Today's 'Islamic Fascists'
Were Yesterday's Friends
by Brendan O'Neill
According
to President George W. Bush, America is at war with "Islamic
fascists." Commentators who support Bush's military interventions also
argue that the West faces new religious enemies who do not play by the old
rules of warfare. Hezbollah
(which literally translates as "Party of God") says its wants to
obliterate Israel, and Hamas
(an abbreviation of "Islamic Resistance Movement") has taken the
reins of power in Gaza and the West Bank; meanwhile, al-Qaeda and its associates
continue to carry out sporadic, scrappy attacks designed to restore the Islamic
caliphate. All of this has led one British newspaper
columnist to argue that there is a new "World War being waged by
clerical fascism against free societies."
In a nutshell, the wars over state, territory, and politics that
defined the Cold War era have given way to cosmic battles between "good"
and "evil" between a West apparently keen to defend secular,
democratic values and its twisted opponents who prefer the idea of autocratic Islam.
This simplistic view of the new geopolitical landscape is deeply
problematic. It overlooks the key role that the West played in nurturing
radical Islamist groups, precisely as a means of isolating and undermining
secular movements that were judged by Western governments to be too uppity or
dangerous. Over the past 80 years and more from Egypt to Afghanistan to
Palestine powerful governments in the West and their allies in the Middle
East helped to create radical Islamic sects as a bulwark against secular
nationalist parties or pan-Arabism. They gave the nod to, and in some instances
funded and armed, Islamist movements that might challenge the claims of local
anti-colonial, liberationist, or communistic outfits.
In other words, there is a deep and bitter irony in the West's current
claims to be standing up to evil religious sects in the name of universal
values. It was precisely the West's earlier disregard for secularism and
democracy in the Middle East, its elevation of its own powerful interests over
the needs and desires of local populations, which helped to give rise to a
layer of apparently "evil" radical Islamism. What we have today is
not a World War between a principled West and psychotic groups from "over
there," but rather the messy residue of decades of Western meddling in the
Middle East.
Duplicitous Western support for Islamist movements has a long and
dishonorable history. In the early and middle 20th century, both British and
U.S. intelligence supported the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, the
group from which so many of today's radical Islamic sects including Hamas and
even al-Qaeda have sprung. Indeed, in the 1920s, the British, then the colonial rulers of Egypt,
helped to set up the Muslim Brotherhood as a means of keeping Egyptian
nationalism and anti-colonialism in check. The immediate precursor to the
Muslim Brotherhood was an organization called the Society
of Propaganda and Guidance, which was funded and backed by British
colonialists. In return, the Society provided Islamist backing to British rule
in Egypt. It published a journal called The Lighthouse, which attacked
Egyptian nationalists who wanted British forces out of Egypt as
"atheists and infidels." Under British patronage, the Society set up
the Institute of Propaganda and Guidance, which brought Islamists from across
the Muslim world to Egypt so they could be trained in political agitation, and
then take such anti-anti-colonialism back to their own homelands.
One graduate of the Institute of Propaganda and Guidance was Hassan al-Banna, who
founded the Muslim Brotherhood in 1928. According to Robert Dreyfuss, in his
informative book Devil's
Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam, the
original Muslim Brotherhood was an "unabashed British intelligence
front." The mosque that served as the first headquarters of the
Brotherhood in Ismailia, Egypt was built by the (British) Suez Canal
Company. With Britain's knowledge, and tacit approval, in the 1930s and '40s
the Brotherhood both challenged anti-colonial parties within Egypt and also
spread to other parts of the Near and Middle East, setting up branches in
Transjordan, Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine.
Following the coming to power of the anti-colonialist and pan-Arabist
Gamal Abdel Nasser in 1954, elements in the West continued to look upon the
Muslim Brotherhood as a weapon against secular nationalism and communism. The
British government of the time encouraged the Brotherhood to challenge Nasser,
and in 1954 there was open conflict between the Brotherhood's and Nasser's
forces. Many hundreds were killed, and eventually the Brotherhood fled, taking
refuge in Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and other states in the Anglo-American camp.
The U.S.-friendly regime in Saudi Arabia, in particular, provided sanctuary
and financial backing to Brotherhood members during Nasser's crackdown on
the group.
Initially the U.S., in its interventionist policies of the postwar
period, adopted the British model of supporting radical Islamists in order to
undermine popular secular governments or communist-influenced outfits in the
Near and Middle East. This included supporting the Brotherhood against Nasser.
In his book Sleeping
With the Devil, former CIA officer Robert Baer said there was a
"dirty little secret" in Washington in the early 1950s:
"The White House looked on the Brothers as a silent ally, a secret
weapon against what else? communism. The covert action started in the 1950s
with the Dulles brothers Allen at the CIA and John Foster at the State
Department when they approved Saudi Arabia's funding of Egypt's Brothers
against Nasser. As far as Washington was concerned, Nasser was a
communist."
Baer said that the "logic of the Cold War" meant that the
U.S. was willing to support radical Islamists even if they carried out
activities such as assassinations or political agitation designed to foment
conflict. As Baer argues, "If Allah agreed to fight on our side, fine. If
Allah decided that political assassination was permissible, that was fine too,
as long as no one talked about it in polite company." (There was, of
course, a subsequent divergence between British and American policy on Nasser.
During the Suez
crisis of 1956, President Dwight Eisenhower put a stop to the
British-French-Israeli invasion of Suez and backed Nasser's regime, temporarily
at least.)
The Muslim Brotherhood and its various branches across the Middle East
which shared the aim of replacing secular democracy with Islamic government
also gave rise to violent splinter groups. Hamas, which today is discussed by
Bush and his supporters as a great danger to peace in Israel-Palestine, if not
the entire world, is a local wing of the Brotherhood, formed in the mid-1980s
from various Brotherhood-affiliated charities that had gained a foothold in
Palestinian territories. Al-Qaeda itself has been influenced primarily by the
thinking of Sayyid Qutb (1906-1966), a radical member of the Brotherhood. Osama
bin Laden's deputy, Ayman
al-Zawahiri, an Egyptian, was first radicalized by the Muslim Brotherhood;
he joined the group when he was 14 years old, before moving on to the more
radical Islamic Jihad group in 1979 and subsequently fighting against the
Soviets in Afghanistan.
Indeed, during the Afghan-Soviet war from 1979 to 1992, American and
British intelligence once again supported radical Islamists against, in this
instance, secularist and communist forces. Where the Cold War began with
America and Britain supporting the Muslim Brotherhood and other radical
Islamists against popular secular movements, it ended with America and Britain
arming, financing, and propagandizing on behalf of radical Islamists fighting
the Soviet Union's last stand in Afghanistan before its collapse in the early
1990s.
Throughout the 1980s, the CIA and the British intelligence organization
MI5 arranged for the arming and training of thousands of mujahedeen in
Afghanistan. American and British elements, together with Saudi Arabia and the
Pakistani intelligence service ISI, ensured that the mujahedeen had everything
they needed to wage war against the Soviets. As Phil
Gasper has argued,
"The CIA became the grand coordinator: purchasing or arranging the
manufacture of Soviet-style weapons from Egypt, China, Poland, Israel, and
elsewhere, or supplying their own; arranging for military training by
Americans, Egyptians, Chinese and Iranians; hitting up Middle-Eastern countries
for donations, notably Saudi Arabia, which gave many hundreds of millions of
dollars in aid each year, totaling probably more than a billion; pressuring and
bribing Pakistan with whom recent American relations had been very poor to
rent out its country as a military staging area and sanctuary; putting the
Pakistan Director of Military Operations, Brigadier Mian Mohammad Afzal, onto
the CIA payroll to ensure Pakistani cooperation."
Two beneficiaries of such widespread American support for the
mujahedeen's war against the Soviets were bin Laden and Zawahiri, currently
al-Qaeda's number 1 and number 2. Both traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan in
the 1980s to assist with the anti-Soviet war effort. It should be noted that
America and Britain did not only fund and arm the mujahedeen; they also
provided backing to mosques, madrassa schools, and propagandistic publications
and radio stations that put the case for political Islam over communism or
secularism. Indeed, Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed who would go on to devise the 9/11 attacks was involved
in a madrassa school that was funded by Saudi and U.S. money. Once again,
Western forces were not only opportunistically supporting their enemy's enemy
they were also fueling the idea that radical Islamism was preferable to "evil"
communism and even to secular government.
We could argue that al-Qaeda, both intellectually and practically, is a
product of Western meddling in Middle Eastern affairs. It takes its inspiration
from the Muslim Brotherhood, that group supported by both American and British
intelligence in the early and middle 20th century, and it was forged in the
heat of the Afghan-Soviet war, that conflict largely facilitated by U.S.,
British, and Saudi funds and arms. In terms of both its political origins and
its early and formative fighting experiences, al-Qaeda owes a great deal to
Western interventionism.
Even Hamas is, in some ways, the product of a desire by the West and
its allies to use radical Islamism as a counterweight to popular secular
movements. It was formed, in 1987, from various charities with links to the
Muslim Brotherhood. These charities had been allowed by Israel itself to gain
strength and influence in Palestinian territories in order to, as one account
puts it, "counter the influence of the secular Palestinian resistance
movements." Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the spiritual leader of Hamas, who was killed by an
Israeli air strike in 2004, formed the military outfit in 1987 as the armed
wing of his group the Islamic Association. This organization had been licensed
by Israel 10 years earlier, in the 1970s. In that period, Israeli officials
gave the nod to, and even indirectly funded, the setting-up of Islamic
societies in the West Bank and Gaza that might weaken and isolate Yasser
Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization. Martha
Kessler, a senior analyst for the CIA, has said: "[W]e saw Israel
cultivate Islam as a counterweight to Palestinian nationalism." The very
Islamic groups "cultivated" by Israel in the 1970s went on to become
Hamas in the 1980s.
In funding Islamists against secularists, Israel was following in a
long tradition started by the British and Americans. As one former senior CIA
official has put it, Israel's tolerance, even support, of Islamic groups
that would later become Hamas "was a direct attempt to divide and dilute
support for a strong, secular PLO by using a competing religious
alternative." There is no evidence that Israel ever supported Hezbollah,
but their interests have coincided over the past two decades or more, since the
founding of Hezbollah in Lebanon by Iranian elements in 1982.
As Strategic
Forecasting Inc., or Stratfor, has argued, "Hezbollah represented a
militant, non-secular alternative to [Arafat's] Nassertie Fatah, Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine, and other groups that took their bearing from
Pan-Arabism rather than Islam
. [Hezbollah] made a powerful claim that the
Palestinian movement had no future while it remained fundamentally
secular." Israel and Hezbollah are, of course, arch-rivals; Hezbollah was
formed with the explicit aim of expelling Israel from Lebanon by any means
necessary. However, in the early 1980s both Israel and Hezbollah had a shared
aim of weakening the more powerful and popular secularist Palestinian
movements.
Over the past 80 years, Western governments and their allies have
supported radical Islamist groups. However, this was not merely opportunism, a
bad case of "my enemy's enemy is my friend." As part of this process,
Western governments seriously denigrated popular secular and democratic
movements. Indeed, from the founding of the Muslim Brotherhood in the 1920s to
Israel's role in the forging of Hamas in the 1980s, the explicit aim of Western
support for radical Islamism was to isolate, weaken, and ultimately destroy
popular political movements that very often were based on Western ideas of
democracy and progress. Thus, many of these radical Islamist groups the
Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, al-Qaeda, Hezbollah have a built-in suspicion of
and hostility toward secular democracy.
What we are faced with today is not a new World War being waged by any kind of powerful Islamist conspiracy. Instead, as secular and nationalist politics has fallen apart in the post-Cold War period, we are left with fairly small, radical Islamist sects in other words, with those very groups that were forged as a bulwark against secular democratic politics in the first place.
Links referenced within this
article
Islamic fascists
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/08/20060810-3.html
Hezbollah
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/1908671.stm
Hamas
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamas
al-Qaeda
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Qaeda
one British newspaper columnist
http://www.melaniephillips.com/londonistan/
"good" and "evil"
http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/divphil/singerp2.htm
Muslim Brotherhood
http://www.fas.org/irp/world/para/mb.htm
colonial rulers of Egypt
http://www.touregypt.net/hbritish.htm
Society of Propaganda and Guidance
http://www.larouchepub.com/other/2006/book_reviews/3307devils_game.html
Hassan al-Banna
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hassan_al_Banna
Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash
Fundamentalist Islam
http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20060301fabook85249/robert-dreyfuss/devil-s-game-how-the-united-states-helped-unleash-fundamentalist-islam.html
sanctuary and financial backing
http://www.larouchepub.com/other/2006/book_reviews/3307devils_game.html
Sleeping With the Devil
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1400050219?/antiwarbookstore
Suez crisis
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5199392.stm
Ayman al-Zawahiri
http://www.time.com/time/archive/preview/0,10987,1187180,00.html
Phil Gasper
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Afghanistan/Afghanistan_CIA_Taliban.html
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,436061,00.html
killed by an Israeli air strike
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3556099.stm
licensed by Israel
http://www.cooperativeresearch.org/context.jsp?item=western_support_for_islamic_militancy_2027
Martha Kessler
http://www.cooperativeresearch.org/context.jsp?item=western_support_for_islamic_militancy_2027
senior CIA official
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2002/06/08/1320881.php
Strategic Forecasting Inc.
http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?id=4670&t=A+closer+look+at+Hezbollah's+motives
Find this article at:
http://www.antiwar.com/orig/oneill.php?articleid=9615