Sep 20, 2014 08:00 AM EST
This is how ISIS wins: Repeating the
Bush/Cheney/Rove approach just won’t work
The way to battle ISIS long-term is to
understand its appeal and retain our humanity. Take Sun Tzu's word for
it!
Topics:
isis,
ISIL,
Karl Rove,
Dick Cjeney,
Barack Obama,
Editor's Picks,
Sun Tzu,
The Art of War,
Rachel Maddow,
evildoers, Politics News
isis,
ISIL,
Karl Rove,
Dick Cjeney,
Barack Obama,
Editor's Picks,
Sun Tzu,
The Art of War,
Rachel Maddow,
evildoers, Politics News
For all his vaunted love of nuance, President Obama’s recent speech
announcing our new war against ISIS (or ISIL, to the White House)
denounced them in terms strikingly similar to George W. Bush’s language
waging war on “evil doers,” and that’s a development that should trouble
us all. Yes, Obama avoided the word ‘war,’ but the rest of his team soon embraced it, and the logic of his address made that move virtually inevitable, whatever he may personally and privately have wished.
“We
can’t erase every trace of evil from the world, and small groups of
killers have the capacity to do great harm,” Obama said — a typical, and
laudable, example of his nuance and restraint. But unfortunately, its
main purpose was anything but nuanced: to firmly establish the
black-and-white evil enemy frame: “ISIL is a terrorist organization,
pure and simple,” Obama continued. “And it has no vision other than the
slaughter of all who stand in its way.”
No one can doubt that ISIS
is murderous — just like Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, last year’s
No. 1 candidate for America’s wrath. But it’s simply untrue that ISIS
has “no other vision” than slaughter. Their vision of an Islamic state —
a new Caliphate — may be many things: delusional, presumptuous,
contrary to true Islamic values and obviously cruel. But it certainly is a vision of sorts, and it has some appeal, if only to a tiny, disaffected fragment of the world’s Islamic community.
If
we don’t understand that vision — and what people find attractive in it
— then we really have very little chance of effectively fighting
against it, even though ISIS now commands only a few thousand fighters.
We may win lots of battles, but not the war. Even if we defeat ISIS
itself, but don’t understand its appeal, it will only a reappear in
another, potentially even more deadly form, just as ISIS now appears
more malignant than al-Qaida. This is particularly true if we ignore
the multilayered network of historical grievances which ISIS seeks to
exploit.
On the other hand — and this is crucial — if we
do take the time to try to understand “pure evil,” we will inevitably
discover things about it, which can ultimately help us defeat it.
announcing our new war against ISIS (or ISIL, to the White House)
denounced them in terms strikingly similar to George W. Bush’s language
waging war on “evil doers,” and that’s a development that should trouble
us all. Yes, Obama avoided the word ‘war,’ but the rest of his team soon embraced it, and the logic of his address made that move virtually inevitable, whatever he may personally and privately have wished.
“We
can’t erase every trace of evil from the world, and small groups of
killers have the capacity to do great harm,” Obama said — a typical, and
laudable, example of his nuance and restraint. But unfortunately, its
main purpose was anything but nuanced: to firmly establish the
black-and-white evil enemy frame: “ISIL is a terrorist organization,
pure and simple,” Obama continued. “And it has no vision other than the
slaughter of all who stand in its way.”
No one can doubt that ISIS
is murderous — just like Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, last year’s
No. 1 candidate for America’s wrath. But it’s simply untrue that ISIS
has “no other vision” than slaughter. Their vision of an Islamic state —
a new Caliphate — may be many things: delusional, presumptuous,
contrary to true Islamic values and obviously cruel. But it certainly is a vision of sorts, and it has some appeal, if only to a tiny, disaffected fragment of the world’s Islamic community.
If
we don’t understand that vision — and what people find attractive in it
— then we really have very little chance of effectively fighting
against it, even though ISIS now commands only a few thousand fighters.
We may win lots of battles, but not the war. Even if we defeat ISIS
itself, but don’t understand its appeal, it will only a reappear in
another, potentially even more deadly form, just as ISIS now appears
more malignant than al-Qaida. This is particularly true if we ignore
the multilayered network of historical grievances which ISIS seeks to
exploit.
On the other hand — and this is crucial — if we
do take the time to try to understand “pure evil,” we will inevitably
discover things about it, which can ultimately help us defeat it.
Paul Rosenberg is a California-based writer/activist,
senior editor for Random Lengths News, and a columnist for Al Jazeera
English. Follow him on Twitter at @PaulHRosenberg.
More Paul Rosenberg.
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