Blindspot!
Terrorism
Nothing excuses the killing
of innocent people. The devastation and anguish that such violence
causes is often beyond description. Ask the families who lost loved
ones in 9/11 or 7/7 or the terrorist attacks in Madrid and Boston.
Their agony is mirrored a world away by families who have seen
relatives torn apart by air strikes in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria, and
Gaza or by suicide attacks in Iraq and Indonesia. The cultures and
languages may be different but the emotional and psychological impact
is very similar. Islam condemns the killing of all innocent people no
matter if the killings were committed by an individual or a group or
by a state. All of these crimes must be condemned.
To end any cycle of violence
its root causes must be properly examined. Although Muslims die in
greater numbers from terrorist acts than any other group, it is often
their religion that is held up as the cause. But according to the
University of Chicago’s Dr. Robert Pape, the world’s foremost expert
on suicide terrorism, “The root cause of suicide terrorism is foreign
occupation” and “over 95% of all suicide attacks are in response to
foreign occupation.”
What is the way forward? Are
we locked in a permanent cycle of war, terrorism and death? Is the
suicide rate of 6500 American soldiers a year an inevitable by-product
in this global blood feud? Fortunately, public opinion in the U.S.
seems to be slowly changing. A Zogby poll in 2010 “found that 27% of
Americans now believe that the `most important factor’ motivating
terrorists to attack the United States is that they `resent Western
power and influence,’” while 33% still believe the terrorists want
Islam to dominate the world. For the 33% it may be helpful to note
that, according to CPOST, groups like Al-Qaeda, Hamas and Hezbollah
are not working and conspiring with one another like a fascist
monolith – “what stands out is that each is driven by essentially
nationalist goals to compel target democracies to withdraw military
forces from their particular homeland.”
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