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      A Brief Evaluation of the 
	'War on Terror,' the Coded Term for War on Islam and Muslims 
  
	By Yamin Zakaria
       
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 12, 2011 
	
  
      9/11 – Revisiting Islam versus the Capitalist West   After a 
	  decade, the zeal for war seems to have waned on both sides. It would be 
	  premature to say permanent peace is on the horizon, but certainly,
	  the ‘war on terror’, a coded term for war on Islam 
	  and Muslims, is not as pronounced since the early days of post 
	  9/11.    In my humble opinion, there are certain political and 
	  economical factors that have led to the changes in the course of history, 
	  even if that change is a temporary deviation.     Within the 
	  US, the nasty neo-conservatives that operate through the Republican Party 
	  were replaced by the more pliant looking Democrats. And surprisingly, the 
	  Americans elected the first black President. They have come a long a way 
	  from the days of running slave labour camps in the farms and plantations. 
	  The election of black Obama can be translated as the benign silent 
	  majority of the US population speaking through the ballot box against the 
	  neo-conservative extremists.    Barack Hussein Obama began well, in 
	  the historic Cairo speech he made grand statements; it was an attempt to 
	  reach out to the Islamic world after a decade of overt hostility shown 
	  from the Bush dynasty. However, very little has materialised, Guantanamo 
	  remains open, Israel has continued to build settlements in the occupied 
	  territory; whilst operations in Iraq were scaled down, drone attacks have 
	  increased significantly in Pakistan and Afghanistan, killing many 
	  civilians.    Most likely Barack Obama hit the solid Zionist wall 
	  that encircles the US establishment, and succumbed to the reality of their 
	  grip on US politics; just look at the reception Netanyahu received from 
	  the US Congress recently. There has to be a radical revolution inside the 
	  US to release the clutches of the Zionists, the neo-conservative 
	  extremists and the Christian-Zionist nut cases beating the drums of 
	  Armageddon.     The West in general faces a mounting debt 
	  crisis; this hampers the ability to wage expensive wars in distant lands. 
	  The disproportionate response to Al-Qaeda has back-fired to some extent it 
	  seems; apart from the cost of invasion and occupation, using expensive 
	  military hardware against primitive devices has an obvious financial toll. 
	  Naturally, the US is withdrawing its troops to cut back on ‘defence’ 
	  (another euphemistic term for war) spending and has taken a back seat over 
	  Libya and Syria. After all, Usamah Bin Laden has been killed with many 
	  other major players of Al-Qaeda, the rest of Al-Qaeda and Taliban 
	  activists are on the run, and their infrastructure is severely damaged, so 
	  the political justification for retreating is there.     After 
	  crying wolf about Muslim terrorists for decades, and the media portrayal 
	  of terrorism as exclusively a Muslim problem, the West has had a rude 
	  awakening to the real perpetrators of terrorism at home. The mass killing 
	  in Norway by a far right extremist, the riots in the UK where the Muslims 
	  were the victims and helped to curtail the riots and the usual acts of 
	  terrorism in the US under reported as acts of delinquent individuals have 
	  finally hit home. According to The Sunday Times, last year out of the 249 
	  terrorist attacks in the EU only three were carried out by Muslim groups.
	 
	In the Islamic world, after a decade it seems clear that the Al-Qaeda 
	strategy has failed; the majority of the masses sympathised with the reason 
	given by these types of groups, but far less concurred with their 
	methodology of attacking civilians regardless of the justification. Some 
	argued that the Al-Qaeda approach was incorrect for legal reasons, forbidden 
	under Islamic law; others pointed out that the West should not be confronted 
	militarily, as it’s futile and counter productive. As they say, don’t fight 
	the crocodile in the water.    On the political front, the masses did 
	not respond to the Caliphate like system where Sharia Laws are applied, 
	primarily because the attitude and the examples set by the radical 
	Jihadi-Salafee groups have not gone down well. They are seen as harsh and 
	intolerant to everyone else. The rush to apply the penal codes to 
	demonstrate the Islamic nature of the state is short-sighted and contrary to 
	the example set by Prophet Mohammed (saw), who showed through numerous 
	examples, that penal codes should be applied as a last resort; the victims 
	are encouraged to exhaust the alternative course of actions first.    
	More pertinently, the pre-requisites should be in place before applying the 
	codes.  Everyone knows the example of the second Caliph of Islam (Umar 
	Al-Khattab) suspending the penal codes of theft during famine, similarly, 
	after centuries of living under non-Islamic systems, there should be extreme 
	caution in applying the Islamic penal codes. It would make sense to suspend 
	the penal codes until the society is given a chance to catch up and the 
	conditions are firmly in place first. Hence, the more substantive issues 
	should be tackled, like poverty, health and education.    The focus 
	should have been on building the institutions for a popular government that 
	can be held accountable, and demonstrate economic and political progress, 
	rather than to seek conflict. The only country that managed to show signs of 
	stability was Somalia under the Islamic Courts Union, but that was put to an 
	end by the US-backed Ethiopian invasion, because it was viewed as an 
	Al-Qaeda like government, and thus had to be fought as part of the policy of 
	the war on terror.    The Arab Spring confirmed the rejection of the 
	Caliphate system as portrayed by the Islamists and Jihadists. The Arab 
	masses waved their national flags, called for freedom and democracy, with 
	even the bearded and the veiled ones chanting Allah Akbar and joining en 
	masse. The system they are calling for is elected constitutional government, 
	where the rule of law should prevail, devoid of corruption and nepotism 
	which runs deep in most of the Muslim nations.    As each dictator is 
	unseated, the rebels discover the level of public wealth accumulated and 
	squandered over the decades, along with the true extent of torture dispensed 
	to many of the opponents of the former regime. But note, the Arab Spring is 
	still in its infancy; maybe at some point the Arab Spring will turn to an 
	Islamic Winter. The devout ones will tell you, one step at a time. Once the 
	basic infrastructure is in place we can make gradual progress towards the 
	introduction of Islamic laws. Following the example of Turkey, the more 
	moderate Islamic parties may well take leadership in the long run; the 
	Caliphate in some form may well be on the horizon again, Insha’Allah (If 
	Allah wills).     With the rising economic powers of China, 
	Brazil and India coupled with the declining power of the US, there might be 
	a return to a multi-polar world; it is difficult to predict if war or peace 
	will dominate but for sure the appetite for further conflict has diminished 
	as each side is busy fixing their internal problems.        
	Yamin Zakaria  London, UK   
	http://yaminzakaria.blogspot.com 
       
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