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Jihad Watch Board Vice President Hugh Fitzgerald explains why the recommendation that American policymakers refer to the global jihad as "hirabah" (unlawful warfare) is wrongheaded:
Two analysts at the National Defense University have recently recommended that the West use the word “hirabah” instead of “jihad” to describe the actions of Osama bin Laden and Co.It is not hard to figure out where the word comes from. It comes from Muslim regimes and their apologists, eager to protect certain regimes that are attacked by local "truer" Muslims for their corruption and misrule. The obvious example is Saudi Arabia, where a family, the Al-Saud, has for decades been stealing, not merely skimming off the top, large amounts of the nation's oil wealth. Those who dislike this, naturally, cannot raise a revolt against the ruler for mere appropriation of wealth; in Islam, the despot is owed submission. He (or his family, or his family-and-friends plan) can be opposed, in the moral and mental universe that Islam posits, only if he is not a Muslim, if he is an "Infidel."
The assorted terrorists or would-be terrorists captured or killed in Saudi Arabia need to be described. They, those enemies of the Al-Saud, and even greater Protectors of the Faith, think of themselves as engaged in Jihad against the false Muslims, the pretend Muslims, the so-corrupt-and-terrible-they-must-be-called-Infidels Muslims. Their word is "Jihad." This, of course, cannot be permitted; it is a danger to the Al-Saud, a danger to all the corrupt ruling families, a danger to Mubarak in Egypt (with the Muslim Brotherhood, the Ikhwan al-islamiyya, a permanent worry). So the Saudi rulers, and other threatened rulers, now employ the word "hibarah."And of course, they are quick to suggest, these ever-helpful people, and Muslim apologists of the slyest variety with contacts in the American civilian and military, that the same word should be used by the Americans. And some Americans, not thinking through the matter, apparently agree. They think the avoidance of the word "Jihad" and adoption of the word "hibarah" is just the thing.
But it isn't. For the Americans have needs and interests that are quite different from those friendly would-be advisers who are Muslim, whether in the diplomatic corps, or American citizens now possibly employed by the American military. For they want to avoid at all costs the word "Jihad," knowing perfectly well that that word is central to Islam. If they can persuade the American government to think of the worldwide Jihad (that is, the Greater Jihad that is merely the sum of all the Lesser Jihads) not as part of Islam, not a duty of Muslims, but instead as "sinful warfare," the kind that is not permitted, that is not legitimate. The Saudi rulers spend great time and effort trying to de-program, as they see it, captured Saudi terrorists. No doubt they will do the same with Saudi citizens sent back from Guantanamo. They do not object -- why should they? -- to attacks on bona fide Infidels, the Americans, Israelis, Europeans of every kind. But they want to make sure that these people, before being released back into society, have had drummed into their skulls the idea that violence against those hardworking, good Muslims, the Guardians of the Two Noble Sanctuaries, the promoters of Islam all over the world, the Al-Saud, and their hangers-on at court, are opposed only by those who have been led astray, led to commit the crime of "sinful warfare" or "hibarah."
But it is not "sinful warfare" to make war on the real Infidels -- that is, us. The word "hibarah" will not do. Use of the word, as Streusand and Tunnell recommend, would get in the way of American comprehension. It would merely deepen the misunderstanding of what the origin and scope of the menace of Jihad is, a misunderstanding that largely explains the topsy-turvy farce of tarbaby Iraq, where the stated goals of the Administration (Sunni Arabs and Shi'a Arabs and Kurds all getting along in a nation-state made prosperous by lots of help from America, best of allies to these presumably "moderate" Muslims as they march forward to create that Light Unto the Muslim Nations) will do nothing to weaken the camp of Islam, but instead will be an attempt to prevent the very outcome that ultimately will come to pass (but after how many more American resources squandered in Tarbaby Iraq?) and that is likely to establish as the fault line between Sunni and Shi'a in the Middle East a line running slightly off-center through Iraq.
The word "hibarah" applies to situations within Muslim-ruled lands, a word used to denounce the fomenters of revolt against the (often cruel and corrupt) rulers. Useful to them. And since the word is applied to Muslim countries, it refers to "warfare" in the classic sense -- qital, or combat, that is violence of all kinds. The word "hibarah" does not include the main instruments of Jihad today -- the use of the "money weapon" (to pay for the spread of Islam through mosque-and-madrasa building and upkeep, propaganda, armies of apologists, including non-Muslim apologists), Da'wa campaigns, and demographic conquest.
But if the American government, and its military, cannot see that this "war" is far more than mere tanks and guns and bombs, and that in particular, the most dangerous theatre of this war is now Western Europe, where through those largely non-violent means -- Da'wa, demographic conquest, and the money weapon -- the forces of Islam become ever stronger when they should be held up to close and critical scrutiny, their moves constrained, their gains reversed, by Infidel peoples and polities intent on defending their own laws, customs, understandings, and civilizational legacy.
The word "Jihad" however, is not limited to the instrument of violence. Muslims write all the time about the varied instruments of "Jihad" to spread Islam: "pen, speech" (propaganda, or Da'wa), "wealth" (the money weapon, from boycotts and bribes, to the building of mosques, to the buying of armaments that Muslims cannot produce, to the buying up of Western hirelings to promote the goals of Muslims, both in Dar al-Islam and in Dar al-Harb). And, most recently, over the past 30 years, all the discussion about the weapon of demographic conquest, which was openly mentioned by Boumedienne at the U.N. in 1974 ("we will conquer you through the bellies of our women" or words to that effect).
The word "Jihad" is the correct word, the word that does not hide, but helps reveal, all the instruments being used to spread Islam until it everywhere dominates, and Muslims rule. The word "hibarah" hides this from view. It diminishes, rather than increases, the likelihood of understanding among a still largely ignorant, and confused, Infidel public. Not as ignorant, however, and not as confused, as many of those in the government who are wedded to earlier constructs that they have difficulty in shedding, and who, by their very positions, come into contact with the most plausible, clever, smiling representatives of the Muslim world who frame things as artfully as they can, offer their own spin, in order to obtain what they want from people whom, to most of those Arabs and Muslims, seem limitlessly gullible.
The example of this I like best is not that of Carter (and Brzezinski, and Gary Sick) failing completely to comprehend Khomeini (a "fellow man of faith" for Carter, who felt they therefore must have so much in common). Nor Carter a few years earlier, when he took the side completely of Saint Sadat against homely, sentimental Begin, who insisted "they [Sadat and Carter] really like me" as he gave away the store, day by day by day, during those hideous sessions at Camp David. No, nor is it those successive Treasury Secretaries who through the 1970s and 1980s kept rushing off to Saudi Arabia to obtain the "cooperation" of our "staunch Saudi allies.” Nor the various Presidents who started the tradition of paying the Jizyah of foreign aid to any Arab or Muslim country that forgot to be born rich with oil -- Egypt, Jordan, the PLO as "representative" of the "Palestinian people" in its, and their, various embodiments, Pakistan (that started long ago, with the love affair between American generals and those ramrod-straight Terry-Thomas mustachioed Pakistani generals, so straight-talking, so pukka-sahib, so...so "just like us"). No, nor is it Eisenhower, puppet of John Foster Dulles in foreign policy, the Dulles who believed in CENTO (the curtain came down on that farce in 1958, when Nuri al-Said's mutilated body was dragged through the streets of Baghdad -- "strongman" Nuri al-Said, "pro-Western" Nuri al-Said). No, it is not Carter, not Eisenhower, not Nixon, not any of them who stand out as absolutely the worst in their failure to begin to have a glimmer of what Islam is all about. No, the answer is that they all must share the prize.
Nothing extenuate? No, let's extenuate. Let's make their case. After all, in the midst of the Cold War, who knew about the belief-system of Islam except that it should be called a "religion" and that it was somehow, for some reason we were never offered in detail, a particularly strong "bulwark against Communism" -- even if Nasser and others in the Arab and Muslim world apparently found the Soviet Union far more to their liking than they did any of the liberal democracies of the West.
Those CIA agents, who thought they were doing god's work in Afghanistan during the Soviet period, who proudly remember their deeds of derring-do in helping the local mujahedin, appear not even now to begin to consider the possibility that possibly they were not doing something in the long-term interests of the United States or the rest of the Western world, by supplying money, weapons including thousands of Stinger missiles, and looking on benignly as the Saudis also provided aid, and then just as benignly, looking on as the Taliban were raised up in Pakistani madrasas, and then, again with Pakistani and Saudi support, and then diplomatic recognition, establishing their rule all over Afghanistan. Meanwhile, who was paying attention in Washington, or elsewhere in the West, to the sinister I.S.I.[i.e., Pakistani intelligence services]-supported Dr. A. Q. Khan? Who noticed what he was doing in Western nuclear laboratories in Holland? The Soviet Union was within a decade of collapse, whatever happened in Afghanistan. Gdansk workers in Solidarity, decades of programming from Radio Liberty and Radio Free Europe, those in Hungary who remained true to Imre Nagy and Pal Demeter, those in Czechoslovakia who remembered Dubcek, those in East Germany who could look over the border and see what goods and services capitalist Germans could produce – all that was leading to its collapse. And of course there was the Russian nomenklatura itself, now having its doubts, and more doubts. Those doubts hardly required the Americans to hand support the mujahedin in Afghanistan to exist.
The Soviet forces might have installed a regime that would necessarily have been antipathetic to Islam, and might have constrained it, or tried to, as Ataturk had done in the 1920s in Turkey. It might have been a start. But surely the aid extended to the Mujahedin, military and financial, was not the unalloyed triumph that the CIA officials involved in it complacently still allow themselves to believe. They, like their civilian bosses then and today, did not know enough about this longer-lasting (1350 years), and much more powerful force. Communism failed on its own terms; Islam can never fail in that way -- it can only be seen to have failed politically, economically, socially, intellectually, in this sublunary world, not in the dream-world of the Muslim paradise promised to those who march in lockstep on the path of Allah, by that selfsame Allah.
Posted by Robert at June 26, 2006 4:56 PM
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"the Dulles who believed in CENTO (the curtain came down on that farce in 1958, when Nuri al-Said's mutilated body was dragged through the streets of Baghdad -- "strongman" Nuri al-Said, "pro-Western" Nuri al-Said)."
Almost 50 years later, and we're still blind.
at June 26, 2006 5:56 PM
Opposition to an idea- in this instance to a militant movement striving to install a global theocratic tyranny- requires a comprehensible language and usable terms.
In English, "jihad" is an Arabic term that can easily be pronounced, because it mirrors many familiar Anglo-Saxon sounds/words ("gee", "jeepers", "jeep", "hat" and "had"; and, as they say at spelling bee's, "Use it in a sentence." VIZ: "Gee, I had a bad feeling about the Koran.") While "hiraba" doesn't resonate so strongly, and, as a concept, is almost completely unfamiliar to the average follower of intellectual events or the daily news out of Islam. It fails to roll off the tongue, and evokes no parallels in English.
To change linguistic warhorses in mid stream of consciousness is foolhardy, at best.
It's the jihad, stupid! 'works'.
It's the hiraba, half-wit! does not.
Best to stick with what is functional and stirring.
This conflict is hard enough without muddying the mental reservoir.
Posted by: profitsbeard
at June 26, 2006 6:07 PM
Two analysts at the National Defense University have recently recommended that the West use the word “hirabah” instead of “jihad” to describe the actions of Osama bin Laden and Co.
So, what about groups like Islamic Jihad? Do we now preach to the faithful the tenants of their faith?
This strikes me as both arrogant and pointless since I hardly think what we call them is going to change how they act, yet it will give them the distinct impression that we are afraid of their anger.
I feel we have reached a cross roads now where to carry on down the road we are currently travelling will lead to civil unrest in Europe and quite possibly open warfare.
Posted by: moif
at June 26, 2006 6:45 PM
All we are reaching is a time when all this talk is going to end.
Posted by: Foehammer
at June 26, 2006 6:58 PM
Alarmed Pig Farmer-
Hodsbodkins! You're right!
"Geez this hodis heavy!"
Some pronounce it "jihad" gee-hod, some say gee-had.
(Ira Gershwin probably said: jih-odd.)
I've done sheetrocking and used a 'mud' pan but never got up to toting a hod or using a mortar board (in case anyone wonders where that hat name comes from, there's a handled flat tool for toting bricklaying cement that looks just like the tasselled collegiate cap... if you were a pencil-necked geek).
Speaking of which, I think John Kerry once lifted a charcoal briquette.
Posted by: profitsbeard
at June 26, 2006 7:41 PM
This whole lingustic exercise strikes me as a 'grasping of straws' upon the hope that "radical Islam is the problem and moderate Islam is the solution". It's a fairly transparent attempt to avoid a "clash of civilizations" through a manipulation of language. Of course, what sane person wouldn't want to avoid a clash of civilizations? But there is also the implication in all of this that those who use the term "jihad" are in some sense responsible for the war which is being waged against them, because they are supposedly marginalizing the true "moderates" while at the same time giving ammunition to the extremists by the words they use (a logical canard which has been pointed out by Spencer repeatedly)- a ploy which succeeds to a large extent in transmuting the real victims into the perpetrators.
For those who are still under the illusion that radical Islam is the problem and that moderate Islam is the solution (and that we can somehow accomplish a sleight of hand to "make it so" (ala Captain Picard) by altering our language in some bizarre Orwellian fashion) - this oldy but goody by Lawrence Auster is still worth a read: "The Search for Moderate Islam":
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=16798
Posted by: Caroline
at June 26, 2006 7:44 PM
We are the canaries in the coal mine.
at June 26, 2006 7:53 PM
Methinks the Israeli's are the canaries in the coal mine and that the rest of us infidels are the miners...
Posted by: Caroline
at June 26, 2006 7:58 PM
I remember when I was still on active duty we were told what to call whom. We went back and forth because Arab officers would explain, not all wahabi were bad, then we couldn't say "islamic terrorist" then they stopped "radical muslims". I'm not surprised this battle of words or is it will continues. I think the Arab officers were taking turns changing the words and laughing at us.
If the PC types win will order the troops to say, “halt you small percentage of misguided muslims attempting to steal a peaceful religion, halt and drop your weapon, or I will be forced to holler twice more before I request permission to use more forceful words. Then I will holler Halt once more and finally request permission to fire”
Of course you have to say all that quickly or they will be out of range. If you in a pinch you could try reading the six page “rules of engagement” designed by an sympathizer (half would be in arabic).
at June 26, 2006 9:43 PM
Concerning Saudi Arabia, Abdullah said this:
And now declares:
Amnesty to Militants Who Surrender
How convenient.
Posted by: ummahnewslinks
at June 26, 2006 9:47 PM
ummahnews what is the purpose of your site? Did you pick a side or are you taking a middle ground? You seem to just find stories and post them, some pro islam some not.
Posted by: Ronin
at June 26, 2006 9:52 PM
By contrast, how quick and easy it is to say, "Halt infidel", if one even bothers with the "halt" at all. Which leaves the clear advantage to those who merely cry "Infidel!", before firing their weapons or wielding their blades. The enemy is clearly not nearly as confused about whom they are fighting as we are. Which gives them a clear advantage. So we should be wary of those who would seek to confuse us further than we already are, because they might well have ulterior motives for doing so.
Posted by: Caroline
at June 26, 2006 9:56 PM
Ummahnews-- to go along with what Ronin said above, you post some interesting stuff, but I'd personally prefer that it stay on the topic of the thread it's in.
Posted by: Shinoliite
at June 26, 2006 9:59 PM
I like ummahnewslinks - he/she is quiet and discreet (in terms of posting off-topic stuff) and it is quite an interesting collection of articles. I get the impression that UNL is definitely on our side, judging from the overall gist of the links.
Posted by: Caroline
at June 26, 2006 10:06 PM
The scary thing to me is we still listen to muslims attempting to explain why we have it wrong. I would have thought we would be past this stage. Ok, so they are not all bad and we don't want to offend them, got it, I truly understand the "win their hearts and mind" types. Here comes the but …I thought the goal was to win. I am all for dropping the win the hearts idea for “the enemy of my enemy”. We tried it the other way, I worked along side muslims both officer and enlisted. True many just did their duty as the saw it but I never turned my back on one and never will. Would I prefer they fight their own war, absolutely, but it will not happen until we can teach them to wipe out their competition. I really believe to fight islam we have to mimic it, we need both warriors and poets, peacemakers and warmongers. Look at the resources we lose each year to answering their propaganda. Why can’t the President of the most powerful military ever fielded just tell them to “deal with it”. If he would have stuck to his “you are with us or against us” idea we would have destroyed islam.
Posted by: Ronin
at June 26, 2006 10:09 PM
Ronin asks,
What is the purpose of your site?
One must first ask, "What is my purpose?" So Ronin, have you asked yourself that question?
Shinoliite states,
I'd personally prefer that it stay on the topic of the thread it's in.
On topic, my friend. The first two paragraphs of Hugh's article discuss Saudi Arabia. My link concerns Saudi Amnesty to their terrorists.
Caroline correctly states:
I get the impression that UNL is definitely on our side
Thank you, Caroline.
at June 27, 2006 7:04 AM
Hugh - as ever, clarity, light and great historical perspective.
Jihad and jihadis are the correct words and clearly define the enemy which we must kill and defeat.
Posted by: dgene
at June 27, 2006 7:24 AM
This is just another attempt to control and define what Infidels say, and, as Mr. Fitzgerald says, further confuse them. You can't say "Islamist Terrorist", now you can't say "Jihad." Never mind the fact the word the Jihadis use is, well, Jihad. It's the word used by Islam for centuries to define war for Allah against Infidels, as it was so clearly illustrated in Dr. Bostom's essential read "The Legacy of Jihad."
Jihad is as Jihad does.
Posted by: Proud Infidel
at June 27, 2006 9:52 AM
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