Find This Book
"An al-Qaida watcher lends some farsighted insight into the group's
motivation and direction. Editor-in-chief of the London newspaper
Al-Quds al-Arabi, Atwan (A Country of Words: A Palestinian Journey from
the Refugee Camp to the Front Page, 2009, etc.) has evidently been
studying the terrorist organization for decades (he interviewed Osama
bin Laden twice). Here, he presents a wealth of strategic information
and cleareyed assessment that casts American efforts in a fairly naive
light. There are some essential givens about the group that need to be
grasped before an effective approach can be tendered: that the
organization has only grown horizontally since the killing of bin Laden,
so much so that the elimination of one leader only leads to martyrdom
and replacement by others; the group is inextricably linked to the
Taliban and will probably be present as the Taliban moves back into
Afghanistan with the vacuum of American withdrawal; and the group has
anticipated the fall of the Arab dictators and the re-establishment of
an Islamic Caliphate across the Arab world, which looks something like
the Arab Spring. Indeed, senior leaders such as Ayman Al-Zawahiri have
been preaching this philosophy for some time. Atwan offers a chilling
narrative that covers the group's activity in Yemen and the Arabian
Peninsula, where it hopes for its strongest toehold; Iraq and
Afghanistan, as the U.S. departs; the Maghreb, Africa, Indonesia, China
and even ex-Soviet Muslim states; and an increase in "lone wolf"
jihadist attacks in the West. Moreover, the group has cunningly adapted
the Internet for its ideological spread. A sobering, intensive report." (Kirkus Reviews)
Current Affairs
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment