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The West, Usama
bin Ladin and the global Islamic movement
By Iqbal
Siddiqui
Was Usama
bin Ladin responsible for the attacks on New York and
the Pentagon? Despite the West’s claims, we will probably
never know. Certainly there are enough holes and inconsistencies
in the West’s version of events, and in its account
of the evidence that it says proves bin Ladin’s involvement,
for that version to be dismissed as worthless.
Muslims
are justifiably angry about the lynch-mob mentality
that has been generated and encouraged by the American
authorities since the attacks. It has caused hundreds
of Muslims in America, Britain and other countries to
be attacked in the streets, harrassed by the authorities,
prevented from flying by airlines, and otherwise treated
as though all Muslims are guilty of the crimes of September
11. One of the staple plots of American cinema has a
doughty sheriff protecting a suspect from a mob to ensure
that he gets a fair trial. Another has a few honest
men defying popular prejudice to ensure that a man is
not assumed to be guilty without proper evidence. Unfortunately
no one in America has been able to live up to these
standards. The fact that anger, and people’s failure
to live up to the standards they profess, are part of
human nature explains the problems, but does not justify
them.
The same
can perhaps be said of most of the few Muslims who have
been foolish enough to suggest that the attacks on the
World Trade Centre and the Pentagon were anything other
than an appalling crime. In recent sections of Imam
Mohammed al-Asi’s tafseer (serialised in Crescent
International) he has discussed the Qur’an’s teachings
on the conduct of warfare, and pointed out that Muslims
cannot be unrestrained in their strategies of war, as
other peoples often have been. Even if bin Ladin was
not responsible for the attacks, his endorsement of
them is wrong — understandable perhaps, in view of the
examples he gave of America’s many crimes, but wrong
nonetheless.
The proper
Muslim response to the current situation was shown by
Imam Khamenei, who condemned the attacks, sympathised
with the American people, but also pointed out why America
is hated so much, and that its response — particularly
its attacks on Afghanistan — is as totally unacceptable
as the attacks on America. Imam Khamenei’s balance,
rational tone and conclusion are an example of how Muslims
should consider such issues, rather than allowing anger
and other emotions to colour their arguments. Other
ulama — such as Shaikh Ahmed Yassin of Hamas — took
similar positions.
The fact
that bin Ladin’s response is so wrong is not surprising,
of course. For all his popularity, his high profile,
his sacrifices for Islam, and his undoubted personal
commitment and courage, it should not be forgotten that
he is part of a trend in contemporary Islamic thought
that is far from the mainstream, and extremely misguided
in many ways. In this he is by no means unique. When
we talk of unity in the Ummah, we have to accept that
that sometimes means dealing with people who do not
share our openmindedness in terms of Islamic understanding
and practice.
In the
case of Usama bin Ladin and others like him, however,
the failure to agree goes beyond simple differences
of understanding. Talking about unity, we have often
said in Crescent that the only division in the
Ummah that concerns us is the division between Muslims
committed to unity and Muslims who are sectarian in
their outlook. Bin Ladin and other like him unfortunately
are sectarian to an extreme — even to the extent of
regarding Muslims who do not share their understanding
as kuffar or apostates, and liable to be killed.
It is
this sort of attitude — often compared to that of the
khawarij of early Islamic history — that has
led to Islamic movements committing crimes against Muslims
in countries such as Algeria and Egypt, and that makes
groups such as the Sepahi Sahaba in Pakistan attack
and kill Shi’ah Muslims. The same is true of the Taliban
in Afghanistan, whose anti-Shi’ah position is well known.
This is not to minimise the reality that, in Algeria
for example, most anti-Muslim violence in recent years
has been carried out by secret government agencies,
and then deliberately blamed on ‘in-fighting’ between
Islamic groups; but to recognise frankly that some Islamic
groups have been guilty too. Such extreme positions
emerge and prosper when communities are under pressure;
but this does not justify what they do, or minimise
the responsibility of other Muslims to reject them and
prevent other Muslims from erring in those directions.
This raises
two questions. Firstly, considering all this, might
bin Ladin in fact be guilty of the September 11 attacks?
Yes: considering that he and people like him have been
responsible for so many Muslim deaths, it cannot be
said that they would not commit such acts. But nor can
we take the Americans’ word for it and simply assume
Usama bin Ladin’s guilt. Simply, as has been said before,
we do not know who was responsible, and probably never
will. Nor is it of much consequence, compared to the
clear responsibility of the West for the far greater
tragedies taking place in Iraq, Palestine and now in
Afghanistan.
Second,
why do so many Muslims seem to support Usama bin Ladin?
Simply, because he stands up to the West in the name
of Islam at a time when the West is widely and correctly
recognised as an arrogant and aggressive hegemonic world
power determined to exploit the world for its own ends,
with no moral compunction whatsoever about the crimes
for which it is responsible — directly or indirectly
— in the process. Muslims have become the main targets
of Western crimes in recent decades, mostly because
Muslims are the one people who continue to resist the
West’s claims to superiority and dominance. As Muslims
suffer under such conditions, it is inevitable that
they will admire anyone who stands up to the West, as
so many did when Saddam Hussain invaded Kuwait in 1990.
A decade later, most Muslims who hailed Saddam Hussain
then as a great Muslim leader are embarrassed by the
memory now. But Muslims too are only human and liable
to make such shortsighted, irrational, emotional errors.
Another
reason is that the West has deliberately promoted Usama
bin Ladin as the face of the Islamic movement, and as
the West’s main enemy, for reasons of its own that many
Muslims fail to understand. It suits the West to have
a single man identified as the root of anti-Western
feeling and resistance in the Muslim world, in order
to be able to dismiss all such movements as marginal
and irrelevant. Blaming all opposition on a network
controlled and financed by one irrational rich man helps
westerners to avoid awkward questions about why so many
Muslims hate the West so much. They also much prefer
to have the movement identified with a man that they
can dismiss as "a madman in the mountains"
(as the British tabloid press have called him). This
is better for them than identifying the Islamic movement
with the Islamic Revolution in Iran, which has created
a modern Islamic state, refuses to become part of the
West’s world-system, and disproves the western claim
that being western is the only way to be modern.
Despite
the West’s efforts, however, most Muslims reject Bush’s
claim that the US represents universal civilized values,
and that we must be with the West or with the terrorists.
This, funnily enough, is an echo of Bin Ladin’s claim
that all those who do not support him are with America
and the kuffar. Muslims must reject both these positions.
We may not approve of what happened on September 11,
but that does not blind us to the truth that the US
has routinely committed crimes that dwarf that one incident,
and has no principles whatsoever when it comes to promoting
its own interests. And we may sympathise with the Afghan
people under attack from the US, and condemn the West
for its hypocrisy and its disregard for human life,
but that does not mean that we share the distorted understanding
of Islam of bin Ladin and others like him.
The Islamic
movement can never espouse any version of Islam that
would be acceptable to the West — a depoliticised Islam
that leaves public and community affairs to men with
no principles, that accepts their hegemony and that
poses no political challenge to their dominance. The
West’s war is not on terrorists, or on bin Ladin. It
is on political Islam generally — the only non-western
worldview that survives to offer an alternative to Western
hegemony, to Muslims and non-Muslims alike. But in its
struggle against the West, the Islamic movement must
also ensure that it does not allow its standards to
fall to those of our enemies. Those who fear Allah subhanahu
wa ta’ala, and struggle in His cause, must maintain
much higher standards than our enemies do, in the form
of our struggle as in all else.
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