By Lawrence Wright, The New Yorker
Dated:
June 2, 2008
Dr. Fadl had laid the intellectual
foundation for Al Qaeda‟s murderous acts. His defection posed a terrible
threat.Last May, a fax arrived at the London office of the Arabic newspaper Asharq
Al Awsat from a shadowy figure in the radical Islamist movement who went by
many names. Born Sayyid Imam al-Sharif, he was the former leader of the
Egyptian terrorist group Al Jihad, and known to those in the underground mainly
as Dr. Fadl. Members of Al Jihad became part of the original core of Al Qaeda;
among them was Ayman al-Zawahiri, Osama bin Laden‟s chief lieutenant. Fadl was
one of the first members of Al Qaeda‟s top council. Twenty years ago, he wrote
two of the most important books in modern Islamist discourse; Al Qaeda used
them to indoctrinate recruits and justify killing. Now Fadl was announcing a
new book, rejecting Al Qaeda‟s violence. “We are prohibited from committing aggression,
even if the enemies of Islam do that,” Fadl wrote in his fax, which was sent
from Tora Prison, in Egypt. Fadl‟s fax confirmed rumors that imprisoned leaders
of Al Jihad were part of a trend in which former terrorists renounced violence.
His defection posed a terrible threat to the radical Islamists, because he
directly challenged their authority. “There is a form of obedience that is
greater than the obedience accorded to any leader, namely, obedience to God and
His Messenger,” Fadl wrote, claiming that hundreds of Egyptian jihadists from
various factions had endorsed his position.
Two months
after Fadl‟s fax appeared, Zawahiri issued a handsomely produced video on
behalf of Al Qaeda. “Do they now have fax machines in Egyptian jail cells?” he
asked. “I wonder if they‟re connected to the same line as the electric-shock
machines.” This sarcastic dismissal was perhaps intended to dampen anxiety
about Fadl‟s manifesto—which was to be published serially, in newspapers in
Egypt and Kuwait—among Al Qaeda insiders. Fadl‟s previous work, after all, had
laid the intellectual foundation for Al Qaeda‟s murderous acts. On a recent
trip to Cairo, I met with Gamal Sultan, an Islamist writer and a publisher
there. He said of Fadl, “Nobody can challenge the legitimacy of this person.
His writings could have far-reaching effects not only in Egypt but on leaders
outside it.” Usama Ayub, a former member of Egypt‟s Islamist community, who is
now the director of the Islamic Center in Münster, Germany, told me, “A lot of people
base their work on Fadl‟s writings, so he‟s very important. When Dr. Fadl
speaks, everyone should listen.” Although the debate between Fadl and Zawahiri
was esoteric and bitterly personal, its ramifications for the West were
potentially enormous. Other Islamist organizations had gone through violent
phases before deciding that such actions led to a dead end. Was this happening
to Al Jihad? Could it happen even to Al Qaeda?
A THEORIST OF JIHAD
The roots of this ideological war within
Al Qaeda go back forty years, to 1968, when two precocious teen-agers met at
Cairo University‟s medical school. Zawahiri, a student there, was then
seventeen, but he was already involved in clandestine Islamist activity.
Although he was not a natural leader, he had an eye for ambitious, frustrated
youths like him who believed that destiny was whispering in their ear. So it
was not surprising that he was drawn to a tall, solitary classmate named Sayyid
Imam al-Sharif. Admired for his brilliance and his tenacity, Imam was expected
to become either a great surgeon or a leading cleric. (The name “al-Sharif”
denotes the family‟s descent from the Prophet Muhammad.) His father, a
headmaster in Beni Suef, a town seventy-five miles south of Cairo, was
conservative, and his son followed suit. He fasted twice a week and, each
morning after dawn prayers, studied the Koran, which he had memorized by the
time he finished sixth grade. When he was fifteen, the Egyptian government
enrolled him in a boarding school for exceptional students, in Cairo. Three
years later, he entered medical school, and began preparing for a career as a
plastic surgeon, specializing in burn injuries.
Both
Zawahiri and Imam were pious and high-minded, prideful, and rigid in their
views. They tended to look at matters of the spirit in the same way they
regarded the laws of nature—as a series of immutable rules, handed down by God.
This mind-set was typical of the engineers and technocrats who
disproportionately made up the extremist branch of Salafism, a school of
thought intent on returning Islam to the idealized early days of the religion.
Imam learned that Zawahiri belonged to a subterranean world. “I knew from
another student that Ayman was part of an Islamic group,” he later told a
reporter for Al Hayat, a pan-Arabic newspaper. The group came to be
called Al Jihad. Its discussions centered on the idea that real Islam no longer
existed, because Egypt‟s rulers had turned away from Islamic law, or Sharia,
and were steering believers away from salvation and toward secular modernity.
The young members of Al Jihad decided that they had to act.
In doing so,
these men were placing their lives, and perhaps their families, in terrible
jeopardy. Egypt‟s military government, then led by Gamal Abdel Nasser, had a
vast network of informers and secret police. The prisons were brimming with
Islamist detainees, locked away in dungeons where torture was routine. Despite
this repressive atmosphere, an increasing number of Egyptians, disillusioned
with Nasser‟s socialist, secular government, were turning to the mosque for
political answers. In 1967, Nasser led Egypt and its Arab allies into a
disastrous confrontation with Israel, which crushed the Egyptian Air Force in
an afternoon. The Sinai Peninsula soon passed to Israeli control. The Arab
world was traumatized, and that deepened the appeal of radical Islamists, who
argued that Muslims had fallen out of God‟s favor, and that only by returning
to the religion as it was originally practiced could Islam regain its supremacy
in the world. In 1977, Zawahiri asked Imam to join his group, presenting
himself as a mere delegate of the organization. Imam told Al Hayat that
his agreement was conditional upon meeting the Islamic scholars who Zawahiri
insisted were in the group; clerical authority was essential to validate the
drastic deeds these men were contemplating. The meeting never happened. “Ayman
was a charlatan who used secrecy as a pretext,” Imam said. “I discovered that
Ayman himself was the emir of this group, and that it didn‟t have any sheikhs.”
In 1981,
soldiers affiliated with Al Jihad assassinated the President of Egypt, Anwar
Sadat—who had signed a peace treaty with Israel two years earlier—but the
militants failed to seize power. Sadat‟s successor, Hosni Mubarak, rounded up
thousands of Islamists, including Zawahiri, who was charged with smuggling
weapons. Before he was arrested, Zawahiri went to Imam‟s house and urged him to
flee, according to Zawahiri‟s uncle Mahfouz Azzam. Imam‟s son Ismail al-Sharif,
who now lives in Yemen, says that this never happened. In fact, he claims,
Zawahiri later put Imam in danger, by disclosing his name to interrogators.
During the
next three years, these two men, who had once been so profoundly alike, began
to diverge. Zawahiri, who had given up the names of other Al Jihad members as
well, was humiliated by this betrayal. Prison hardened him; torture sharpened
his appetite for revenge. He abandoned the ideological purity of his youth.
Imam, by contrast, had not been forced to face the limits of his belief. He had
slipped out of Egypt and made his way to Peshawar, Pakistan, where the Afghan
resistance against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan was based. Imam left
his real identity behind and became Dr. Fadl. It was common for those who joined
the jihad to take a nom de guerre. He adopted the persona of the revolutionary
intellectual, in the tradition of Leon Trotsky and Che Guevara. Instead of
engaging in combat, Fadl worked as a surgeon for the injured fighters and
became a spiritual guide to the jihad.
Zawahiri
finished serving his sentence in 1984, and also fled Egypt. He was soon
reunited in Peshawar with Fadl, who had become the director of a Red Crescent
hospital there. Their relationship had turned edgy and competitive, and,
besides, Fadl held a low opinion of Zawahiri‟s abilities as a surgeon. “He
asked me to stand with him and teach him how to perform operations,” Fadl told Al
Hayat. “I taught him until he could perform them on his own. Were it not
for that, he would have been exposed, as he had contracted for a job for which
he was unqualified.”
In the mid-eighties, Fadl became Al
Jihad‟s emir, or chief. (Fadl told Al Hayat that this was untrue, saying
that his role was merely one of offering “Sharia guidance.”) Zawahiri, whose
reputation had been stained by his prison confessions, was left to handle
tactical operations. He had to defer to Fadl‟s superior learning in Islamic
jurisprudence. The jihadis who came to Peshawar revered Fadl for his
encyclopedic knowledge of the Koran and the Hadith—the sayings of the Prophet.
Usama Ayub, who was in Peshawar at the time, remembered, “He would say, Get
this book, volume so-and-so, and he would quote it perfectly—without the book
in his hand!”
Kamal
Helbawy, a former spokesman for the Muslim Brotherhood, the Egyptian Islamist
group, was also in Peshawar, and remembers Fadl as a “haughty, dominating
presence,” who frequently lambasted Muslims who didn‟t believe in the same
doctrines. A former member of Al Qaeda says of Fadl, “He used to lecture for
four or five hours at a time. He would say that anything the government does
has to come from God, and if that‟s not the case then people should be allowed
to topple the ruler by any means necessary.” Fadl remained so much in the
background, however, that some newer members of Al Jihad thought that Zawahiri
was actually their emir. Fadl is “not a social man—he‟s very isolated,”
according to Hani al-Sibai, an Islamist attorney who knew both men. “Ayman was
the one in front, but the real leader was Dr. Fadl.” Fadl resented the
attention that Zawahiri received. (In the interview with Al Hayat, Fadl
said that Zawahiri was “enamored of the media and a showoff.”) And yet he let
Zawahiri take the public role and give voice to ideas and doctrines that came
from his own mind, not Zawahiri‟s. This dynamic eventually became the source of
an acrimonious dispute between the two men.
THE RIFT
In Peshawar, Fadl devoted himself to
formalizing the rules of holy war. The jihadis needed a text that would school
them in the proper way to fight battles whose real objective was not victory
over the Soviets but martyrdom and eternal salvation. “The Essential Guide for
Preparation” appeared in 1988, as the Afghan jihad was winding down. It quickly
became one of the most important texts in the jihadis‟ training. The “Guide”
begins with the premise that jihad is the natural state of Islam. Muslims must
always be in conflict with nonbelievers, Fadl asserts, resorting to peace only
in moments of abject weakness. Because jihad is, above all, a religious
exercise, there are divine rewards to be gained. He who gives money for jihad
will be compensated in Heaven, but not as much as the person who acts. The
greatest prize goes to the martyr. Every able-bodied believer is obligated to
engage in jihad, since most Muslim countries are ruled by infidels who must be
forcibly removed, in order to bring about an Islamic state. “The way to bring
an end to the rulers‟ unbelief is armed rebellion,” the “Guide” states. Some
Arab governments regarded the book as so dangerous that anyone caught with a
copy was subject to arrest.
On August
11, 1988, Dr. Fadl attended a meeting in Peshawar with several senior leaders
of Al Jihad, along with Abdullah Azzam, a Palestinian who oversaw the recruitment
of Arabs to the cause. They were joined by a protégé of Azzam‟s, a young Saudi
named Osama bin Laden. The Soviets had already announced their intention to
withdraw from Afghanistan, and the prospect of victory awakened many old dreams
among these men. They were not the same dreams, however. The leaders of Al
Jihad, especially Zawahiri, wanted to use their well-trained warriors to
overthrow the Egyptian government. Azzam longed to turn the attention of the
Arab mujahideen to Palestine. Neither had the money or the resources to pursue
such goals. Bin Laden, on the other hand, was rich, and he had his own vision:
to create an all-Arab foreign legion that would pursue the retreating Soviets
into Central Asia and also fight against the Marxist government that was then
in control of South Yemen. According to Montasser al-Zayyat, an Islamist lawyer
in Cairo who is Zawahiri‟s biographer, Fadl proposed supporting bin Laden with
members of Al Jihad. Combining the Saudi‟s money with the Egyptians‟ expertise,
the men who met that day formed a new group, called Al Qaeda. Fadl was part of
its inner circle. “For years after the launching of Al Qaeda, they would do
nothing without consulting me,” he boasted to Al Hayat.
After the
Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, in 1989, Zawahiri and most members of Al
Jihad relocated to Sudan, where bin Laden, who had fled Saudi Arabia after
falling out with the royal family, had set up operations. Zawahiri urged Fadl
and his family to join them there. Fadl, who was completing what he considered
his masterwork, “The Compendium of the Pursuit of Divine Knowledge,” agreed to
go. “Zawahiri picked us up from the Khartoum airport and took us to our flat,”
Fadl‟s son Ismail al-Sharif told me. “Zawahiri said, „You don‟t need to work, we
will pay your salary. We just want you to finish your book.‟ ” From Sudan,
members of Al Jihad watched enviously as a much larger organization, the
Islamic Group, waged open warfare on the Egyptian state. Both groups wished for
the overthrow of the secular government and the institution of a theocracy, but
they differed in their methods. Al Jihad was organized as a network of
clandestine cells, centered in Cairo; Zawahiri‟s plan was to take over the
country by means of a military coup. One of the founders of the Islamic Group
was Karam Zuhdy, a former student of agricultural management at Asyut
University. The group was a broad, above-ground movement that was determined to
launch a social revolution. Members undertook to enforce Islamic values by
“compelling good and driving out evil.” They ransacked video stores, music
recitals, cinemas, and liquor stores. They demanded that women dress in hijab,
and rampaged against Egypt‟s Coptic minority, bombing its churches. They
attacked a regional headquarters of the state security service, cutting off the
head of the commander and killing a large number of policemen. Blood on the
ground became the measure of the Islamic Group‟s success, and it was all the
more thrilling because the murder was done in the name of God.
In 1981,
Zuhdy was caught in the Egyptian government‟s roundup of Islamists after the
Sadat assassination, and for three years he lived in the same cellblock as
Zawahiri, in the enormous Tora Prison complex. They respected each other but
were not friends. “Dr. Ayman was polite and well-mannered,” Zuhdy recalls. “He
was not a military man—he was a doctor. You couldn‟t tell that he would be the
Ayman al-Zawahiri of today.” Zuhdy remained in prison for two decades after
Zawahiri finished serving his three-year sentence. In 1990, the spokesman for
the Islamic Group was shot dead in the street in Cairo. There was little doubt
that the government was behind the killing, and soon afterward the Islamic
Group announced its intention to respond with a terror campaign. Dozens of
police officers were murdered. Intellectuals were also on its hit list,
including Naguib Mahfouz, the Nobel Prize-winning novelist, who was stabbed in
the neck. (He survived.) Next, the Islamic Group targeted the tourist industry,
declaring that it corrupted Egyptian society by bringing “alien customs and
morals which offend Islam.” Members of the group attacked tourists with
homemade bombs on buses and trains, and fired on cruise ships that plied the
Nile. The economy swooned. During the nineties, more than twelve hundred people
were killed in terror attacks in Egypt.
The exiled
members of Al Jihad decided that they needed to enter the fray. Fadl disagreed;
despite his advocacy of endless warfare against unjust rulers, he contended
that the Egyptian government was too powerful and that the insurgency would
fail. He also complained that Al Jihad was undertaking operations only to
emulate the Islamic Group. “This is senseless activity that will bring no
benefit,” he warned. His point was quickly proved when the Egyptian security
services captured a computer containing the names of Zawahiri‟s followers,
nearly a thousand of whom were arrested. In retaliation, Zawahiri authorized a
suicide bombing that targeted Hasan al-Alfi, the Interior Minister, in August,
1993. Alfi survived the attack with a broken arm. Two months later, Al Jihad
attempted to kill Egypt‟s Prime Minister, Atef Sidqi, in a bombing. The Prime
Minister was not hurt, but the explosion killed a twelve-year-old schoolgirl.
Embarrassed by these failures, members
of Al Jihad demanded that their leader resign. Many were surprised to discover
that the emir was Fadl. He willingly gave up the post, and Zawahiri soon became
the leader of Al Jihad in name as well as in fact.
In 1994,
Fadl moved to Yemen, where he resumed his medical practice and tried to put the
work of jihad behind him. Before he left, however, he gave a copy of his
finished manuscript to Zawahiri, saying that it could be used to raise money.
Few books in recent history have done as much damage.Fadl wrote the book under
yet another pseudonym, Abdul Qader bin Abdul Aziz, in part because the name was
not Egyptian and would further mask his identity. But his continual use of
aliases also allowed him to adopt positions that were somewhat in conflict with
his stated personal views. Given Fadl‟s critique of Al Jihad‟s violent
operations as “senseless,” the intransigent and bloodthirsty document that Fadl
gave to Zawahiri must have come as a surprise.
“The
Compendium of the Pursuit of Divine Knowledge,” which is more than a thousand
pages long, starts with the assertion that salvation is available only to the
perfect Muslim. Even an exemplary believer can wander off the path to Paradise
with a single misstep. Fadl contends that the rulers of Egypt and other Arab
countries are apostates of Islam. “The infidel‟s rule, his prayers, and the
prayers of those who pray behind him are invalid,” Fadl decrees. “His blood is
legal.” He declares that Muslims have a duty to wage jihad against such
leaders; those who submit to an infidel ruler are themselves infidels, and
doomed to damnation. The same punishment awaits those who participate in
democratic elections. “I say to Muslims in all candor that secular, nationalist
democracy opposes your religion and your doctrine, and in submitting to it you
leave God‟s book behind,” he writes. Those who labor in government, the police,
and the courts are infidels, as is anyone who works for peaceful change;
religious war, not political reform, is the sole mandate. Even devout believers
walk a tightrope over the abyss. “A man may enter the faith in many ways, yet
be expelled from it by just one deed,” Fadl cautions. Anyone who believes
otherwise is a heretic and deserves to be slaughtered.
In writing
this book, Fadl also expands upon the heresy of takfir—the
excommunication of one Muslim by another. To deny the faith of a
believer—without persuasive evidence—is a grievous injustice. The Prophet Muhammad
is said to have remarked, “When a man calls his brother an infidel, we can be
sure that one of them is indeed an infidel.” Fadl defines Islam so
narrowly,however, that nearly everyone falls outside the sacred boundaries.
Muslims who follow his thinking believe that they have a divine right to kill
anyone who disagrees with their straitened view of what constitutes a Muslim.
The “Compendium” gave Al Qaeda and its allies a warrant to murder all who stood
in their way. Zawahiri was ecstatic. According to Fadl, Zawahiri told him,
“This book is a victory from Almighty God.” And yet, even for Zawahiri, the
book went too far.
When Fadl
moved to Yemen, he considered his work in revolutionary Islam to be complete.
His son Ismail al-Sharif told Al Jarida, a Kuwaiti newspaper, that Fadl
cut off all contact with bin Laden, complaining that “he doesn‟t listen to the
advice of others, he listens only to himself.” Fadl took his family to the
mountain town of Ibb. He had two wives, with four sons and two daughters
between them. He called himself Dr. Abdul Aziz al-Sharif. On holidays, the
family took walks around the town. Otherwise, he spent his spare time reading.
“He didn‟t care to watch television, except for the news,” Ismail al-Sharif
told me. “He didn‟t like to make friends, because he was a fugitive. He thinks
having too many relations is a waste of time.”
While awaiting a work permit from
Yemen‟s government, Fadl volunteered his services at a local hospital. His
skills quickly became evident. “People were coming from all over the country,”
his son told me. The fact that Fadl was working without pay in such a primitive
facility—rather than opening a practice in a gleaming modern clinic in Kuwait
or Europe—drew unwelcome attention. He had the profile of a man with something
to hide.
While in
Ibb, Fadl learned that his book had been bowdlerized. His original manuscript
contained a barbed critique of the jihadi movement, naming specific
organizations and individuals whose actions he disdained. He scolded the
Islamic Group in particular, at a time when Zawahiri was attempting to engineer
a merger with it. Those sections of the book had been removed. Other parts were
significantly altered. Even the title had been changed, to “Guide to the Path
of Righteousness for Jihad and Belief.” The thought that a less qualified
writer had taken liberties with his masterpiece sent him into a fury. He soon
discovered the perpetrator. A member of Al Jihad had come to Yemen for a job.
“He informed me that Zawahiri alone was the one who committed these
perversions,” Fadl said. In 1995, Zawahiri travelled to Yemen and appealed to
Fadl for forgiveness. By this time, Zawahiri had suspended his operations in
Egypt, and his organization was floundering. Now his former emir refused to see
him. “I do not know anyone in the history of Islam prior to Ayman al-Zawahiri
who engaged in such lying, cheating, forgery, and betrayal of trust by transgressing
against someone else‟s book,” the inflamed author told Al Hayat.
Zawahiri and Fadl have not spoken since, but their war of words was only
beginning.
THE GREAT PRISON
DEBATES
Meanwhile, a furtive conversation was
taking place among the imprisoned leaders of the Islamic Group. Karam Zuhdy
remained incarcerated, along with more than twenty thousand Islamists. “We
started growing older,” he says. “We started examining the evidence. We began
to read books and reconsider.” The prisoners came to feel that they had been
manipulated into pursuing a violent path. Just opening the subject for
discussion was extremely threatening, not only for members of the organization
but for groups that had an interest in prolonging the clash with Egypt‟s
government. Zuhdy points in particular to the Muslim Brotherhood. “These
people,when we launched an initiative against violence, accused us of being
weak,” he says. “Instead of supporting us, they wanted us to continue the
violence. We faced very strong opposition inside prison, outside prison, and
outside Egypt.”
In 1997,
rumors of a possible deal between the Islamic Group and the Egyptian government
reached Zawahiri, who was then hiding in an Al Qaeda safe house in Kandahar,
Afghanistan. Montasser al-Zayyat, the Islamist lawyer, was brokering talks
between the parties. Zayyat has often served as an emissary between the
Islamists and the security apparatus, a role that makes him both universally
distrusted and invaluable. In his biography of Zawahiri, “The Road to Al-Qaeda:
The Story of Bin Laden‟s Right-Hand Man,” Zayyat reports that Zawahiri called
him in March of that year, when Zayyat arrived in London on business. “Why are
you making the brothers angry?” Zawahiri asked him. Zayyat responded that jihad
did not have to be restricted to an armed approach. Zawahiri urged Zayyat to
change his mind, even promising that he could secure political asylum for him
in London. “I politely rejected his offer,” Zayyat writes.
The talks
between the Islamic Group and the government remained secret until July, when
one of the imprisoned leaders, who was on trial in a military court, stood up
and announced to stunned observers the organization‟s intention to cease all
violent activity. Incensed, Zawahiri wrote a letter addressed to the group‟s
imprisoned leaders. “God only knows the grief I felt when I heard about this
initiative and the negative impact it has caused,” he wrote. “If we are going
to stop now, why did we start in the first place?” In his opinion, the
initiative was a surrender, “a massive loss for the jihadist movement as a
whole.”
To
Zawahiri‟s annoyance, imprisoned members of Al Jihad also began to express an
interest in joining the nonviolence initiative. “The leadership started to
change its views,” said Abdel Moneim Moneeb, who, in 1993, was charged with
being a member of Al Jihad. Although Moneeb was never convicted, he spent
fourteen years in an Egyptian prison. “At one point, you might mention this
idea, and all the voices would drown you out. Later, it became possible.”
Independent thinking on the subject of violence was not easy when as many as
thirty men were crammed into cells that were about nine feet by fifteen. Except
for a few smuggled radios, the prisoners were largely deprived of sources of
outside information. They occupied themselves with endless theological debates
and glum speculation about where they had gone wrong. Eventually, though, these
discussions prompted the imprisoned leaders of Al Jihad to open their own
secret channel with the government.
Zawahiri
became increasingly isolated. He understood that violence was the fuel that
kept the radical Islamist organizations running; they had no future without
terror. Together with several leaders of the Islamic Group who were living
outside Egypt, he plotted a way to raise the stakes and permanently wreck the
Islamic Group‟s attempt to reform itself. On November 17, 1997, just four
months after the announcement of the nonviolence initiative, six young men
entered the magnificent ruins of Queen Hatshepsut‟s temple, near Luxor.
Hundreds of tourists were strolling through the grounds. For forty-five
minutes, the killers shot randomly. A flyer was stuffed inside a mutilated
body, identifying them as members of the Islamic Group. Sixty-two people died,
not counting the killers, whose bodies were later found in a desert cave. They
had apparently committed suicide. It was the worst terrorist incident in
Egypt‟s bloody political history.
If Zawahiri
and the exiled members of the Islamic Group hoped that this action would
undermine the nonviolence initiative, they miscalculated. Zuhdy said, “We
issued a statement in the newspaper that this action is a knife in our back.”
More important, the Egyptian people definitively turned against the violence
that characterized the radical Islamist movement. The Islamic Group‟s
imprisoned leaders wrote a series of books and pamphlets, collectively known as
“the revisions,” in which they formally explained their new thinking. “We
wanted to relay our experience to young people to protect them from falling
into the same mistakes we did,” Zuhdy told me. He recalled that, in several
television appearances, he “advised Ayman al-Zawahiri to read our responses
with an open mind.” In 1999, the Islamic Group called for an end to all armed action,
not only in Egypt but also against America. “The Islamic Group does not believe
in the creed of killing by nationality,” one of its representatives later
explained.
The new
thinking among the leaders caught the attention of the clerics at Al Azhar, the
thousand-year-old institution of Islamic learning in the center of ancient
Cairo. During my stay in Egypt, I met with Sheikh Ali Gomaa, Egypt‟s Grand
Mufti, at the nearby Dar al-Iftah, a government agency charged with issuing
religious edicts—some five thousand fatwas a week. I waited for several hours
in an antechamber while Gomaa finished a meeting with a delegation from the
British House of Lords. Since 2003, when Gomaa was appointed Grand Mufti, a top
religious post in Egypt, he has become a highly promoted champion of moderate
Islam, with his own television show and occasional columns in Al Ahram,
a government daily. He is the kind of cleric the West longs for, because of his
assurances that there is no conflict with democratic rule and no need for
theocracy. Gomaa has also become an advocate for Muslim women, who he says
should have equal standing with men. His forceful condemnations of extreme
forms of Islam have made him an object of hatred among Islamists and an icon
among progressives, whose voices have been overpowered by the thunder of the
radicals.
The door
finally opened, and Gomaa emerged. He is fifty-five, tall and regal, with a
round face and a trim beard. He wore a tan caftan and a white turban. He held a
sprig of mint to his nose as an aide whispered to him my reasons for coming. On
the wall behind his desk was a photograph of President Mubarak. Gomaa was born
in Beni Suef, the same town as Dr. Fadl. “I began going into the prisons in the
nineteen-nineties,” he told me. “We had debates and dialogues with the
prisoners, which continued for more than three years. Such debates became the
nucleus for the revisionist thinking.” Before the revisions were published,
Gomaa reviewed them. “We accept the revisions conditionally, not as the true
teachings of Islam but with the understanding that this process is like
medicine for a particular time,” he said. The fact that the prisoners were
painfully reëxamining their thinking struck him as progress enough. “Terrorism
springs from rigidity, and rigidity from literalism,” he said. Each concept is
a circle within a circle, and just getting a person to inch away from the
center was a victory. “Our experience with such people is that it is very
difficult to move them two or three degrees from where they are,” he said.
“It‟s easier to move from terrorism to extremism or from extremism to rigidity.
We have not come across the person who can be moved all the way from terrorism
to a normal life.”
Decades ago,
I taught English at the American University in Cairo, and since then I‟ve
watched the vast, moody city go through wrenching changes. I was living there
when Nasser died, in 1970. At that time, there were no diplomatic relations
between the U.S. and Egypt, and there were only a few hundred Americans in the
country, but the Egyptian people loved America and what it stood for. When I
visited the country in 2002, a few months after 9/11, I found the situation
utterly reversed. The U.S. and Egyptian governments were close, but the
Egyptian people were alienated and angry. When I lived in Cairo, the population
was about six million. Now it is three times that size. The unbearable
congestion reflects the ungoverned quality of life in the city; pedestrians
plunge into the anarchic traffic, their faces masked by fright or resignation.
The virtual absence of any attempt to impose order—in the form of street lights
or crosswalks—is characteristic of a government that has no sense of obligation
to its people and seeks only to protect itself.
One day
during my visit, I went to Cairo University, whose buildings are practically
crumbling from neglect. There are nearly two hundred thousand students, a good
many more than there were when Zawahiri and Fadl studied there. Although the
campus was quiet, the mood of the students was troubled, if subdued. Their
professors had been on strike because of low pay; in Cairo‟s poorer
neighborhoods, riots had broken out over the cost of bread, and, in a
middle-class area, residents had marched against pollution. The government‟s
response to the desperation had been to round up eight hundred members of the
Muslim Brotherhood and throw them in jail.Several faculty members I spoke with
repeated the exhausted formulations that were so common among Egyptian
intellectuals several years ago—that terrorism is mainly the consequence of
America‟s meddling in the Middle East, and that the attacks of September 11,
2001, were an inside job. The students were more cordial and less doctrinaire.
They expressed interest in the U.S. Presidential campaign, which provided such
a contrast to their own smothered political system. And they were impatient with
Islamist dogma, which had done little to help ordinary Egyptians.
When I lived
in Cairo under Nasser, there was still a sense of promise, despite the beating
that the Arabs had taken from Israel. Economically, Egypt was on a par with
India and South Korea. In the years since then, Egyptians have watched these
former peers take a place among the developed nations. Countries that were once
ruled by dictators and autocrats far more tyrannical than their own have
refashioned themselves as liberal democracies or adopted systems that are more
tolerant and responsive to citizens‟ needs. Egypt, meanwhile, has stood still.
Extreme solutions began to seem the only ones equal to the challenge.
The
jubilation felt by some Egyptians after 9/11 was tied, in part, to a hope that
their lives would finally change, no doubt for the better. They expected that
America, having been bloodied, would loosen its grip on the Muslim world.
Without American support, the tyrants of the Middle East would be pushed aside
by the Islamists, who posed the only potent alternative. But the U.S., instead
of withdrawing, invaded two Muslim countries and became even more enmeshed in
the politics of the region. Nevertheless, the audacity of Al Qaeda‟s attacks
helped give radical Islamists credibility among people who were desperate for
change. The years immediately after 9/11 presented an opportunity for the
Islamists to offer their vision of a redeemed political system that brought
about real improvements in people‟s lives. Instead, they continued to propagate
their fantasies of theocracy and a caliphate, which had little chance of ever
happening, and did nothing to address the actual problems facing the Egyptians:
illiteracy, joblessness, and the desperation that came from watching the rest
of the world pass them by. As a result, the young were eager for fresh thinking—a
way to escape the dead end of radical Islam.Before 9/11, the Egyptian
government had quietly permitted the Islamic Group‟s leaders to carry their
discussions about renouncing violence to members in other prisons around the
country. After the attacks, state security decided to call more attention to
these debates. Makram Mohamed Ahmed, who was close to the Minister of the
Interior and was then the editor of Al Mussawar, a government weekly,
was permitted to cover some of the discussions. “There were three generations
in prison,” he said. “They were in despair.” Many of these Islamists had
fantasized that they would be hailed as heroes by their society; instead, they
were isolated and rejected. Now Karam Zuhdy and other imprisoned leaders were
asking the radicals to accept that they had been deluded from the beginning. It
was an overwhelming spiritual defeat. “We began going from prison to prison,”
Ahmed recalled. “Those boys would see their leaders giving them the new
conception of the revisions.” Ahmed recalls that many of the prisoners were
angry. “They would say, „You‟ve been deceiving us for eighteen years! Why
didn‟t you say this before?‟ ”
Despite such
objections, the imprisoned members of the Islamic Group largely accepted the
leaders‟ new position. Ahmed says that he was initially skeptical of the
prisoners‟ apparent repentance, which looked like a ploy for better treatment;
however, several of the participants in the discussions had already been
sentenced to death and were wearing the red clothing that identifies a prisoner
as a condemned man. They had nothing to gain. Ahmed says that one of these
prisoners told him, “I‟m not offering these revisions for Mubarak! I don‟t care
about this government. What is important is that I killed people—Copts,
innocent persons—and before I meet God I should declare my sins.” Then the man
burst into tears.
The moral dimensions of the prisoners‟
predicament unfolded as they continued their discussions. What about the
brother who was killed while carrying out an attack that we now realize was
against Islam? Is he a martyr? If not, how do we console his family? One of the
leaders proposed that if the brother who died was sincere, although genuinely
deceived, he would still gain his heavenly reward; but because “everyone knows
there is no advantage to violence, and that it is religiously incorrect,” from
now on such actions were doomed. What about correcting the sins of other
Muslims? The Islamic Group had a reputation in Egypt for acting as a kind of
moral police force, often quite savagely—for instance, throwing acid in the
face of a woman who was wearing makeup. “We used to blame the people and say,
„The people are cowards,‟ ” one of the leaders admitted. “None of us thought of
saying that the violence we employed was abhorrent to them.”
These
emotional discussions were widely covered in the Egyptian press. Zuhdy publicly
apologized to the Egyptian people for the Islamic Group‟s violent deeds,
beginning with the murder of Sadat, whom he called a martyr. These riveting and
courageous confessions also cast light on other organizations—in particular,
the Muslim Brotherhood—that had never fully addressed their own violent pasts.
I went to the office of the Brotherhood to talk to Essam el-Erian, a prominent
member of the movement. He is a small, defiant man with a large prayer mark on
his forehead. I reminded him that when we last spoke, in April, 2002, he had
just got out of prison. He laughed and said, “I‟ve been back in prison twice
more since then!” We sat in our stocking feet in the dim reception room. “From
the start until now, the Muslim Brotherhood has been peaceful,” he maintained.
“We have only three or four instances of violence in our history, mainly
assassinations.” He added, “Those were individual instances and we condemned
them as a group.” But, in addition to the killings of political figures,
terrorist attacks on the Jewish community in Cairo, and the attempted murder of
Nasser, members of the Muslim Brotherhood took part in arson that destroyed
some seven hundred and fifty buildings—mainly night clubs, theatres, hotels,
and restaurants—in downtown Cairo in 1952, an attack that marked the end of the
liberal, progressive, cosmopolitan direction that Egypt might have chosen. (The
Muslim Brotherhood also created Hamas, which employs many of the same tactics
now condemned by the Islamic Group.) And yet, unlike other radical movements,
the Brotherhood has embraced political change as the only legitimate means to
the goal of achieving an Islamic state. “We welcome these revisions, because we
have called for many years to stop violence,” Erian continued. “But these
revisions are incomplete. They reject violence, but they don‟t offer a new
strategy for reform and change.” He pointed out that radical Islamists have
long condemned the Muslim Brotherhood because of its willingness to compromise
with the government and even to run candidates for office. “Now they are under
pressure, because if they accept democratic change by democratic means they
will be asked, „What is the difference between you and the Muslim Brothers?‟ ”
According to
Zuhdy, the Egyptian government responded to the nonviolence initiative by
releasing twelve thousand five hundred members of the Islamic Group. Many of
them had never been charged with a crime, much less tried and sentenced. Some
were shattered by their confinement. “Imagine what twenty years of prison can
do,” Zuhdy said. The prisoners returned to a society that was far more
religious than the one they left. They must have been heartened to see most
Egyptian women, who once enjoyed Western fashions, now wearing hijab, or
completely hidden behind veils, like Saudis. Many more Egyptian men had prayer
marks on their foreheads. Imams had become celebrities, their sermons blaring
from televisions and radios. These newly released men might fairly have
believed that they had achieved a great social victory through their actions
and their sacrifice.
And yet the
brutal indifference of the Egyptian government toward its people was unchanged.
As the Islamists emerged from prison, new detainees took their
place—protesters, liberals, bloggers, potential candidates for political
office. The economy was growing, but the money was increasingly concentrated in
the hands of the already wealthy; meanwhile, the price of food was shooting up
so quickly that people were going hungry. Within a few months of being
released, hundreds of the Islamists petitioned, unsuccessfully, to be let back
into prison. From the Egyptian government‟s point of view, the deal with the
Islamic Group has proved to be an unparalleled success. According to Makram
Mohamed Ahmed, the former editor of Al Mussawar, who witnessed the
prison debates, there have been only two instances where members showed signs
of returning to their former violent ways, and in both cases they were betrayed
by informers in their own group. “Prison or time may have defeated them,”
Montasser al-Zayyat, the lawyer, says of the Islamic Group. “Some would call it
a collapse.”
THE MANIFESTO
Dr. Fadl was practicing surgery in Ibb
when the 9/11 attacks took place. “We heard the reports first on BBC Radio,”
his son Ismail al-Sharif recalls. After his shift ended, Fadl returned home and
watched the television coverage with his family. They asked him who he thought
was responsible. “This action is from Al Qaeda, because there is no other group
in the world that will kill themselves in a plane,” he responded. On October
28, 2001, two Yemeni intelligence officers came to Fadl‟s clinic to ask him
some questions. He put them off. The director of the hospital persuaded Fadl to
turn himself in, saying that he would pull some strings to protect him. Fadl
was held in Ibb for a week before being transferred to government detention in
the capital, Sanaa. The speaker of parliament and other prominent Yemeni
politicians agitated unsuccessfully for his release.
Fadl was
joined in prison by Yemeni members of Al Qaeda who had escaped the bombing of
Afghanistan by American and coalition troops in the months after the attacks.
They filled him in on details of the plot. In Fadl‟s opinion, the organization
had committed “group suicide” by striking America, which was bound to retaliate
severely. Indeed, nearly eighty per cent of Al Qaeda‟s members in Afghanistan
were killed in the final months of 2001. “My father was very sad for the
killing of Abu Hafs al-Masri, the military leader of Al Qaeda,” Ismail
al-Sharif told Al Jarida. “My father said that, with the death of Abu
Hafs, Al Qaeda is finished, because the rest is a group of zeroes.” At first,
the Yemenis weren‟t sure what to do with the celebrated jihadi philosopher.
There were many Yemenis, even in the intelligence agencies, who sympathized
with Al Qaeda. According to Sharif, at the beginning of 2002 Yemeni
intelligence offered Fadl the opportunity to escape to any country he wanted.
Fadl said that he would go to Sudan. But the promised release was postponed.
The following year, Sharif has said, the offer was changed: either Fadl could
seek political asylum or Egyptian authorities would come and get him. Fadl
applied for asylum, but before he received a response he disappeared.
According to
a 2005 report by Human Rights Watch, which had followed his case, Fadl was
taken from his cell and smuggled onto a plane to Cairo. For more than two
years, Fadl—who had been tried and convicted in absentia on terrorism
charges—was held by Egyptian authorities, who are notorious for their rough
treatment of political prisoners. He was eventually transferred to the
Scorpion, a facility inside Tora Prison where major political figures were
held. Fadl remains there to this day, under a life sentence. It was clear that
he was getting special treatment. His son says that he has a private room with
a bath and a small kitchen, adding, “He has a refrigerator and a television,
and the newspaper comes every day.” Fadl passes the time reading and trying not
to gain weight. (The Egyptian authorities rejected multiple requests to speak
with Fadl in prison.)
There may be
many inducements for Dr. Fadl‟s revisions, torture among them, but his
smoldering resentment of Zawahiri‟s literary crimes was obviously a factor.
Fadl claimed in Al Hayat that his differences with Zawahiri were
“objective,” not personal. “He was a burden to me on the educational,
professional, jurisprudential, and sometimes personal levels,” Fadl complained.
“He was ungrateful for the kindness I had shown him and bit the hand that I had
extended to him. What I got for my efforts was deception, betrayal, lies, and
thuggery.” Usama Ayub, the Islamic Center director, told me that Fadl was
questioning his thinking before his arrest in Yemen. Ayub called Fadl in late
2000 or early 2001 to inform him that he was preparing a nonviolent initiative
of his own. “He encouraged me, although his security situation in Yemen did not
allow him to discuss it,” Ayub said, adding that he warned Fadl that many of
his original ideas about jihad were being used to justify violence against
women and innocent civilians. “I‟m about to publish a book that clarifies all these
ideas,” Fadl told him. According to his son, Fadl “was not under any pressure
to write the new book. He thought it could save the blood of Muslims.”
The book‟s
first segment appeared in the newspapers Al Masri Al Youm and Al
Jarida, in November, 2007, on the tenth anniversary of the Luxor massacre.
Titled “Rationalizing Jihad in Egypt and the World,” it attempted to reconcile
Fadl‟s well-known views with his sweeping modifications. Fadl claims that he
wrote the book without any references, which makes his verbatim quotations of
Islamic sources all the more impressive. A majority of the Al Jihad members in
prison signed Fadl‟s manuscript—hoping, no doubt, to follow their Islamic Group
colleagues out the prison door.
Hisham
Kassem, a human-rights activist and a publisher in Cairo, told me that the
newspapers that published Fadl‟s work “bought it from the Ministry of the
Interior for a hundred and fifty thousand Egyptian pounds.” The circumstances
of the publication added to the general suspicion that the government had
supervised the revisions, if not actually written them. Perhaps to counter that
impression, Muhammad Salah, the Cairo bureau chief of Al Hayat, was
allowed into Tora Prison to interview Fadl. In the resulting six-part series,
Fadl defended the work as his own and left no doubt of his personal grudge
against Zawahiri. Whatever the motivations behind the writing of the book, its
publication amounted to a major assault on radical Islamist theology, from the
man who had originally formulated much of that thinking.
The premise
that opens “Rationalizing Jihad” is “There is nothing that invokes the anger of
God and His wrath like the unwarranted spilling of blood and wrecking of
property.” Fadl then establishes a new set of rules for jihad, which
essentially define most forms of terrorism as illegal under Islamic law and
restrict the possibility of holy war to extremely rare circumstances. His
argument may seem arcane, even to most Muslims, but to men who had risked their
lives in order to carry out what they saw as the authentic precepts of their
religion, every word assaulted their world view and brought into question their
own chances for salvation. In order to declare jihad, Fadl writes, certain
requirements must be observed. One must have a place of refuge. There should be
adequate financial resources to wage the campaign. Fadl castigates Muslims who
resort to theft or kidnapping to finance jihad: “There is no such thing in
Islam as ends justifying the means.” Family members must be provided for.
“There are those who strike and then escape, leaving their families,
dependents, and other Muslims to suffer the consequences,” Fadl points out.
“This is in no way religion or jihad. It is not manliness.” Finally, the enemy
should be properly identified in order to prevent harm to innocents. “Those who
have not followed these principles have committed the gravest of sins,” Fadl
writes.
To wage
jihad, one must first gain permission from one‟s parents and creditors. The
potential warrior also needs the blessing of a qualified imam or sheikh; he
can‟t simply respond to the summons of a charismatic leader acting in the name
of Islam. “Oh, you young people, do not be deceived by the heroes of the
Internet, the leaders of the microphones, who are launching statements inciting
the youth while living under the protection of intelligence services, or of a
tribe, or in a distant cave or under political asylum in an infidel country,”
Fadl warns. “They have thrown many others before you into the infernos, graves,
and prisons.” Even if a person is fit and capable, jihad may not be required of
him, Fadl says, pointing out that God also praises those who choose to isolate
themselves from unbelievers rather than fight them. Nor is jihad required if the
enemy is twice as powerful as the Muslims; in such an unequal contest, Fadl
writes, “God permitted peace treaties and cease-fires with the infidels, either
in exchange for money or without it—all of this in order to protect the
Muslims, in contrast with those who push them into peril.” In what sounds like
a deliberate swipe at Zawahiri, he remarks, “Those who have triggered clashes
and pressed their brothers into unequal military confrontations are specialists
neither in fatwas nor in military affairs. . . . Just as those who practice
medicine without background should provide compensation for the damage they
have done, the same goes for those who issue fatwas without being qualified to
do so.”
Despite his
previous call for jihad against unjust Muslim rulers, Fadl now says that such
rulers can be fought only if they are unbelievers, and even then only to the
extent that the battle will improve the situation of Muslims. Obviously, that
has not been the case in Egypt or most other Islamic countries, where increased
repression has been the usual result of armed insurgency. Fadl quotes the
Prophet Muhammad advising Muslims to be patient with their flawed leaders:
“Those who rebel against the Sultan shall die a pagan death.” Fadl repeatedly
emphasizes that it is forbidden to kill civilians—including Christians and
Jews—unless they are actively attacking Muslims. “There is nothing in the
Sharia about killing Jews and the Nazarenes, referred to by some as the
Crusaders,” Fadl observes. “They are the neighbors of the Muslims . . . and
being kind to one‟s neighbors is a religious duty.” Indiscriminate
bombing—“such as blowing up of hotels, buildings, and public transportation”—is
not permitted, because innocents will surely die. “If vice is mixed with
virtue, all becomes sinful,” he writes. “There is no legal reason for harming
people in any way.” The prohibition against killing applies even to foreigners
inside Muslim countries, since many of them may be Muslims. “You cannot decide
who is a Muslim or who is an unbeliever or who should be killed based on the
color of his skin or hair or the language he speaks or because he wears Western
fashion,” Fadl writes. “These are not proper indications for who is a Muslim
and who is not.” As for foreigners who are non-Muslims, they may have been
invited into the country for work, which is a kind of treaty. What‟s more,
there are many Muslims living in foreign lands considered inimical to Islam,
and yet those Muslims are treated fairly; therefore, Muslims should reciprocate
in their own countries. To Muslims living in non-Islamic countries, Fadl
sternly writes, “I say it is not honorable to reside with people—even if they
were nonbelievers and not part of a treaty, if they gave you permission to
enter their homes and live with them, and if they gave you security for
yourself and your money, and if they gave you the opportunity to work or study,
or they granted you political asylum with a decent life and other acts of
kindness—and then betray them, through killing and destruction. This was not in
the manners and practices of the Prophet.”
Fadl does
not condemn all jihadist activity, however. “Jihad in Afghanistan will lead to
the creation of an Islamic state with the triumph of the Taliban, God willing,”
he declares. The jihads in Iraq and Palestine are more problematic. As Fadl
sees it, “If it were not for the jihad in Palestine, the Jews would have crept
toward the neighboring countries a long time ago.” Even so, he writes, “the
Palestinian cause has, for some time, been a grape leaf used by the bankrupt
leaders to cover their own faults.” Speaking of Iraq, he notes that, without
the jihad there, “America would have moved into Syria.” However, it is
unrealistic to believe that, “under current circumstances,” such struggles will
lead to Islamic states. Iraq is particularly troubling because of the sectarian
cleansing that the war has generated. Fadl addresses the bloody division
between Sunnis and Shiites at the heart of Islam: “Harming those who are
affiliated with Islam but have a different creed is forbidden.” Al Qaeda is an
entirely Sunni organization; the Shiites are its declared enemies. Fadl,
however, quotes Ibn Taymiyya, one of the revered scholars of early Islam, who
is also bin Laden‟s favorite authority: “A Muslim‟s blood and money are
safeguarded even if his creed is different.” Fadl approaches the question of takfir
with caution, especially given his reputation for promoting this tendency
in the past. He observes that there are various kinds of takfir, and
that the matter is so complex that it must be left in the hands of competent
Islamic jurists; members of the public are not allowed to enforce the law. “It
is not permissible for a Muslim to condemn another Muslim,” he writes, although
he has been guilty of this on countless occasions. “He should renounce only the
sin he commits.”
Fadl
acknowledges that “terrorizing the enemy is a legitimate duty”; however, he
points out, “legitimate terror” has many constraints. Al Qaeda‟s terrorist
attacks in America, London, and Madrid were wrong, because they were based on
nationality, a form of indiscriminate slaughter forbidden by Islam. In his Al
Hayat interview, Fadl labels 9/11 “a catastrophe for Muslims,” because Al
Qaeda‟s actions “caused the death of tens of thousands of Muslims—Arabs,
Afghans, Pakistanis and others.” The most original argument in the book and the
interview is Fadl‟s assertion that the hijackers of 9/11 “betrayed the enemy,”
because they had been given U.S. visas, which are a contract of protection.
“The followers of bin Laden entered the United States with his knowledge, and
on his orders double-crossed its population, killing and destroying,” Fadl
continues. “The Prophet—God‟s prayer and peace be upon him—said, „On the Day of
Judgment, every double-crosser will have a banner up his anus proportionate to
his treachery.‟ ”
At one
point, Fadl observes, “People hate America, and the Islamist movements feel
their hatred and their impotence. Ramming America has become the shortest road
to fame and leadership among the Arabs and Muslims. But what good is it if you
destroy one of your enemy‟s buildings, and he destroys one of your countries?
What good is it if you kill one of his people, and he kills a thousand of
yours? . . . That, in short, is my evaluation of 9/11.”
ZAWAHIRI
RESPONDS
Fadl‟s
arguments undermined the entire intellectual framework of jihadist warfare. If
the security services in Egypt, in tandem with the Al Azhar scholars, had
undertaken to write a refutation of Al Qaeda‟s doctrine, it would likely have
resembled the book that Dr. Fadl produced; and, indeed, that may have been
exactly what occurred. And yet, with so many leaders of Al Jihad endorsing the
book, it seemed clear that the organization itself was now dead. Terrorism in
Egypt might continue in some form, but the violent factions were finished,
departing amid public exclamations of repentance for the futility and
sinfulness of their actions. As the Muslim world awaited Zawahiri‟s inevitable
response, the press and the clergy were surprisingly muted. One reason was that
Fadl‟s revisions raised doubts about political activity that many Muslims do
not regard as terror—for instance, the resistance movements, in Palestine and
elsewhere, that oppose Israel and the presence of American troops in Muslim
countries. “In this region, we must distinguish between violence against
national governments and that of the resistance—in Iraq, in Lebanon, in
Palestine,” Essam el-Erian, of the Muslim Brotherhood, told me. “We cannot call
this resistance „violence.‟ ” Nevertheless, such movements were inevitably
drawn into the debate surrounding Fadl‟s book.
A number of
Muslim clerics struggled to answer Dr. Fadl‟s broad critique of political
bloodshed. Many had issued fatwas endorsing the very actions that Fadl now
declared to be unjustified. Their responses were often surprising. For
instance, Sheikh Hamid al-Ali, an influential Salafi cleric in Kuwait, whom the
U.S. Treasury has described as an Al Qaeda facilitator and fundraiser, declared
on a Web site that he welcomed the rejection of violence as a means of
fostering change in the Arab world. Sheikh Ali‟s fatwas have sometimes been
linked to Al Qaeda actions. (Notoriously, months before 9/11, he authorized
flying aircraft into targets during suicide operations.) He observed that
although the Arab regimes have a natural self-interest in encouraging
nonviolence, that shouldn‟t cause readers to spurn Fadl‟s argument. “I believe
it is a big mistake to let this important intellectual transformation be
nullified by political suspicion,” Ali said. The decision of radical Islamist
groups to adopt a peaceful path does not necessarily mean, however, that they
can evolve into political parties. “We have to admit that we do not have in our
land a true political process worthy of the name,” Ali argued. “What we have
are regimes that play a game in which they use whatever will guarantee their
continued existence.”
Meanwhile,
Sheikh Abu Basir al-Tartusi, a Syrian Islamist living in London, railed against
the “numbness and discouragement” of Fadl‟s message in telling Muslims that
they are too weak to engage in jihad or overthrow their oppressive rulers.
“More than half of the Koran and hundreds of the Prophet‟s sayings call for
jihad and fighting those unjust tyrants,” Tartusi exclaimed on a jihadist Web
site. “What do you want us to do with his huge quantity of Sharia provisions,
and how do you want us to understand and interpret them? Where is the benefit
in deserting jihad against those tyrants? Because of them, the nation lost its
religion, glory, honor, dignity, land, resources, and every precious thing!”
Jihadist publications were filled with condemnations of Fadl‟s revisions. Hani
el-Sibai, the Islamist attorney, is a Zawahiri loyalist who now runs a
political Web site in London; he said of Fadl, “Do you think any Islamic group
will listen to him? No. They are in the middle of a war.”
Even so, the
fact that Al Qaeda followers and sympathizers were paying so much attention to
Fadl‟s manuscript made it imperative that Zawahiri offer a definitive
refutation. Since Al Qaeda‟s violent ideology rested, in part, on Fadl‟s
foundation, Zawahiri would have to find a way to discredit the author without
destroying the authority of his own organization. It was a tricky task. Zawahiri‟s
main problem in countering Fadl was his own lack of standing as a religious
scholar. “Al Qaeda has no one who is qualified from a Sharia perspective to
make a response,” Fadl boasted to Al Hayat. “All of them—bin Laden,
Zawahiri, and others—are not religious scholars on whose opinion you can count.
They are ordinary persons.” Of course, Fadl himself had no formal religious
training, either.
In February
of this year, Zawahiri announced in a video that he had finished a “letter”
responding to Fadl‟s book. “The Islam presented by that document is the one
that America and the West wants and is pleased with: an Islam without jihad,”
Zawahiri said. “Because I consider this document to be an insult to the Muslim
nation, I chose for the rebuttal the name „The Exoneration,‟ in order to
express the nation‟s innocence of this insult.” This announcement, by itself,
was unprecedented. “It‟s the first time in history that bin Laden and Zawahiri
have responded in this way to internal dissent,” Diaa Rashwan, an analyst for
the Al Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies, in Cairo, told me. The
“letter,” which finally appeared on the Internet in March, was nearly two
hundred pages long. “This message I present to the reader today is among the
most difficult I have ever written in my life,” Zawahiri admits in his
introduction. Although the text is laden with footnotes and lengthy citations
from Islamic scholars, Zawahiri‟s strategy is apparent from the beginning.
Whereas Fadl‟s book is a trenchant attack on the immoral roots of Al Qaeda‟s
theology, Zawahiri navigates his argument toward the familiar shores of the
“Zionist-Crusader” conspiracy. Zawahiri claims that Fadl wrote his book “in the
spirit of the Minister of the Interior.” He characterizes it as a desperate
attempt by the enemies of Islam—America, the West, Jews, the apostate rulers of
the Muslim world—to “stand in the way of the fierce wave of jihadi revivalism
that is shaking the Islamic world.” Mistakes have been made, he concedes. “I
neither condone the killing of innocent people nor claim that jihad is free of
error,” he writes. “Muslim leaders during the time of the Prophet made
mistakes, but the jihad did not stop. . . . I‟m warning those Islamist groups
who welcome the document that they are giving the government the knife with
which it can slaughter them.”
In
presenting Al Qaeda‟s defense, Zawahiri clearly displays the moral relativism
that has taken over the organization. “Keep in mind that we have the right to
do to the infidels what they have done to us,” he writes. “We bomb them as they
bomb us, even if we kill someone who is not permitted to be killed.” He
compares 9/11 to the 1998 American bombing of a pharmaceutical plant in Sudan,
in retaliation for Al Qaeda‟s destruction of two American embassies in East
Africa. (The U.S. mistakenly believed that the plant was producing chemical
weapons.) “I see no difference between the two operations, except that the
money used to build the factory was Muslim money and the workers who died in
the factory‟s rubble”—actually, a single night watchman—“were Muslims, while
the money that was spent on the buildings that those hijackers destroyed was
infidel money and the people who died in the explosion were infidels.” When
Zawahiri questions the sanctity of a visa, which Fadl equates with a mutual
contract of safe passage, he consults an English dictionary and finds in the
definition of “visa” no mention of a guarantee of protection. “Even if the
contract is based on international agreements, we are not bound by these
agreements,” Zawahiri claims, citing two radical clerics who support his view.
In any case, America doesn‟t feel bound to protect Muslims; for instance, it is
torturing people in its military prisons in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. “The U.S.
gives itself the right to take any Muslim without respect to his visa,”
Zawahiri writes. “If the U.S. and Westerners don‟t respect visas, why should
we?”
Zawahiri
clumsily dodges many of the most penetrating of Fadl‟s arguments. “The writer
speaks of violations of the Sharia, such as killing people because of their
nationality, skin color, hair color, or denomination,” he complains in a
characteristic passage. “This is another example of making accusations without
evidence. No one ever talked about killing people because of their skin color
or hair color. I demand the writer produce specific incidents with specific
dates.” Zawahiri makes some telling psychological points; for instance, he says
that the imprisoned Fadl is projecting his own weakness on the mujahideen, who
have grown stronger since Fadl deserted them, fifteen years earlier. “The
Islamic mujahid movement was not defeated, by the grace of God; indeed, because
of its patience, steadfastness, and thoughtfulness, it is headed toward
victory,” he writes. He cites the strikes on 9/11 and the ongoing battles in
Iraq,
Afghanistan,
and Somalia, which he says are wearing America down.
To dispute Fadl‟s assertion that Muslims
living in non-Islamic countries are treated fairly, Zawahiri points out that in
some Western countries Muslim girls are forbidden to wear hijab to
school. Muslim men are prevented from marrying more than one wife, and from
beating their wives, as allowed by some interpretations of Sharia. Muslims are
barred from donating money to certain Islamic causes, although money is freely
and openly raised for Israel. He cites the 2005 cartoon controversy in Denmark
and the celebrity of the author Salman Rushdie as examples of Western countries
exalting those who denigrate Islam. He says that some Western laws prohibiting
anti-Semitic remarks would forbid Muslims to recite certain passages in the
Koran dealing with the treachery of the Jews.
Writing
about the treatment of tourists, Zawahiri says, “The mujahideen don‟t kidnap
people randomly”—they kidnap or harm tourists to send a message to their home
countries. “We don‟t attack Brazilian tourists in Finland, or those from
Vietnam in Venezuela,” he writes. No doubt, Muslims may be killed occasionally,
but if that happens it‟s a pardonable mistake. “The majority of scholars say
that it is permissible to strike at infidels, even if Muslims are among them,”
Zawahiri contends. He cites a well-known verse in the Koran to support, among
other things, the practice of kidnapping: “When the sacred months are drawn away,
slay the idolators wherever you find them, and take them, and confine them, and
lie in wait for them at every place of ambush.” As for 9/11, Zawahiri writes,
“The mujahideen didn‟t attack the West in its home country with suicide attacks
in order to break treaties, or out of a desire to spill blood, or because they
were half-mad, or because they suffer from frustration and failure, as many
imagine. They attacked it because they were forced to defend their community
and their sacred religion from centuries of aggression. They had no means other
than suicide attacks to defend themselves.”
Zawahiri‟s
argument demonstrates why Islam is so vulnerable to radicalization. It is a
religion that was born in conflict, and in its long history it has developed a reservoir
of opinions and precedents that are supposed to govern the behavior of Muslims
toward their enemies. Some of Zawahiri‟s commentary may seem comically
academic, as in this citation in support of the need for Muslims to prepare for
jihad: “Imam Ahmad said: „We heard from Harun bin Ma‟ruf, citing Abu Wahab, who
quoted Amru bin al-Harith citing Abu Ali Tamamah bin Shafi that he heard Uqbah
bin Amir saying, “I heard the Prophet say from the pulpit: „Against them make
ready your strength.‟ ” ‟ Strength refers to shooting arrows and other
projectiles from instruments of war.” And yet such proofs of the rightfulness
of jihad, or taking captives, or slaughtering the enemy are easily found in the
commentaries of scholars, the rulings of Sharia courts, the volumes of the
Prophet‟s sayings, and the Koran itself. Sheikh Ali Gomaa, the Egyptian Grand
Mufti, has pointed out that literalism is often the prelude to extremism. “We
must not oversimplify,” he told me. Crude interpretations of Islamic texts can
lead men like Zawahiri to conclude that murder should be celebrated. They come
to believe that religion is science. They see their actions as logical,
righteous, and mandatory. In this fashion, a surgeon is transformed from a
healer into a killer, but only if the candle of individual conscience has been
extinguished.
ON THE DEFENSIVE
Several
times in his lengthy response, Zawahiri complains of double standards when
critics attack Al Qaeda‟s tactics but ignore similar actions on the part of
Palestinian organizations. He notes that Fadl ridicules the fighting within Al
Qaeda. “Why don‟t you ask Hamas the same thing?” Zawahiri demands. “Isn‟t this
a clear contradiction?” At another point, Zawahiri concedes the failure of Al
Jihad to overthrow the Egyptian government, then adds, “Neither has the
eighty-year-old jihad kicked the occupier out of Palestine. If it is said that
the jihad in Egypt put a halt to tourism and harmed the economy, the answer is
that jihad in Palestine resulted in the siege of Gaza.” He goes on to point out
that Palestinian missiles also indiscriminately kill children and the elderly,
even Arabs, but no one holds the Palestinians to the same ethical standards as
Al Qaeda. Zawahiri knows that Palestine is a confounding issue for many
Muslims. “The situation in Palestine will always be an exception,” Gamal
Sultan, the Islamist writer in Cairo, told me. Essam el-Erian, of the Muslim
Brotherhood, said, “Here in Egypt, you will find that the entire population
supports Hamas and Hezbollah, although no one endorses the Islamic Group.”
Recently, however, the embargo in the Arab press on any criticism of terrorist
acts by the Palestinian resistance movement has been breached by several
searching articles that directly address the futility of violence. “The whole
point of resistance in Palestine and Lebanon is to accomplish independence, but
we should ask ourselves if we are achieving that goal,” Marzouq al-Halabi, a
Palestinian writer, wrote in Al Hayat in January. “We should not just
say, „Oh, every resistance has its mistakes, there are victims by accident.‟ .
. . Violence has become the beginning and the end of all action. How else would
you explain Hamas militants throwing Fatah leaders off the roofs of buildings?”
The resistance is destroying the potential of society to ever recover, the
writer argues. Unfortunately, this reconsideration of violence appears at a
time when despair and revolutionary fervor are boiling over in Palestine. In
March of this year, a poll found that, among Palestinians, support for violence
was greater than at any time in the past fifteen years, and that a majority
opposed continuing peace negotiations.
Zawahiri has
watched Al Qaeda‟s popularity decline in places where it formerly enjoyed great
support. In Pakistan, where hundreds have been killed recently by Al Qaeda
suicide bombers—including, perhaps, former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto—public
opinion has turned against bin Laden and his companions. An Algerian terror
organization, the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat, formally affiliated
itself with Al Qaeda in September, 2006, and began a series of suicide bombings
that have alienated the Algerian people, long weary of the horrors that
Islamist radicals have inflicted on their country. Even members of Al Qaeda
admit that their cause has been harmed by indiscriminate violence. In February
of this year, Abu Turab al-Jazairi, an Al Qaeda commander in northern Iraq,
whose nom de guerre suggests that he is Algerian, gave an interview to Al
Arab, a Qatari daily. “The attacks in Algeria sparked animated debate here
in Iraq,” he said. “By God, had they told me they were planning to harm the
Algerian President and his family, I would say, „Blessings be upon them!‟ But
explosions in the street, blood knee-deep, the killing of soldiers whose wages
are not even enough for them to eat at third-rate restaurants . . . and calling
this jihad? By God, it‟s sheer idiocy!” Abu Turab admitted that he and his
colleagues were suffering a similar public-relations problem in Iraq, because
“Al Qaeda has been infiltrated by people who have harmed its reputation.” He
said that only about a third of the nine thousand fighters who call themselves
members of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia can be relied upon. “The rest are
unreliable, since they keep harming the good name of Al Qaeda.” He concludes,
“Our position is very difficult.”
In Saudi
Arabia, where the government has been trying to tame its radical clerics,
Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah Aal al-Sheikh, the Grand Mufti, issued a fatwa
in October, 2007, forbidding Saudi youth to join the jihad outside the country.
Two months later, Saudi authorities arrested members of a suspected Al Qaeda
cell who allegedly planned to assassinate the Grand Mufti. That same fall,
Sheikh Salman al-Oadah, a cleric whom bin Laden has praised in the past,
appeared on an Arabic television network and read an open letter to the Al
Qaeda leader. He asked, “Brother Osama, how much blood has been spilled? How
many innocent children, women, and old people have been killed, maimed, and
expelled from their homes in the name of Al Qaeda?” These critiques echoed some
of the concerns of the Palestinian cleric Sheikh Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi, who
is considered by some to be the most influential jihadi theorist. In 2004,
Maqdisi, then in a Jordanian prison, castigated his former protégé Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, the now dead leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq, for his unproductive
violence, particularly the wholesale slaughter of Shiites and the use of
suicide bombers. “Mujahideen should refrain from acts that target civilians,
churches, or other places of worship, including Shiite sites,” Maqdisi wrote.
“The hands of the jihad warriors must remain clean.”
In December,
in order to stanch the flow of criticism, Zawahiri boldly initiated a virtual
town-hall meeting, soliciting questions in an online forum. This spring, he
released two lengthy audio responses to nearly a hundred of the nine hundred
often testy queries that were posed. The first one came from a man who
identified himself sardonically as the Geography Teacher. “Excuse me, Mr.
Zawahiri, but who is it who is killing, with Your Excellency‟s permission, the
innocents in Baghdad, Morocco, and Algeria? Do you consider the killing of
women and children to be jihad?” Then he demanded, “Why have you not—to this
day—carried out any strike in Israel? Or is it easier to kill Muslims in the
markets? Maybe you should study geography, because your maps show only the
Muslim states.” Zawahiri protested that Al Qaeda had not killed innocents. “In
fact, we fight those who kill innocents. Those who kill innocents are the
Americans, the Jews, the Russians, and the French and their agents.” As for Al
Qaeda‟s failure to attack Israel, despite bin Laden‟s constant exploitation of
the issue, Zawahiri asks, “Why does the questioner focus on how Al Qaeda in
particular must strike Israel, while he didn‟t request that jihadist
organizations in Palestine come to the aid of their brothers in Chechnya,
Afghanistan, and Iraq?”
The murder
of innocents emerged as the most prominent issue in the exchanges. An Algerian
university student sarcastically congratulated Zawahiri for killing sixty
Muslims in Algeria on a holy feast day. What was their sin? the student wanted
to know. “Those who were killed on the eleventh of December in Algeria are not
from the innocents,” Zawahiri claimed. “They are from the Crusader unbelievers
and the government troops who defend them. Our brothers in Al Qaeda in the
Islamic Maghreb”—North Africa—“are more truthful, more just, and more righteous
than the lying sons of France.” A Saudi wondered how Muslims could justify
supporting Al Qaeda, given its long history of indiscriminate murder. “Are
there other ways and means in which the objectives of jihad can be achieved
without killing people?” he asked. “Please do not use as a pretext what the
Americans or others are doing. Muslims are supposed to be an example to the
world in tolerance and lofty goals, not to become a gang whose only concern is
revenge.” But Zawahiri was unable to rise to the questioner‟s ethical
challenge. He replied, “If a criminal were to storm into your house, attack
your family and kill them, steal your property, and burn down your house, then
turns to attack the homes of your neighbors, will you treat him tolerantly so
that you will not become a gang whose only concern is revenge?”
Zawahiri
even had to defend himself for helping to spread the myth that the Israelis
carried out the attacks of 9/11. He placed the blame for this rumor on
Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite organization, which aired the notion on its
television station, Al Manar. Zawahiri said indignantly, “The objective behind
this lie is to deny that the Sunnis have heroes who harm America as no one has
harmed it throughout its history.” Many of the questions dealt with Fadl,
beginning with why Zawahiri had altered without permission Fadl‟s encyclopedia
of jihadist philosophy, “The Compendium of the Pursuit of Divine Knowledge.”
Zawahiri claimed that the writing of the book was a joint effort, because Al
Jihad had financed it. He had to edit the book because it was full of theological
errors. “We neither forged anything nor meddled with anything,” Zawahiri said.
Later, he added, “I ask those who are firm in their covenant not to pay
attention to this propaganda war that the United States is launching in its
prisons, which are situated in our countries.” Fadl‟s revisions, Zawahiri
warned, “place restrictions on jihadist action which, if implemented, would
destroy jihad completely.”
IS
AL QAEDA FINISHED?
It is, of
course, unlikely that Al Qaeda will voluntarily follow the example of the
Islamist Group and Zawahiri‟s own organization, Al Jihad, and revise its
violent strategy. But it is clear that radical Islam is confronting a rebellion
within its ranks, one that Zawahiri and the leaders of Al Qaeda are poorly
equipped to respond to. Radical Islam began as a spiritual call to the Muslim
world to unify and strengthen itself through holy warfare. For the dreamers who
long to institute God‟s justice on earth, Fadl‟s revisions represent a
substantial moral challenge. But for the young nihilists who are joining the Al
Qaeda movement for their own reasons—revenge, boredom, or a desire for
adventure—the quarrels of the philosophers will have little meaning.
According to
a recent National Intelligence Estimate, Al Qaeda has been regenerating, and
remains the greatest terror threat to America. Bruce Hoffman, a professor of
security studies at Georgetown University, says that although Fadl‟s
denunciation has weakened Al Qaeda‟s intellectual standing, “from the
worm‟s-eye view Al Qaeda fighters have on the border of Pakistan and
Afghanistan, things are going more their way than they have in a long time.” He
went on, “The Pakistani government is more accommodating. The number of suicide
bombers in both countries is way up, which indicates a steady supply of
fighters. Even in Iraq, the flow is slower but continues.” Still, the core of
Al Qaeda is much reduced from what it was before 9/11. An Egyptian intelligence
official told me that the current membership totals less than two hundred men;
American intelligence estimates range from under three hundred to more than
five hundred. Meanwhile, new Al Qaeda-inspired groups, which may be only
tangentially connected to the leaders, have spread, and older, more established
terrorist organizations are now flying the Al Qaeda banner, outside the control
of bin Laden and Zawahiri. Hoffman thinks this is the reason that bin Laden and
Zawahiri have been emphasizing Israel and Palestine in their latest statements.
“I see the pressure building on Al Qaeda to do something enormous this year,”
Hoffman said. “The biggest damage that Dr. Fadl has done to Al Qaeda is to
bring into question its relevance.”
This August,
Al Qaeda will mark its twentieth anniversary. That is a long life for a
terrorist group. Most terror organizations disappear with the death of their
charismatic leader, and it would be hard to imagine Al Qaeda remaining a
coherent entity without Osama bin Laden. The Red Army Faction went out of
business when the Berlin Wall came down and it lost its sanctuary in East
Germany. The Irish Republican Army, unusually, endured for nearly a century,
until economic conditions in Ireland significantly improved, and the leaders
were pressured by their own members to reach a political accommodation. When
one looks for hopeful parallels for the end of Al Qaeda, it is discouraging to
realize that its leadership is intact, its sanctuaries are unthreatened, and
the social conditions that gave rise to the movement are largely unchanged. On
the other hand, Al Qaeda has nothing to show for its efforts except blood and
grief. The organization was constructed from rotten intellectual bits and
pieces—false readings of religion and history—cleverly and deviously fitted
together to give the appearance of reason. Even if Fadl‟s rhetoric strikes some
readers as questionable, Al Qaeda‟s sophistry is rudely displayed for everyone
to see. Although it will likely continue as a terrorist group, who could still take
it seriously as a philosophy?
One
afternoon in Egypt, I visited Kamal Habib, a key leader of the first generation
of Al Jihad, who is now a political scientist and analyst. His writing has
gained him an audience of former radicals who, like him, have sought a path
back to moderation. We met in the cafeteria of the Journalists‟ Syndicate, in
downtown Cairo. Habib is an energetic political theorist, unbroken by ten years
in prison, despite having been tortured. (His arms are marked with scars from
cigarette burns.) “We now have before us two schools of thought,” Habib told
me. “The old school, which was expressed by Al Jihad and its spinoff, Al Qaeda,
is the one that was led by Ayman al-Zawahiri, Sheikh Maqdisi, Zarqawi. The new
school, which Dr. Fadl has given expression to, represents a battle of faith.
It‟s deeper than just ideology.” He went on, “The general mood of Islamist
movements in the seventies was intransigence. Now the general mood is toward
harmony and coexistence. The distance between the two is a measure of their
experience.” Ironically, Dr. Fadl‟s thinking gave birth to both schools. “As
long as a person lives in a world of jihad, the old vision will control his
thinking,” Habib suggested. “When he‟s in battle, he doesn‟t wonder if he‟s wrong
or he‟s right. When he‟s arrested, he has time to wonder.”
“Dr. Fadl‟s
revisions and Zawahiri‟s response show that the movement is disintegrating,”
Karam Zuhdy, the Islamic Group leader, told me one afternoon, in his modest
apartment in Alexandria. He is a striking figure, fifty-six years old, with
blond hair and black eyebrows. His daughter, who is four, wrapped herself
around his leg as an old black-and-white Egyptian movie played silently on a
television. Such movies provide a glimpse of a more tolerant and hopeful time,
before Egypt took its dark turn into revolution and Islamist violence. I asked
Zuhdy how his country might have been different if he and his colleagues had
never chosen the bloody path. “It would have been a lot better now,” he admitted.
“Our opting for violence encouraged Al Jihad to emerge.” He even suggested
that, had the Islamists not murdered Sadat thirty years ago, there would be
peace today between the Palestinians and the Israelis. He quoted the Prophet
Muhammad: “Only what benefits people stays on the earth.”
Reference:
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/06/02/080602fa_fact_wright#ixzz1S11tcaBU
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