Pundits and politicians of all stripes are quick to offer their wisdom on what fuels Islamist terrorism. It just so happens that much of what they say is wrong. Poverty doesn’t produce terrorists, a solution to the Israel-Palestine problem isn’t a cure-all, and young Muslim men aren’t the most likely to turn to terror. If we are going to fight a war on terror, the least we can do is understand who we are fighting. ‘Fixing the Israel-Palestinian Problem Will Make Terrorism Go Away’ Hardly. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is important, but it is by no means the only issue inspiring the ideology of global jihad. There are several pivotal conflicts around the world that animate militant Islamist ideology, from the Caucasus and the Balkans to the Southern Philippines and the intractable Kashmir conflict. Militant Islamists also see a connection between their local issues and global politics. To them, Muslims are victims in every conflict and the West is responsible for Muslim suffering and powerlessness. That is to say nothing of the fact that the significance of each regional conflict varies from one jihadi group to the next. For Algerian jihadists, their war, provoked by the refusal of […]
Monday, May 15th, 2006
Think Again: Islamist Terrorism
Author: C. CHRISTINE FAIR and HUSAIN HAQQANI
Source: Foreign Policy
Publication Date:
Link: Think Again: Islamist Terrorism
Source: Foreign Policy
Publication Date:
Link: Think Again: Islamist Terrorism
Stephan: C. Christine Fair is a senior research associate at the United States Institute of Peace. Husain Haqqani is a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and teaches international relations at Boston University.