www.PalestineChronicle.com -  September 30, 2014
   
In This Issue
What if 'Islamic State' Didn't Exist? - EDITORIAL - RAMZY BAROUD
SELECTED ARTICLES
Israeli Settlers 'Occupy 23 Homes' in East Jerusalem Neighborhood
PLO: Netanyahu UN Speech 'Blatant Manipulation of Facts' and other news..

We greatly appreciate your support. Please click HERE
to help. The Palestine Chronicle is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization. All donations are tax deductible.
Like us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter
Palestine Chronicle   
The Palestine Chronicle is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization whose mission is to educate the general public by providing a forum that strives to highlight issues of relevance to human rights, national struggles, freedom and democracy in the form of daily news, commentary, features, book reviews, photos, art, and more.
Join Our Mailing List
FEATURE

What if 'Islamic State' Didn't Exist?

If IS didn't exist, many in the region would be keen on creating one.
If IS didn't exist, many in the region would be keen on creating one.

By Ramzy Baroud

 

What if the so-called Islamic State (IS) didn't exist?

 

In order to answer this question, one has to liberate the argument from its geopolitical and ideological confines.

 

Flexible language

 

Many in the media (Western, Arab, etc) use the reference "Islamist" to brand any movement at all whether it be political, militant or even charity-focused. If it is dominated by men with beards or women with headscarves that make references to the Holy Koran and Islam as the motivator behind their ideas, violent tactics or even good deeds, then the word "Islamist" is the language of choice.

 

According to this overbearing logic, a Malaysia-based charity can be as 'Islamist' as the militant group Boko Haram in Nigeria. When the term "Islamist" was first introduced to the debate on Islam and politics, it carried mostly intellectual connotations. Even some "Islamists" used it in reference to their political thought. Now, it can be moulded to mean many things.

 

This is not the only convenient term that is being tossed around so deliberately in the discourse pertaining to Islam and politics. Many are already familiar with how the term "terrorism" manifested itself in the myriad of ways that fit any country's national or foreign policy agenda - from the US' George W. Bush to Russia's Vladimir Putin. In fact, some of these leaders accused one another of practising, encouraging or engendering terrorism while positioning themselves as the crusaders against terror. The American version of the "war on terror" gained much attention and bad repute because it was highly destructive. But many other governments launched their own wars to various degrees of violent outcomes.

 

The flexibility of the usage of language very much stands at the heart of this story, including that of IS. We are told the group is mostly made of foreign jihadists. This could have much truth to it, but this notion cannot be accepted without much contention.

 

Foreign Menace

 

Why does the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad insist on the "foreign jihadists" claim and did so even when the civil war plaguing his country was still at the stage of infancy, teetering between a popular uprising and an armed insurgency? It is for the same reason that Israel insists on infusing the Iranian threat, and its supposedly "genocidal" intents towards Israel in every discussion about the Hamas-led resistance in Palestine, and Hezbollah's in Lebanon. Of course, there is a Hamas-Iran connection, although it has been weakened in recent years by regional circumstances. But for Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Iran has to be at the heart of the discourse.

 

There are ample examples of governments of the Middle East ingraining the "foreign menace" factor when dealing with solely international phenomena, violence or otherwise. The logic behind it is simple: if the Syrian civil war is fuelled by foreign fanatics, then al-Assad can exact his violence against rebelling Syrians in the name of fighting the foreigners/jihadists/terrorists. According to this logic, Bashar becomes a national hero, as opposed to a despotic dictator.

 

Netanyahu remains the master of political diversion. He vacillates between peace talks and Iran-backed Palestinian "terror" groups in whatever way he finds suitable. The desired outcome is placing Israel as a victim of and a crusader against foreign-inspired terrorism. Just days after Israel carried out what was described by many as a genocide in Gaza - killing over 2,200 and wounded over 11,000 - he once more tried to shift global attention by claiming that the so-called Islamic State was at the Israeli border.

 

The "foreign hordes on the border" notion is being utilised, although so far ineffectively, by Egypt's Abdul-Fatah al-Sisi also. Desperate to gain access to this convenient discourse, he has made numerous claims of foreigners being at the border of Libya, Sudan and Sinai. Few have paid attention aside from the unintelligible Egyptian state-controlled media. However, one must not neglect the events that took place in Egypt when he himself overthrew the Muslim Brotherhood's democratically-elected government of Mohamed Morsi last year.

 

When US President Barack Obama decided to launch his war on IS, Sisi lined up to enlist his country in a fight against the "Islamists" as he sees them as part and parcel of the war against the supporters of the deposed Muslim Brotherhood. After all, they are both "Islamists."

 

US-western Motives

 

For the US and their western allies, the logic behind the war is hardly removed from the war discourse engendered by previous US administrations, most notably that of W. Bush and his father. It is another chapter of the unfinished wars that the US had unleashed in Iraq over the last 25 years. In some way, IS, with its brutal tactics, is the worst possible manifestation of American interventionism.

 

In the first Iraq war (1990-91), the US-led coalition seemed determined to achieve the clear goal of driving the Iraqi army out of Kuwait, and to use that as a starting point to achieve complete US dominance over the Middle East. Back then, George Bush had feared that pushing beyond that goal could lead to the kind of consequences that would alter the entire region and empower Iran at the expense of America's Arab allies. Instead of carrying out regime change in Iraq itself, the US opted to subject Iraq to a decade of economic torment - a suffocating blockade that resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians. That was the golden age of America's "containment" policy in the region.

 

However, US policy in the Middle East, under Bush's son, W. Bush, was reinvigorated by new elements that somewhat altered the political landscape leading to the second Iraq war in 2003. Firstly, the attacks of September 11, 2001 were dubiously used to mislead the public into another war by linking Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to al-Qaeda; and secondly, there was the rise of the neoconservative political ideology that dominated Washington at the time. The neo-cons strongly believed in the regime-change doctrine that has since then proven to be a complete failure.

 

It was not just a failure, but rather, a calamity. Today's rise of IS is in fact a mere bullet point in a tragic Iraq timeline which started the moment W. Bush began his "shock and awe campaign." This was followed by the fall of Baghdad, the dismantling of the country's institutions (the de-Baathification of Iraq) and the "missions accomplished" speech. Since then, it has been one adversity after another. The US strategy in Iraq was predicated on destroying Iraqi nationalism and replacing it with a dangerous form of sectarianism that used the proverbial "divide and conquer" stratagem. But neither the Shia remained united, nor did the Sunni accept their new lower status, or did the Kurds stay committed to being part of an untied Iraq.

 

Al-qaeda Connection

 

The US has indeed succeeded in dividing Iraq, maybe not territorially, but certainly in every other way. Moreover, the war brought al-Qaeda to Iraq. The group used the atrocities inflicted by the US war and invasion to recruit fighters from Iraq and throughout the Middle East. And like a bull in a china shop, the US wrecked more havoc on Iraq, playing around with sectarian and tribal cards to lower the intensity of the resistance and to busy Iraqis with fighting each other.

 

When the US combat troops allegedly departed Iraq, they left behind a country in ruins, millions of refugees on the run, deep sectarian divides, a brutal government, and an army made mostly of loosely united Shia-militias with a blood-soaked past.

 

Al-Qaeda was supposedly weakened in Iraq by then. In actuality, while al-Qaeda didn't exist in Iraq prior to the US invasion, at the eve of the US withdrawal, al-Qaeda had branched off into other militant manifestations. They were able to move with greater agility in the region, and when the Syrian uprising was intentionally-armed by regional and international powers, al-Qaeda resurfaced with incredible power, fighting with prowess and unparalleled influence. Despite the misinformation about the roots of IS, IS and al-Qaeda in Iraq are the same. They share the same ideology and had only branched off into various groupings in Syria. Their differences are an internal matter, but their objectives are ultimately identical.

 

The reason the above point is often ignored, is that such an assertion would be a clear indictment that the Iraq war created IS, and that the irresponsible handling of the Syria conflict empowered the group to actually form a sectarian state that extends from the north-east of Syria to the heart of Iraq.

 

IS Must Exist

 

US-Western and Arab motives in the war against IS might differ, but both sides have keen interest in partaking in the war and an even keener interest in refusing to accept that such violence is not created in a vacuum. The US and its western allies refuse to see the obvious link between IS, al-Qaeda and the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. Arab leaders insist that their countries are also victims of some "Islamist" terror, produced, not of their own  

anti-democratic and oppressive policies, but by Chechenia and other foreign fighters who are bringing dark-age violence to otherwise perfectly peaceable and stable political landscapes.

 

The lie is further cemented by most media when they highlight the horror of IS but refuse to speak of other horrors that preceded and accompanied the existence of the group. They insist on speaking of IS as if a fully independent phenomenon devoid of any contexts, meanings and representations.

 

For the US-led coalition, IS must exist, although every member of the coalition has their own self-serving reasoning to explain their involvement. And since IS mostly made of "foreign jihadists" from faraway lands, speaking languages that few Arabs and westerners understand, then, somehow, no one is guilty, and the current upheaval in the Middle East is someone else's fault. Thus, there is no need to speak of Syrian massacres, or Egyptian massacres, or of Iraq wars and its massacres, for the problem is obviously foreign.

 

If the so-called Islamic State didn't exist, many in the region would be keen on creating one.

 

- Ramzy Baroud is a PhD scholar in People's History at the University of Exeter. He is the Managing Editor of Middle East Eye. Baroud is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).


SELECTED ARTICLES

What if 'Islamic State' Didn't Exist?

If IS didn't exist, many in the region would be keen on creating one.

By Ramzy Baroud What if the so-called Islamic State (IS) didn't exist? In order to answer this question, one has to liberate the argument from its geopolitical and ideological confines. Flexible language Many in the media (Western, Arab, etc) use the reference "Islamist" to brand any movement at all whether it be political, militant or [...]

Netanyahu's Chutzpa: Lying with a Smile

'Some (lie) only when necessary, some do it often, some, like Netanyahu, do it as a rule.'

By Jamal Kanj I have followed the megalomaniac performance of Benjamin Netanyahu since he was Israel's representative at the UN in the mid-1980s. I watched with keen interest his debates, and must confess I was taken by his chutzpa. Netanyahu has special abilities to twist facts without blinking an eye: he can lie with a [...]

Why Obama Must Bomb ISIS

Obama and Congress are unable to choose diplomacy and humanitarian aid over war with ISIS. (WH)

By Steve Breyman Every national peace group (large and small, new and old, religious and secular) opposes Barack Obama's war against ISIS in Iraq, and its recent extension to Syria. Their opposition extends to Obama's Congress-sanctioned arming of "moderate" Syrian rebels (for which legislators found half a billion dollars). The anti-war movement's antagonism is sturdy [...]

Sharmouta: Names Games in Israel

By Hatim Kanaaneh The Name Games are on in Israel. On the eve of the 5775 Jewish New Year the Israeli Population, Immigration and Border Authority announced the winning first name most commonly given to a newborn boy in Israel in the preceding year as Youssef, which is used by both Arabs and Jews. The [...]

The Girl with the Doll

(Tamar Fleishman/PC)

By Tamar Fleishman The girl with the doll, her mother and her two sisters, one of which was burning up with fever and kept crying each time she saw a soldier, weren't permitted to pass through the checkpoint and head home to Abu- Gosh. Everything was done according to the regulations and everything was done [...]

Nakhwa without Borders: Gaza and the End of 'Arab Gallantry'

It was al-Karama (dignity) that forced Gaza to the streets in the First Palestinian Uprising.

By Ramzy Baroud On its own the Arabic word al-Nakhwa, means "gallantry." Combined with the word "al-Arabiya" - "Arab gallantry" - the term becomes loaded with meanings, cultural and even political implications and subtext. But what is one to make of "Arab gallantry" during and after Israel's most brutal war on Gaza between 8 July [...]

Israeli Refuseniks: Occupation's Dark Underbelly Exposed

Soldiers of Unit 8200. (Haaretz)

By Jonathan Cook - Nazareth A letter signed by 43 veterans of an elite Israeli military intelligence unit declaring their refusal to continue serving the occupation has sent shockwaves through Israeli society. But not in the way the soldiers may have hoped. Unusually, this small group of reservists has gone beyond justifying their act of [...]


LATEST NEWS

Israeli Settlers 'Occupy 23 Homes' in East Jerusalem Neighborhood

Sep 30 2014 / 1:17 pm

Israeli settlers early Tuesday occupied 23 houses in the Palestinian neighborhood of Silwan south of the Old City of Jerusalem, a local information center said.

 

Wadi Hilweh Information Center said in a statement that "settlers of the Elad (Ir David) Association" stormed Silwan at 1:30 a.m. escorted by Israeli soldiers and forcibly evicted the residents of an apartment and occupied it, in addition to several vacant homes.

 

The houses belong to Baydoun, al-Karaki, Abu Sbeih, al-Zawahra, al-Abbasi, al-Khayyat, Qarain and al-Yamani families, the statement said.

 

The Wadi Hilweh Center called the act a "unprecedented settlement attack."

 

"Even if the houses have been bought stealthily, this is still an illegal seizure of Arab houses by the Elad settlement association."

 

Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld did not immediately comment on the incident.

 

Ir David Foundation is an organization that promotes a Jewish connection to parts of the Silwan neighborhood in occupied East Jerusalem, including the "City of David" archaeological site.

 

East Jerusalem is internationally recognized as Palestinian territory, but Israel occupied it in 1967 and later annexed it in a move never considered legitimate abroad.

 

More than 500,000 Israeli settlers live in settlements across the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, in contravention of international law.

 

(Ma'an - www.maannews.net)


SELECTED NEWS

PLO: Netanyahu UN Speech 'Blatant Manipulation of Facts'

The Palestine Liberation Organization said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blatantly manipulated the facts when he compared Hamas with the Islamic State group in a UN speech on Monday. "Netanyahu's speech at the UN was a blatant manipulation of facts and attempted at misleading the audience through a combination of hate language, slander, and argument [...]

Israeli Settlers 'Occupy 23 Homes' in East Jerusalem Neighborhood

Israeli settlers early Tuesday occupied 23 houses in the Palestinian neighborhood of Silwan south of the Old City of Jerusalem, a local information center said. Wadi Hilweh Information Center said in a statement that "settlers of the Elad (Ir David) Association" stormed Silwan at 1:30 a.m. escorted by Israeli soldiers and forcibly evicted the residents [...]

Hamas: Govt has Agreed to Pay all Salaries without 'Discrimination'

A senior Hamas official said on Saturday that the Palestinian consensus government had agreed to cover the salaries of all employees of the former Hamas government in Gaza without "discrimination." The statements came only hours after Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah said earlier Saturday that an unnamed international body was willing to pay the salaries [...]

Gazans Displaced by Israel Offensive still Waiting Solutions

Palestinians in Gaza displaced by Israel's military offensive on the besieged enclave are still waiting for solutions as winter approaches. Israel's military assault left over 110,000 Palestinians homeless and the displaced are traveling from one place to another to find refuge. Muin Bahar, who lives amongst the rubble of his destroyed home, told Ma'an that [...]

Fatah, Hamas Reach Comprehensive Agreement on Gaza Affairs

Rival Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah reached a "comprehensive" agreement Thursday for the return of their unity government in Gaza after two days of talks in Cairo, negotiators from both sides said. Egyptian sources told Ma'an that the two movements had been able to reach an agreement on a number of major points of contention, [...]

Hamas, Fatah Unity Talks in Cairo 'Positive'

Talks in Cairo between rival Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah on strengthening the Palestinian unity government were taking place in a "positive atmosphere" on Wednesday, officials said. The two-day talks, which began early Wednesday, come after a joint Palestinian delegation and Israel agreed to hold separate indirect talks in late October to thrash out a [...]

Official: Cairo Ceasefire Talks still on

Senior Hamas official Mahmoud Zahhar said Tuesday that the Palestinian delegation decided to go ahead with indirect ceasefire talks in Cairo despite deadly violence overnight. "After consultations between the delegation and Hamas officials both in Gaza and abroad, a decision was taken to go ahead with Cairo talks," Zahhar told Reuters. His remarks followed reports [...]




The Palestine Chronicle is an independent online newspaper that provides daily news, commentary, features, book reviews, photos, art, etc, on a variety of subjects. However, it's largely focused on Palestine, Israel, and the Middle East region. The Palestine Chronicle is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization. To contact the editor, submit an article or any other material, please write to: [email protected]. For other inquiries write to: [email protected].