Members of Indonesian jihadist
groups have been disengaging from violence in various regions of the
archipelago. Among them are Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), Mujahidin KOMPAK in Java,
and Tanah Runtuh in Poso.
They provide interesting case studies of why the
terrorist groups disengage.
Jihadists disengaging from violence
offer different motivations for their changed positions. Four significant
factors help to facilitate disengagement. A terrorist disengages when he
decides to cease participation in acts of violence. A handful may actually
leave the group. More go inactive or shift from a violent to a non-violent role
within the group. Disengagement is a gradual process, occurring over months and
even years. The entire process combines rational, emotional, relational, and
psychological factors.
Understanding Disengagement: The Factors
The four factors that drive the
disengagement process forward tend to work together. The first factor is
disillusionment with the targets and timing of attacks, with leaders, and even
remorse for one’s own role. This was often the start of the reflective process
that proceeded disengagement. It was rarely a decisive factor, however, because
loyalty to one’s seniors often trumped feelings of unease and disappointment.
The second factor – cost benefit
analysis – played a key role in disengagement, often in an interactive
relationship with disillusionment. This tended to be operationalised in two
ways: change of context and actions viewed as counter-productive. Tanah Runtuh
members who disengaged cited changing context as proximate to their decision.
Since Poso was peaceful and had been so for over a decade, there was no longer
a need for violence.
JI and Mujahidin KOMPAK members
tended to utilise cost-benefit logic with several lines of reasoning. First,
most interviewees pointed to general public revulsion with the bombings and
expressed the general sentiment that ongoing bombings would be
“counterproductive” to the interests of JI and Muslims in general. Alongside
this view, it was often mentioned that bombings against civilian targets was a
violation of the Quran’s rules governing the conduct of war. Thus, there were
religious “costs” involved with taking such a step.
Alternative Social Networks
The third and perhaps the most
important factor in facilitating successful disengagement was the establishment
of an alternative social network of friends, family members, business
associates and mentors. New relationships and friendships can offer new
narratives for perceiving the enemy, highlight instances where the rhetoric of
seniors was at odds with their actions, challenge prior-held views, and refocus
priorities from jihad and/or revenge killing toward family.
Pressure from parents or a spouse
can be a key supporting factor facilitating the disengagement. This was
especially true among the Tanah Runtuh jihadists in Poso. However, the converse
was also true. In those cases where parents professed support for terrorism,
individuals remained hard line and unrepentant.
Finally, shifts in priorities from
jihad and clandestine activities toward marriage, family, and gainful
employment also facilitated disengagement. Priority shifts followed. In the
cases of Tanah Runtuh members who had been released from prison, the need to
earn a living, to “cari makanan” for one’s family, led to prioritising finding
and keeping a job over their prior jihad activities. Likewise, among members of
JI, Mujahidin KOMPAK, and the Subur cell, the most successful instances of
disengagement and reintegration were those young men who had the opportunity to
go for either further education or professional development training and had
become teachers or businessmen in their own right.
Implications for Policy
It is important to note that these
factors also hold if we look at a broader range of cases outside Indonesia.
Studies such as those by Peter Neumann on defections from Islamic State show
that ISIS defectors have cited disillusionment with ISIS’ brutality, corruption,
sectarianism, and unIslamic behaviour as well as the general lack of a quality
of life as key to their decision to return home.
Members of Scandinavian skinhead
gangs cited a desire to get married and start a family as well as a general
sense of burnout and disillusionment as key to their decision to disengage. ETA
members raised issues of changing context and a desire to become fathers.
Finally, IRA members cited disillusionment with tactics as well as the role of
a supportive family network in facilitating disengagement.
These generalisations are
instructive in the development of disengagement programmes both by governments
and by civil society organisations. Indonesia would benefit from well-targeted,
well-resourced disengagement programmes, built on a foundation of knowledge
about the Indonesian jihadist community. This has historically been lacking.
Early Densus 88 programmes championed
first by Brigadier General Suryadharma and then by General Tito Karnavian drew
on substantial knowledge of the target population but were ad hoc and poorly
funded. Later BNPT programmes were well funded but were built without
sufficient understanding of the jihadist community. With Tito Karnavian taking
the reins at BNPT, this provides an opportunity for equal emphasis of these
goals. To date, BNPT and Densus programmes have not focused on life skills
training and professional development.
However, this is the area where they
could have the most sustainable impact. By focusing on the priority shift
element, they could move disengagement forward at a very tenuous time. If
someone cannot find a way to earn a living outside the jihadi network, they may
very well return to it. Likewise, providing space for those conversations
around disillusionment and cost-benefit to take place, especially within
prisons, can also embolden those who are “thinking” disengagement to “do”
disengagement and ultimately reintegration post-release.
*Julie Chernov Hwang is an Associate
Professor and Chair of the Department of Political Science and International
Relations at Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. Her forthcoming book,
“Reconsidering Violence: The Disengagement of Indonesian Jihadists” is under
review at Cornell University Press. She contributed this article to RSIS
Commentary.
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