[iwar] [fc:Rhetoric.to.arouse.the.Islamic.world.-.information.warfare.no.doubt.about.it]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-10-08 07:13:43


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From: Fred Cohen <fc@all.net>
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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Rhetoric.to.arouse.the.Islamic.world.-.information.warfare.no.doubt.about.it]
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Rhetoric to arouse the Islamic world

Video speech was part of the overall plan

Julian Borger in Washington
Monday October 8, 2001
The Guardian

The video prepared by Osama bin Laden as a response to yesterday's air
strikes was not an after-thought: it was an essential part of his
strategy, almost as important as the September 11 terrorist attacks
themselves. 

His remarks, made with an assault rifle at his side and posterity in
mind, are consistent with his long-standing aim of arousing an upheaval
throughout the Islamic world, intended to drive the US out of the Middle
East and topple pro-western Arab regimes. 

Bin Laden believes himself to be a latterday embodiment of Saladin: a
militarily gifted defender of the faith, willing to jettison Islam's
tradition of peaceful reflection and do what is necessary to drive the
infidels out of the holy shrines.  To this son of a Saudi construction
magnate, it is a historic settling of scores. 

"Our Islamic nation has been tasting the same for more than 80 years of
humiliation and disgrace, its sons killed and their blood spilled, its
sanctities desecrated," he says on the tape. 

The appeal to a common sense of Islamic identity is central to his
propaganda war.  In fact the faith is as divided as Christianity,
between Sunni and Shi'ite and a range of sects within those two broad
strains, such as Bin Laden's own Wahhabis. 

The September 11 massacre was intended to provoke a response which
killed Muslims and galvanised the Islamic world. 

That response has now been delivered, and it is vital for Bin Laden to
counter President George Bush's strenuous attempts to reassure the Arab
world and other Islamic nations that it is not an attack aimed at them. 

By all accounts Bin Laden knew and cared little about the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict until recently.  His first fight was
against the atheistic Soviet Union in Afghanistan, in which the US was
his ally.  He turned against the Americans principally after US soldiers
were sent to Saudi Arabia in 1990 in the build-up to the Gulf war: to
him and his followers that amounted to an occupation of Muslim shrines. 
Their removal is central to his objectives. 

But the issue is regarded as parochial in much of the Arab world.  The
US troops are not actually stationed at the shrines, and they were
invited in by the Saudi royal family. 

It was reportedly Ayman al-Zawahri, the leader of Egyptian Islamic Jihad
who was sitting alongside him on the video, who taught him to look
further afield for support, and to widen his outlook to the
Israeli-Palestinian struggle and the sanctions against Iraq: the two
most emotive issues on the world stage today in the eyes of most Arab
Muslims. 

Bin Laden goes out of his way to demonstrate his knowledge of these
issues, at one point listing the sites of recent clashes between
Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. 

In his address, he taps a deep-rooted sense of frustration across the
Arab world that in the double standards adopted by the western media
dead Muslims count for less than dead westerners. 

It is a complaint heard in every Arab capital in the world.  "A million
innocent children are dying at this time as we speak, killed in Iraq
without any guilt.  We hear no denunciation.  In these days, Israeli
tanks rampage across Palestine, and we do not hear anyone raising his
voice," Bin Laden said, striking at the gut-level sympathy evoked in
many fellow Arabs by the victims in New York and Washington. 

"But when the sword fell upon America after 80 years, hypocrisy raised
its head up high bemoaning those killers."

The 80-year period arises elsewhere in the speech. 

Its significance is not entirely clear, but it is probably a rough
reference to the start of British-led direct intervention in the Arabian
peninsula which was aimed at ousting the Ottoman empire at the time of
the first world war. 

In the eyes of many Arabs, the colonial powers, principally Britain,
reneged on the promises of self-determination made by such Arabists as
TE Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia). 

Since then, it is argued, the imperialist baton has been handed from
Britain to the US, which now plays the leading role in orchestrating
events in pro-western nations like Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf
states. 

Bin Laden's rhetoric is calibrated to trigger an apocalyptic sense of
the moment when the world will fall into camps, the believers and the
infidels, and each person must choose his camp. 

The ensuing battle, Bin Laden implies, will resolve once and for all the
long-standing Palestinian-Israeli conflict and the suffering of the
Iraqi people under sanctions. 

It will also dispel the deep-seated sense of powerlessness afflicting
the Arab world. 

For those reasons, it will resonate deeply across the region. 


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