Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Taliban: Holy war, suicide bombs until West exits Afghanistan

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - A man identified on tape as the Taliban’s new top field commander warned Wednesday that new recruits were volunteering as suicide bombers and that fighters would continue their holy war until Western powers leave Afghanistan.

Violence struck throughout the country with two bomb blasts that killed four people, including a Finnish soldier in the usually quiet north. NATO said it attacked a meeting of Taliban leaders in the south, killing an unspecified number of militants.
Shuhabuddin Athul, a Taliban spokesman, played an audio tape over the telephone to an Associated Press reporter that Athul said was a recording of Dadullah Mansoor, brother and replacement of Mullah Dadullah, the top Taliban commander shot to death in a U.S. operation this month in southern Afghanistan.

The man on the tape said Taliban fighters were ready to avenge his brother’s death and would "pursue holy war until the occupying countries leave."
"They will pursue their attacks against occupying countries and the (Afghan) government," he said in a first public statement. "The number of suicide attackers is increasing. ... All of the Taliban, we are ready to carry out suicide attacks, roadside bombs and ambushes against the Americans and the government."
There was no way to verify that the voice was really Mansoor’s.
Mullah Dadullah, a one-legged veteran who orchestrated an intensifying campaign of suicide attacks and beheadings, had long been a top lieutenant of Taliban leader Mullah Omar. Al-Qaida’s No. 2 leader, Ayman al-Zawahri, hailed Mullah Dadullah in a videotape released Tuesday.
Athul has said that Mansoor was one of five prisoners released in March in exchange for kidnapped Italian journalist Daniele Mastrogiacomo. He was named as Mullah Dadullah’s replacement last week, Athul said.
In a sign that the insurgency could be spreading, a bomb blast killed a Finnish soldier and an Afghan civilian in the northern town of Maymana, 100 yards outside a Norwegian-led base. Four Norwegian soldiers were slightly wounded.
The soldiers had been on their way to a hospital for the opening of a reconstruction project, said Lt. Col. John Inge Oeglaend, a Norwegian military spokesman.
Northern Afghanistan is relatively calm, compared with the south and east, but it has seen a run of attacks in recent weeks. A suicide bomber Saturday killed 10 people in the northern city of Kunduz, including three German soldiers who were walking through a market.
"No parts of Afghanistan are safe, but the north has normally been quieter," Oeglaend said. "But this is one of the threats we have been prepared for and have been aware of for a long time."
In the capital, Kabul, a suicide attacker on a motorbike blew himself up next to highway police guarding a road construction project, killing one policeman and a civilian, officials said.
An SUV carrying foreigners that had its window shattered in the attack may have been the intended target, said Gen. Ali Shah Paktiawal, the Kabul police director of criminal investigations. The SUV drove off and officials didn’t know what group or country it was from.

NATO’s International Security Assistance Force said "precision weapons" targeted a meeting of Taliban leaders Tuesday in the southern province of Helmand. A military statement said "all of those who died were enemy insurgents," but did not indicate how many were killed, and Afghan officials said they were not aware of the attack.
In western Afghanistan, suspected Taliban militants beheaded a man and left his body in the Shindand bazaar in Herat province, said Mohammad Naieem, a border police official.
The man’s head was placed on his chest along with a letter purportedly from the Taliban warning that anyone working with foreign military forces would be killed, Naieem said. The man was apparently taken Tuesday night and his body was discovered Wednesday.
In Khost province, a roadside bomb exploded Tuesday as two trucks full of Afghan soldiers were driving by, killing four soldiers and destroying a truck, said Wazir Padshah, a provincial police spokesman.
Attacks in Afghanistan have increased in recent weeks. More than 1,800 people have been killed in insurgency-related violence this year, according to an AP count based on U.S., NATO and Afghan officials.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

The Misconceptual Jihad

Jihad: Holy War. This is meaning of the word Jihad as it is interpreted by most Americans and non-Muslims, and rightfully so. The events of the past few years, or even the past decade, make it easy to draw conclusions about other cultures and religions. While most Americans have heard the word jihad broadcast on one of the uncountable news bulletins from Iraq, Israel, Palestine, Iran, or any other hot bed of Islamic violence, the vast majority do not know anything about the Islamic culture, let alone the true meaning of jihad. We are trained by the media to associate the word jihad with bloodshed, terrorism, and suicide bombings. It is not really trickery on behalf of the media, but rather the fundamental stretch of application that is employed by the Islamic extremists. Before we delve into this, let’s take a look at the meaning of Jihad.

Let us examine the term “jihad” from the perspective of a Muslim. The true meaning of jihad is “to strive for moral and religious perfection”. Now what exactly does this mean? This means living in accordance with the five pillars of Islam. For those of you not familiar with the five pillars, they are Confession of Faith, Prayer, Alms Giving, Fasting, and the Hajj. The Hajj is a pilgrimmage to Mecca that every Muslim must undertake at some point in his or her life. So back to our examination of the concept of jihad. You might be asking how people can misinterpret it as a Holy War when the meaning is so far from that. Well, there is more to the idea of Jihad.

Jihad is composed of two parts. There exists both an Internal jihad and an External jihad. The external jihad is the part that throws most Americans off track. Now the confusion of jihad meaning “Holy War” stems from what Muslims call the “Little Holy War”, or the external jihad. The concept of external jihad is fighting in the defense of Islam. Obviously, we see many Muslims refering to the jihad as cause for terroristic attacks, including 9/11. The key word, however, is defense. The term jihad cannot be used to label an offensive, as the Qu’ran lays out a law that force and violence are prohibited as a means to convert others to Islam.

“Defend yourself against your enemies, but do not attack them first. God does not approve of the aggressor.” -The Qu’ran

The quote above comes directly from the Qu’ran. As you can see, your fighting in the name of Islam is allowed, but strictly as a defense. This brings us to the stretching of the concept that is occurring today. We see terrorists and Islamic Extremists declaring jihad in taped messages, and claiming that their actions are valid in God’s eyes. Unfortunately, they are using the term to cover attacks which are certainly not defensive. Flashback to 9/11. While we have had conflicts with the Middle Eastern countries in the past, how have we threatened the Islamic faith? What provoked this attack? You can’t label the terrorism that is rampant today as jihad, because their is no defensive stance to it. Their actions are not sanctioned by God, even if you examine from their belief system. While one could make the argument that our Western way of life is starting to make its way to the Middle East, you cannot blame the choices of your children on us. We do not force our music, food, or clothing on the Islamic culture.

Islamic countries operate on the concept of Islamic Law. This means that all law is based on the Qu’ran. Many Islamic manuscripts have been written in order to layout the guidelines for armed conflict. Even these conflict with what is occuring today. Among the most important laws of armed combat is the prohibition of killing women, children, and non-combatants. Each and every terrorist attack volates these strictly layed out laws.

The main focus of the word Jihad is on the internal side of things. The internal jihad is the struggle within oneself to submit to the will of God, or in other words, the struggle to act as God would have you act, as opposed to how you want to act. To hammer home the point that this is the main form of jihad, I leave you with the Islamic name for internal jihad: “The Great Holy War”.