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The roots of Mideast terror
National Post ^ | December 18 2004 | Paul Berman

Posted on 12/18/2004 5:37:10 PM PST by knighthawk

Totalitarian movements have always featured the same myth: There is a people of God, and they have been afflicted by pollutants from within their society as well as cosmic forces from abroad. Then good people rise up in an act of rebellion and wipe out the evil influences. Essentially, it is the story of the apocalypse from the Book of Revelation.

The pattern played out with Lenin and Stalin in Soviet Russia, with Mussolini in Italy, Franco in Spain and Hitler in Germany. The people of God were called the proletariat if you were a Bolshevik or a Stalinist. Or they were called the Sons of the Roman Wolf if you were an Italian fascist. Or they were warriors of Christ the King for Franco, or they were the Aryan race for Hitler. As for the polluting forces, they were the bourgeoisie, kulaks, masons, Jews or so-called "inferior" races, depending on the movement.

After the apocalyptic war to purge these elements, a perfect society was predicted, be it a proletarian utopia, or a new Roman Empire, or a Reich to last a thousand years.

In each case, it was going to be a leap into the future that was also a leap into a romanticized past. Soviet communists, for instance, idealized the virtues of the ancient Russian folk who were going to be resurrected as futuristic, perfect communists.

A key feature of each of these totalitarian movements was a cult of death -- epitomized by the Spanish fascist slogan viva la muerte. This legitimized the horrors of the Holocaust and Stalin's great purges. These movements were based on the impossible goal of creating a perfect society. The communist vision of a world purged of all capitalist elements was not achievable. But it was possible to kill a lot of Ukrainian farmers. Hitler's vision of a heroic and pure Aryan race was also impossible. But he was able to murder millions of people who interfered with his hateful vision.

In the liberal conception, people who have human rights, who are free to think for themselves, will make rational decisions about the kind of society they want. But the whole spirit of the totalitarian movements goes against this. It stands against the liberal ideal of tolerance and rationality, and instead promotes a mythology devoted to death. This aspect of facist and communist movements was typically ignored until it was too late. Indeed, the history of totalitarianism's growth in the 20th century largely depended on the fact that Western thinkers had difficulty comprehending the anti-liberal nature of these movements and the threat they posed.

The major totalitarian movements, communism and fascism, arose in Europe during a very short period of time between 1917 and the late 1930s. Both quickly spread throughout the world, including the Middle East.

We hear so much these days about how the Arab and Muslim worlds are alien to the West. But in regard to the spread of communism, the pattern was one we would recognize. In Iraq in the 1950s, the single largest political party, the party with the largest ability to bring people into the streets, was the communist party. The communists enjoyed similar popularity in a variety of other Muslim nations.

The spread of fascism was harder to discern. Whereas communists all over the world prided themselves on how one communist party was exactly like all other communist parties, spouting the same rhetoric from Marx and Lenin, each fascist movement claimed to be strictly a product of local roots.

Yet it is possible to see the connections. In 1922, Mussolini came to power seeking to refound the Roman Empire. He organized his followers into Roman legions. In 1928, a few hundred miles away in Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood was formed and called itself a fundamentalist Islamic organization. But it was a political organization as well. It organized itself into phalanges. Its goal was not the idea of refounding the Roman Empire. But it had an analogous project: refounding the great Muslim empire created by the Prophet Mohammed in the 7th century.

One of the branches that emerged from the Muslim brotherhood came to power in Iran in 1979. Another branch came out of the Syrian youths who returned from their studies in Paris to found the Nazi-inspired Baath party in 1943. While Islamists sought to establish what they pictured as a theocracy, which is to say a dictatorship of the mullahs or imams, Baathists primarily sought to recreate Mohammed's empire as an imperial expression of the Arab people. Despite this difference, both movements shared with European totalitarianism one overarching theme: the cult of death.

Under the Ayatollah Khomeini, the drive toward martyrdom became a kind of mass mania, epitomized in the human-wave attacks of the Iran-Iraq war, in which young boys were sent across Saddam's mine fields. The entire wave would typically be killed. Mothers all over Iran were hoping, praying, that their sons would be blown up in this kind of attack. Saddam encouraged his own death cult through his use of poison gas. And, of course, both of these movements developed the notion of the human bomb.

The idea of suicide terrorism began to spread in the 1980s, especially in Lebanon, where Syrian Baathists were working with the Islamist Hezbollah. It became more popular in the course of the intifada of the last few years, which was subsidized on a grand scale by Iraq and carried out by Palestinian Islamist groups. By 2002, Saddam's military parades featured units of suicide warriors, putting the death cult in full view.

For many years, this phenomenon was largely ignored in the West. It somehow escaped notice that we lived in an age of genocide. Under Saddam Hussein, some 300,000 Iraqi Shiites were killed. 180,000 Kurds were killed or went missing. The insane war that Saddam and Khomeini conducted during the 1980s took hundreds of thousands of lives. The Islamist movement in Algeria has produced some 100,000 deaths. Add to that tens of thousands of deaths in Syria. In Sudan, a civil war waged by Islamists is thought to have killed up to two-million people. The scale of these killings is simply staggering.

But it's also staggering to realize how little any of this registered in the West. As in the past, the success of totalitarian movements rested on the blindness of liberal-minded people. We found reasons not to see these things. We told ourselves that in the Arab and Muslims worlds, that is simply the way people are -- even though much of history suggests otherwise.

The United States has taken every possible position in regard to these movements. During the Reagan years, the United States supported Afghanistan's Islamist insurgents, as well as Saddam's regime in Iraq. After 9/11, George W. Bush attacked both nations. But in his explanation for going to war, he failed to articulate an appreciation of how bloody and deeply rooted the underlying movements truly were, or a comprehensive strategy for destroying them.

Instead, he came up with a variety of rationales. In Afghanistan, it was to capture a single man. In Iraq, it was to prevent Saddam from attaining weapons of mass destruction. These were defensible goals. But Bush wasn't able to situate them in the larger narrative of fanatical movements devoted to totalitarian ideals, a narrative that should have been recognizable from the history of the previous century.

Bush's lack of historical appreciation helps explain why the United States was not properly prepared for the aftermath of Saddam's fall. Like those around him, the President hadn't come to grips with the fact that millions of Iraqis were fanatical adherents of a mass totalitarian movement, and were willing to die for it. In the war of ideas unfolding in the region, the West is hobbled by the same sort of naivete that compromised the battle against totalitarianism in the 20th century.

But this blindness was by no means confined to the United States. Bush at least sought to overthrow Saddam and the Taliban. But a large part of the world persuaded itself that overthrowing Saddam's dictatorship was a moral wrong. This followed in the tradition of the French socialists of the 1930s who failed to see the true nature of Hitler, or of Western intellectuals who praised Stalin's Soviet Union in the 1950s.

And so a remarkable spectacle took place on streets all over the world in February, 2003. The world witnessed the largest mass demonstration for peace in the history of mankind. Its purpose? To prevent the overthrow of one of the worst tyrants in modern history.

We must be clear about what the ongoing conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan are about. The enemy stands for the principles of Baathism and Islamism, and expresses these principles in the form of human bombs. These are totalitarian movements stemming from the worst European tradition. And yet it has been difficult to rally the world to its side. Most nations seem eager to wash their hands of the whole situation.

The United States and its allies are facing the confusion that, history shows, has traditionally plagued liberal-minded people in the face of totalitarian movements. As much as terrorism itself, this confusion remains one of the great problems of our time. And dispelling it remains one of our great challenges.

Paul Berman's most recent book is Terror and Liberalism. This essay is adapted from a lecture delivered recently at Toronto's Holy Blossom Temple as part of the Gerald Schwartz/ Heather Reisman Fall 2004 Lecture Series, "Terror and the Defence of the West."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: islam; islamofascism; islamonazi; koran; mideast; mohammed; nationalpost; origins; terror; terrorism; terrorist
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1 posted on 12/18/2004 5:37:10 PM PST by knighthawk
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To: MizSterious; rebdov; Nix 2; green lantern; BeOSUser; Brad's Gramma; dreadme; Turk2; keri; ...

Ping


2 posted on 12/18/2004 5:37:35 PM PST by knighthawk (We will always remember We will always be proud We will always be prepared so we may always be free)
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To: knighthawk
Mohammed.
3 posted on 12/18/2004 5:38:32 PM PST by Fatalis
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To: knighthawk
Interesting article...but I kept nodding off due to length...If someone could just summarize.

I think this is important, but I can't make it to the end.

4 posted on 12/18/2004 5:44:15 PM PST by weenie (Islam is as "dangerous in a man as hydrophobia in a dog." -- Churchill)
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To: knighthawk

The roots of Mideast terror: Koran


5 posted on 12/18/2004 5:44:41 PM PST by Proud Infidel (There is no such thing as a moderate Huitzilopochtlist.)
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To: knighthawk; Last Dakotan

Absolutely the best historical treatment of Islamo-fascism I've read to date.


6 posted on 12/18/2004 5:46:13 PM PST by HolgerDansk ("Oh Bother", said Pooh, as he chambered another round.)
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To: knighthawk

Life is cheap among Muslims.

..."... thousands of deaths in Syria. In Sudan, a civil war waged by Islamists is thought to have killed up to two-million people."...

Watch reports from Iraq. There is almost always a bunch of young and middle aged adults just "hanging around" doing nothing. Are they disposable? Maybe not--if they are being paid to do nothing. Only if they join the government will they get killed? Maybe yes.


7 posted on 12/18/2004 5:59:43 PM PST by jolie560
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To: knighthawk

Huge oversimplifications. This is really a dumbed-down analysis.


8 posted on 12/18/2004 6:15:34 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: knighthawk

bump


9 posted on 12/18/2004 6:52:55 PM PST by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: Cicero
Huge oversimplifications.

I don't think of Iraq as solely a "culture of death". Lots of Iraqis seek to fight another day

10 posted on 12/18/2004 7:08:09 PM PST by secretagent
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To: knighthawk

bump


11 posted on 12/18/2004 7:10:17 PM PST by nkycincinnatikid
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To: knighthawk

I laughed at this guys disdain for " Bush's lack of historical appreciation". Fortunately for the world some leaders lead nations. Eventually "historians" will try to come to grips with what happens.


12 posted on 12/18/2004 7:57:02 PM PST by nkycincinnatikid
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To: knighthawk

Thanks for the ping.


13 posted on 12/18/2004 9:10:49 PM PST by GOPJ (M.Dowd...hits..like a bucket of vomit with Body Shop potpourri sprinked across the surface--Goldberg)
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Comment #14 Removed by Moderator

To: knighthawk; All
Islam, The Alleged Religion of Peace® ( TARP™ )? Click this picture:


That said, Merry Christmas to you & yours, knighthawk... did I ever mention to you that I am about one-third Dutch? I come from a long line of seafarers who made their home there for a while, long ago.

15 posted on 12/18/2004 11:57:09 PM PST by backhoe (-30-)
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To: tsteven
Israel aggresstion and its affects on the Middle Eastern political front

Really?

-Answers for Anti-Israeli, anti-Jewish Propaganda --

Oh, BTW?


16 posted on 12/18/2004 11:59:33 PM PST by backhoe (-30-)
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To: tsteven

TROLL go back to DU or your MOSLEM cult.


17 posted on 12/19/2004 12:03:48 AM PST by HuntsvilleTxVeteran (A little knowledge is dangerous.-- I live dangerously.)
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To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
TROLL go back to DU or your MOSLEM cult.

The Mods are slow tonight-- I dropped the hammer on this little jihadist a while ago...

18 posted on 12/19/2004 12:06:38 AM PST by backhoe (-30-)
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To: backhoe

I also hit abuse on this troll.


19 posted on 12/19/2004 12:14:03 AM PST by HuntsvilleTxVeteran (A little knowledge is dangerous.-- I live dangerously.)
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To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
I also hit abuse on this troll.

Thank you. We see enough of that nonsense elsewhere without entertaining it here.

20 posted on 12/19/2004 12:18:45 AM PST by backhoe (-30-)
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