According to someone belonging to
an earlier generation of radical jihadists who now resides in a maximum security
prison in the US and views shared by others who are critical of present
policies pursued, there has to be a different narrative from the “them or us”
zero sum game of war.
ISIS are not like the jihadists
recruited from all over to fight as it was in Afghanistan, Bosnia and Chechnya.
They are the Sunni Muslims that have lived through 25 years of wars, torture,
and rapes. They are the Iraqi that have suffered from unjust wars started by
the US. They are Syrian people tormented, barrelled bombed and massacred by Bashar
Assad.
When the US pulled out of Iraq in
2010, the Shia led by Maliki’s government started killing and torturing the
Sunni day and night.
The US and the world’s response
was that it was an internal problem. It seemed that they are trying to spin it
like ISIS are aliens from another planet. Arab and Muslims know ISIS are the
native people of Iraq and Syria. Some were incarcerated in American prisons in
Iraq during the occupation for years. And
nothing nurtured the growth of ISIS as much as the marginalization and
humiliation of Iraq’s Sunni community in the gloomy dungeons of Abu Ghraib and
Camp Bucca. Guantanamo is still the living glaring grotesque image and lingering
dread of human degradation of Muslims rendered and designated arbitrarily as
enemy combatants.
They had tribal support which are
very big families in Iraq. The Iraqi people are the most stubborn of the Muslim
world. They will not accept occupation or dishonour.
The recruits for ISIS are Muslims
from all over the world that have seen an injustice of nearly a century, seeing
only defeat, powerlessness, hopelessness, indignation and humiliation. They
want to help and be able to do something. They apparently see an organization
that is effective and winning battles. They want to be with their brothers and
sisters in their time of need. They wish to do their part in the jihad.
Imagine the plight of Iraq and
Syrian people. After a year of bombing, they see their people killed, their land
and homes destroyed, children so scared that they hide all day. Bombs come from
the sky and they are unable to stop it. US Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee
James speaking about replenishing munition stocks said, "We're in the
business of killing terrorists, and business is good." This is business to
them. But it is human life. Human life has the right to exist.
So, the question should be who is
the first to be blamed? We have to tell both sides of the story.
Arabs are not radicalizing
themselves but action by US and its allies including its rival Russia is
radicalizing them. People see the pictures, days and nights of bombs, the
refugees, and the millions running away from war.
Arabs want to live the way they
want to live. For a century they have suffered under dictators and tyrants strongly
backed by the West. They want to live a decent life, that is all. The West want
them to live under their law, their order, their control. But the West will not
give them freedom.
They cannot live like the West. They
are different from them and the only thing that keeps them just and sane is
Islam.
If they have an Arab leader
without Islam which is not superficial, he turns out to be a dictator.
Out of the deepest and darkest dungeons
of these despots, ISIS came and declares an Islamic State after a century of
living under cruel dictators who were tolerated, encouraged, nurtured,
collaborated and supported by the West.
ISIS thus came forth and the
problem of Muslims got even worse.
More important than a competition
for strongest terms to denounce ISIS (or insisting on calling out the Arabic
acronym Da’esh because of an alleged derogatory connotation in Arabic) Europe
and the US need to think about some real policy changes.
In order to solve the root of the
problem, everyone has to become human again. They need to engage, to talk to one
another, however bad it maybe. No person must be regarded as sub human or unter menshen nor infidel.
A retired veteran jihadi made
this plea, “We have to let the people decide what they want. We need to leave
them alone. We cannot go on fighting and killing for the rest of our limited
lives.”
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