.

The Qur’anic revelations during Muhammad’s Medina years abound with verses extolling the virtues of jihad, as do the countless sayings and traditions (hadith) attributed to the prophet. Those who participate in this holy pursuit are to be generously rewarded, both in this life and in the afterworld, where they will reside in shaded and ever-green gardens, indulged by pure women. Accordingly, those killed while waging jihad should not be mourned: “Allah has bought from the believers their soul and their possessions against the gift of Paradise; they fight in the path of Allah; they kill and are killed. . . . So rejoice in the bargain you have made with Him; that is the mighty triumph.”

But the doctrine’s appeal was not just otherworldly. By forbidding fighting and raiding within the community of believers (the umma), Muhammad had deprived the Arabian tribes of a traditional source of livelihood. For a time, the prophet could rely on booty from non-Muslims as a substitute for the lost war spoils, which is why he never went out of his way to convert all of the tribes seeking a place in his Pax Islamica. Yet given his belief in the supremacy of Islam and his relentless commitment to its widest possible dissemination, he could hardly deny conversion to those wishing to undertake it. Once the whole of Arabia had become Muslim, a new source of wealth and an alternative outlet would have to be found for the aggressive energies of the Arabian tribes, and it was, in the Fertile Crescent and the Levant.

Within twelve years of Muhammad’s death, a Middle Eastern empire, stretching from Iran to Egypt and from Yemen to northern Syria, had come into being under the banner of Islam. By the early 8th century, the Muslims had hugely extended their grip to Central Asia and much of the Indian subcontinent, had laid siege to the Byzantine capital of Constantinople, and had overrun North Africa and Spain. Had they not been contained in 732 at the famous battle of Poitiers in west central France, they might well have swept deep into northern Europe.

Though sectarianism and civil war divided the Muslim world in the generations after Muhammad, the basic dynamic of Islam remained expansionist. The short-lived Umayyad dynasty (661-750) gave way to the ostensibly more pious Abbasid caliphs, whose readiness to accept non-Arabs solidified Islam’s hold on its far-flung possessions. From their imperial capital of Baghdad, the Abbasids ruled, with waning authority, until the Mongol invasion of 1258. The most powerful of their successors would emerge in Anatolia, among the Ottoman Turks who invaded Europe in the mid-14th century and would conquer Constantinople in 1453, destroying the Byzantine empire and laying claim to virtually all of the Balkan peninsula and the eastern Mediterranean.

Like their Arab predecessors, the Ottomans were energetic empire-builders in the name of jihad. By the early 16th century, they had conquered Syria and Egypt from the Mamluks, the formidable slave soldiers who had contained the Mongols and destroyed the Crusader kingdoms. Under Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, they soon turned northward. By the middle of the 17th century they seemed poised to overrun Christian Europe, only to be turned back in fierce fighting at the gates of Vienna in 1683—on September 11, of all dates. Though already on the defensive by the early 18th century, the Ottoman empire—the proverbial “sick man of Europe”—would endure another 200 years. Its demise at the hands of the victorious European powers of World War I, to say nothing of the work of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the father of modern Turkish nationalism, finally brought an end both to the Ottoman caliphate itself and to Islam’s centuries-long imperial reach.

To Islamic historians, the chronicles of Muslim empire represent a model of shining religious zeal and selfless exertion in the cause of Allah. Many Western historians, for their part, have been inclined to marvel at the perceived sophistication and tolerance of Islamic rule, praising the caliphs’ cultivation of the arts and sciences and their apparent willingness to accommodate ethnic and religious minorities. There is some truth in both views, but neither captures the deeper and often more callous impulses at work in the expanding umma set in motion by Muhammad. For successive generations of Islamic rulers, imperial dominion was dictated not by universalistic religious principles but by their prophet’s vision of conquest and his summons to fight and subjugate unbelievers.

That the worldly aims of Islam might conflict with its moral and spiritual demands was evident from the start of the caliphate. Though the Umayyad monarchs portrayed their constant wars of expansion as “jihad in the path of Allah,” this was largely a façade, concealing an increasingly secular and absolutist rule. Lax in their attitude toward Islamic practices and mores, they were said to have set aside special days for drinking alcohol—specifically forbidden by the prophet—and showed little inhibition about appearing nude before their boon companions and female singers.

The coup staged by the Abbasids in 747-49 was intended to restore Islam’s true ways and undo the godless practices of their predecessors; but they too, like the Umayyads, were first and foremost imperial monarchs. For the Abbasids, Islam was a means to consolidating their jurisdiction and enjoying the fruits of conquest. They complied with the stipulations of the nascent religious law (shari’a) only to the extent that it served their needs, and indulged in the same vices—wine, singing girls, and sexual license—that had ruined the reputation of the Umayyads.

Of particular importance to the Abbasids was material splendor. On the occasion of his nephew’s coronation as the first Abbasid caliph, Dawud ibn Ali had proclaimed, “We did not rebel in order to grow rich in silver and in gold.” Yet it was precisely the ever-increasing pomp of the royal court that would underpin Abbasid prestige. The gem-studded dishes of the caliph’s table, the gilded curtains of the palace, the golden tree and ruby-eyed golden elephant that adorned the royal courtyard were a few of the opulent possessions that bore witness to this extravagance.

The riches of the empire, moreover, were concentrated in the hands of the few at the expense of the many. While the caliph might bestow thousands of dirhams on a favorite poet for reciting a few lines, ordinary laborers in Baghdad carried home a dirham or two a month. As for the empire’s more distant subjects, the caliphs showed little interest in their conversion to the faith, preferring instead to colonize their lands and expropriate their wealth and labor. Not until the third Islamic century did the bulk of these populations embrace the religion of their imperial masters, and this was a process emanating from below—an effort by non-Arabs to escape paying tribute and to remove social barriers to their advancement. To make matters worse, the metropolis plundered the resources of the provinces, a practice inaugurated at the time of Muhammad and reaching its apogee under the Abbasids. Combined with the government’s weakening control of the periphery, this shameless exploitation triggered numerous rebellions throughout the empire.

Tension between the center and the periphery was, indeed, to become the hallmark of Islam’s imperial experience. Even in its early days, under the Umayyads, the empire was hopelessly overextended, largely because of inadequate means of communication and control. Under the Abbasids, a growing number of provinces fell under the sway of local dynasties. With no effective metropolis, the empire was reduced to an agglomeration of entities united only by the overarching factors of language and religion. Though the Ottomans temporarily reversed the trend, their own imperial ambitions were likewise eventually thwarted by internal fragmentation.

In the long history of Islamic empire, the wide gap between delusions of grandeur and the centrifugal forces of localism would be bridged time and again by force of arms, making violence a key element of Islamic political culture. No sooner had Muhammad died than his successor, Abu Bakr, had to suppress a widespread revolt among the Arabian tribes. Twenty-three years later, the head of the umma, the caliph Uthman ibn Affan, was murdered by disgruntled rebels; his successor, Ali ibn Abi Talib, was confronted for most of his reign with armed insurrections, most notably by the governor of Syria, Mu’awiya ibn Abi Sufian, who went on to establish the Umayyad dynasty after Ali’s assassination. Mu’awiya’s successors managed to hang on to power mainly by relying on physical force, and were consumed for most of their reign with preventing or quelling revolts in the diverse corners of their empire. The same was true for the Abbasids during the long centuries of their sovereignty.

Western academics often hold up the Ottoman empire as an exception to this earlier pattern. In fact the caliphate did deal relatively gently with its vast non-Muslim subject populations—provided that they acquiesced in their legal and institutional inferiority in the Islamic order of things. When these groups dared to question their subordinate status, however, let alone attempt to break free from the Ottoman yoke, they were viciously put down. In the century or so between Napoleon’s conquests in the Middle East and World War I, the Ottomans embarked on an orgy of bloodletting in response to the nationalist aspirations of their European subjects. The Greek war of independence of the 1820’s, the Danubian uprisings of 1848 and the attendant Crimean war, the Balkan explosion of the 1870’s, the Greco-Ottoman war of 1897—all were painful reminders of the costs of resisting Islamic imperial rule.

Nor was such violence confined to Ottoman Europe. Turkey’s Afro-Asiatic provinces, though far less infected with the nationalist virus, were also scenes of mayhem and destruction. The Ottoman army or its surrogates brought force to bear against Wahhabi uprisings in Mesopotamia and the Levant in the early 19th century, against civil strife in Lebanon in the 1840’s (culminating in the 1860 massacres in Mount Lebanon and Damascus), and against a string of Kurdish rebellions. In response to the national awakening of the Armenians in the 1890’s, Constantinople killed tens of thousands—a taste of the horrors that lay ahead for the Armenians during World War I.

The legacy of this imperial experience is not difficult to discern in today’s Islamic world. Physical force has remained the main if not the sole instrument of political discourse in the Middle East. Throughout the region, absolute leaders still supersede political institutions, and citizenship is largely synonymous with submission; power is often concentrated in the hands of small, oppressive minorities; religious, ethnic, and tribal conflicts abound; and the overriding preoccupation of sovereigns is with their own survival.

At the domestic level, these circumstances have resulted in the world’s most illiberal polities. Political dissent is dealt with by repression, and ethnic and religious differences are settled by internecine strife and murder. One need only mention, among many instances, Syria’s massacre of 20,000 of its Muslim activists in the early 1980’s, or the brutal treatment of Iraq’s Shiite and Kurdish communities until the 2003 war, or the genocidal campaign now being conducted in Darfur by the government of Sudan and its allied militias. As for foreign policy in the Middle East, it too has been pursued by means of crude force, ranging from terrorism and subversion to outright aggression, with examples too numerous and familiar to cite.

Reinforcing these habits is the fact that, to this day, Islam has retained its imperial ambitions. The last great Muslim empire may have been destroyed and the caliphate left vacant, but the dream of regional and world domination has remained very much alive. Even the ostensibly secular doctrine of pan-Arabism has been effectively Islamic in its ethos, worldview, and imperialist vision. In the words of Nuri Said, longtime prime minister of Iraq and a prominent early champion of this doctrine: “Although Arabs are naturally attached to their native land, their nationalism is not confined by boundaries. It is an aspiration to restore the great tolerant civilization of the early caliphate.”

That this “great tolerant civilization” reached well beyond today’s Middle East is not lost on those who hope for its restoration. Like the leaders of al Qaeda, many Muslims and Arabs unabashedly pine for the reconquest of Spain and consider their 1492 expulsion from the country a grave historical injustice waiting to be undone. Indeed, as immigration and higher rates of childbirth have greatly increased the number of Muslims within Europe itself over the past several decades, countries that were never ruled by the caliphate have become targets of Muslim imperial ambition. Since the late 1980’s, Islamists have looked upon the growing population of French Muslims as proof that France, too, has become a part of the House of Islam. In Britain, even the more moderate elements of the Muslim community are candid in setting out their aims. As the late Zaki Badawi, a doyen of interfaith dialogue in the UK, put it, “Islam is a universal religion. It aims to bring its message to all corners of the earth. It hopes that one day the whole of humanity will be one Muslim community.”

Whether in its militant or its more benign version, this world-conquering agenda continues to meet with condescension and denial on the part of many educated Westerners. To intellectuals, foreign-policy experts, and politicians alike, “empire” and “imperialism” are categories that apply exclusively to the European powers and, more recently, to the United States. In this view of things, Muslims, whether in the Middle East or elsewhere, are merely objects—the long-suffering victims of the aggressive encroachments of others. Lacking an internal, autonomous dynamic of its own, their history is rather a function of their unhappy interaction with the West, whose obligation it is to make amends. This perspective dominated the widespread explanation of the 9/11 attacks as only a response to America’s (allegedly) arrogant and self-serving foreign policy, particularly with respect to the Arab-Israeli conflict.

As we have seen, however, Islamic history has been anything but reactive. From Muhammad to the Ottomans, the story of Islam has been the story of the rise and fall of an often astonishing imperial aggressiveness and, no less important, of never quiescent imperial dreams. Even as these dreams have repeatedly frustrated any possibility for the peaceful social and political development of the Arab-Muslim world, they have given rise to no less repeated fantasies of revenge and restoration and to murderous efforts to transform fantasy into fact. If, today, America is reviled in the Muslim world, it is not because of its specific policies but because, as the preeminent world power, it blocks the final realization of this same age-old dream of regaining, in Zawahiri’s words, the “lost glory” of the caliphate.

Nor is the vision confined to a tiny extremist fringe. This we saw in the overwhelming support for the 9/11 attacks throughout the Arab and Islamic worlds, in the admiring evocations of bin Laden’s murderous acts during the crisis over the Danish cartoons, and in such recent findings as the poll indicating significant reservoirs of sympathy among Muslims in Britain for the “feelings and motives” of the suicide bombers who attacked London last July. In the historical imagination of many Muslims and Arabs, bin Laden represents nothing short of the new incarnation of Saladin, defeater of the Crusaders and conqueror of Jerusalem. In this sense, the House of Islam’s war for world mastery is a traditional, indeed venerable, quest that is far from over.

To the contrary, now that this war has itself met with a so far determined counterattack by the United States and others, and with a Western intervention in the heart of the House of Islam, it has escalated to a new stage of virulence. In many Middle Eastern countries, Islamist movements, and movements appealing to traditionalist Muslims, are now jockeying fiercely for positions of power, both against the Americans and against secular parties. For the Islamists, the stakes are very high indeed, for if the political elites of the Middle East and elsewhere were ever to reconcile themselves to the reality that there is no Arab or Islamic “nation,” but only modern Muslim states with destinies and domestic responsibilities of their own, the imperialist dream would die.

It is in recognition of this state of affairs that Zawahiri wrote his now famous letter to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the head of al Qaeda in Iraq, in July 2005. If, Zawahiri instructed his lieutenant, al Qaeda’s strategy for Iraq and elsewhere were to succeed, it would have to take into account the growing thirst among many Arabs for democracy and a normal life, and strive not to alienate popular opinion through such polarizing deeds as suicide attacks on fellow Muslims. Only by harnessing popular support, Zawahiri concluded, would it be possible to come to power by means of democracy itself, thereby to establish jihadist rule in Iraq, and then to move onward to conquer still larger and more distant realms and impose the writ of Islam far and wide.

Something of the same logic clearly underlies the carefully plotted rise of Hamas in the Palestinian Authority, the (temporarily thwarted) attempt by the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt to exploit the demand for free elections there, and the accession of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Iran. Indeed, as reported by Mark MacKinnon in the Toronto Globe & Mail, some analysts now see a new “axis of Islam” arising in the Middle East, uniting Hizballah, Hamas, Iran, Syria, the Muslim Brotherhood, elements of Iraq’s Shiites, and others in an anti-American, anti-Israel alliance backed by Russia.

Whether or not any such structure exists or can be forged, the fact is that the fuel of Islamic imperialism remains as volatile as ever, and is very far from having burned itself out. To deny its force is the height of folly, and to imagine that it can be appeased or deflected is to play into its hands. Only when it is defeated, and when the faith of Islam is no longer a tool of Islamic political ambition, will the inhabitants of Muslim lands, and the rest of the world, be able to look forward to a future less burdened by Saladins and their gory dreams.

Efraim Karsh is head of Mediterranean Studies at King’s College, University of London, and the author of, among other works, Arafat’s War, Saddam Hussein: A Political Biography, and Empires of the Sand: The Struggle for Mastery in the Middle East. His new book, Islamic Imperialism: A History, on which this article is based, is about to be published by Yale.

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