By Walid Phares
In an address to the Asian Security Conference 2010 under the theme “Asian Strategic Futures 2030: Trends, Scenarios and Alternatives.” I made a presentation under the title: “The Future of Terrorism: Jihadi threat in the Indian Subcontinent.” The Conference, organized by the Institute for Defense Studies and Analyses, was addressed by India's Prime Minister, Defense Minister and officials as well as international experts live and via satellite. In this adapted piece I argue that the fight against the Jihadists must become internationalized.
Text of the Remarks:
Future Terrorism is expected to witness the expansion of various types of terror networks and forces existing today, including the social class warfare (Marxist) such as Maoism in Asia or neo Trotskyism in Latin America on the one hand.
On the other hand the many separatist terror networks such the PKK in Turkey, Chechen in Russia, southern Philippines, Xingian Ughiur or in Kashmir s in India are expected to continue with their attempts short of political solutions found to these issues.
But beyond these forms of terror, the widest network projected to expand and threaten most democracies around the world is undoubtedly the Jihadi Global web indoctrinated by the Salafi ideology. Other forms of Jihadi terror groups, some supported by the Khomeini ideology are also expected to expand in the Middle East and beyond, depending on the political future of the regimes that support them, mainly in Iran.
Hence what democracies in the West and Asia will continue to face off with, in the next two decades, are organisations and movements identifying themselves as Jihadist (al Jihadiyyun). Al Qaeda will continue to mutate and morph as well as the organisations that espouse the same ideology. We may even see new types of Jihadi groups emerging.
Based on a totalitarian ideology and a universal agenda, the global Jihadist threat targets democracies throughout the international community in an effort to establish what they coin as “Emirates”, from the kind we witnessed under the Taliban before 2001 and the attempts we see in Iraq’s Sunni triangle, Somalia and in Waziristan. These pockets are building blocks for the sought Caliphate, the ultimate goal of all Jihadi movements and organizations since the 1920s.The Jihadist movements have been diverse and have adopted different international strategies as I have explained in my book Future Jihad: Terrorist strategies against the West.
Internationalisation of the Jihadists
One major feature of the Jihadist Salafi movements is that they draw their principles from one universal ideology. Hence they are able to assist each other against dispersed and often divided foes. The Jihadi terror forces were able to single out the United States, European democracies, Russia, India, Black Africa, China and many moderate Muslim countries.
It is clear that the Jihadists are coordinating worldwide and their targets are not. Worse, the Jihadist propaganda often hijacked separatist causes and transformed them into a Jihadi battlefield making it difficult on the rest of the world to identify them as terrorists, but as resistance movement. These are the cases in Chechniya, Cashmir, Southern Philippines, Gaza and Lebanon. The propaganda network of all Jihadi forces combined would isolate the United States and fight it on particular issues, then isolate an Arab or Muslim government on another issue, as in Pakistan, Nigeria or Egypt. Then the Jihadi machine would demonize India on the Kashmir issue and try to isolate New Delhi on the matter.
Internationalisation of the confrontation against the Jihadi terror
Today’s central question is about the internationalisation of the confrontation with the Jihadi forces operating in many countries. Salafists and their radicalisation network worldwide aim at confronting their own foes, mostly democracies, one at a time and with various strategies.
In our assessment we are proposing a global response integrating the resources of all targeted countries by al Qaeda. Hence future strategies must be based on the following principles:
a. That targeted democracies around the world, including India and Russia, would develop a joint platform on all levels to counter that ideology and isolate the threat instead of being isolated by it as I argued in my book The Confrontation: Winning the War against Future Jihad
b. That regional coordination must also develop such as in Africa, in the Muslim world and in Latin America, to coordinate efforts based on the particularity of each region.
c. That the sum of all these platforms comes under an international platform of confrontation with the Jihadist forces.
Professor Walid Phares is the Director of the Future Terrorism Project at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. He is the author of the Confrontation: Winning the War against Future Jihad.
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