.
U.S. Misreading of Bin Laden Tape May Win Iraqi War
For Al Qaeda
Commentary,
William
O. Beeman,
Pacific News Service, Feb 14, 2003
The new tape believed to be Osama bin Laden's contains
important information missed by the Bush administration.
The Bush administration's assessment of al Qaeda's relationship with the
government of Saddam Hussein remains seriously flawed. If it is not
rethought, America may win the war in Iraq -- for Osama bin Laden.
The Bush administration has pursued a dangerously inaccurate
"fungal" theory of world terrorism. It assumes that, like a
giant mycelium, all terrorist organizations are part of the same organism.
They have a single purpose and are linked. Individual groups pop up here
and there like fungi, in cells to attack the United States. In this
neo-Cold War theory, Iraq constitutes one cell, and al Qaeda, another.
Eliminating the Iraqi regime, it is thought, will damage terrorism
everywhere.
This theory is wrong. Saddam and al Qaeda are competing for the same
political and cultural ecosystem. They are not only opposed to each other,
they have utterly different philosophical views on how the Middle East
should be governed.
The latest manifestation of this flawed American theory occurred on Feb.
11, with the revelation of a new tape from Osama bin Laden, or someone
masquerading as him. Whether it is actually bin Laden or not, the remarks
are consistent with his previous rhetoric. It is the U.S. reading of the
tape that is off base.
In the words of Colin Powell's spokesman, Richard A. Boucher, the tape
purportedly proves "that bin Laden and Saddam Hussein seem to find
common ground." But the full tape, when properly read, shows that al
Qaeda is opposed to Iraq, and that Washington's pursuit of war serves al
Qaeda's interests more than those of Americans.
First, the tape shows that bin Laden, far from supporting Saddam Hussein,
is directly opposed to him. Saddam is ruthlessly secular. His Ba'ath party
and his government is socialist in its origins and its practice. Bin Laden
asserts that "socialists and communists are unbelievers,"
thereby labeling Saddam an apostate of Islam, an infidel.
Second, bin Laden opposes all secular leaders in the Arab world. His
opposition to the government of Saudi Arabia is well known, and his desire
for the overthrow of the Iraqi regime is equally well established. To make
the matter perfectly clear, the tape also called for the overthrow of a
range of governments: "Among regions ready for liberation are Jordan,
Morocco, Nigeria, the country of the two shrines (Saudi Arabia), Yemen and
Pakistan."
Bin Laden's eventual ends are also made clear in the tape. He admonishes
his followers, "You know that such a crusade war concerns the Muslim
nation mainly, regardless of whether the socialist party and Saddam remain
or go. So Muslims in general and Iraq in particular must pull up your pant
legs for jihad against this unjust campaign."
It is this last aim that should give the Bush administration serious
pause. In eliminating Saddam, the United States is in effect fulfilling
bin Laden's agenda. Saddam is not a partner for al Qaeda -- he is
irrelevant. Far from opposing the war, bin Laden welcomes it as a chance
to humiliate the United States on the battlefield, and as an opportunity
to pave the way toward an Islamic regime in previously secular Iraq.
The tape suggests that if the United States tries to eliminate Saddam, the
process will not be quick and painless as administration officials have
claimed. Killing the Iraqi regime will not deal a deathblow to a
mushroom-like "terrorist organism." Bin Laden advises his Iraqi
followers: "go and dig many trenches as it was mentioned before in
the holy book, 'Take the earth as your shelter.' Such a way will deplete
all your enemy's reserves in a few months."
Now we know how the war may really proceed. A quick blow in Baghdad would
not instantly liberate the Iraqi people and usher in democratic rule. In
the hills and caves of the Zagros mountains on Iraq's eastern borders, al
Qaeda guerilla forces will be waiting for Saddam's secular army to be
eliminated by General Tommy Franks and his U.S. Central Command. Then they
will descend to strike in the name of revolutionary Islam.
PNS contributor William O. Beeman (William_beeman@brown.edu) is an
anthropologist and director of Middle East Studies at Brown University. He
has lived and conducted research in the Middle East for more than 30
years.
Copyright
© Pacific News Service


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