Posted on 09/20/2006 5:40:43 PM PDT by Rummyfan
LOOMING TOWER
On the fifth anniversary of 9/11, US and Afghan troops in eastern Afghanistan a vague delineated land that doesnt necessarily stop at the Pakistani border captured a man called Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.
Who?
Well, he was the head of Hezb-i-Islami or, latterly, one faction of it. And for a while he was Prime Minister of Afghanistan, and an opponent of the Taliban, and then an ally of the Taliban. And in recent years hes been Irans Mister Big in the Hindu Kush. Hes believed to be the guy who smuggled Osamas son, Saad bin Laden, and various al-Qaeda A-listers out of Afghanistan and to the safety of the ayatollahs bosom. Hes an evil man who knows a lot of high-value information, if you can prise it out of him.
He made his name in the Eighties, when there were so many Afghan refugees in Peshawar that Pakistans ISI decided to streamline operations and make the human tide sign up with one of six designated émigré groups in order to be eligible for aid. Hekmatyar headed one of the two biggest, with some 800,000 people under his banner. He also has the distinction of being the commander of Osamas first foray into the field. In 1985, bin Laden and 60 other Arabs were holed up in Peshawar doing nothing terribly useful until they got the call to head across the Afghan border and join up with Hekmatyars men to battle the Soviets near Jihad Wal. So off they rode, with a single local guide. They arrived at Hekmatyars camp at ten in the evening only to find the Soviets had retreated and there was no battle to fight.
Your presence is no longer needed, Hekmatyar told Osamas boys. So go back. So the neophyte warriors shot a few tin cans off fence posts, handed in their weapons and caught the bus back to Peshawar: mujahideen tourists whod missed the show.
This poignant vignette occurs in Lawrence Wrights masterful work The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda And The Road To 9/11. I picked the book up a couple of weeks ago without much enthusiasm, mainly because of a growing suspicion these last five years that a human interest view of current events is bound to be misleading. Osama himself seems merely an extreme embodiment of larger globalized trends hes barely aware of. The praise The New York Times heaped on Wright for his portrayal of John ONeill, the driven, demon-ridden FBI agent who worked so frantically to stop Osama bin Laden, only to perish in the attack on the World Trade Center, suggested one of those artificially novelistic accounts too obviously aimed at getting a sale to Miramax. And most of the Wahhabist fellows over on the other side are too irrational for the psychological demands of fiction: it would surely be as unsatisfying as reading a detective novel where every characters insane.
But I was wrong. The human comedy in The Looming Tower is very illuminating. Bin Laden, for example, emerges not as the fearless jihadist and scourge of the Soviets but as a laggard and faintheart with a tendency to call in sick before battle and, if pressed into service, to pass out during it due to his blood pressure. The nap he took during the battle of the Lions Den in 1987 is spoken of by awed al-Qaeda types as evidence of his cool under fire, but it seems more likely he just fainted. In Afghanistan, the local lads were hard and brave, the Arab volunteers they dismissed as useless. Had the Americans funded the mujahideen directly, the Afghan resistance of the 1980s might have remained a conventional war of liberation against the Soviet invaders. But Zbigniew Brzezinski, facing the Congressional oversight of post-Watergate Washington, chose instead to run the operation through third parties and plumped for the Saudis Prince Turki and the Pakistani intelligence service, the ISI. And next thing you know a more or less straightforward nationalist resistance has become jihad central. The deeply sinister Prince Turki (full disclosure: hes not big on me, either The arrogance of Mark Steyn knows no bounds) used bin Ladens money to attract to Afghanistan a bunch of freaks and misfits from the Arab world and beyond, and their natural tendency to self-glorification did the rest: from the Soviet point of view, the Lions Den was an inconsequential tactical retreat; to Osamas boys, living in the heightened pseudo-religiosity of jihadism, it was an exhilarating victory, a moment when (as Wright puts it) reality knelt before faith. When the Soviet empire fell apart a few years later, the bin Laden crowd genuinely believed it was they who had inflicted the fatal blow with their famous triumph at this rinky-dink no-account nickelndime skirmish the Commies had barely noticed. So their thoughts naturally turned to what they might do for an encore. And, having taken down one superpower, they figured the next move was pretty obvious.
Wrights book is a marvelously vivid recreation of a kind of sustained unreality. My talk-radio pal Hugh Hewitt calls it a genealogy, and I think thats a very good way of putting it: The Looming Tower is a family tree of jihad, the chain connecting some weirdsmobile in Cairo with another in Riyadh and then Islamabad and then Hamburg and London and pretty much everywhere. One thing it demolishes is the lazy leftist trope that the root cause is poverty. The penniless yak herds arent the problem. The very first words of the very first chapter are In a first-class stateroom on a cruise ship bound for New York Its 1948 and inside the first-class stateroom is Sayyid Qutb, the first of a grand parade of privileged middle-class westernized Muslims for whom a mis-wired encounter with the modern world is enough to make them hot for jihad. Theres a sad inevitability when al-Qaedas head honchos are ready to give up on 9/11 because they havent any Muslim westerners who can pull it off, and just at that moment a Hamburg engineering student called Mohammed Atta shows up. In the jihad, somebody always shows up, somebody middle-class and prosperous and educated and perfectly assimilated except for an urge to self-detonate on the London Underground.
Its tempting to think history might have turned out a little differently had that drunken floozy on the ship not come on to Sayyid late one night or the nurse in George Washington University Hospital not been showing quite so much cleavage. But reading of Qutbs sojourn in America in the late 1940s you begin to wonder whether the girl really did come on to him or if the nurse truly disclosed to him the particulars of what she sought in a lover. His disgust at the lasciviousness of America is vaguely reminiscent of the old joke about the spinster who complains that the young man across the street strips naked in full view every night: When the cop says he cant see anything, she explains you have to climb up on the wardrobe and crane your neck up over the skylight. If youre looking for it as assiduously as Qutb was, youll find it everywhere.
The title of Wrights book comes from the Korans fourth sura, the one Osama quoted in a speech on the eve of 9/11:
Wherever you are, death will find you, Even in the looming tower.
In an Islamist grievance culture, the tower doesnt have to be that tall to loom. The tragedy in Wrights book is that across little more than half a century a loser cult has metastasized, eventually to swallow almost all the moderate, syncretic forms of Islam. What was so awful about Sayyid Qutbs experience in America that led him to regard modernity as an abomination? Well, he went to a dance in Greeley, Colorado: The room convulsed with the feverish music from the gramophone. Dancing naked legs filled the hall, arms draped around the waists, chests met chests, lips met lips
In 1949, Greeley, Colorado was dry. The dance was a church social. The feverish music was Frank Loessers charm song Baby, Its Cold Outside. But it was enough to start a chain that led from Qutb to Zawahiri in Egypt to bin Laden in Saudi Arabia to the mullahs in Iran to the man arrested in Afghanistan on September 11th. And its a useful reminder of how much we could give up and still be found decadent and disgusting by the Islamists. A world without Baby, Its Cold Outside will be very cold indeed.
ping
It is indeed long past time for the left to stop caterwaling about "poverty" and start thinking about the real world. Steyn is a marvelous writer.
Ive often thought that Binny was a privileged rich kid searching for a purpose in life
Bump!
Canada/Steyn bump
PING!
Alas, they now claim we didn't catch that very big fish, but instead a less big fish who's a dead ringer for him.
jihad bump
bookmark
BTTT.
The Sept. 11th capture of Hekmatyar that Steyn refers to has not been confirmed. It seems to have been an error by the German press agency, DPA.
FYI
d.o.l.
Criminal Number 18F
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