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Monday, June 1, 2009

Illusions in `The Illusion of an Islamic State'

The book The Illusion of an Islamic State: Expansion of Transnational Islamist Movements to Indonesia by the LibFor All Foundation, edited by former president and former chairman of the Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), Abdurrahman Wahid, places the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI), the Council of Indonesian Jihad Fighters (MMI) and Islam Defenders Front (FPI) in a single box called "hardline Islam".
This hardline Islam is a manifestation of Wahabism that is opposed to the "Moderate Islam" which the authors of this book claims to profess. This kind of categorization is simplistic, unfocused and runs counter to historical fact. As streams of Islamic thought, Wahabism and Salafism have obviously evolved over time, negotiating within their own places and times.
At the same time, the Muslim Brotherhood (IM) is an organization that is obviously not monolithic and also cannot be separated from the dimensions of time and place. Perhaps in the past this organization was inspired by the thinking of Sayyid Qutb via monumental books like Ma'alim fit Thariq (Signposts) and Fii Zhilalil Qur-an (In the Shade of the Koran). But, it is completely wrong to equate IM with Sayyid Qutb. The real thinking of IM's founder, Hasan Al Banna, stresses that his followers be moderate and wise in accepting differences, since IM is not a jama'atul muslimin (a group that embraces all Muslims), but a jama'atul minal muslimin, one group among many striving to restore the glory of Islam.
Syaikh Yusuf Qardlawi, the head of the World Muslim League (Rabithah *Alam al Islami), who for dozens of years has been active in IM, stressed in his work Fiqh Daulah (Jurisprudence of the State) that the daulah (state) envisaged by Islam is not a theocracy, the state of God, but rather a state built and administered to guarantee the welfare of all its residents, guided by divine values. He even stated firmly there is no reason to question democracy, because it constitutes a form of reasoning to secure collective benefits.
Then what about PKS? Even if it is true that it was inspired by or even affiliated with the IM as claimed in this book, it is just wrong to assume that this makes PKS identical to various manifestations of the Muslim Brotherhood in other countries. It is intolerable to put PKS in the same category as Wahabism, Salafism or Hizbut Tahrir, and then label them all hardline Islam. PKS has been sharply criticized by Salafi dan Hizbut Tahrir because in their view, political parties, democracy and elections are all haram (prohibited by Islamic law).
This book castigates the group it labels hardline Islam as a side which claims a monopoly on truth, and which regards all groups that do not share its way of thinking as deviant. But the "Moderate Islam" group that produced this book has done exactly the same thing. Supporters of liberalism and Islam liberal, socialism, secular nationalism, even hedonism, can sell their ideas freely - so why should a group of Muslims, who see Islam as way of life, be silenced in the era of democracy?
Take a look at the Decision of the Bathsul Masa'il Council of Nahdlatul Ulama on the Caliphate and Formalisation of Sharia, that appears in this book as an attachment. On page 253 it says: "A law which changes the form of the Indonesian state into a different form is not allowed, as long as the disadvantages are greater. Changing the legal basis of the state is also not allowed if unconstitutional means are employed, but allowed if constiutional means are used." So why put a negative stigma on Muslim groups in Indonesia who want to struggle for "political Islam"?
And if the concept of Islam followed by PKS and HTI is considered transnational and influenced by Wahabis and others, is the concept of Islam followed by NU and Muhammadiyah then something indigenously Indonesian? It seems not.
It is a fact that the "Yellow Books" (Kitab Kuning) that have become the standard reference for NU scholars are Arabic books, in the Arabic language, written in Arabic script - exactly like Muslim Brotherhood books. The only difference is that the Brotherhood books have been translated into Indonesian while the Yellow Books are still in their original language.
History also notes that the influence of puritan Wahabism, with the concept of cleansing Islam from all unacceptable innovations and accretions, played a significant role in Muhammadiyah's concept of Islam. So let us acknowledge that NU, Muhammadiyah, PKS, HTI and other Islamic organisations in Indonesia cannot be separated from concepts of Islam "imported" from abroad, but each of these concepts then evolved in accordance with their own place and time.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Fataawa

Running the fingers through the beard when making wudoo’

Does running the fingers through the beard when making wudoo’ mean that one must ensure that water reaches the skin under the beard?

Praise be to Allaah.

The outside of a thick beard should be washed, but it is not a must to wash the inside or the skin underneath. However, it is encouraged to run one's fingers through the beard. Al-Nawawi (may Allaah have mercy on him) said: “The scholars agree unanimously that a thick beard should be washed, but that the inner layers do not need to be washed, nor does the skin underneath. This is the opinion of the majority of scholars among the Sahaabah, Taabi’een and those who came after them.” Ibn Rushd said: “This is an issue in which I know of no difference of opinion.”

However, if the beard is thin and the skin underneath is visible, then it should be washed thoroughly when performing wudoo’.

Fataawa al-Lajnah al-Daa’imah,


Sunday, May 3, 2009

ISLAMIC TRADITIONS AND THE FEMINIST MOVEMENT: CONFRONTATION OR COOPERATION? (post 1)

By: Dr. Lois Lamya' al Faruqi

Whether living in the Middle East or Africa, in Central Asia, in Pakistan, in Southeast Asia, or in Europe and the Americas, Muslim women tend to view the feminist movement with some apprehension. Although there are some features of the feminist cause with which we as Muslims would wish to join hands, other features generate our disappointment and even opposition. There is therefore no simple or "pat" answer to the question of the future cooperation or competition which feminism may meet in an Islamic environment.
There are however a number of social, psychological, and economic traditions which govern the thinking of most Muslims and which are particularly affective of woman's status and role in Islamic society.Understanding these can help us understand the issues which affect male and female status and roles, and how we should react to movements which seek to improve the situation of women in any of the countries where Muslims live.
THE FAMILY SYSTEM:
One of the Islamic traditions which will affect the way in which Muslim women respond to feminist ideas is the advocacy in Islamic culture of an extended rather than a nuclear family system. Some Muslim families are "residentially extended" - that is, their members live communally with three or more generations of relatives (grandparents, parents, uncles, aunts, and their offspring) in a single building or compound. Even when this residential version of the extended family is not possible or adhered to, family connections reaching far beyond the nuclear unit are evident in strong psychological, social, economic, and even political ties. Mutual supports and responsibilities affecting these larger consanguine groups are not just considered desirable, but they are made legally incumbent on members of the society by Islamic law. The Holy Quran itself exhorts to extended family solidarity; in addition it specifies the extent of such responsibilities and contains prescriptive measures for inheritance, support, and other close interdependencies within the extended family.
[1]
Our Islamic traditions also prescribe a much stronger participation of the family in the contracting and preservation of marriages. While most Western feminists would decry family participation or arranged marriage as a negative influence because of its apparent restriction of individualistic freedom and responsibility, as Muslims we would rgue that such participation is advantageous for both individuals and groups within the society. Not only does it ensure marriages based on sounder principles than physical attraction and sexual infatuation, but it provides other safeguards for successful marital continuity. Members of the family provide diverse companionship as well as ready sources of advice and sympathy for the newly married as they adjust to each others' way. One party of the marriage cannot easily pursue an eccentric course at the expense of the spouse since such behavior would rally opposition from the larger group.
Quarrels are never so devastating to the marriage bond since other adult family members act as mediators and provide alternative sources of companionship and counsel following disagreements. The problems of parenting and generational incompatibility are also alleviated, and singles clubs and dating bureaus would be unnecessary props for social interaction. There is no need in the extended family for children of working parents to be unguarded, unattended, or inadequately loved and socialized because the extended family home is never empty. There is therefore no feeling of guilt which the working parent often feels in a nuclear or single-parent organization. Tragedy, even divorce, is not so debilitating to either adults or children since the larger social unit absorbs the residual numbers with much greater ease than a nuclear family organization can ever provide.
The move away from the cohesiveness which the family formerly enjoyed in Western society, the rise of usually smaller alternative family styles, and the accompanying rise in individualism which many feminists advocate or at least practice, are at odds with these deep-rooted Islamic customs and traditions. If feminism in the Muslim world chooses to espouse the Western family models, it should and would certainly be strongly challenged by Muslim women's groups and by Islamic society as a whole.
INDIVIDUALISM VS. THE LARGER ORGANIZATION:
The traditional support of the large and intricately interrelated family organization is correlative to another Islamic tradition which seems to run counter to recent Western trends and to feminist ideology. Islam and Muslim women generally advocate molding of individual goals and interests to accord with the welfare of the larger group and its members. Instead of holding the goals of the individual supreme, Islam instills in the adherent a sense of his or her place within the family and of a responsibility to that group. This is not perceived or experienced by Muslims as repression of the individual. Other traditions which will be discussed later guarantee his or her legal personality. Feminism, therefore, would not be espoused by Muslim women as a goal to be pursued without regard for the relation of the female to the other members of her family. The Muslim woman regards her goals as necessitating a balance with, or even subordination to, those of the family group. The rampant individualism often experienced in contemporary life, that which treats the goals of the individual in isolation from other factors, or as utterly supreme, runs against a deep Islamic commitment to social interdependence.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Causes that Lead to Apostasy

Knowing the meaning of our testimony of faith is necessary but not sufficient. One should also know the causes that may lead a person to revoke this testimony. In other words, one should know the causes that lead to apostasy from the religion of Islam. Among the more prevalent causes of apostasy in our times:
  1. To Associate Others with Allah or "Shirk"

    The first cause of apostasy is to commit shirk. Allah said (4:48): "Allah forgives not that partners should be set up with Him in worship, but He forgives anything else to whomsoever He pleases, and whoever sets up partner with Allah in worship, he has indeed forged a mighty sin."

    And He said (5:72): "Verily, whosoever associates with Allah anything, for him Allah has forbidden Paradise, and the Fire will be his abode; and the wrongdoers shall have no helpers."

    There are four types of Shirk:

    • Shirk through one's prayers (See 29:65)
    • Shirk through one's intent in his acts of worship (See 11:15-16)
    • Shirk through one's obedience (See 9:31)
    • Shirk through one's love (See 2:165)

    The fourth type of shirk is explained by Allah's statement (See 9:24): "Say (to them O Muhammad, sallallaahu `alayhi wa sallam): 'If your fathers, your sons, your brothers, your wives, your kindred, your possessions that you have gained, commerce you fear may slacken, and dwellings you love, if these are dearer to you than Allah and His Messenger (Muhammad), and to struggle in His Way, then wait until Allah brings about His Command (Punishment). And Allah guides not the wrong-doing people.'"

  2. To Deny the Finality of the Prophethood of Muhammad, sallallaahu `alayhi wa sallam

    The second cause of apostasy is denial of finality of Prophethood with the Prophet Muhammad sallallaahu `alayhi wa sallam. Whoever claims Prophethood or believes the claim of a false prophet has left the fold of Islam. For example, in our times, those who believe the claims of prophethood of Ghulam Ahmad, Elijah Poole, or Rashad Khalifa have left the fold of Islam.

  3. To Deny the Binding Nature of the Sunnah

    The third cause of apostasy is denial of the Sunnah. For example, those who claim that Islam is only the Qur'an have left the fold of Islam.

  4. To Judge by Other than Sharia

    The fourth cause of apostasy is to judge by other than the sharia that Allah sent down to the Prophet Muhammad, sallallaahu `alaihi wa sallam. For example those who believe that the systems and laws devised by men are better than the sharia, or that it is permissible to judge by other than the sharia even if one does not believe that judgment to be better than that of the sharia, or that Islam should be restricted to the private relationship between an individual and His Lord without entering into the other aspects of life.

  5. To Ridicule Any Aspect of Islam

    The fifth cause of apostasy is to ridicule or make fun of any aspect of Islam, its rewards or punishments.

    Allah said (S9 A65-66): "And if you (O Muhammad) question them, they (the hypocrites) will say: "We were only talking idly and jesting." Say (to them o Muhammad), "What, then were you mocking Allah and His Signs and His Messenger. Make no excuse you have disbelieved after you have believed."

  6. To Hate Any Aspect of Islam

    The sixth cause of apostasy is to hate any aspect of Islam.

    Allah said: (S47 A9): "That is because they have been averse to what Allah has sent down, so He has made their deeds to fail."

  7. To Perform or to be Pleased with Sorcery

    The seventh cause of apostasy is to perform sorcery or to be pleased with the performance of sorcery like bringing a man and a woman to love or hate one another.

    Allah said (S2 A102): "The devils disbelieved, they teach people sorcery."

  8. To Believe that One May Obtain Salvation by Following Other than the Sharia of the Prophet

    The eighth cause of apostasy is to believe that one may obtain salvation by following other than the religion of Islam or by refusing to cal the infidels, like the Jews and Christians, infidels, or to doubt their unbelief, or to say their religion is still correct.

    Allah said: "The true religion with Allah is Islam." (S3 A19)

    "Whoever desires a religion other than Islam, it shall not be accepted of him and in the Hereafter he shall be among the losers." (S33 A85)

    "And they say, "Be Jews or Christians then you shall be guided." Say: "Nay, rather the religion of Abraham, a man of pure faith, and he was not of idolaters."" (S2 A135)

    The Prophet has said: "By Him in Whose Hand Muhammad's soul is, anyone of this community, Jew or Christian, who hears of me and then dies without believing in me, will be among the inhabitants of the Hellfire." [Muslim]

  9. To Turn Away from Islam by Neither Learning nor Acting Upon its Teachings

    The ninth cause of apostasy is to turn away from the religion of Islam by neither learning it or acting upon it.

    Allah said (S32 A22): "And who does greater evil than he who is reminded of the signs of His Lord, then turns away from them? We shall take vengeance upon the criminals."

    May Allah keep us upon the testimony "There is no god (worthy of worship) but Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah" in this world and reward us full for it in the Hereafter.

    Allah said (S14 A27): "Allah confirms those who believe with the firm word (la ilaha ill Allah), in the present life and in the Hereafter; and Allah leads astray the evil-doers. And Allah does what He will."

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Political Islam

by Samir Amin
What is the nature and function, in the contemporary Muslim world, of the political movements claiming to be the one true Islamic faith? These movements are commonly designated “Islamic fundamentalism” in the West, but I prefer the phrase used in the Arab world: “Political Islam.” We do not have religious movements, per se, here – the various groups are all quite close to one another – but something much more banal: political organizations whose aim is the conquest of state power, nothing more, nothing less. Wrapping such organizations in the flag of Islam is simple, straightforward opportunism.

Political Islam is the adversary of liberation theology.
It advocates submission, not emancipation.

Modern Political Islam was invented by the orientalists serving British colonialism in India and was adopted intact by Mawdudi of Pakistan. It consisted mainly in “proving” that Muslim believers may only live under the rule of an Islamic State – anticipating the partition of India – because Islam cannot permit separation of Church and State. The orientalists conveniently forgot that the English of the 13th Century held precisely such ideas about Christianity.

Merciless Adversary of Liberation
Political Islam is not interested in the religion which it invokes, and does not propose any theological or social critique. It is not a “liberation theology” analogous to what has happened in Latin America. Political Islam is the adversary of liberation theology. It advocates submission, not emancipation. Mahmoud Taha of Sudan was the only Islamic intellectual who attempted to emphasize the element of emancipation in his interpretation of Islam. Condemned to death by the authorities of Khartoum for his ideas, Taha's execution was not protested by any Islamic group, “radical” or “moderate.” Nor was he defended by any of the intellectuals identifying themselves with “Islamic Renaissance” or even by those merely willing to “dialogue” with such movements. It was not even reported in the Western media.

The heralds of “Islamic Renaissance” are not interested in theology and they never refer to classic theological texts. For such thinkers, an Islamic community is defined by inheritance, like ethnicity, rather than by a strong and intimate personal conviction. It is a question of asserting a “collective identity” and nothing more. That is why the phrase “Political Islam” is the appropriate designation for such movements.

Saudi Arabia is a country without a constitution, whose rules claim that the Qur'an is a satisfactory substitute. In actual practice, the House of Saud has the power of an absolute monarchy or tribal chiefdom.

Of Islam, Political Islam retains only the shared habits of contemporary Muslim life – notably rituals for which it demands absolute respect. At the same time, it demands a complete cultural return to public and private rules which were practiced two centuries ago in the Ottoman Empire, in Iran and in Central Asia, by the powers of that time. Political Islam believes, or pretends to believe, that these rules are those of the “real Islam,” the Islam of the age of the Prophet. But this is not important. Certainly Islam permits this interpretation as legitimation for the exercise of power, as it has been used from Islam's origin to modern times.

In this sense Islam is not original. Christianity has done the same to sustain the structures of political and social power in pre-modern Europe, for example. Anyone with a minimum of awareness and critical sense recognizes that behind legitimizing discourse stand real social systems, with real histories. Political Islam is not interested in this. It does not propose any analysis or critique of these systems. Contemporary Islam is only an ideology based on the past, an ideology which proposes a pure and simple return to the past, and more precisely, to the period immediately preceding the submission of the Muslim world to the expansion of capitalism and Western imperialism. That religions – Islam, Christianity, and others – are thus interpreted in a reactionary, obscurantist way, does not exclude other interpretations, reformist or even revolutionary. Not only is the return to the past not desirable (nor actually desired by the peoples in whose name Political Islam pretends to be speaking); it is, quite simply, impossible. That is why the movements which constitute Political Islam refuse to offer a precise program, contrary to what is customary in political life. For its answer to concrete questions of social and economic life, Political Islam repeats the empty slogan: Islam is the solution. When pushed to the wall, the spokesmen for Political Islam never fail to choose an answer harmonious with liberal capitalism, as when the Egyptian parliament grants absolute freedom of maneuver to landowners and nothing whatsoever to the peasant farmers who work their land. In their unhappy effort to produce an “Islamic Political Economy,” the authors of manuals on the subject (financed by Saudi Arabia) have only succeeded in applying a coat of religious whitewash to the most banal tenets of American liberalism.

A Turbaned Dictatorship In Iran
The Islamic Republic of Iran proves the general rule, despite the confusions that contributed to its success: rapid development of the Islamist movement in parallel with the secular, socialist struggle waged against the socially reactionary U.S.-aligned dictatorship of the Shah. Following the Shah's overthrow, the extremely eccentric behavior of the Mullahs was offset by their anti-imperialist positions, from which they derived a powerful popular legitimacy which echoed well beyond the borders of Iran. Gradually the regime showed that it was incapable of providing the leadership required to stimulate vigorous and innovative socioeconomic development. The turbaned dictatorship of the men of religion, who took over from that of the “Caps” (military and technocrats), resulted in a fantastic degradation of the country's economic machinery. Iran which boasted about “doing the same as S. Korea,” now ranks among the group of “Fourth World” countries.

The indifference of the regime's hard right wing to the social problems facing the country's working class gave rise to the “reformers” whose aim has been to moderate the harshness of the theocratic dictatorship, but without renouncing its basic principle – the monopoly of political power. Recognizing the extent of the Islamic Republic's economic disaster, the “reformers” have made the pragmatic decision to gradually revise their “anti-imperialist” postures. They are in the process of reintegrating Iran into the commonplace comprador world of capitalism on the peripheries. The system of Political Islam in Iran has reached deadlock. The political and social struggles into which the Iranian people have now been plunged might soon lead to rejection of the very principle of “wilaya al faquih” which places the clergy above all other institutions of political and civil society.

The Islamic Republic of Iran has conceived no other political system than that of a one-party dictatorship monopolized by the Mullahs. False comparisons are frequently made between the Islamist parties and the Christian Democratic parties of Europe (i.e., if the Christian Democrats have governed Italy for 50 years, why shouldn't an Islamist party govern Algeria and Egypt?). But once in power, an Islamist government immediately and definitively abolishes any form of legal political opposition.

Neoliberal Theocracy
If Political Islam is only a version of neoliberalism, extolling the virtues of the market – completely unregulated, naturally – it is also an absolute refusal of democracy. According to Political Islam, religious law (the Shari'a) has already given the answer to every question, thereby relieving humanity of the difficulty of inventing laws – a basic definition of democracy – and allows us at most to interpret the nuances of divine law. This kind of ideological talk ignores reality, ignores the actual history of Muslim societies, in which it has obviously been necessary to invent laws, although this was done without saying so. It meant that only the governing class had the right, and the power to interpret the Shari'a. The extreme example of this kind of autocracy is Saudi Arabia, a country without a constitution, whose rulers claim that the Qur'an is a satisfactory substitute. In actual practice, the House of Saud has the power of an absolute monarchy or tribal chiefdom.

Contemporary Political Islam is not the outcome of a reaction to the so-called abuses of secularism, as often purported, unfortunately. No Muslim society of modern times, except in the former Soviet Union, has ever been truly secular, let alone offended by the daring innovations of any atheistic and aggressive power. The semi-modern States of Kemal's Turkey, Nasser's Egypt, Baathist Syria and Iraq, merely subjugated the men of religion (as often happened in former times) to impose on them concepts aimed solely at legitimizing the State's political options.

Western support for Political Islam has thus gone to grotesque extreme of furnishing weapons, financial backing and military training to the agents of Political Islam. In the case of Afghanistan, the pretext was “fighting communism,” but the odious behavior of these Islamists (closing schools for girls opened by the terrible “communists”) apparently gave no cause for regret – neither to the Western governments supporting them, nor to Western feminist organizations.

Political Islam is in fact nothing other than an adaptation to the subordinate status of comprador capitalism. Its so-called “moderate” form therefore probably constitutes the principal danger threatening the people concerned since the violence of the “radicals” only serves to destabilize the State, impeding the installation of a new comprador power suitable to the designs of the “moderates” beloved by the West (those of Iran are a good example). The constant support offered by the pro-American diplomacies of the Triad countries (U.S., Europe and Japan) toward finding this “solution” to the problem is absolutely consistent with their desire to impose the globalized neoliberal order in the service of dominant transnational capital.

The combination of neoliberal economy and political autocracy is perfectly suited to the dominant comprador class charged with management of societies at the contemporary capitalist periphery. The Islamist parties are all instruments of this class. This is true not only of the Muslim Brotherhood and other organizations considered moderate, and whose close ties to the bourgeoisie are well known. It is equally true of the small clandestine organizations which practice “terrorism.” Both are useful tools of Political Islam, and the division of labor is highly complimentary between those using violence and those infiltrating state institutions (especially education, the judiciary, the mass media and, if possible, the police and military). For all such groups and activities, there is one objective: seizure of state power, although on the morning after the anticipated victory, the “moderates” will put an end to the excesses of the “radicals.” Immediately after the Iranian revolution, the Mullahs massacred the left-wing militants (Fedayin and Mojahedin) who had attempted to make common cause between their populist, revolutionary aims inspired by Socialism and the deeper mobilization of Political Islam. Without the Fedayin and Mojahedin, the triumph of the “Islamic” revolution would not have been possible. Since then, the Mullahs have recruited and trained millions of political terrorists from among the lumpen proletariat in order to enforce its rule.*

The existing power structures against which the movements of Political Islam are hurling themselves are the compradors, the national bourgeoisie of the region, fully subordinate to the diktats of neoliberal globalization. The comprador classes are not particularly democratic, even when they offer the gift of parliamentary elections which they call “multi-party,” and they often rely on the pretext of Islamic terrorism to justify their refusal of meaningful democracy (as in Algeria).

What this means is that the contest between the compradors and the Islamists is only a conflict between factions of the ruling class – a struggle for power, nothing more, between opposing leaders and their clients. Depending on the circumstances, the shape of the conflict varies from extreme violence, as in the case of Algeria, to dialogue, as in Egypt, where the government holds direct talks with the Muslim Brotherhood. Both sides in the conflict utilize Islamic demagogy in their attempts to capture for their own benefit the allegiance of the politically confused populace. Contemporary popular political confusion closely resembles that which followed the failure of hopes based on the populist nationalisms of the previous era (Nasser, Boumedienne, Le Bass). This time it results from widespread recognition of the social destruction wrought by the neoliberalism of the ruling comprador classes.

Popular political confusion in the Islamic world is in no small part due to the extreme timidity of the critique that the left had addressed in the previous period to the ruling forces of national populism. Yet the bourgeoisie in power is by no means secular. It pretends to be as “Islamic” as its adversaries, for example by enforcing many of the precepts of Islamic law – especially in the domain of the family – thus gradually making the ruse into reality. The resulting “compromise” solutions inevitably augment the dominant neoliberal and antidemocratic order. Thus the dominant international political and economic powers, led primarily by the U.S., see no inconvenience in the exercise of power by Political Islam. This says a great deal about the hypocrisy of Western advocacy of “democracy” and demonstrates that, contrary to the Western ideological equation of “market” and “democracy,” the two principles are in fact in direct conflict.

Ideological Complementarity
The two discourses of globalized neoliberal capitalism and Political Islam do not conflict, but are complementary. The ideology of American “communitarianisms” being popularized by current fashion overshadows the conscience and social struggles and substitutes for them so-called collective “identities” that ignore them. This ideology is therefore perfectly manipulated in the strategy of capital domination because it transfers the struggle from the arena of real social contradictions to the imaginary world that is said to be cultural, trans-historical and absolute, whereas Political Islam is precisely a “communitarianism.”

The diplomacy of the G7 powers, particularly that of the U.S., knowingly chooses to support Political Islam. The G7 lends such aid and assistance from Egypt to Algeria. In Afghanistan, U.S. support took the form of describing Afghan Islamists as “freedom fighters” against the horrible dictatorship of communism, which was in fact an enlightened, modernist, national and populist despotism that had the audacity to open schools for girls. Western leaders know that Political Islam has the virtue – for them – of making the peoples concerned helpless and consequently ensuring their compradorization without difficulty.

Given its inherent cynicism, the American Establishment knows how to take a second advantage of Political Islam. The barbaric “drifts” of the regimes that Political Islam inspires – the Taliban, for instance – are not drifts at all, but actually fall within the logic of their programs, and can be exploited whenever imperialism finds it expedient to intervene brutally, if necessary. The “savagery” attributed to the peoples who are the first victims of Political Islam is likely to encourage “Islamophobia” which may facilitate the acceptance of a “global apartheid,” the logical and necessary outcome of an ever-polarizing capitalist expansion.

Those the West called “Afghan freedom fighters” (in fact, hoodlums trained by the CIA) and “volunteers” (Algerian, Egyptian and other Muslims), nowadays fill decisive roles in military-terrorist actions around the globe, including major U.S. cities.

Western support for Political Islam has thus gone to the grotesque extreme of furnishing weapons, financial backing and military training to the agents of Political Islam. In the case of Afghanistan, the pretext was “fighting communism,” but the odious behavior of these Islamists (closing schools for girls opened by the terrible “communists”) apparently gave no cause for regret – neither to the Western governments supporting them, nor to Western feminist organizations. Those the West called “Afghan freedom fighters” (in fact, hoodlums trained by the CIA) and “volunteers” (Algerian, Egyptian and other Muslims), nowadays fill decisive roles in military-terrorist actions around the globe, including major U.S. cities. Support for Political Islam has included the illusory rubric of “political refugee” status, offered by the U.S., Britain and Germany, which has given the militants of Political Islam the power to organize and command their operations from abroad, thus maximizing efficiency and minimizing risk.

The ideological accompaniment to this alliance between the Western powers and Political Islam is an endless campaign of legitimation in the Western mass media, usually turning on an illusory distinction between “moderates” and “radicals,” or a pious chant of praise for the virtues of multi-cultural diversity, so dear to Americans, as everyone knows.

The ideological accompaniment to this alliance between the Western powers and Political Islam is an endless campaign of legitimation in the Western mass media, usually turning on an illusory distinction between “moderates” and “radicals,” or a pious chant of praise for the virtues of multi-cultural diversity, so dear to Americans, as everyone knows. Such forms of “respect” for diverse “communities” are very useful for the management purposes of neoliberalism and globalization, because they do not imply any confrontation on the terrain of real challenges. The “communities” in question play the game of neoliberalism, shifting the debate, if and when it occurs, from the real and practical problems of the here and now into the harmless celestial regions of the cultural imaginary.

Political Islam is thus in no way the adversary of imperialism, but is, quite the contrary, its perfect servant. This fact does not prevent Western ideologues and opinion-managers from resorting, whenever necessary, to the fairytale formulae of Islam as an implacable enemy of Western modernity, the “clash of cultures” so dear to Samuel Huntington and his CIA patrons. Such wars occur only on the imaginary plane, whereas in the real world, the victims of the “communities” represented by Political Islam suffer terribly under very real blows. The ideological war, furthermore, provides yet another cover for military-political intervention by the U.S. and its subaltern “allies” when and wherever the need might arise.

We should not be surprised that the U.S. is pleased by the services that Political Islam renders to its project of world hegemony. With the exception of Hamas in Palestine and Hizbollah in Lebanon (pre-911) and the Taliban (post-911), no movement of Political Islam is designated as an enemy by Washington. The pre-911 designation of Hamas and Hizbollah by the U.S. State Department as “terrorist organizations” was clearly an accident of political geography, since both are opposed to the state of Israel, which evidently takes precedence in U.S. considerations over everything else. Hamas and Hizbollah are the only manifestations of Political Islam fighting foreign military occupation, whereas the others direct their violence only at their compatriots. Double standards and hypocrisy – can we expect anything else from the imperialists?

911 and Beyond
Will the attacks of September 11 oblige Washington to revise its alliance with Political Islam? Diplomatic and intelligence cooperation with Iran and Sudan suggests otherwise. But we cannot help noticing that the events of 911 occurred at precisely the right moment to permit the U.S. to install itself in petroleum-rich Central Asia, a region well-situated to allow another turn of the geostrategic vise which the West has clamped around Russia, China and India. This has been the openly proclaimed strategic objective of the U.S. for over 10 years. Saddam Hussein has served well as justification for permanent U.S. military installations in the Gulf. Osama bin Laden could well do the same for U.S. policy in Central Asia. One cannot exclude the hypothesis that machinations of the CIA and its faithful ally Mossad may have been involved in some way.

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