How quickly we forget. Just a year
ago, 132 children in Pakistan were killed in an attack by jihadi gunmen on a school in Peshawar. We recoiled in horror -- and
then we moved on.
Just as we did after the Charlie
Hebdo and kosher supermarket attacks in Paris last January when 17 people were
killed. And the attack in Kenya in April when 148 students were killed. And the
one in June in Tunisia when 38 people, most of them British tourists, were
killed. And the one in October in Ankara when 102 people were killed. And the
one three weeks later on the Russian passenger jet in Egypt when 224 people
were killed.
(We haven't forgotten, because we
never even noticed, that in March, more than 140 people were killed in suicide
bomb attacks on two mosques in the Yemeni capital, Sana'a.)
All that before the attacks in
Paris a month ago, in which 137 people were killed. According to a list in
Wikipedia of Islamist terrorist attacks during the course of 2015 -- a list
that must inevitably be incomplete and can be only a very rough tally (it
excludes, for example, any attacks in Syria) -- there have been 105 attacks
this year, with a total death toll of around 2,800.
2015: the year of terror. An
all-out assault on Western civilisation and our way of life.
Wrong.
Because the country that has
suffered the highest number of attacks this year is Nigeria, thanks to the
murderous activities of the jihadi
group calling itself Boko Haram. Next comes Iraq, followed by Afghanistan.
These are not countries that are 'Western' in the generally accepted sense of
the word, yet they have been targets far more frequently than Europe or the US.
Which means, of course, that the jihadis have
killed far more Muslims than non-Muslims.
It is also worth noting that the
deadly attacks by jihadis long
pre-date the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. Who now remembers the attacks in
Paris in 1995 by the Armed Islamic Group of Algeria that killed eight people?
Or the attack in 1997 in Luxor, Egypt, that killed 62 tourists? Or the one in
1998 when 200 people were killed in attacks on US embassies in Kenya and
Tanzania?
How quickly we forget. And, more
to the point, how quickly our political leaders forget. Which helps to explain
why their responses to the threat posed by jihadis
tend to be so piecemeal and ineffective. Perhaps they have never heard of
the American philosopher George Santayana, who wrote: 'Those who cannot
remember the past are condemned to repeat it.'
Bombing Islamic State targets in
Syria may, possibly, help to reduce the threat of further IS advances in Syria
and Iraq and may, again possibly, help to reduce the threat of further attacks
in Europe. What it will not do is 'defeat' the ideology that underpins its
appeal to those who flock to join its ranks.
I'm not at all sure, in fact, that
an ideology can be defeated. What we can do is propose an alternative ideology
that offers a better future than a suicide vest and death. In other words, an
ideology that offers young men in places like Tunisia, Egypt, Chechnya, Iraq
and Syria, a future which offers more than a life of oppression and
unemployment.
The same applies to young Muslims
in Belgium, France and the UK, because those who join IS do so in the full
knowledge that they are almost certainly going to their deaths. What a
calamitous failure of Western policy-making it is that the message of jihadi zealots, whether online, in
mosques or in jail, can be more attractive than the alternatives that should be
on offer.
So the task for 2016 is to craft
a far more sophisticated response. It needs to be a response that reaches young
potential jihadis before they turn in
desperation to an apocalyptic vision of a global caliphate. A response that
encourages them to feel an integral part of the society in which they are
growing up, rather than part of a suspect minority in which everyone is
regarded as a potential terrorist.
In places like Nigeria and
Chechnya, it means putting in place a governing structure that does not depend
on cronyism and corruption. In Europe it means rethinking how political leaders
refer to Muslim minorities. It means being prepared for the long haul and not
falling into the trap of thinking that the only response to a terrorist attack
is to introduce ever more oppressive 'anti-terrorist' measures.
The key is good governance. In a
country where all citizens feel they have an equal chance of making something
of their lives, where they don't come to believe that the odds will always be
stacked against them because of their faith or ethnic origin, there will be far
fewer tempted to end their lives by blowing themselves up in crowded places. It
is a difficult message for politicians to sell -- I don't see Donald Trump or
Ted Cruz being much persuaded by it, for example -- but it's a message that we
need to hear.
And here's another message for
American voters as they prepare to elect a new president in 2016. Remember
those 2,800 deaths from Islamist terrorism worldwide this year? Each one of
them a life cut short unnecessarily, leaving behind grieving families and
friends in more than 25 countries across the globe.
So what about the 12,700 people
who have been shot dead in the US since the beginning of this year? That's more
than four times as many killed by guns in one country alone than by jihadi terrorism in the whole of the
rest of the world.
I just thought it was worth
mentioning.
2 comments:
I agree that giving hope to muslims for a full life in western society and bringing better governance to places like Nigeria are prerequisite. However, I have no hope that any western leader has the clout or vision to realize that. And maybe the western world's role is simply played out in that respect. And there's no one to step into the vacuum. That's where the problem lies...
As so often, Robin, you've hit the nail on the head. Well said.
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