AL SHABAB STRIKES
Last night, terrorists from al-Shabab
attacked the Medina Hotel in the port city of Kismayo, Somalia. In a
fourteen-hour assault, they murdered 26 people and wounded 56. Two of those
killed were Americans.
Assailants from the
al-Shabab terror group detonated a car bomb at the entrance gate to the hotel
and followed with an assault by gunmen who stormed the building.
The incident lasted
more than 14 hours before armed troops shot dead all attackers inside the hotel
compound, Col. Abdiqadir Nur, a local police officer, said. Somalia’s Islamic
extremist rebels, al-Shabab, claimed responsibility for the attack.
This is neither the
first nor the worst such atrocity perpetrated by al-Shabab. But it occurs to me
that the pace of Islamic terror attacks seems to have slowed. I haven’t tried
to research the numbers, but impressionistically, it doesn’t seem that
terrorist attacks are as frequent as they once were.
To be sure, we still
see horrific crimes perpetrated by Muslim activists, like the beheading of two
Scandinavian hikers by Moroccans loyal to ISIS. But even these horrors seem to
have become less frequent.
For a time, beginning
in the 1990s with a series of successful terror attacks and continuing into the
early years of this century, jihadists and their sympathizers were triumphant.
They believed that the West was pathetically weak and that history (along with
Allah, of course) was on their side. But since then, they have suffered a lot
of reversals: among others, the restoration of a reasonable level of peace and
progress in Iraq, the killing of Osama bin Laden (by the way, whatever happened
to Zawahiri?), the exposure and foiling of numerous plots here in the U.S. as
well as in Western Europe, and the destruction of ISIS by the Trump
administration. It is a success, not a failure, that draws adherents to a movement,
and the jihadists haven’t had many successes lately.
No doubt, the fact
that Western intelligence agencies have penetrated jihadist organizations with
sophisticated surveillance, as well as human informants, has been a major factor.
But I suspect that broader forces are at work, too. For one, the universal
revulsion of normal people against Jihadi doctrine and actions. Joining a
movement that pretty much everyone hates is not appealing to most people.
Another optimistic
possibility is that normal, moderate Muslims have quietly moved to quell the
radicals in their midst. This kind of thing happens mostly out of sight of
outsiders. But if Islamic terrorism really is dying down–again, I haven’t tried
to do a numerical analysis, but that is my sense–the most important reason
could be that jihadism has been repudiated by most Muslims and their leaders.
Here in Minnesota,
where I live, a considerable number of young Somalis have run off to join
al-Shabab, enticed by the prospect of jihad which, at one time, was arguably
ascendant. Some of them died. But that doesn’t seem to have happened recently.
At least, it hasn’t been reported in the news. Here, too, maybe the worldwide
failure of the jihadist movement and the sobering reality of what happened to
those who joined al-Shabab have combined to dim the glamour of that terrorist
group.
.
In the long run, the
main factor that will determine the future of jihadism is the response of
normal, moderate Muslims. If jihadism is emphatically rejected and scorned by
the vast majority of the world’s Muslims–something that certainly was not the
case 15 years ago–it will die.
Is that happening?
Call me an inveterate optimist, but I think it might be.
Source: Power Line- 13 July 2019
By: John Hinderaker
https://bit.ly/2YNF16N
Comments
Post a Comment