Al-Fajr Media Center presents a new book by Abū Yaḥyā al-Lībī: "Jihād & the Battle of Uncertainty"

NOTE: Abū Yaḥyā al-Lībī is considered one of the top leaders within the al-Qā’idah organization (AQSL). He has also been touted as a possible replacement to ‘Usāmah Bin Lāden. Al-Lībī started to gain notoriety and respect within the jihādī community after he broke out of the Bagram Airbase prison facility in 2005. It was also reported this past December that a drone killed al-Lībī, but it ended up being Ṣāleḥ al-Ṣūmālī instead.  Ibn Siqilli of Views from the Occident does a great job of explaining al-Fajr Media:

The 45-page book was published by the Al-Fajr (Dawn) Media Center, a shadowy transnational jihadi-takfiri media outlet that distributes all the visual, audio, and written media productions of AQC and its two main affiliates, Al-Qa’ida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) in North and Northwest Africa and Al-Qa’ida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) based in Yemen.



Al-Fajr Media Center presents a new book by Abu Yahya al-Libi- “Jihad & the Battle of Uncertainty”
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GUEST POST: Juhaymān al 'Utaybī and the Siege of the Grand Mosque in Mecca


NOTE: This is the second guest post at the al-Maktabah – المكتبة Blog. As with all guest posts, the opinions expressed below are those of the guest author and they do not necessarily represent the views of this blogs administrator. That said, I hope you enjoy the post and as always comments are welcomed! In addition, if you are interested in posting an article or research paper feel free to contact me through email.
This guest post is a summary of Marissa Allison’s senior thesis, which focuses on three aspects of the Siege of the Grand Mosque in Mecca. First, Allison describes the intellectual origins of the movement led by Juhaymān al ‘Utaybī. Second, Allison covers the events of the siege, and third, the influence al ‘Utaybī’s thought and movement had on later “jihadist” thinkers and groups. If you would like a full copy of Allison’s senior thesis, which I highly recommend, you can contact her: marissa [dot] allison [at] gmail [dot] com. This post will provide a flavor of Allison’s summary by pasting the introduction below and the rest will be in an embedded Scribd file after the introduction. Also, I would like to acknowledge J.M. Berger of IntelWire who first put us in contact.
Allison is a recent graduate from the University of Mary Washington where she received her B.A. in History and was awarded a certificate in Middle East Studies. This summer, she is studying Arabic in Oman with a Critical Language Scholarship from the State Department and in December, she will also travel to Pakistan as a Research Assistant to Dr. David Cook of Rice University to conduct research on mysticism in radical Islamic groups. While attending Mary Washington, she participated in study abroad programs in Costa Rica, Jordan and Egypt and also traveled to Lebanon, Syria, and Israel. She also served as an Arabic media research intern with the global intelligence network Stirling-Assynt, a research intern at the Palestine-Israel Journal in Jerusalem, and in a Baghdad Embassy virtual internship.

Copyright Notice: The summary paper is copyrighted by Marissa Allison and may not be reproduced or cited without prior permission from the author.
Introduction






Thirty years after Juhayman al-Utaybi stormed the Grand Mosque at Mecca, it remains both one of the most poignant and least understood events in modern Middle Eastern history. Both because of the anniversary of the event and because of a general interest in Islamic militancy rising from the attacks of September 11, a new body of literature on this topic became prominent. This new literature considered this storming of the Grand Mosque as one of the first stepping stones on the road to transnational jihadism, culminating in al-Qaeda’s prominence and September 11. This literature is represented by the most recent book and the only book focusing solely on the topic: The Siege of Mecca by Yaroslav Trofimov.
However, my research portrays the Siege of Mecca in a different light. This research shows that Juhayman al-Utaybi’s movement was Saudi-specific, rather than transnational, and highlights the array of lingering influence of this event both within and outside of Saudi Arabia.
My research covers some of the details of the event, then explains why and how it occurred, and the final and most prominent part will show the great impact that this event has had in the past, and continues to have.

Summary of Senior Thesis- Militants Seize Mecca
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GUEST POST: Response to post on Counter Narrative and AQ

NOTE: I recently received an email from an individual who would like to remain anonymous since he works in the government. In it he provides his own take on my recent blog post about counter narrative strategy and al-Qā’idah. He agreed to allow me to re-post his comments here since I thought it would be fruitful to continue the conversation. The opinions expressed below are those of the guest author and they do not necessarily represent the views of this blogs administrator. That said, I hope you enjoy the post and as always comments are welcomed!

I’m not deep into the theological arguments for or against the Al Qaeda worldview, but I’m a pragmatist and will point out a few things.
1. I really liked Jarret Brachman’s position that Al Qaeda and their associated groups should be labeled “Qutbians” to bluntly insert a human into their idealogy and see how many religious scholars can be found to argue against Qutb.
2. Brachman’s research into the mindset of the jihadist forum readers shows that:

A) Qutb is still the most widely read “theologian” by jihadists (hence calling them Qutbians) by a wide margin.

B) Al Qaeda and their supporters react immediately to threats to their worldview as seen in their responses to the rejection of their ideology by Dr. Fadl and the LIFG.

3. There is already a small counter-narrative as noted above. I don’t believe a U.S. counter-narrative will have a great effect on the current crop of committed jihadists. It may help reduce the number of available recruits but it would more likely affect their support base and erode some supporters.
4. The same philosophy professor who cited the need to agree on definitions in order to engage in constructive debate also stated that you can’t debate belief (faith) because faith has no basis in empirical fact. No matter how you couch your arguments, true believers (i.e. committed jihadists who believe that the non-Muslim world is at war with Islam and who see the world as a binary — dar ul harb or dar ul Islam) cannot be reasoned with because they cling to blind faith. So who is the counter-narrative trying counter?
5. What the U.S. and the Western world says about Al Qaeda and others not being Islamic may have a positive effect and reduce the so-called “home grown” extremists because of the volume of the message locally. What the U.S. and the Western world says about AQ will likely have no effect in Somalia, Yemen, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, etc. because of the number and volume of voices who denounce the western world.
6. These loud voices are heard from childhood in the madrassas of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia and are a trusted voice compared to the voice of the Western world. Part of the challenge is getting the Muslim world to denounce violent organizations and what seems to occur more often is the Muslim world embracing the violent organizations.
7. The “rehabilitation” programs, as exemplified by the Saudi program, attempts to establish a counter-narrative and to rehabilitate those who see violence against those who do not share their beliefs as a valid program. The Saudi counter-narrative carries more weight than a U.S. counter-narrative would have and the Saudi program boasts an 80-90% success rate… of those that agreed to attend. Even if those percentages are correct, they’re likely misleading. Of the number of people who engaged in “jihad” over the past twenty years (meaning those Muslims who traveled to another country and received combat training), how many actually continued to support violent jihad cause over the long-term? That was a rhetorical question, the number is small. Of the thousands who filtered through training camps in Afghanistan over the decades, only a very small number continued to actively engage in supporting violence. So are the Saudis convincing a bunch of people who aren’t committed to violence to not be committed to violence? Good success rate to publicize with little effect of the overall levels of violence. The hard-core guys never even showed up.
As always, making simplistic blanket statements in a complex world is dangerous, but my gist is that we do need to strike up a counter-narrative, but we must understand that our narrative will have little effect globally without other, more trusted Islamic voices stating the same. Even then, a committed core will continue to decry those Islamic voices as apostates who have joined with the infidels to steal the resources of the true Muslims and to enslave the righteous.

Abū Walīd Responds to Charles Cameron

I am a few days late to this, nonetheless it is still very important to highlight. Last year, friend of the blog Leah Farrall, who blogs at All Things Counter Terrorism, had been in a dialogue with Abū Walīd al-Maṣrī, a Ṭālibān strategist who is known for not holding back his critiques of al-Qā’idah. During the dialogue, Farrall asked some individuals to respond to al-Maṣrī. Although the dialogue appeared to be over a few months ago, al-Maṣrī recently responded to Charles Cameron. See Cameron’s original post here. For background on the dialogue see: “Hotline to Jihad.” Below is an unedited copy of al-Maṣrī’s post in Arabic and Farrall hopes to get an English translation of this up as soon as she can:

تعليق على ردود تشارلز كاميرون

Poem by Online Jihādi Mourning the Death of AQC #3 Mustafa Abu Al-Yazid

You are a real hero
O Mustafa Abu Yazid
You spent your whole life fighting
Until you fell down Shaheed
You are a real terror
Against America
You sent their soldiers running
With shots of your Pee-Ka
You are a real Mujahid
To Allah you belong
Never did you give up
You were firm and you were strong
You are a Freedom Fighter
A Lion of Islam
You finally left this Dunya
And joined the Caravan
You are very lucky
To gain the Shahadah
Married to the Hooris
In the Gardens of Jannah
With the Lions that have fallen
In Kitaeb-ul-Qassam
Chechnya and Kashmir
Iraq and Afghanistan
Asadullah Alshishani salutes you
And he prays for the day
That he meets you in Jannah
And is killed as a Fidaye
And I pray
For the day, O that day
When I’m killed as a Fidaye
Audio File of Poem: https://bit.ly/atQXEH (FLV File)

Statement from the Islamic State of Iraq: "From the Consultative Council"

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

الحمدُ لله العزيز الحكيم القائل: {وَشَاوِرْهُمْ فِي الْأَمْرِ فَإِذَا عَزَمْتَ فَتَوَكَّلْ عَلَى اللَّهِ إِنَّ اللَّهَ يُحِبُّ الْمُتَوَكِّلِينَ}، والصّلاة والسلام على نبيّ الملحمة والرّحمة، الأمّي القُرشيّ القائل: (وأنا آمرُكم بخمسٍ الله أمرني بهنّ: بالجَماعة، والسّمع والطّاعة، والهجرة، والجهادِ في سَبيل الله، فإنه من خَرج من الجماعة قيدَ شِبر فقد خلعَ رِبقة الإسلام من عُنقه إلاّ أن يَرجع، ومن دَعا بدَعوى الجاهلية فهو مِن جثاء جهنّم)، وبعد..

فبعد الواقعة التي قدّر الله أن يُقتل فيها الشّيخان الجليلان، أمير المؤمنين بدولة العراق الإسلاميّة أبو عمر البغداديّ، ووزيره الأول أبو حمزة المُهاجر رحمهما الله وتقبّلهما في زمرة الشّهداء، انعقد مجلس شورى الدّولة الإسلاميّة مباشرة لحسم مسألة إمارةِ الدّولة، والتي آلت بفضل الله ومنّه إلى وِفق ما خطّط لها الشيخان الشّهيدان في مثل هذه الظّروف الخاصّة.

وظلّ مجلس الشّورى في حال انعقادٍ مستمرّ طيلة الفترة الماضية للقاء وزراء الدّولة وولاتها وأهل الحلّ والعقد وأصحاب الرأي فيها، ونبشّر أمّة الإسلام ونخصّ منهم طليعتها المُجاهدة، وفي مقدّمتهم شيوخُ الأمّة وقادة الجهاد في كلّ مكان، بأنّ الكلمة قد اجتمعت على بيعةِ الشّيخ المجاهد أبي بكر البغداديّ الحُسينيّ القرشيّ أميراً للمؤمنين بدولة العراق الإسلاميّة، وكذا على تولية الشيخ المجاهد أبي عبد الله الحَسنيّ القُرشيّ وزيراً أوّلا ونائباً له.

والشّيخان الفاضلان من أهلِ القدم الراسخة في العِلم والسّابقة في الدّعوة لدينِ الله والجهاد في سبيله نحسبهما كذلك والله حسيبُهما، نسأل الله أن يُسدّد رأيهما ويُقيّض لهما بطانةً صالحةً تأمُرهما بالخَير وتحضهما عليه، وأن يعصمهما ويُتمّ على يديهما ما بدأه الشّيخان الشّهيدان في رفع راية الجهاد والسّعي لتحكيم شرع الله وبناء دولة إسلاميّة قويّة عزيزة.

{وَاللَّهُ غَالِبٌ عَلَى أَمْرِهِ وَلَكِنَّ أَكْثَرَ النَّاسِ لَا يَعْلَمُونَ}
مجلسُ شورى دَولة العِراق الإسلاميّة

المصدر : ( مركز الفجر للإعلام )