The rise of abrasive populist figures and movements
around the world, including Donald Trump, has featured much demagoguery
alleging the Muslim community as a whole shares collective responsibility for
the crimes of Islamist extremists.
A good local example is the
return to prominence of Pauline Hanson – her first rise in the 1990s featured
claims about how Australia was being "swamped by Asians" and
allegations about so-called "industries" supposedly providing discriminatory
benefits to Aborigines. Today, she claims to promote a "strong stance
against Muslims" and "no more Muslims in Australia, no more Muslim
refugees in Australia."
Responsibility for such bigotry
belongs to the perpetrators - yet there is a strong case to be made that many
Western leaders, analysts and commentators are, often with the best of
intentions, counter-productively aiding the popularity of anti-Muslim political
movements by failing to speak clearly and sensibly about the ideological
origins and nature of Islamist extremist terrorism – such as the bloody attack
in Nice onThursday.
This ideology is best described
as Islamism, a violent, totalitarian ideology which argues all political and
social problems can be resolved by returning to an imagined version of the
Islamic caliphate which existed in the time of the Prophet Muhammad. This
ideology is a political belief system – like communism or fascism – and
not at all the same as the religion, Islam.
In Australia, we have seen
various attacks inspired by Islamism including the siege at Sydney's Lindt
cafe, the murder of police accountant Curtis Cheng in Sydney last year and the
stabbing attack on two police officers in Melbourne in 2014.
The question of how to respond
politically to such Islamist inspired attacks like those in Nice,Orlando,
Baghdad, Istanbul, Sydney and elsewhere is only becoming more acute, because IS
has been shifting the messaging of its slick propaganda. Facing losses on the
battlefield, IS has been urging aspiring Western jihadists to carry out attacks
close to home, rather than, as previously, leaving Western countries for Iraq
and Syria to fight for and build the self-proclaimed "caliphate".
Expect, therefore, "lone
wolf terror" – inspired, but not planned, by IS and its Islamist
ideology – in western nations to become worse before it gets better.
Some, apparently including
US President Obama and individuals in Australia, argue that it is best not
to mention the Islamist ideology and belief system behind such attacks, which
drives not only IS, but al-Qaeda, Hamas, Hezbollah, Jemaah Islamyah, Boko
Haram, and numerous other violent and ostensibly non-violent groups.
They say that doing so increases
xenophobic and anti-Muslim sentiment. They also argue that it
makes mainstream Muslim communities uncomfortable, increasing their alienation,
which can lead to terrorist recruitment.
However well-intentioned, this
strategy is badly misguided for several reasons.
Failing to speak clearly about
this ideology even as we see individuals, on a daily basis, carrying out vicious
and unconscionable violence which they say is in the name of Islam, actually
does no favours to the vast majority of non-Islamist Muslims, Islamism's
primary victims. Instead it risks failing to create a clear public distinction
between the perverse Islamism that guides attacks and moderate, majority,
mainstream Islam.
As noted, rather than decrease
anti-Muslim tension, the failure to clearly address the wider ideology behind
so many terrorist groups almost certainly fuels the rise of populist groups and
reactionaries intent on portraying Islam as a whole, and all its adherents, as
the problem.
It also plays into the hands of
the Islamists, who like to portray the world as a "clash of
civilisations" – a fight between the Islamic Umma (community) and the
"crusader" Christians and Jews. In fact, as the Istanbul and Baghdad
attacks demonstrate, the Islamist surge is primarily the result of violent
extremists who are trying to impose their own extreme version of Islam on other
Muslims. Moreover, only other Muslims can effectively counter and discredit
this ideology, rooted in extremist interpretations of Islamic sources.
At the same time, fighting the
Islamist ideology which underlies IS and other regional and global Islamist
groups requires a multi-pronged comprehensive strategy – including law
enforcement, diplomacy, aid policy, intelligence and military means – which
will likely need to be maintained for decades. Governments must speak clearly
about the nature of the Islamist challenge to garner the public support
necessary for such measures.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull's
pre-election comment attributing responsibility to "radical Islamist
ideology" for terrorism was therefore especially timely and apposite, as
indeed was his post Nice statement about showing "our resolute
solidarity ... in the struggle against Islamist terrorism today" but it is
crucial that political leaders from all sides continue to reinforce this
point.
This is why not
only Turnbull but also representatives of most major western,
democratic governments – including France, Britain, Italy and Germany, and even
Muslim-majority Indonesia – use language that publicly recognises the
Islamist ideological threat, while also being very careful not to validate the
Islamist world view of a "clash of civilisations". This is the
only sensible starting point for confronting the ongoing Islamist terror
threat. It does not in itself meet the challenge of blood-thirsty terrorism and
genocidal impulses emanating from Islamist extremist groups – but it is a
necessary pre-condition to developing long-term strategies, policies and
diplomatic tools that can.
Dr Colin
Rubenstein is executive director of the Australia/Israel and Jewish
Affairs Council. He was a lecturer at Monash University on Middle East
politics.
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