The Barbarism of Modern Islamist Terrorism. By Brendan O’Neill.
I’m sorry, but we have to talk about the barbarism of modern Islamist terrorism. By Brendan O’Neill. The Telegraph, September 28, 2013.
The Unbelievable Savagery of the Kenya Mall Terrorists. By Alec Torres. National Review Online, September 27, 2013.
O’Neill:
In
Western news-making and opinion-forming circles, there’s a palpable reluctance
to talk about the most noteworthy thing about modern Islamist violence: its
barbarism, its graphic lack of moral restraint. This goes beyond the BBC's
yellow reluctance to deploy the T-word – terrorism – in relation to the bloody
assault on the Westgate shopping mall in Kenya at the weekend. Across the
commentating board, people are sheepish about pointing out the historically
unique lunacy of Islamist violence and its utter detachment from any
recognisable moral universe or human values. We have to talk about this
barbarism; we have to appreciate how new and unusual it is, how different it is
even from the terrorism of the 1970s or of the early twentieth century. We owe
it to the victims of these assaults, and to the principle of honest and frank
political debate, to face up to the unhinged, morally unanchored nature of
Islamist violence in the 21st century.
Maybe
it’s because we have become so inured to Islamist terrorism in the 12 years
since 9/11 that even something like the blowing-up of 85 Christians outside a church in Pakistan no longer shocks us or even makes it on to many newspaper
front pages. But consider what happened: two men strapped with explosives
walked into a group of men, women and children who were queuing for food and
blew up themselves and the innocents gathered around them. Who does that? How
far must a person have drifted from any basic system of moral values to behave
in such an unrestrained and wicked fashion? Yet the Guardian tells us it is
“moral masturbation” to express outrage over this attack, and it would be
better to give into a “sober recognition that there are many bad things we
can’t as a matter of fact do much about”. This is a demand that we further
acclimatise to the peculiar and perverse bloody Islamist attacks around the
world, shrug our shoulders, put away our moral compasses, and say: “Ah well,
this kind of thing happens.”
Or
consider the attack on Westgate in Kenya, where both the old and the young,
black and white, male and female were targeted. With no clear stated aims from
the people who carried the attack out, and no logic to their strange and brutal
behaviour, Westgate had more in common with those mass mall and school
shootings that are occasionally carried out by disturbed people in the West
than it did with the political violence of yesteryear. And yet still observers
avoid using the T-word or the M-word (murder) to describe what happened there,
and instead attach all sorts of made-up, see-through political theories to this
rampage, giving what was effectively a terror tantrum executed by morally
unrestrained Islamists the respectability of being a political protest of some
breed.
Time
and again, one reads about Islamist attacks that seem to defy not only the most
basic of humanity’s moral strictures but also political and even guerrilla
logic. Consider the hundreds of suicide attacks that have taken place in Iraq
in recent years, a great number of them against ordinary Iraqis, often
children. Western apologists for this wave of weird violence, which they call
“resistance”, claim it is about fighting against the Western forces which were
occupying Iraq in the wake of the 2003 invasion. If so, it’s the first
“resistance” in history whose prime targets have been civilians rather than
security forces, and which has failed to put forward any kind of political
programme that its violence is allegedly designed to achieve. Even experts in
counterinsurgency have found themselves perplexed by the numerous nameless
suicide assaults on massive numbers of civilians in post-war Iraq, and the fact
that these violent actors, unlike the vast majority of violent political actors
in history, have “developed no alternative government or political wing and displayed no intention of amassing territory to govern”. One Iraqi attack has
stuck in my mind for seven years. In 2006 a female suicide bomber blew herself
up among families – including many mothers and their offspring – who were
queuing up for kerosene. Can you imagine what happened? A terrible glimpse was
offered by this line in a Washington Post report on 24 September 2006: “Twopre-teen girls embraced each other as they burned to death.”
What
motivates this perversity? What are its origins? Unwilling, or perhaps unable,
to face up to the newness of this unrestrained, aim-free, civilian-targeting
violence, Western observers do all sorts of moral contortions in an effort to
present such violence as run-of-the-mill or even possibly a justifiable
response to Western militarism. Some say, “Well, America kills women and
children too, in its drone attacks”, wilfully overlooking the fact such people
are not the targets of America’s military interventions – and I say that as
someone who has opposed every American venture overseas of the past 20 years.
If you cannot see the difference between a drone strike that goes wrong and
kills an entire family and a man who crashes his car into the middle of a group of children accepting sweets from a US soldier and them blows himself and them up – as happened in Iraq in 2005 – then there is something wrong with you.
Other observers say that Islamists, particularly in Iraq and Afghanistan, but
also the individuals who attacked London and New York, are fighting against
Western imperialism in Muslim lands. But that doesn’t add up. How does blowing
up Iraqi children represent a strike against American militarism? How is
detonating a bomb on the London Underground a stab at the Foreign Office? It is
ridiculous, and more than a little immoral, to try to dress up nihilistic
assaults designed merely to kill as many ordinary people as possible as some
kind of principled political violence.
We have
a tendency to overlook the newness of modern Islamic terrorism, how recent is
this emergence of a totally suicidal violence that revels in causing as many
causalities as possible. Yes, terrorism has existed throughout the modern era,
but not like this. Consider the newness of suicide attacks, of terrorists who
destroy themselves as well as their surroundings and fellow citizens. In the
1980s and 1990s, there were an average of one or two suicide attacks a year.
Across the whole world. Since the early and mid-2000s there have been around 300 or 400 suicide attacks a year. In 2006 there were more suicide attacks around the world than had taken place in the entire 20 years previous.
Terrorists’ focus on killing civilians – the more the better – is also new. If
you look at the 20 bloodiest terrorist attacks in human history, measured by
the number of causalities they caused, you’ll see something remarkable: 14 of
them – 14 – took place in the 1990s and 2000s. So in terms of mass death and
injury, those terrorist eras of the 1970s and 80s, and also earlier outbursts
of anarchist terrorism, pale into insignificance when compared with the new,
Islamist-leaning terrorism that has emerged in recent years.
What we
have today, uniquely in human history, is a terrorism that seems myopically
focused on killing as many people as possible and which has no clear political
goals and no stated territorial aims. The question is, why? It is not moral
masturbation to ask this question or to point out the peculiarity and
perversity of modern Islamist violence. My penny’s worth is that this terrorism
speaks to a profound crisis of politics and of morality. Where earlier
terrorist groups were restrained both by their desire to appear as rational
political actors with a clear goal in mind and by basic moral rules of human
behaviour – meaning their violence was often bloody, yes, but rarely focused
narrowly on committing mass murder – today’s Islamist terrorists appear to
float free of normal political rules and moral compunctions. This is what is so
infuriating about the BBC’s refusal to call these groups terrorists – because
if anything, and historically speaking, even the term terrorist might be too
good for them.