Daniel Greenfield's article: We Didn't Beat ISIS,
It's Here
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Posted: 31 Oct 2017 10:33 PM PDT
ISIS has been beaten. It's been forced out of city after city.
Its fighters are dying or have run away. Its resources are exhausted.
It's over.
And yet once again, there's blood on the pavement and screams
filling the air of a Western city. And the note in the bloodied truck links
the attack to ISIS.
We didn't beat ISIS because it's not just an army or an
alliance. It's an idea. The idea is Islam.
By declaring a Caliphate, ISIS made its existence
interchangeable with Islam and its manifest destiny. Losing so many battles
has weakened that identification, but there are still plenty of Muslims
willing to kill for it. And it isn't because ISIS has radicalized them with
some brilliant internet memes, but because it promised to fulfill the ideas
and beliefs of their religion.
ISIS is popular because it appeared to have come closest to
doing what no other Islamic group had been able to do in a century, resurrect
the Caliphate. ISIS was popular because it was Islamic.
It was popular to the degree that it was Islamic. It was popular
because it brought back Islamic institutions from slavery to mutilating
thieves without any apologies or concessions.
That is the simple truth that our leaders refuse to deal with.
What causes an Uzbek immigrant, along with Pakistanis, Syrians,
Iraqis, Afghans, Tunisians and American converts to Islam, to be willing to
kill and die? They aren't killing and dying for ISIS. But the Ummah, the
global Islamic tribe that embodies their honor, for the virgins of paradise,
and for the cry that accompanied their atrocities. The cry of, "Allahu
Akbar."
And until we understand that, we won't beat ISIS. Because ISIS
is Islam.
We beat ISIS twice before. Once in its previous incarnation as
Al Qaeda in Iraq and in its even earlier incarnation as Saddam Hussein’s
regime whose Sunni Baathists went on to play a crucial role in ISIS.
Each time it was reborn as another murderous monstrosity.
We beat Saddam, Al Qaeda in Iraq and the Islamic State. But it
keeps coming back because we don’t understand what it is. And we don’t get it
because we don’t understand what Islamic terrorism is.
Critics who accuse the US of creating ISIS by bombing Iraq miss
the point. ISIS is the latest embodiment of Sunni supremacism and historical
nostalgia for the Abbasid Caliphate. Both Saddam and the Caliph of ISIS
capitalized on that nostalgia the way that Hitler did on Charlemagne.
We’re not just fighting a bunch of ragged terrorists. We’re
fighting against the sense of manifest destiny of a large Muslim population,
not just in Iraq and Syria, but in London, Paris and every state in America.
The Islamic terrorist groups of the Middle East are especially
dangerous because, as ISIS did with its Caliphate, they can closely link
themselves to crucial epochs in Islam. Al Qaeda leveraged its Saudi face to
form a visceral connection with Muslims worldwide. ISIS repeated the same
trick with its Iraqi link. And large numbers of non-Arabs and converts to
Islam rallied from around the world to the Jihad.
ISIS is now the new Al Qaeda. It may not be able to hold on to
its Iraqi or Syrian conquests, but it has become an international terrorist
organization that is even more dangerous than Al Qaeda. And that may be what
it wanted.
Why settle for some dirty and dusty kilometers in Syria or Iraq,
when you can have the world?
Like the Palestinian Authority, Hamas and other Islamic
terrorist groups, the Islamic State was never very good at running things.
The PA won’t make peace with Israel for the same reason that Hamas won’t make
peace with the PA: statehood is a compelling imperative, but requires hard
work in reality. It’s much easier to send off a few useful idiots to blow
themselves up and then collect the Qatari checks.
Civilizations manage societies. Barbarians have more fun
destroying things than taking out the garbage or cleaning the streets.
The original Islamic conquests wrecked the societies and
cultures they overran the way that barbarians always do. They wouldn’t have
succeeded if civilization had not been in a state of collapse. Today’s
Islamic conquests are a similar reaction to our civilizational decline.
ISIS claimed that it could win a military showdown: it was
wrong. The Muslim Brotherhood’s strategy of political and demographic
invasion, sneered at by ISIS, may be less glamorous, but the demographic
conquest is going very well. Just ask the frightened natives of Paris and
London.
The challenge for Islamic terrorists is turning that demographic
growth into military strength. ISIS emerged as the Uber of Islamic terrorism
by unlocking the key to turning Muslims anywhere into terrorists with no
training or recruitment. While Al Qaeda had pioneered the strategy, ISIS made
it work.
Dismissing the terrorists who have been killing for ISIS in the
West as “lone wolves” misses the point.
The Islamic terrorist who goes on a stabbing spree in London or
a shooting spree in Orlando is no more a “lone wolf” than an Uber driver who
picks up a passenger is just some random eccentric. They’re parts of a
distributed network that is deliberately decentralized to better fulfill its
central purpose.
CVE and other efforts to tackle “online extremism” fight
messaging wars that ignore the demographics. But our targeted strikes on ISIS
ignore demographics in the same way. We keep looking at the trees while
missing the forest. But the forest is where the trees come from. Muslim
terrorists emerge from an Islamic population. They aren’t aberrations.
Instead they represent its religious and historic aspirations.
ISIS and Islamic terrorists aren’t going anywhere. Defeating
them through patronizing lectures about the peacefulness of Islam, as Obama’s
CVE policy proposed to do, was a futile farce. Bombing them temporarily
suppresses them as an organized military force, but not their religious and
cultural origins.
As long as we go on seeing Islamic terrorism as an aberration
that has no connection to the history and religion of Islam, our efforts to
defeat it will be pinpricks that treat the symptoms, but not the problem.
Only when we recognize that Islamic terrorism is Islam, that the
crimes of ISIS and countless others dating back to Mohammed were committed to
achieve the goals of the Islamic population, will we be ready to face the war
that we’re in and to defend ourselves against what is to come not just in
Iraq or Afghanistan, but in America, Australia, Canada, Europe, India, Israel
and everywhere else.
We are not fighting a handful of Islamic terrorists. We are
standing in the path of the manifest destiny of Islam. Either that manifest
destiny will break against us, as it did at the Gates of Vienna, or it will
break us. The attacks were once yearly. Now they are monthly. Soon they will become
daily.
Every attack is a pebble in an avalanche. A pebble falls in
Brussels, in Fresno, in Dusseldorf, in New York, in Munich, in London, in
Garland, in Paris, in Jerusalem, in Mumbai, in Boston and in more places than
anyone can count. We are too close to the bloodshed to see the big picture.
We only see the smoke and hear the screams. We see the boats bringing armies
into Europe. We see refugees fill our airports.
Those are the trees, not the forest: the pebbles, not the
avalanche. Those are the battles, not the war.
The Islamic State is not going anywhere. It’s not a name. It’s
an Islamic imperative. And it’s here.
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