It is probable that despite the dithering in the Iraqi parliament and the abysmal failure of the Iraqi armed forces that ISIS, which could not have managed its present success without the support of such Sunni groups as the Naqshbandis led by the late Saddam Hussain’s deputy Izzat Ibrahim alDourie and other Sunni groups, will eventually collapse even if the Americans do not intervene militarily. (The prospects for such intervention are dim. American public opinion is tired of foreign entanglements and wants no repetition of the 2001 and 2003 fiascos). But it will, unless the Iraqi Shias elect a leader who can offer power sharing to the Sunnis, lead to the disintegration of Iraq and the creation of a space in the Sunni majority provinces of Iraq and bordering provinces of Syria, where Sunni extremism fuelled by looted funds and donations from extremist millionaires from the Gulf states can flourish.
The resources are formidable; a vast array of sophisticated American supplied weaponry abandoned by the Iraqi army, reportedly some $500 million in cash looted from banks in Mosul and other cities and hundreds of millions of dollars from private and public donations from the Gulf states. They also draw upon manpower resources from around the world. Current estimates show that about 12,000 fighters from around the world, primarily from Muslim countries, are now participating in the fighting in Syria and Iraq.
A recent poll by the Pew Global Attitudes project shows that concern about religious extremism is high in the Muslim countries — 92 per cent in Lebanon, 50 per cent in Turkey and 66 per cent in Pakistan. Admittedly, the poll was based on only slightly more than 14,000 respondents and did not cover all OIC members but it seems to be an accurate reflection of the prevailing sentiment and suggests that those participating in the fighting will not be welcome when they come home.
It is, however, the 3,000 or so fighters who have come from the West that will exacerbate the suspicion and distrust with which the minority Muslim communities are viewed in these countries. A particular furore was created in these countries when a militant website carried an ISIS recruitment video featuring three Britons fighting in Syria as members of ISIS and calling for jihad against the West.
The British prime minister has said that insurgents in other countries must be dealt with or the “problems will come back and hit us at home”. Even more alarmingly the former chief of defence staff, Lord Richards a veteran of the Afghan conflict, maintains that ‘militant jihadism’ is the biggest threat facing the world and needs a global response.
One counter-insurgency expert in the UK has determined on the basis of extensive research that one of every nine participants in the conflict will return to his home country to carry out terrorist attacks and will, because of his experience, be better equipped to achieve his objective. Whether this research is accurate or not, it suggests that from the 500 or so Britons who are said to be or have been in the war zone, some 35 will have to be identified and surveilled. A former head of counterterrorism at MI6 deems tracking returning jihadis an ‘impossible task’.
Presumably at government urging, leaders of the Islamic community in the UK have, in an open letter on a website, called upon young Muslims not to get involved in the civil wars in Syria and Iraq and not to fall prey to any form of sectarian divisions or social discord.
In the US, officials have said that dozens of fighters have travelled to Syria and then returned home. Other officials have surmised that if wanted to make a name for itself the best way would be to mount a major attack on a Western target and to use returnees for this purpose. Yet others have conceded that currently, the ISIS is focused on Iraq but believe it will shift attention to identifying, recruiting and training Western individuals to return to their homelands to mount extremist attacks.
A couple of days ago, the American Homeland Security Department asked for additional surveillance and checking at airports that have direct flights to US destinations, possibly because they believe explosives experts now safely ensconced in ISIS-controlled territory are developing difficult-to-detect bombs that some American citizens now in Syria can carry on to planes.
Given these circumstances,the Muslim minorities in all these countries will have a tough time finding jobs or acceptance in an increasingly suspicious society.
After 9/11, I had predicted that terrorism would be the issue that will dominate American policy for the next decade. The many mistakes made have ensured that this will now remain the focus for another decade and that in this decade what will also be called into question will be the much extolled secularism and tolerance of other beliefs and attitudes in the West. Perhaps President Obama’s proposal to Congress for a $5 billion fund to finance counter-insurgency in the affected countries, which in our region would include Pakistan and Afghanistan and in the Middle East would focus on Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan, may seek to address the underlying causes of terrorism.
There is also, perhaps, the forlorn hope that Saudi Arabia and Iran will forswear the current policies that are exacerbating the sectarian divide.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 7th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (46)
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@Rex Minor:
Coming from you, I take that as a compliment.
@Gurion: Your case is a hopeless one! Those who disbelieve, it is all the same for them whether you warn them or not they will not believe- Allah has set a seal upon their hearts and upon their hearing and over their vision is a veil .........!!! The enlighened ones are not super humans but regular humans who do good and wrong, the only difference being that they know when they do wrong is a SIN, with consequences after death, whereas the man from the antique does it without being conscious of the SIN. Now what is your complaint aial bout Saudi Arabia? They supply energy to foreign lndustry, invests its wealth in foreign countries, provides employment to jobs foreign workers and above all has an open line credit for the USA, who without this support would go bankrupt. The hoh use of Saud is very generous in providing aid to the needy, but personaly lives a conservative life style. There is a prohibition on Kiff and alcohal which is no different than what the amish people observe in the bible belt counties of the USA.
Rex Minor
@Rex Minor:
We all can see how educated and civilized Saudis are. After all, Islam originated among them!
@Rex Minor: Freeze and picle your brains on one book is your message.do not waste your lfie on science,tachnology ,knowledge and modern outlook What was said about 1300 yesrs ago is the best.??????? Then why not abandon all modern covneices and go back to the days of camel life.
@Khan: Nice to dream and speuclate.what is the gaurentee that it will not be another bangladesh?
@Barry: Each such incident where muslims display intolerence towards others will only make thier lives difficult but also society at large will view them with alarm and suspciosn for no fault of theirs.the extremists should understand the harm they are casusing to the'silent majority'
@Strategic Asset: We could go round and round in circles as to who is being simplistic. The bottom line is that we are both using broad brush strokes to describe complex situations. For example, I did not mention Detroit, which has descended from being a marvelous example of automobile production to a basket case which cannot pay its domestic water bill. In regard to Australia it is basically producing huge amounts of coal to provide electricity, but many of its good jobs are going off shore just the way they are in America. One could also say that many people from Pakistan, India, and the Middle East have become very well educated, and are leading educators, industrialist, and producers. However, in regard to India and Pakistan we should not get too ambitious. About half a billion people on the sub-continent, more than the populations of America, Canada, UK, and Australia, do not have bathroom facilities. This should provide ample job opportunities. The mundane things in life may not sound exciting, but they are important. I think that if you asked the average Pakistan housewife if she would like to swap places with a Saudi housewife's lifestyle the answer would be a resounding yes. I am not certain as to the exact wealth and gold stocks of the Middle-Eastern countries, but they are considerable, and they own much of Western real estate. I do not think they will have too much trouble paying future bills.
@Barry: If you do not know what I am referring to in regard to the Iraqi death toll from Western intervention I cannot help you.
@Sexton Blake: I am sorry to note that you underrate education especially when you state that, the old days of Western models having high education levels, high standards of living and well paid, union controlled industrial jobs are gone. Most Western countries now have service industry type occupations, and relatively high rate of unemployment..............? What you are watching is very normal cycle and has been occurring for centuries. That we are simultaneously witnessing the slow but steady demise of the so called largest economy and its waning Imperial hegemonic power after having lived for decades on more than what they earn is a spectacle of the century. We do not fudge unemployment figures other than what is statisticaly correct, nor expect our income to go down; it is the performance of productvity which compensates the higher wage and enables competition with the low wage chinese!!! There is an imbalance between the minimum wage of Eight Euro an hour and Eight million Euros annual salary of Volkswagen, but this is criticaly being looked at and will be brought under control eventualy in a country which operates on a social market economy. Both the Professor and the strategi asset are speaking from their ignorance and cannot estimate the wealth that the house of Saud and the Gulf countries have invested into the European economy, not only that they are also the source of energy for the western industry.
Rex Minor
Not sure what you are referring to? Are you referring to the slaughter of 1000s and 1000s of Christians in Africa carried out by Muslim terrorists? Are you referring to the Sunni slaughter of Shias and Shia slaughter of Sunnis in the middle east?
@Barry: The Muslim world may be somewhat violent, but using Iraq as an example I am not aware, in recent times, of Muslims killing well over half a million plus people the way a few non-Muslim countries have over the last 12 years or so.
@Sexton Blake: Agree with you that a number of western governments fudge their unemployment numbers. For instance the US does this by considering those whose unemployment benefits expire as no longer interested in looking for a job.
However the rest of your post alluding to the world being carved up into various sectors for different countries is much too simplistic. The neoclassical economic growth model predicts that eventually in any industry, one experiences diminishing returns on capital. The only way one can up regain growth is through innovation.
Consider Finland where the PM recently said that Steve Jobs killed their economy. This is because Finland was dependent only on two main industries -- telecom and paper. Nokia started off selling expensive phones and telecom equipment, but eventually their products started costing less due to competition, their return on capital diminished and the market stagnated. Apple's innovation created a new market in smart-phones and killed off Nokia which is now partly owned by Microsoft.
Coming to your example of Australia, it is true that Australia is a resource rich country and they are dependent on mining. But what you are missing out is the innovation that Australian companies introduced in mining in terms of scale, logistics and safety.
@Professor is right. The fact is that that the oil rich countries in the Middle East do not own or even understand petroleum technology even though they supply the world with oil. All of the world's foremost petroleum engineering colleges are located in the US. Countries in the middle east simply do not have the knowledge or the ability to prospect, source, refine or transport oil & gas. The most recent innovation in oil & gas, the process of obtaining shale oil & gas by fracking, has been developed entirely in the US.
At the same time, the world is also moving away from oil and gas partly due to carbon emissions. The fact is that a rising economy like India which houses 1.2 billlion people would spur rising global demand for more energy. Consumption per capita in India will also rise with increased prosperity. However India cannot pay increasing oil prices and will look for indigenous resources and rely on non-conventional resources which India is already focusing on in areas such as wind and solar energy. India is also looking at ethanol blends of up to 85% to power cars.
If global oil consumption reduces even a few percentage points, what it really means is that citizens of countries in the Middle East shall no longer be able to afford their lavish lifestyles and yet at the same time have no temperament, education or skills to do work. Saudi Arabia relizes this and that is why the have half-heartedly introduced reservation for Saudis in low paying jobs held by Indians and Pakistanis.
@Professor: Dear Professor, If you are thinking in terms of an untrained manufacturing workforce you are correct, but that is part of the world wide economic plan, which has been ongoing for well over 40 years. In simplistic terms the world has been carved up into various sectors where different countries do what they are good at. For example high wage countries such as Australia have converted their economies into big holes in the ground, and they supply coal and iron ore to low wage manufacturing .countries such as China. The old days of Western models having high education levels, high standards of living and well paid, union controlled industrial jobs are gone. Most Western countries now have service industry type occupations, and relatively high unemployment although their governments fudge the employment statistics. Put even more simply, we will have to get used to the idea of a large percentage of our children being employed as hamburger cooks and super-market check out employees although even the the check-outs are becoming self-service with new technology. I do not know where the job sector will end-up, but I have a bad feeling that many of our children will have to find new ways to fill in their time, because jobs will be very scarce. Perhaps that is already happening as they move overseas and and help to expand such activities as the euphemistically named Arab Spring. In regard to the above article by Najmuddin a Shakh I am afraid that like most leaders, world wide, he has either missed the plot or deliberately ignores the real problems. With the current crop of leaders the World's future appears somewhat gloomy. I will not go into who is controlling our Government puppets, or the future of Pakistan, which looks decidedly grim. .
@Barry, You said what needed to be said.
@goggi (Lahore): All knowledge emanates from scriptures and is expressed in the divine language. Learn to read and write the arabic language and the classic arabian culture, you will be able to decode the Quraanic verses. Until that time comes, say your prayers five times a day and visit Mecca for Haj once in your life time to receive the cosmic energy which will energise your soul!
Rex Minor
@Professor:
You definitely need schooling, Sir.Your narrative is what is called "freedom of expression"!!
Rex Minor
OMG, last decade AfPaks were in news, now they are displaced by ISIS.
The chaos in Iraq-Syria and else where in the Middle East is a result of imposing primarily a western democratic system in these societies/ countries.If Democracy as a system could be imposed by force in a society,then another system of governance which is closer to the culture of these societies could also be imposed by force.Though the common denominator in both the cases is,'Force',the continuation of the'system imposed',depends upon the acceptability of it by the local populace of the society/country involved and not of the diaspora of that society living abroad.From the foregoing the 'Khilafat', has better chances to continue.Though it would also adopt features of 'Democracy.
It's not just the West that is troubled due to the religious extremism taking place today in various parts of the world. We are too, and I assure you that we are and will be trying our best to eliminate terrorism originating from our soil. We mourn the loss of precious lives, just as you do. We understand how it must feel to see religious extremism being carried out every otehr day in the name of Islam. Unfortunately, these are only some aspects plaguing our society. But if we work together, I'm positive that we will be able to sort it out. At a time like this, we people ought to promote harmony and be compassionate rather than playing the blame-game with one another. Lets not forget, in the end we're all human beings. But then, thats what I think.
Iran, Iraq, and Syria are the newly emerging axis-of-evil in the Middle East and that also has a global impact on Muslims.
Looney Tunes from a previous millennia. Muslims must start working for a living. Oil has led to endemic laziness and pipe-dreaming. But the flow of free money will not last forever. You'll be left with an uneducated, untrained and work-shy population that will keep building castles in the air. Imagine that day.
@goggi (Lahore): You got stuck with the negative "la". Thereafter, you have missed the affirmative. One-sided tendentious analysis.
The al-Maliki's sectarian policies have created a space for the ISIS/ISIL "Caliphate."
@Sonya: To be fair and objective, one must admit that alongside GCC (including Saudi Arabia) it is also Iran which is fueling the fire in Iraq and Syria.
@goggi (Lahore): "La" is supposed to negate all the negative. "illal'Alllah" is supposed to alert to all the positives that are associated with only one worthy of worship, who created everything, negative and positive. The intention is to get you away from all negatives and focus on all positives.
it is Iran who are responsible for the present crisis in Syria and Iraq..
@idonotagree: awesome post. True. Pakistanis have too much to worry about our own growth and development than worry about some self proclaimed Khalifa in some distant land. We have fought too many wars for others- this time it is our war and we will not fight it with weapons but with education and development.
The Muslim religion begins with a negation i.e. "LA" which means NO.....there is no god...but Allah!
The psychological impact; as we witness; is the negation and destruction of life, negation for collective happiness, negation for collective joy, negation for equality of genders, negation for inter-religious love and harmony, negation for compassion (everyday genocide of animals) and above all the negation and ignorance for the eternal universal laws of Nature such as:
the universal law of cause and effect states that nothing happens by chance or outside the universal law................ACCORDING TO THE LOGIC THERE EXISTS NO OUTSIDE OF OUR UNIVERSE! Every action has a reaction or a consequence and "we reap what we have SOWN."
the universal law of attraction demonstrates how our thoughts, words, feelings and actions produce energies which in turn attract like energies. NEGATIVE ENERGIES ATTRACT NEGATIVE ENERGIES AND POSITIVE ENERGIES ATTRACT POSITIVE ENERGIES.
@Sexton Blake: You are asking the man from the land of avatars who have not reached the stage of an enlightened homo sapiens even after the thousands years of history and for centuries chaparoned by muslim and christian rulers? Even among themselves, they address each other with abusive names?
Rex Minor
The time has come to push the invaders out of Gandharva and Sindh. By the end of this century there will be no terrorists left in this world.
@Dilip: "Liberals" dont get offended at such trivial things. adding mr. sir. shri. or janaab to a name is part of culture and nothing should be read beyond. Remember our own Shri Digvijay Singh addressing OBL as "Shri Osama ji".
@Khan Brother ..India will soon start ruling pakistan..Thats the given.And your "2 nation" theory will go in dustbin.Only hindu's can rule proplerly and we have seen your rulers have failed miserably in last 65years. So cheers :) ET pls publish this,nothing derogatory in this.
@p r sharma:
You can use your hindsight and advance the rasons how and why for what is occurring in the destabilised middle east? Facts are that the people are running away from the storm and no air force of the world can stop a movement or an ideology.
Rex Minor
You will pay for all of that which has happened since the beginning of history as you say... Just look around you!!
@rahul: don't worry my friend, India is a part of "Khurasan", a province of the Islamic State. So if Pakistan became like Syria or Iraq, Indians will see a repeat of history..... invasion from the west as has been happening since the beginning of history.
@Dilip: I am not really sure what you are saying in respect to the title "Mr". In most parts of the world it is considered a polite sign of respect, and is similar to calling someone "Sir" or "Monsieur" . I understand that some Muslims do not like it, but why, and what is the alternative for Westerners?
@p r sharma: That is not true. The basic issue is Muslims non trust on democratic system of governance and riots and pick arms easily if feel that the majoritarian government passes laws which other sects feel irreligious about it. That was the main reason that Jinnah asked for partition as he felt that Muslims can grow better among themselves then staying in minority where laws will be passed by non-muslims majority. How good the law maybe muslims will suspect non-muslims of conspiracy? And that turn out to be true, Indian Muslims are most backward socially and economically in the subcontinent.
Pakistanis with kalipate (empty stomach) are more worried from where the next meal will come rather than a Caliphate in some distant country.
Mr Shaikh, just a bit of info for you - the vast majority of the British Muslim community especially the youth have no truck with extremists like ISIS, Taliban or so-called representatives of British Muslims like the unrepresentative MCB
@Rex Minor: " Neither the Americans nor any other power in the region can confront this movement which is wide spread like a storm which is making the opposing forces run for their safety" ---- ISIS has been able to make inroads in the northern and central Iraq which is Sunni dominated(population) and the local tribes supported them wholeheartedly because of Maliki's brutal sectarian and non inclusive policies. They have not been able to make an advancement towards Baghdad where the situations are different. ISIS is not a formidable force and lack the aerial power while Iraqi army supported by Russian fighter jets can change the scenario. . The disintegration of Iraq on the basis of sectarian divide is imminent.
I do not mean to be rude, but the author is from the past gone 20th century and is unable to follow the events in the middle east. The Talibans wee the first to take the lead and start a march in Afghanistan to clear up the mess after soviets withdraw.. The same principle is now being followed by ISIS marching, creating the electro-magnetic currents in the plains of Iraq, never mind the names being used by different actors. Neither the Americans nor any other power in the region can confront this movement which is wide spread like a storm which is making the opposing forces run for their safety. The movement will run its course but what it leaves behind is unlikely to be the same business as usual. The author has the experience of his region before and after the Taliban rule in Afghanistan. Did he also forecast Pakistan army bombing its own natural border with Afghanistan, which the Brits avoided in their times.
Rex Minor
The irony of this all! We non-Muslims find these lamentations hypocritical....of the so called moderate Muslims about the safety of muslims where they are minorities. When you talk about tolerance of non-Muslim societies. There are many conflicts in this world where Muslims are not involved. But those conflicts are nowhere as violent, as extreme and as focused on fascist world domination as pursued by the Islamists. There is universal loathing and fear against Muslims building up amongst kafirs all over the world.
Muslims have become a menace to themselves and every one else. Why? inspired by you know what. Just focus on that.
Pakistan is also heading towards like Iran and Syria ...
The author is living in a land of delusion, and with his qualifications as Foreign Secretary etc it is easy to see why Pakistan is in such a mess. I will not go into all the details he missed in the above article, but would suggest that what he did write was somewhat akin to the the tale of "Alice in Wonderland".
Muslims across the globe dont give a damn about this self proclaimed KHALIFA who even does not know the meaning therof. Entire media should ignore him.....and he will die his own death.
Dear @author, much as I respect you (apart from your age), certainly for your thoughts in past articles.... but here you have actually used the word "Mister" (i.e. Mr. -- ref:: "Mr Abu Bakr Baghdadi") in the opening lines of your article..... Awww... HOW COULD YOU...?!?!?! Forget about the rest of the article (it makes little difference anyway - "less than ZERO", in your own words!) .... but that one word (Mr.) has just lowered your respect in the eyes of "liberals" that you I dare say represent... you ought to correct that.