Extract from The Guardian
An apocalyptic view of Islamist
terrorism is the thread that connects key figures in the Trump
administration and underpins this weekend’s immigration chaos. But
is their ramped-up rhetoric just giving terrorists what they want?
Tuesday
31 January 2017 04.38 AEDT
It
was the moment the world sat up and started to take notice of the US
presidential campaign. Donald Trump had made headlines before, in
June 2015, when he had called for a “great, great wall” along the
Mexican border. Back then, he was hovering around ninth place in a
crowded field of Republican candidates. But by 7 December, when he
released a short statement calling for the “total
and complete shutdown” of Muslim immigration, he was the
frontrunner for his party’s nomination. His message, that Islam
itself was a threat to America, was heard loud and clear across the
globe, not least by 1.6 billion Muslims.
Now,
as president, he appears to be following through. On Friday he
stunned us again by announcing that citizens of seven Muslim-majority
countries – encompassing around 220 million people – would be
barred from entering the US for 90 days. On Sunday, his long-time
ally, Rudy Giuliani, traced
the order back to a conversation about the “Muslim ban”
in which Trump asked him to “show me the right way to do it
legally”. While commentators have had their work cut out trying to
follow the twists and turns of Trump’s logic on everything from
climate change to the CIA, on this issue his attitude has been
consistent. If there is a Trump doctrine, “war on Islam” has to
be a strong contender.
Trump
with Rudy Giuliani, whom the president asked how to ‘legally’
create a Muslim ban. Photograph: Don Emmert/AFP/Getty Images
An
apocalyptic view of Islamist terrorism is the thread that connects
many of his appointments, be they military men, Breitbarters or TV
pundits. National security adviser Michael
Flynn has written: “I’m totally convinced that, without a
proper sense of urgency, we will be eventually defeated, dominated,
and very likely destroyed,” adding: “Do you want to be ruled by
men who eagerly drink the blood of their dying enemies?”
Flynn’s
deputy, KT
Macfarland argued that, without American leadership, global
jihadism will “usher in its version of paradise – the destruction
of the apostates and unbelievers and the triumph of the caliphate”.
National Security Council member Sebastian
Gorka wrote: “America is now in a threat environment that makes
some … look back wistfully at the cold-war years when the only real
threat was the spread of communism”. Today, the official Trump
platform includes the pledge: “We will defeat the ideology of
radical Islamic terrorism just as we won the cold war.”
Stephen
Bannon: ‘We are “at the beginning stages of a global war against
Islamic fascism” Photograph: Andrew Harrer/EPA
Steve
Bannon, the man whom many regard as the ideological linchpin of the
administration, believes we are “at the beginning stages of a
global war against Islamic fascism”. In a surprise move at the
weekend, Bannon
was appointed to the council, the principal body advising the
president on foreign policy and intelligence.
Members
of that team differ in the extent to which they distinguish between
Islam and violent distortions of it. Before his appointment to the
administration, Flynn, for example, tweeted a YouTube video with the
title “Fear of Muslims is RATIONAL” from his verified account.
The tweet has not been deleted. In contrast, special assistant to the
president, Derek Harvey, believes that “the threat is the extremist
interpretation of Islam”. Macfarland has written: “Not all the
world’s 1.6 billion Muslims are extremists or terrorists. Not by a
long shot.” However, she warns that “even if just 10% of 1% are
radicalised, that’s a staggering 1.6 million people bent on
destroying western civilization”. One 2014
estimate put the number of active jihadists at between
85,000 and 106,000 – or around 0.006% of all Muslims.
Michael
Flynn: ‘Do you want to be ruled by men who eagerly drink the blood
of their dying enemies?’ Photograph: Andrew Harrer/EPA
Trump’s
own understanding of Islam appears to be superficial. “I’ve had
good instincts in life, and a lot of this is instinct,” he told the
Washington Post last year. It’s also the influence of men including
Frank Gaffney, whose thinktank, the Center for Security Policy (CSP),
briefed Trump on sharia law before the crucial Iowa caucuses in
February 2016. The CSP believes that “American civil and political
society is under systematic, sustained and seditious assault – a
‘Stealth Jihad’ – by adherents to Shariah”. Incredibly,
Gaffney himself suggested that the Obama administration had inserted
an Islamic crescent moon into the logo of the Missile Defense Agency.
Gaffney
hasn’t, as yet, been rewarded with a post in the administration.
But Flynn’s and Bannon’s closeness to the president means their
clash-of-civilisations rhetoric and blurring of the line between
Islam and jihadism carry real authority. The question is: what effect
will this actually have on terrorism, in the US and around the world?
Katerina
Dalacoura, associate professor of international relations at the
London School of Economics, thinks Flynn’s framing of the problem
is wrong, for a start. “We have a situation very different from the
cold war one,” she says. “Within the Soviet Union and eastern
Europe generally, you had the population at large being sympathetic
to the United States. The US was able to play a role of upholder of
certain values because politically it had been unable to interfere.
In the case of the Middle East, the US has no such standing. In fact,
it’s the opposite – I think that through decades of intervention,
[it] has been turned into an illegitimate actor.”
“It
may be able to play that role in 10 or 20 years, if it continues to
pull out of the Middle East. But not at this moment.”
Sir
Jeremy Greenstock, a former chair of the UN Security Council’s
counter-terrorism committee, is similarly sceptical. “I don’t
think Islamic terrorism is an existential threat to western
democracy. Western democracy has got other kinds of problems, in
populism, in reaction against globalisation, in the fragmentation of
political cultures, in the rise of the local over the collective. I
would put terrorism way down the list of real existential concerns.”
He describes it, instead, as a “lethal nuisance”.
Demonstrators
at anti-Donald Trump travel ban protests outside Hartsfield-Jackson
Atlanta International Airport in Atlanta. Photograph: Christopher
Aluka Berry/Reuters
In
terms of the fight against Isis, he expects American action around
Mosul to continue, with the focus moving, in due course, to Raqqa.
Eliminating these strongholds is unlikely to be the end of the story,
however. “You’ve got to look at what other kinds of terrorist
action are going to be stimulated by the loss of territory where Isis
had wanted to form a caliphate … they will have to start showing
that terrorism has teeth in other ways, including presumably, in
incidents in western democracies.”
This
is not an argument for allowing Isis to remain in Syria and Iraq, he
says. Instead, “if there is to be a global anti-terrorist coalition
that is effective, it’s got to deal with some of the causes of it,
rather than the symptoms. It’s got to deal with governance in the
Middle East, it’s got to deal with ungoverned space in other
territories … I don’t see any signs from Trump yet that he has
formed a proactive, comprehensive policy that deals with the whole
phenomenon of 21st-century terrorism.”
Despite
this, Trump’s strong-man stance has fans – and not just among
the 65%
of his voters who viewed terrorism as a “major problem”.
James Carafano, a fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation who
served on the Trump transition committee, sounds as if he is looking
forward to the change in tone. “The previous administration,
because they didn’t want anything to be perceived as anti-Muslim or
focused on a specific religion, kind of tried to vanilla-ize or
neuter the programmes by using terms such as ‘countering violent
extremism’, ‘counter radicalisation’, or whatever else. And I
think that will go away. Very clearly the administration will say
look, we’re focusing on stopping … Islamist-related transnational
terrorism.” One unambiguous
token of this came on Saturday, when a US
raid in the Yakla district of Yemen was said by the Pentagon
to have killed 14 members of al-Qaida.
Will
a military solution result in blowback? Carofano calls this argument
“stupid”. “At the peak of hard power [from] the US, which is
about 2007-2008, when they crushed the uprising in Iraq, the
terrorism numbers actually plummeted. And when Obama went to this
kind of ‘let’s move away from hard power into the more soft power
and more stealthy approach’, the numbers skyrocketed.” Carofano
is right that total deaths from terrorism dipped after 2007, but they
rose above those levels only after the beginning of the Syrian
civil war, in 2011.
Donald
Trump signs an executive order to impose tighter vetting of
travellers entering the US, targeting Muslim-majority countries and
shutting down refugee entry. Photograph: Carlos Barria/Reuters
Was
Trump’s promise to eradicate “radical Islamic terrorism … from
the face of the earth” realistic? “Here’s why this is a stupid
question: people all the time say we want to eliminate poverty, and
nobody says, ‘Well that’s stupid, you can’t eliminate all
poverty’ … nobody has a problem with that.”
There
is a home front to this ramped-up “war on terror”, and many
Muslim Americans are profoundly anxious about the possible impact on
their lives. Moustafa
Bayoumi, professor at Brooklyn College and author of How Does It
Feel To Be a Problem?, says: “It’s clear that Trump uses Islam as
a kind of rhetorical prop to feed his populism. But I think
that he has also developed a cabinet that has some internal
contradictions. There is Flynn, for sure, and he’s not
inconsequential, but [John] Kelly, on the homeland security
front, seems more reasonable.” Does he think Trump has a fear of
Muslims? “That’s a good question, and I think it asks for
coherence from an incoherent mind.”
The
15 years since 9/11 have been difficult for the Muslim community –
he cites, among other things, warrantless surveillance and FBI
informants. “But, on the other hand, the state has functioned on
many levels to preserve the sphere of civil society for Muslim
Americans. Things such as the justice department filing suit for
problems with mosque construction.” Under Obama, the federal
government sued several cities for religious discrimination after
they had refused permits for new mosques. “I’m not sure that
we’re going to see that from a Jeff Sessions justice department.
I’m not sure we’re going to have the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission take on Muslim discrimination cases with the same kind of
interest.”
It’s
clear that Trump uses Islam as a kind of rhetorical prop to feed his
populism
“Even
George W Bush,” Bayoumi says, “was trying to preserve a certain
sense that the government will be in charge of patrolling Muslims,
not vigilantes. Whereas, under Trump, I could see how that they could
just both become the same thing. We’ll lose that sense of guarantee
of equal protection under the law.”
That
raises the prospect of a vicious circle. Enhanced vetting for Muslims
will just make everyone else more suspicious. “I know when I fly,
on those few occasions when I’ve actually been taken away from the
line for a special screening then taken back to the line, it hardly
makes anybody, myself included, feel more comfortable,” he laughs.
“The extra scrutiny is just going to make everybody more
Islamophobic, and this is just going to make Muslims feel more
alienated.”
Scott
Atran, an anthropologist with unrivalled field experience of
radicalisation – he’s just come back from interviewing members of
Islamic State near Mosul – deplores the visa ban and many of the
other signals coming from the Trump team. “That stigmatises all
citizens of those countries, many of whom sacrificed their lives for
what they thought was advancing the values and goals of both
countries. Just take Iraq – the US invaded Iraq, the country fell
apart, tens of thousands of people tried to help the United States in
their efforts there, and now you’re basically saying they’re not
allowed in either? You can’t just turn your back on people whose
lives you put in harm’s way.”
Anger
across America at Donald Trump’s travel ban – video report
There
are many reasonable Americans who would counter that, whatever the
antecedents, Iraq is now a safe haven for many violent jihadists.
Doesn’t it make sense to reduce the likelihood of one of them
getting through to zero? “There have not been problems with people
coming from Libya, Syria, or Iraq, because they are very carefully
vetted. So I think this just plays to a general fear.”
The
hard edges of Trumpian counter-terrorism represent an attempt to
placate the people who supported him, says Atran, and “to give a
general sense that he’s trying to protect the American homeland. I
don’t think it will be very effective or meaningful, except that it
works psychologically on voters.”. Moreover, the idea that everyday
Islam shades into violent jihadism is “a disastrous line to take.
It’s one that plays directly to the Islamic State’s desire to
eliminate the grey zone between believers and non-believers, by
saying that the overwhelming majority of Muslims who simply want a
more peaceful life are in essence no different from the people who
commit murder and wish to harm innocents. How can that possibly be
useful? It risks only fanning the flames of anger, violence and
opposition to peace, not only among American citizens, but across the
world.”
The
problem is that tough talk on Islam, never mind terrorism, is a
vote-winner. One
analysis from June found that people who felt the word
“violent” was a good way to describe Muslims had much more
positive views of Trump than of Clinton. “They’re actually
expressing what is becoming the popular way of thinking about Islam,”
says Dalacoura, of Trump’s circle.
So
how would Atran, who is steeped in the first-hand reality of
terrorism, begin to explain to a Trump voter that Muslims are not the
enemy? Evidence and truth aren’t always effective tools of
argument, he says. Instead, the key is to start by appealing to the
emotions, perhaps by invoking admired figures such as Muhammad
Ali, or Kareem
Abdul Jabbar. “If then I can make some inroads, I’d show that
leaders of eight Muslim countries have been women, and then go down
the line of some of the great achievements of Muslim civilisation,
and then recognise that, certainly, in this time and geopolitical
space, there is a very cruel, revolutionary strand of fundamentalist
Islam that is a real danger not only to people in the United States,
but much more so to Muslims around the world.”
There
is a mirror image of that fundamentalism in the west. “Xenophobic
etho-nationalist extremism … is also gaining ground. In fact,
there’s an unholy alliance between these two movements that’s
tearing apart western society to some extent. It’s very similar to
what fascism and communism were doing in the 1930s. They need one
another.”
“The
more [xenophobes] attribute all the ills of society to immigrants and
especially Muslim immigrants, the more the strategy of Islamic State
and al-Qaida to drive a wedge between Muslims and their host
societies in the west, or between Muslim-majority societies and
western societies, progresses. It’s reaching alarming levels. And
that comes together with the fact that nations themselves are
starting to break the rules of the international order, which can
rapidly develop into a free-for-all, as happened before the first
world war.”
In
his 2016 book The Field of Fight, Flynn wrote: “We’re in a world
war, but very few Americans recognise it, and fewer still have any
idea how to win it.” If the Trump doctrine holds sway, the general,
his lieutenants and their commander-in-chief may indeed get the war
they seem to crave. Despite what they claim, however, the losers
won’t be the terrorists, but all of us.
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