King Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud of Saudi Arabia
The world — or at least the Anglosphere — is recoiling with horror at the bombing of the Manchester Arena, in an attack that appears to have been aimed at children. Already shocked by the barbarity of the gross excesses of Islamist violence, this latest outrage has many struggling to comprehend not just why an attack, but why such an attack against children.
There are no “rational” answers. However, “rationality” is not a universally shared world view. This, then, goes to what seems like the impossibility of understanding how such events could occur and, ultimately, how to stop them.
The attack was by undertaken by Manchester-born Salman Abedi in support of the self-proclaimed Islamic State organisation. It is likely that he acted with the support of a local, independent IS cell.
Twitter lit up with condemnation but also support, with one tweet noting the attack was “successful and surprising”, indicating that the attack was not carried out with the knowledge of the wider organisation. Another linked to it revenge for allied aerial bombing of Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria. On March 17, an allied air attack on IS positions in Mosul killed dozens — perhaps 200 — civilians, including children.
But that is “war”, and the attack on Manchester was not part of a war zone. For jihadi Islamists (of which Abedi had become one), however, there are no battle lines and there are no innocents.
The process that led to the Manchester attack, that in Paris in 2015 and others, reflects a profound rejection of Western neoliberal hegemony under the guise of “democracy”. This is seen by radical Islamists to lack justice, set against their own version of an absolutist “justice”.
This struggle to cleanse Islamic countries of Western influence and to punish the West in turn reflects a struggle for the soul of Islam. Ironically, this struggle started in, and continues to be propagated by, the West’s principal Islamic ally, Saudi Arabia.
The Saudi regime does not endorse IS or al-Qaeda and sees such organisations as a threat to its existence. But the Saudi regime explicitly endorses a fundamentalist interpretation of Islam and requires its people to live under an austere version of Islamic law.
It is this fundamentalist version of Sunni Islam that provides the foundation for a more extremist, violent iteration that rejects the Western indulgences of the Saudi royal family, the Saudis’ alliance with the United States and an American presence on Islamic soil.
In this extremist understanding, only those who have already adopted this “pure” form of Islam or are willing to convert to it are deemed worthy of being spared death. For the rest, such death should be exemplary, hence the theatrical barbarism of al-Qaeda and especially IS executions.
Ironically, already “saved” self-believing jihadi “purists” negate their own lives. In this way, as with other fanatics, they only discover their “true” selves by following the ideological rabbit hole to its absolute conclusion.
Suicide bombing of unbelievers thus becomes a sacred duty. This sacred duty is more completely fulfilled if it has the added value of demonstrator effect.
As a front line member of the Western coalition, the UK is the enemy and attacks against its most vulnerable parts in some ways, writ small, echoes the strategically unnecessary “demonstrator effect” carpet bombings, including fire bombings, of mass civilian targets in World War II.
We forget, sometimes, that “we” also have a history that could be viewed from some perspectives as “irrational”. And certainly, from a fundamentalist position that does not accept the premise of the West in any way on “their” land, “we” are seen as the evil ones, wherever “we” are.
In a globalised world, the “soldiers” of ideological armies can be in any place, from Mosul to Manchester, and not relying on specific orders.
In the face of globalised violence, where the lives of children have become tools of propaganda, this all begs the question of how does it end? One response, which is effective against individuals if not the idea, is to identify and kill “them” — hence the US’ drone strike program, among other measures.
Another, combined, approach is to increase security, expand intelligence and other measures of countering violent extremism, in ways that might also infringe on the rights of ordinary Western civilians, and then to wait it out, if perhaps with the hope that Muslim communities will moderate the effects of their own dissidents.
The common refrain is that, if the West goes down this path, the radical jihadis “will already have won”. Well, yes, the West certainly does not have a monopoly on the use of violence and the parameters of warfare have permanently changed.
In the face of this there is a choice. The West can maintain civil liberties as they are, suffer the occasional attack on innocents and move on in stoic, moral outrage.
Or the West can understand that the type of unchallenged hegemony it enjoyed for a few brief years following the end of the Cold War was but a brief moment in history and has now ended.
The triumphalist promise that the world would become free market and “democratic”, just like “us”, was always ahistorical nonsense. We are in the process of learning that brutal lesson.
* Damien Kingsbury is professor of international politics at Deakin University
The west should remember that the so-called Al Qaida was invented by the US to rid Afghanistan of the Russians and send them broke, it was the CIA who hired and funded Bin Laden as their agent and that the US deliberately started the so-call ISIS in Camp Bucca in Iraq to over thrown Assad.
Yes OK Professor, but the Saudis funded the Afghan Mujaheddin, they chanelled money through Pakistan to the Taliban, they funded madrassas and I have no doubt that plenty of Saudi arms and money has slipped into the hands of IS. The Saudis and their proxies’ funding of terrorists is many multiples of what Iran has done (no good guys there). Who needs enemies? MInd you much of this emanates from unwarranted interference in middle east politics by the US going back 60 odd years.
I have no love for the Saudis, but I’m not sure if Saudi money is funding IS. The profile of those who chose to fight with IS whether overseas or in their place of birth seems to be those who have rejected association with the local mosques and community and instead withdraw into their own like-minded cells who are disconnected from any major bodies.
Maybe you are right and there are some sleeper agents somewhere who are being funded by Saudi-linked bodies and influencing these lone wolf groups through social media. However, I feel that it seems that IS groups seems to be doing these on their own, otherwise, why waste resources fighting directly with Saudi in the middle east?
Democracy is a product of the late 18 Century Enlightenment – or Age of Reason -released by the French Revolution, and means government of the people by the people for the people. For it to function it requires autonomous status of every citizen and respect from every citizen for the autonomous status of every other citizen.
Transient events taking place in societies based on democracy – such as colonial subjugation, class theft of wealth, wars of aggression, primacy for a time of this or that lie or myth etc are not products of democracy but the counter-Enlightenment antithesis of it.
Professor Kingsbury’s conflation of antitheses of democracy with democracy itself, in order to denigrate democracy in contrast to theocratic violence against the human rights that democracy upholds, including the right to life itself, sounds like the voice of the counter-Enlightenment.
That’d be great if we had government of the people, by the people, for the people, or respect for the autonomous status of every citizen. Unfortunately, we live in the real world and not in a textbook. We have what is called representative parliamentary democracy, where citizens vote for candidates approved by the political class. These candidates serve themselves, their party, the state and then finally, if the first 3 things are in line with it, their voters. If you don’t separate the ideal in its purest form from what exists in real life you end up defending the status quo, which is a poor place to start if you want to reach the ideal.
Fully agree. It would be a giant step towards democracy if we went beyond the government of the people by the political parties who whoever could buy them, and adopted the Californian system of binding citizen-initiated referenda (BCIR). California isn’t ancient Athens or a twee Swiss canton – it’s much bigger than Australia with our 24 million people.
“who whoever” should be “for whoever””. Sorry.
You speak as though colonisation ended, Dion. As though bringing democracy and free market capitalism to the world at gun point wasn’t an act of colonisation. Guess what? It was. The effects were harshest in countries that preferred a little less free market capitalism and a little more socialism in their democracy – places like the former Yugoslavia, Russia, Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan, South America, the once Asian Tigers.
It’s all very well to talk about “transient events” like the Age of Enlightenment 300 years ago, but it’s not a good idea to ignore the 300 years that came after it, including the realisation after the French Revolution that capitalism didn’t produce liberte, egalite and fraternite after all. It just produced different masters. You might recall a little revolution in a place called Russia came out of that realisation, and guess what? It just produced new masters, too.
Capitalism is built on the principle of individuals extracting maximum gain for minimum input, regardless of the resource and unfortunately, the people don’t get to define the maximum or the minimum, powerful individuals do. Capitalism is completely incompatible with social democracy. So is liberalism. Both prize the individual over the collective.
We don’t live in a democracy. Nobody does. Some countries are trying to, like Ecuador. Most of us live in corporate plutocracies or oligarchies with democratic forms: elections every few years; free speech allowing you to praise this group while condemning that one.
It’s the same fight, Dion. Only the names of the heroes and villains change.
Democracy is ( so far) a utopian dream. I’ve heard about the Californian referenda, too, and like you, I’m inspired by it. It’s a start. But I’ll bet you for every citizen initiated referendum there are 100 acts of legislation detrimental to ordinary Californians, passed without their knowledge, let alone consent.
I’d raise no opposition to this analysis except to suggest that democracy is not a yes/no issue or a utoipian dream but an ongoing process in which the French have a great deal more scrutiny of, and say in, how they are governed than the sans culottes of pre-revolutionary France. For that matter we have a great deal more say in how we are governed than in pre-Eureka Australia.
Representative government is government of the people by the political parties for those who buy them and every struggle for more say for everyone in rule at every level in society can advance democracy (starting with the role of the MPs vs the rank and file in the appointment of Bill Shorten as Leader of the Labor Opposition!)
Saudi Wahhabism isn’t Sunni. Most Wahhabis don’t support the likes of ISIS anyway but commentators writing about Sunni Islam need to understand that the Wahhabi sect regards orthodox Sunni Muslims as heretics. My wife and I were lectured by one of their religious students about the wrongfulness of our actions when we performed an act of respect in Madinah that all Sunni Muslims are encouraged to perform.
I don’t think the Wahhabis think that way though. I believe they truly believe themselves to be the best and purest form of Sunni and that other Sunni groups are not orthodox enough.
The contrast between each Sunni groups are the slight differences in interpretations of the teachings of Mohammad (which they refer to as the Hadith), and how strictly they follow them.
While the Israelis continue to obfuscate the situation by having Trump types point their accusing fingers at Iran and other immediate foes of the promised land, the very real support for funding of world terrorism is quite literally under the President’s nose (or was at least the other day).