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The Struggle for Civilization
American Thinker ^ | July 06, 2008 | Jack Lott

Posted on 07/06/2008 1:29:19 AM PDT by neverdem

The "War on Terror" is over, even as combat with terrorists continues. Like the "Wars" on Drugs and Poverty, it lingers on the back pages and the TV equivalent, the highbrow channels like Discovery and History. Meanwhile, the Department of Defense quietly gears up for the "long war" that is essential to countering the enemy.  The gulf between public perception and the grim reality couldn't be greater or more important to bridge. Public boredom with the combat should not displace the importance of understanding and dealing with conflict within the Muslim world.

Seven years is a long time for the American public but a short time for the enemy. We need to explore the reality of the current conflict before the phrase "9/11" slips from our memory, like "Pearl Harbor," becoming something kids Googleâ for a school assignment in history. This war includes a major propaganda battle, which we are on the way to losing. Americans have trouble with ambiguity and complexity in public issues and an inherent skepticism of government statements. They have little interest in things foreign, especially if discussion requires some knowledge of another language.  The domestic political wrangling over Iraq illustrates how far the public and much of the government and media elites are from understanding the real war.

The enemy in a slogan war is a condition, not an organization, so it cannot be defeated in the military sense. Warfare is the wrong metaphor for the sustained effort it takes to reduce recreational drug use, redistribute wealth or protect civilians from intentional combat injury. The confusion surrounding "The War on Terror" exists because the phrase was painted over a real war initiated by real enemies with real objectives. It took the 9/11 attacks to get America's fleeting attention to the real decades-old conflict within Islam. America has paid scant attention to terrorists killing modern people in Bali, England, and Spain, and even less attention to them killing developing people in Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Turkey, and Yemen, where control of these people is the enemy's objective.

To regain the initiative we've lost, we need to make this war real in the public arena by looking at the complex makeup of the enemies and the simplicity of their objectives. The conflict will not go away because we have tired of talking about it.

There are three things to understand before we get into the reasons for the 9/11 attacks.

First, in spite of the confusion and conflict over the term "War on Terror," our enemies started their War Against Civilization, in the 18th century, not the 21st century. It doesn't help our understanding that this war against civilization is so outside of our modern sensibilities. To make sense of it, we have to consider the enemies' world as "inside the looking glass" -- as puzzling to us as the Red Queen was to Lewis Carroll's Alice.

Second, the enemy is not the religion of Islam, but certain Muslims, like the team of Usama bin Laden and Mullah Omar of the Taliban, who follow the uncommon Wahhabi interpretation of Hanbali Islamic law. Laurent Murawiec's definition, from his book Princes of Darkness, is succinct and clear:

"... Wahhabism is a strange mixture of paganism, provincial narrow-mindedness, and rhetoric borrowed from Islam. Hardly a generation ago, the Al-Saud family religion was considered by the Islamic world as a weird distortion of Islam by exalted visionaries: the backward religion of ignorant and crude Bedouins."

Thanks to Saudi money, Muslim disdain is fast becoming no longer the case.

The danger of cartooning the war in religious terms, such as calling the fighters jihadi (transliterated Arabic -- one who strives in the path of God), is that Al Qaeda gains undeserved status among Muslims because of our misuse of their language. Professor Douglas Streusand of the Marine Corps Command and Staff College addresses this problem by terming the terrorists hirabi (transliterated Arabic -- sinful warrior), in place of jihadi, which has positive connotations for most Muslims. Streusand also suggests that we use the Arabic word for terrorist (irhabi) when discussing those who attack civilians for political purposes. The poor choice of words, in Arabic or English, has more than a negative impact on our propaganda. It enhances the enemy view of us as easy prey -- not the formidable foe we have been to past totalitarians -- because it underscores the perception of us as ignorant of them.

Al Qaeda wants to resurrect the Caliphate (the office of the successor to the Prophet, ended by the Republic of Turkey in 1924). They want control of the 57 nations that make up the Organization of the Islamic Conference as a step to conquering the world. The Caliphate is the leadership of the "Ghost Country" that we are fighting; the term Ghost Country avoids getting sidetracked into discussion of Muslim religious politics. It is an accurate way to characterize the source of the Shadow Army, Al Qaeda, who initiated this war.

The Wahhabi camp within the twenty-thousand-member Saud family wants to reconstitute Islam, as it existed before 632, the year Muhammad died. They spent 140 years conquering most of Arabia and imposing their morality on it. The advent of effortless oil revenue in the 1930's gave them the aura of power and exponential growth. Some of the family is attracted to the modern world, and has less zeal for the imposition of Wahhabi practices within Islam. But the Wahhabi supporters still characterize the family and fund a significant missionary effort.

Al Qaeda feeds off this missionary effort. The Wahhabi Sauds are smart enough not to correct the Western misperception that Al Qaeda is the sole Muslim enemy of modern civilization. They want to continue quietly building a Muslim resistance to modern life without aggravating us to the point of open conflict.

The Al Qaeda camp is less patient than the Saud camp, and has different motives. They are not interested in promoting the Saud-Wahhab alliance as the path to Muslim virtue and power, but would supplant the Saud family as the leadership of the effort to restore a resurrected political Islam to world power. Western reaction to the 9/11attacks has masked this internal Arab struggle, amounting to a civil war for the leadership and allegiance of Muslims demoralized by modern life, into which we have been dragged because of our relationship with the Sauds and other traditional rulers.

Third, globalization is the setting for this war. The political world closed in 1959, when the last open land, Antarctica, was internationalized by treaty. Since then, a modern commercial civilization has ringed the world creating an attractive donut of prosperity surrounding a hole of scarcity. Thomas P.M. Barnett, describes this world in The Pentagon's New Map, calling civilization the "Core" states, and the states in need, the "Gap," which stretches from Afghanistan, through Africa to Central and northern South America in the West, and through Indonesia to New Guinea and the Solomon Islands in the East. General Zinni, in The Battle for Peace, terms the African-Asian portion of this Gap the "Arc of Instability." The Ghost Country's Shadow Army is based there.

With that background to focus our vision we can now peer into the looking glass to see the six reasons the Ghost Country attacked us on 9/11.

Reason One. The Ghost Country warriors practice the old saying: "The friend of my enemy is my enemy." The United States is the friend, and modern Muslims are the Al Qaeda enemy we befriend.

The Ghost Country traditionalists have a daunting strategic task. They have to win more than 57 campaigns just to end the beginning of the war against civilization. Nonetheless, they have been pursuing a "Near Enemy" strategy of fighting as many campaigns in the Gap as they could within their limited resources.

The growing dominance of Al Qaeda leadership within global terrorism has promoted pursuit of a "Far Enemy" strategy. Al Qaeda assumes that none of the target Muslim countries has the strength to stand on its own, and offers an attractive alternative to the Near Enemy approach; attack America at home and it will withdraw globally, as it did when attacked locally, from Lebanon in 1983 and Somalia in 1993. Moderate Muslims will then fall under Shadow Army control as the emerging Ghost Country takes shape.

Reason Two. We ignored the earlier attacks on the World Trade Center (1993), Khobar Towers in the Kingdom (1996), east African embassies (1998) and the USS Cole in Yemen (2000). These attacks failed to hold our attention and did not change our ways.

At the risk of seeming callous, it is clear that the enemy values the symbolic damage from terror as more important than the substantive damage of any attack. Terror is the tool of the weak to communicate with us in the absence of formal paths of negotiation, which are closed to most terrorist organizations because they are covert and illegal in the countries they want to influence.

In a media-rich modern world, the "Most Law" applies: on most issues, most of the time most people -- don't care. The media definition of spectacular has to grow as the audience appreciation of the last event fades. The media and the enemy understand this law, which fuels their symbiotic relationship. The terrorists provide the riveting imagery that the media outlets need to compete for the attention of a jaded audience.

Reason Three. Al Qaeda wanted to advertise their ability to counter the pressures on Muslims to modernize their cultures that is inherent in globalization.

The enemy leadership has two audiences. The modern public in the Core countries is one; the Muslim male teenage public in the Gap countries is the other. These boys are underemployed, looking for a commitment that will improve their lot, and prone to blaming some "other" for their plight.

Al Qaeda's "Far Enemy" strategy feeds on these characteristics to provide the Shadow Army with the cannon fodder it needs to take on Muslim governments who are adept at survival, however ineffective they may be in serving their citizens. The argument is: what we, Al Qaeda, did in America, you young men can do in Muslim countries to rid yourselves of the evils of prosperity, including immoral entertainment and competition from unrestrained women. Just join us and we will make your world better, In'ch Allah (Arabic "God Willing"), the passive mindset of most of this audience.

Reason Four. Al Qaeda's first attack on the World Trade Center failed and they needed to regain prestige with their peers in the world of terror.

The Most Law leads the media to exaggerate any incident to maintain interest in the episodic nature of Ghost Country terror. Our interest quickly faded after 26 February 1993, when the images of the truck bomb attack were seen as no big deal. The low speed car chase of murder suspect and celebrity icon O. J. Simpson in 1994 drew more attention.

Not so in the Shadow Army leadership, who are constantly jockeying for power, and for whom charisma is the dominant leader characteristic. The truck bomb failure brought questioning of Al Qaeda's capability, if not the overall strategy. Survival of Al Qaeda in Ghost Country leadership required a more daring attack to reach the objective of American withdrawal from the Gap and incidentally, to maintain the strategic initiative in Al Qaeda's hands.

Reason Five. Al Qaeda and their allies don't have the direct power to conquer significant Muslim countries on their own. Modern Muslims, often religious moderates, are their enemy.

The Ghost Country warriors reached out to attack us at home in an attempt to overcome the inherent weaknesses they bring to the battlefield. They must contend for support in the face of significant losses in obscure campaigns that get little notice in the Core states.

While the American media focused on Afghanistan and Iraq, the Ghost Country suffered a defeat in Algeria. Frustrated when their election win was abrogated by the government in 1991, the Ghost Country party, the Armed Islamic Group, began a vicious civil war, escalating their terror campaign to an insurgency that they lost on the battlefield, a loss they acknowledged in 2000, while resuming a low level of terror.  The lesson from this campaign was that the national government won without much aid from the former colonial power, France or from the "Great Satan" America.

The 9/11 Attack served to distract further the modern world from the problem-solving, promising strategy of closing the Gap. That strategy means overcoming the serious resistance of traditionalists through providing the benefits of modern civilization to the young, who, despite enemy propaganda, find our world attractive. Modern societies are more adept at nation building through a host of nongovernmental organizations, than our traditionalist enemies can ever be. Taliban Afghanistan is about the best that they can do.

Reason Six. The enemy is certain that they are right and we are wrong, just as we assert the opposite, reflecting the mutual ignorance between innovators and traditionalists.

It is ironic that civilized Americans and the Ghost Country warriors share a trait that explains why "The War on Terror" is so difficult to prosecute and has been so divisive throughout the modern world.

Both sides think that everything that goes wrong in their societies (however different those societies are) is their own fault. The two sides differ only in what that fault is.

The modern American attitude is demonstrated by the reaction to Hurricane Katrina damage. Americans castigated the governments involved for poor performance, in spite of the fact that the damage was the most widespread of any storm on the Gulf Coast -- ever. We believe that even natural disasters have to be somebody's fault, and that our society should be minimally affected by any disaster, no matter how severe the incident.

The Ghost Country warrior attitude is demonstrated by the Arab recriminations after their loss in the '67 Arab-Israeli war, an attitude that continues to make the appeal of the Wahhabi message attractive. The attitude is that it was not Arab military incompetence that lost the war; it was the backsliding of the nominal Muslims in Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, and Syria from their religion. The argument goes: If only they had been more devout, then they would have prevailed.

Regardless of our modern sensibilities, traditionalists, even as adamant as those in the Ghost Country, are not crazy. They may be as unrealistic in their goals as Americans are in their expectations, but they are rational. We need to remember that whenever they gain a tactical surprise like 9/11.

Recall that our last world war began with a tactical surprise, Pearl Harbor. The enemies then are allies now, in part because our policy of unconditional surrender forced the zealots in both Germany and Japan to expire in a futile effort to defeat the "Arsenal of Democracy".  We turned the people of the defeated nations into friends by helping them rebuild their countries as part of the world economy.

Today, we are trying to rebuild the nations in the Gap while the battle for their loyalty is still being fought. If we expect them to be friends, we need to defend them from Ghost Country totalitarianism as vigorously as we defended democracy from political totalitarianism in World War II.

Jack Lott teaches courses on intelligence, globalization, and terrorism for the Christopher Wren Association at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. 


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: civilization; islam
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1 posted on 07/06/2008 1:37:03 AM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem

Very relevant article!
People have to be informed about what it’s going on in the world instead of that people are distracted,”amused” and sent to sleep by the liberal MSM and their croocks


2 posted on 07/06/2008 1:49:17 AM PDT by Ulysse
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To: neverdem

Good information, thanks for posting.


3 posted on 07/06/2008 1:58:19 AM PDT by monkeycard (There's no such thing as too much ammo.)
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To: neverdem
Second, the enemy is not the religion of Islam, but certain Muslims, like the team of Usama bin Laden and Mullah Omar of the Taliban, who follow the uncommon Wahhabi interpretation of Hanbali Islamic law.

This is not correct. OBL is actually following Islam.

"Fight those who believe not in Allah nor the Last Day, nor hold that forbidden which hath been forbidden by Allah and His Messenger, nor acknowledge the religion of Truth, (even if they are) of the People of the Book, until they pay the Jizya with willing submission, and feel themselves subdued." 9:29 (Jizya is the money that non-Muslims must pay to the Muslim overlords in a pure Islamic state.)

If you follow the words of the prophet, when you meet me, a Christian, you give me three choices:
1. Convert to Islam
2. Be killed
3. Submit and pay the jizya

Peaceful co-existence does not seem to be the will of Allah.

I used to believe the God of the Jew, the Christian and the Muslim was the God of Abraham. Until I started learning about the cult of death called Islam.

4 posted on 07/06/2008 2:05:53 AM PDT by FatherofFive (Islam is an EVIL like no other, and must be ERADICATED)
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To: neverdem
Globaloney.

Defending our Republic is one thing.

Transferring my wealth to the “gap” to further the Bolshevik elites, under the Utopian dream of ending war...forget it.

5 posted on 07/06/2008 2:41:08 AM PDT by endthematrix (Congress, Get Off Your Gas, And Drill!)
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To: neverdem
The Ghost Country's Shadow Army

This is a great phrase in a very interesting article.

The only point at which he falls down is assigning the 18th century as the moment at which Islam became violent and a threat. It was violent and a threat since the day of its founding, and is based on violence, and has always extended itself that way.

The 18th century was simply another flare-up, although it was, obviously, the first US contact with Islam, since we had just been founded. Remember, we were having to fight Islam in the Med within only a few years after our founding.

One of the problems is that while most Muslims do not agree with AQ and are not members of the Shadow Army, they are members of the Ghost Country (the umma, the house of Islam), and it is easy both to intimidate them and to radicalize them because the mental groundwork is already laid.

Can we fight all of Islam? No, not militarily. But what we need to do is to defend our ideas, because this is the area in which we really fall down. Western society has an entirely different basis, and is based on the concept of natural law and the value of the individual. It's hard for us to present this clearly because we have our own undermining force, Marxism, which is based, like Islam, on an externally imposed law (for the good of an entity known as the state, in this case), and exalts the collective.

But I think one area in which we are very remiss is the philosophical/theoretical area. We simply don't present it. About the only person who ever says anything regarding it is the Pope.

It would be nice if he had a little more company, because we need the two pronged approach: unrelenting military activity to protect ourselves and our allies, and vigorous philosophical/political activity to protect the core of our civilization and resist Islam at the most profound level.

6 posted on 07/06/2008 3:25:21 AM PDT by livius
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To: neverdem

History channel? Highbrow???

Buwahahaaha!

The former “Hitler channel” (all Hitler, all the time in the 90’s) is home of some of the worst pop history pap I’ve ever seen.

It’s a TAD beter now than it was and occasionally the do have a decent show on but it’s basically second rate. It’s the Wikipedia of history. The NY Post of history. It ain’t highbrow!


7 posted on 07/06/2008 3:48:22 AM PDT by NucSubs (Cognitive dissonance: Conflict or anxiety resulting from inconsistency between beliefs and actions)
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To: NucSubs

Yeah the “Hitler channel” is home of some of the worst pop history pap I’ve ever seen as well as all the inserted PC garbage that bubbles up at some off the wall time about GW, Commies and other mistruths from the Left....but compared to the 90% of pure crap broadcasttd on TeeVee it is similaer to Fox vs.ABCNBCCBSNPR...etal.


8 posted on 07/06/2008 4:02:30 AM PDT by iopscusa (El Vaquero. (SC Lowcountry Cowboy))
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To: neverdem

They’re also attacking us in the schools, the media, and the courts. And we’re losing.


9 posted on 07/06/2008 4:17:06 AM PDT by 668 - Neighbor of the Beast (Only a Kennedy between us and tyranny.)
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To: neverdem
Hooey.

The idea of transferring wealth to empower Barnett's Gap entails borrowing money from the world to turn the United States into the hegemon of Global Governance. Never mind that it bankrupts us in the process so that the world calls the shots within our borders, to the detriment of what remains of the American middle class. Look at what we've spent in Iraq. What makes these idiots think we can afford to do that for the entire African content?

I have no interest in a world made safe for American corporatists on the backs of impoverished taxpayers. Better that we train and arm resistances within other countries and let them build themselves, which is where we have been way behind the curve within Iran.

10 posted on 07/06/2008 5:18:41 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (We have people in power with desire for evil.)
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To: neverdem

btt


11 posted on 07/06/2008 5:20:18 AM PDT by Cacique (quos Deus vult perdere, prius dementat ( Islamia Delenda Est ))
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To: 668 - Neighbor of the Beast; neverdem
And we’re losing.

I see it in the glazed eyes of "educated" members of my own family when the subject of Islamic terrorism arises or the latest Nanny State atrocity is passively accepted.

Disheartening.

Good article, thanks for posting.

12 posted on 07/06/2008 5:51:04 AM PDT by Madame Dufarge
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To: neverdem
They want control of the 57 nations that make up the Organization of the Islamic Conference as a step to conquering the world.

More than a little interesting, in light of Obama's 57 states, eh?

13 posted on 07/06/2008 6:20:58 AM PDT by logos
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To: livius
But I think one area in which we are very remiss is the philosophical/theoretical area. We simply don't present it. About the only person who ever says anything regarding it is the Pope.

IMHO, that's worth repeating.

14 posted on 07/06/2008 12:17:11 PM PDT by neverdem (I'm praying for a Divine Intervention.)
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To: 668 - Neighbor of the Beast

We’re losing the intellectual battle because we never even present our ideas - those upon which our country and all of Western civilization were founded. We have been undermined by the left and our own professors and even secondary school (and probably primary, too) teachers, who hate the US and reject our foundational thought. We’ve got to go back to it, revive it, and teach it if we want to survive.


15 posted on 07/06/2008 12:25:09 PM PDT by livius
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To: neverdem

[the enemy is not the religion of Islam, but certain Muslims, like the team of Usama bin Laden and Mullah Omar of the Taliban, who follow the uncommon Wahhabi interpretation of Hanbali Islamic law. Laurent Murawiec’s definition, from his book Princes of Darkness, is succinct and clear:

“... Wahhabism is a strange mixture of paganism, provincial narrow-mindedness, and rhetoric borrowed from Islam. Hardly a generation ago, the Al-Saud family religion was considered by the Islamic world as a weird distortion of Islam by exalted visionaries: the backward religion of ignorant and crude Bedouins.”]

Everything that follows from this premise is flawed by the naivete of the premise itself; were it so easy to see through the motives of a militant few, so many would have abandoned the entire core long before now as to make these few to which he refers universal outcasts.

The world cheers winners and forgets how they came to win.

It’s mostly boredom that allows the day to break as the revelry crashes into the scattered pieces of the night’s excess.


16 posted on 07/06/2008 12:28:54 PM PDT by Old Professer (The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
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To: NucSubs

Yeah, all about dung, monster quest, ice road trucking, all about sex and let’s not forget about the hapless fishermen who take to the storm-lashed seas...


17 posted on 07/06/2008 12:32:32 PM PDT by Old Professer (The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
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To: NucSubs; endthematrix; Old Professer
This war includes a major propaganda battle, which we are on the way to losing.

IMHO, that statement is true. I don't have to agree with everything in an article before I post it.

Americans' unhappy birthday: 'Too much wrong'

I could post an article like that just to mock it. Every thing that's wrong with this country comes from the left with the exception of business that wants cheap, illegal labor.

18 posted on 07/06/2008 2:17:14 PM PDT by neverdem (I'm praying for a Divine Intervention.)
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To: wardaddy; Joe Brower; Cannoneer No. 4; Criminal Number 18F; Dan from Michigan; Eaker; Jeff Head; ...
Employers Fight Tough Measures on Immigration

Shoot to Stun

NYT: Maybe Greenland Isn't Melting After All

Uranium Stockpile Removed From Iraq in Secret U.S. Mission. Just on the 5PM news WABC-AM, in NYC.

From time to time, I’ll ping on noteworthy articles about politics, foreign and military affairs. FReepmail me if you want on or off my list.

19 posted on 07/06/2008 2:36:40 PM PDT by neverdem (I'm praying for a Divine Intervention.)
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To: All; Ulysse; neverdem; do the dhue

.

1,000 years ago one man of great courage,

...one EL CID (Arabic for ‘The Lord’) portrayed by CHARLETON HESTON in the 1961 Epic Motion Picture of the same name,

pulled a fractious baby Spain together to repel a Muslim invasion hell bent on taking over an entire Christian Europe.

Sorta like today 1,000 years later,

...with our heading back to Earth’s Moon and then on to the Planet Mars in this new 21st Century AD of ours,

...bringing those living here in the 7th Century AD along for the ride.

The “EL CID” Special Edition DVD was finally released this year.
A real MUST SEE.

http://www.Amazon.com

.

.


20 posted on 07/06/2008 4:56:29 PM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE ("ALOHA RONNIE" Guyer/Veteran-"WE WERE SOLDIERS" Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.lzxray.com)
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