Original Article at
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_mohamed__060911_al_qaeda_2c_muslims_
ar.htm
  _____  


September 11, 2006
Al-Qaeda, Muslims are Infidels of Bush's "Freedom Agenda"
By Mohamed Al-Azaki
Sana'a, Yemen -- The al-Qaeda threats have actually bedeviled president Bush
for the five years since the September 11 attacks. President George W. Bush
now has no opportunity to bring it to an end. 


This is not in the interests of Americans, Europeans, and the US closet
allies of Arab regimes in the Middle East that prefer peace to war. From the
perspective of the United States, this global war has become a strategic
imperative.


A new counterterrorism strategy released eight days ago by the White House
believed in President Bush's "freedom agenda" of promoting democracy as the
leading long-term weapon against the evolving nature of the terrorist
threats. 


While the fact on the ground is that many Arabs and Muslims are now infidels
of Bush's "freedom agenda" that are currently applying in Iraq, they do no
longer believe in the US-style democratic project in the Middle East; I'm
not talking about dictatorial Arab regimes, but major hungry people in the
Arab and Muslim world. 


Many Arabs know the fact that the United States support of its Arab
'friendly' regimes prevented spreading real democracy to the Islamic world.


The National Strategy for Combating Terrorism in its new counterterrorism
strategy described al-Qaeda as a significantly degraded organization, but
outlines potent threats from smaller networks and individuals motivated by
al-Qaeda ideology. "Oh great!" 


It's maybe true that al-Qaeda and jihadist movements have lost secure
shelters and the open battle fronts. This situation, according to
Arabic-language al-Qaeda's strategy released through jihadist web sites, led
al-Qaeda to build self-controlled small cells - in nearly most countries,
including the United States and Britain � deeply believing in al-Qaeda
idea of the holy war against the political, economic and military power of
America and its Western and Arab allies. 


The counterterrorism strategy came from the fact that Bush administration
believes in a global vital organization of al-Qaeda that its organizations
rang from a fully functioning state such as Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Iraq and
Jordan to small groups of individuals in British and American cities. 


In addition, the US administration in its new strategy admitted the bitter
fact that al-Qaeda was no longer a smaller group fighting a losing battle
with that US-led coalition on Pakistani-Afghanistan borders; it's widely
dispersed Islamic youths who are often isolated and linked by little more
than the Internet from Afghan capital Kabul into Washington, New York and
London. 


The al-Qaeda tendency to be formed as smaller networks and individuals has
made it a striking force in all over the world; the White House recognized
this fact probably due to all terrorist attacks have been carried out by
smaller networks whether in the September 11 attacks or London bombings. 


After September 11, the Arab public became sympathizers to those
al-Qaeda-related terrorists, describing them as an opposition group against
Israel and the presence of US military bases in the Middle East. 


The US strategy failed to find out the next step for al-Qaeda attacks that
will be in Israel and Israeli interests within its friendly countries.
According to al-Qaeda's strategy, its attacks will be different than
assaults of Palestinian jihadist movements and Hamas... it will be an anther
September 11, 2001. 


Absolutely, the five years since September 11 attacks on American soil have
proven the previous counterterrorism strategies wrong. Only the coming days
will also prove this new counterterrorism strategy as additional Bush's
grave blunder. 


The bad managing of the US war on terrorism succeeded not only in inflaming
anti-U.S. opinion throughout the Islamic world, including, significantly,
the US allies in Europe, according to most regional experts in Washington,
but also in weakening the pro-Western Islamist-dominated governments �
notably Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Egypt and Jordan � that, as before 9/11,
remain Washington's only allies in the region. 


Many Muslims are now laughing at Bush's "freedom agenda" of promoting
Palestinian democracy that led Hamas government under the siege! Here is
al-Qaeda has won in its propaganda against the unfair democracy and freedom
in the Arab public that led them not to believe any future US project for
the region. 


I think it's easy for everyone loves peace to conclude that if the United
States really wants to improve its image in the Middle East, it must find a
solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as a first step, and to
stabilize Iraq after the war. 


These are a critical component for Bush administration to winning the war of
ideas in Muslim world and defeating the recruiting processes of Arab youths
by al-Qaeda that exploits the American occupation on Iraq and
Israeli-Palestinian conflict in its propagandas.


Instead, the U.S administration concentrated from time to time on releasing
new strategies that only mean an admission that previous policies have
failed. (END). 
-------------------------------



Authors Bio: Mohamed Al-Azaki, a Yemeni journalist and researcher on Islamic
militants at the Saba Center for Political and Strategic Studies in Sana'a,
Yemen. 
 


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