President Obama isn’t alone in grappling with how best to
counter ISIS and its brand of Islamic extremism—and convening summits for just
that purpose. Earlier this week, the Muslim World League, a Saudi-backed
alliance of Islamic NGOs, wrapped up a little-noticed three-day conference in Mecca
on “Islam and Counterterrorism.” With the patronage of Saudi Arabia’s newly
minted King Salman bin Abdulaziz and a keynote address by Sheikh Ahmed
al-Tayeb, the grand imam of Sunni Islam’s most prestigious university, al-Azhar
in Egypt, the program sought to address the nature of terrorism, its
relationship to Islam, and what the Muslim community can do to prevent its
members from becoming radicalized. The proceedings offered a counterpoint to
the U.S. government’s narrative about the nature of the Islamic State and how
to confront the group.
Obama has been criticized recently for attempting to delink
ISIS (or ISIL, as he would put it) and other terrorist groups from Islam. The
president has been sounding this note since the fall, when he insisted, “ISIL
is not Islamic.” And there’s reason behind his rhetoric. Obama is seeking to
combat rising Islamophobia in many parts of the world, assure Muslims that the
United States is not at war with Islam, and fight a war against a barbarous
terrorist organization that seeks its legitimacy through Islamic theology.
Earlier this month, the White House and State Department hosted a Summit on
Countering Violent Extremism (CVE), during which the president once again
insisted, “We are at war with people who have perverted Islam,” and “No
religion is responsible for terrorism. People are responsible for violence and
terrorism.” The president hasn’t gone so far as to deny any connection between
terrorism and Islam, but he tends to acknowledge the link by noting how ISIS and
similar groups exploit Islam to justify violence while their true motivations
are wholly distinct from their faith.
At the conference in Mecca, by contrast, speakers seem to
have been less certain that Islamist terror can be divorced from Islam. Some
statements did echo those made by the White House. According to a translation
by the Muslim World League, al-Tayeb argued, “The violence and terrorism … of
these groups are strange to Islam. They have nothing to do with our creed,
Sharia, ethic, history, and civilization.” And much as Obama sought to expand
the discussion of violent extremism to include examples like the Oklahoma City
bombing and the attack against a Sikh temple in Wisconsin, participants at the
Mecca conference similarly argued that terrorism is associated with no one
religion, remarking that “if a Muslim … commits an act of terror, it is linked
to Islam. But if the same terror act is committed by a Christian, Jew, Hindu,
or Buddhist, it is seldom linked to the perpetrator’s religion,” according to a
report by the Saudi Gazette.
At other times, though, speakers asserted that ISIS could
not be disassociated from Islam. After discounting poverty, social
marginalization, and incarceration as the primary causes of radicalization,
al-Tayeb said that in his opinion, “the most prominent” source of
radicalization among Muslims is the “historical accumulations of extremism and
militancy in our heritage.” Abdullah bin Abdelmohsin al-Turki,
secretary-general of the Muslim World League, was even blunter: “The terrorism
that we face within the Muslim Ummah and our own homelands today … is
religiously motivated. It has been founded on extremism, and the misconception
of some distorted Sharia concept.” King Salman’s speech referred to the
phenomenon of “Islamized terrorism,” and the program for the conference
explicitly stated that “our own children” are responsible for extremist
violence.
According to Will McCants, director of the Project on U.S.
Relations with the Islamic World at the Brookings Institution, there’s a logic
behind the divergence in messaging from Washington and Mecca. “This
conversation can’t really happen in the U.S., or in the West, because the
[Obama] administration is determined not to frame this [conflict] or have it be
interpreted as a religious war,” he told me. “It wants to take that talking
point away from its enemies.” McCants added that Muslim leaders may also feel
more comfortable speaking openly about an issue that is afflicting their own
community. When the U.S. tries to adjudicate theological issues, he said, “it can
discredit the people who reach the same conclusions we do. If Muslims and the
U.S. government say these guys don’t represent Islam, it makes the Muslims look
like pawns of the United States.”
The priorities of the CVE and Muslim World League summits
were also distinct. The impetus for the conference in Mecca appears to have
been the Saudi government’s belief that Islamist terrorism represents not only
a threat to the security of the region, but also an existential threat to Islam
itself. It would therefore have been impossible for the speakers to ignore
ISIS’s Islamic roots. The conference’s organizers cast their mission as
developing a coordinated campaign to promote a moderate, peaceful vision of
Islam that disavows the violence and apostasy that ISIS thrives on. The
program, above all, emphasized that this is a specifically Muslim issue, and
placed the onus on the Muslim community to craft a narrative that overpowers
the Islamic State’s.
In comparison, the CVE summit was more concerned with
addressing radicalization in all its forms, and emphasized the economic and
social conditions in which people tend to become radicalized. The agenda also
had a largely domestic focus despite the United States being low on the list of
countries contributing foreign fighters to jihadist groups in Syria and Iraq.
But whether ISIS’s deeds are labeled “violent extremism” or
“Islamized terrorism,” the conversations in Washington and Mecca had at least
one thing in common: They deepened the debate over whether ISIS and its fellow
travelers are “Islamic,” and whether the answer matters in the first place.
That debate is not just academic. It has real consequences for how the Islamic
State’s opponents mount their counteroffensive.
Credit to EDWARD DELMAN
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