Pretending that the danger comes only from the devout could cost lives.
Can you guess which books the wannabe jihadists
Yusuf Sarwar and Mohammed Ahmed ordered online from
Amazon before they set out from Birmingham to fight
in Syria last May? A copy ofMilestonesby
the Egyptian Islamist Sayyid Qutb? No. How aboutMessages
to the World: the Statements of Osama Bin Laden?
Guess again. Wait,The Anarchist
Cookbook, right? Wrong. Sarwar and Ahmed, both
of whom pleaded guilty to terrorism offences last
month, purchasedIslam
for DummiesandThe
Koran for Dummies. You could not ask for better
evidence to bolster the argument that
the 1,400-year-old Islamic faith has little to do
with the modern jihadist movement. The swivel-eyed
young men who take sadistic pleasure in bombings and
beheadings may try to justify their violence with
recourse to religious rhetoric – think the killers
of Lee Rigby screaming “Allahu Akbar” at their
trial; think of Islamic State beheading the
photojournalist James Foley as part of its “holy
war” – but religious fervour isn’t what motivates
most of them.
In 2008, a classified briefing note on
radicalization, prepared by MI5’s behavioral science
unit, was leaked to theGuardian.
It revealed that, “far from being religious zealots,
a large number of those involved in terrorism do not
practice their faith regularly. Many lack religious
literacy and could . . . be regarded as religious
novices.” The analysts concluded that “a
well-established religious identity actually
protects against violent radicalization”, the
newspaper said.
For more evidence, read the books of the forensic
psychiatrist and former CIA officer Marc Sageman;
the political scientist Robert Pape; the
international relations scholar Rik Coolsaet; the
Islamism expert Olivier Roy; the anthropologist
Scott Atran. They have all studied the lives and
backgrounds of hundreds of gun-toting, bomb-throwing
jihadists and they all agree that Islam isn’t to
blame for the behaviour of such men (and, yes, they
usually are men).
Instead they point to other drivers of
radicalization: moral outrage, disaffection, peer
pressure, the search for a new identity, for a sense
of belonging and purpose. As Atran pointed out in
testimony to the US Senate in March 2010: “. . .
what inspires the most lethal terrorists in the
world today is not so much the Quran or religious
teachings as a thrilling cause and call to action
that promises glory and esteem in the eyes of
friends, and through friends, eternal respect and
remembrance in the wider world”. He described
wannabe jihadists as “bored, underemployed,
overqualified and underwhelmed” young men for whom
“jihad is an egalitarian, equal-opportunity employer
. . . thrilling, glorious and cool”.
Or, as Chris Morris, the writer and director of the
2010 black comedyFour
Lions – which satirized the ignorance,
incompetence and sheer banality of British Muslim
jihadists – once put it: “Terrorism is about
ideology, but it’s also about berks.”
Berks, not martyrs. “Pathetic figures”, to quote the
former MI6 chief Richard Dearlove, not holy
warriors. If we want to tackle jihadism, we need to
stop exaggerating the threat these young men pose
and giving them the oxygen of publicity they crave,
and start highlighting how so many of them lead
decidedly un-Islamic lives.
When he lived in the Philippines in the 1990s,
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, described as “the principal
architect” of the 11 September attacks by the 9/11
Commission, once flew a helicopter past a
girlfriend’s office building with a banner saying “I
love you”. His nephew Ramzi Yousef, sentenced to
life in prison for his role in the 1993 World Trade
Center bombing, also had a girlfriend and, like his
uncle, was often spotted in Manila’s red-light
district. The FBI agent who hunted Yousef said that
he “hid behind a cloak of Islam”. Eyewitness
accounts suggest the 9/11 hijackers were visiting
bars and strip clubs in Florida and Las Vegas in the
run-up to the attacks. The Spanish neighbours of
Hamid Ahmidan, convicted for his role in the Madrid
train bombings of 2004, remember him “zooming by on
a motorcycle with his long-haired girlfriend, a
Spanish woman with a taste for revealing outfits”,
according to press reports.
Religion does, of course, play a role: in
particular, a perverted and politicized form of
Islam acts as an “emotional vehicle” (to quote Atran),
as a means of articulating anger and mobilizing
masses in the Muslim-majority world. But to pretend
that the danger comes only from the devout could
cost lives. Whatever theDaily
Mailor
Michael Gove might have you believe, long beards and
flowing robes aren’t indicators of radicalization;
ultra-conservative or reactionary views don’t
automatically lead to violent acts. Muslims aren’t
all Islamists, Islamists aren’t all jihadists and
jihadists aren’t all devout. To claim otherwise
isn’t only factually inaccurate; it could be fatal.
ConsiderFour
Lions. Omar is the nice, clean-shaven,
thoroughly modern ringleader of a gang of wannabe
suicide bombers; he reads Disney stories to his son,
sings Toploader’s “Dancing in the Moonlight” with
his mates and is pretty uninterested in Muslim
beliefs or practices. Meanwhile, his brother Ahmed
is a religious fundamentalist, a big-bearded
Salafist who can’t bear to make eye contact with
women and thinks laughter is un-Islamic but who,
crucially, has no time for violence or jihad. The
police raid the home of peaceful Ahmed, rather than
Omar, allowing Omar to escape and launch an attack
on . . . a branch of Boots.
Back in the real world, as would-be jihadists buy
books such asIslam
for Dummies, ministers and security chiefs
should venture online and order DVDs ofFour
Lions. They might learn a thing or two.
Mehdi Hasan is an NS contributing writer, and works
for al-Jazeera English and the Huffington Post UK, where
this column is cross-posted.