Articles of the Week – 4/30-5/6

Saturday April 30:
Muslim Brotherhood in Syria, 1945-1958: Founding, Social Origins, Ideology – Joshua Teitelbaum, Middle East Journal: https://bit.ly/kkboXd
Why Don’t Jihadi Orgs Tweet? – Will McCants, Jihadica: https://tinyurl.com/3qfccgm
Monday May 2:
OBL is no more; some quick thoughts – Leah Farrall, All Things Counterterrorism: https://wp.me/pDq0j-Tb
So We’ve Killed Osama Bin Laden; What Happens Next Matters – J.M. Berger, IntelWire: https://intelwire.net/iPKhlG
Bin Laden’s Death Shatters Conventional Wisdom – Bruce Hoffman, The National Interest: https://bit.ly/kLb8nE
Bin Laden’s Death Leaves a Gaping Hole – Will McCants, Foreign Policy: https://bit.ly/mhdPHZ
The bin Laden aftermath: The Internet jihadis react – Aaron Y. Zelin, AfPak Channel: https://ow.ly/4Lzdu
Bin Laden Video and Message Archives: In the end, the messages were Bin Laden’s undoing – Laura Mansfield: https://bit.ly/juqm4G
What if Al Qaida Goes Away – Mark Stout, On War and Words: https://bit.ly/lUTUbH
Tuesday May 3:
What’s the jihadis’ game plan in Syria? – Joas Wagemakers, Jihadica: https://bit.ly/iI5P8C
Wanted: Charismatic Terror Mastermind. Some Travel Required – Leah Farrall, Foreign Policy: https://bit.ly/jTWWh7

New statement from Dr. Akram Ḥijāzī: "Goodbye Oh Honorable Shaykh"

UPDATE 5/9 9:32 AM: Here is an English translation of the below statement:
Picture
In the name of Allah the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful
“And never think of those who have been killed in the cause of Allah as dead. Rather, they are alive with their Lord, receiving provision, (169) Rejoicing in what Allah has bestowed upon them of His bounty, and they receive good tidings about those [to be martyred] after them who have not yet joined them – that there will be no fear concerning them, nor will they grieve. (170) They receive good tidings of favor from Allah and bounty and [of the fact] that Allah does not allow the reward of believers to be lost – (171) Those [believers] who responded to Allah and the Messenger after injury had struck them. For those who did good among them and feared Allah is a great reward – (172) Those to whom hypocrites said, “Indeed, the people have gathered against you, so fear them.” But it [merely] increased them in faith, and they said, “Sufficient for us is Allah, and [He is] the best Disposer of affairs.” (173)” (Surah Aal Imran 169-173)

When Sultan Muhammad Fatih, conquered Constantinople, he was less than 25 years of age!! And when he passed away almost close to 80 years, the bells of churches rang for three days in Europe in celebration and merriment and craze and belittlement of the one who had disgraced them and was preparing to conquer Rome… a happiness unequal except to their happiness and the Jews and their allies with the passing away of a man who is unique in his time, in manners and simplicity and faith and courage and steadfastness and humanity…
Really! It was not for the people of disbelief and association and vanity to harvest all this happiness and set up parties and dance like dogs on the bodies of lions, except for the fact that Usama caused them that level of vexation and disgrace, what shattered their self respect and broke their might, and influence, and revealed their hidden, and made them a moral for others… until they became, due to sheer happiness and overwhelming with the death of Sheikh Osama, after great vexation, like the cat that relates with pride the deeds of a lion… and what happiness is it if they only knew its effect upon the selves of the sons of the Ummah so that  they regret the evil of their doing?
A happiness that was met, except for those who resisted, big and small, general and special, Arabs or non Arabs, male or female, analysts, scholars, Mujahedeen, journalists, supporters, aiders, and even those who differed and condemned… with deep sadness, and great respect and honor, for a knight who fought the tyrants of earth with unrelenting patience and mind, and then dismounted his horse… a knight who gave up to his destiny as Sheikh Tahir Owais
A sadness that has no other meaning except to be a bitter thorn in the throat of Obama and his allies… a thorn that has stripped them of every form of manner and respect except a justice that they have claimed for themselves that is evil and envious, after having denied it to everyone else, justifying every transgression, indiscretion and beastly action in the right of the sons of man… a thorn, that is so overwhelming that it has taken in its indications and vastness and encompassment to strangle every enemy and agent and traitor and immoral or drunkard or doubtful one, in vain, that he has performed a great deed, or that the world without Usama has become safe…
Osama died… no… he did not die… the news is not true… there should be a verifying statement… or… denial… or… decisiveness in the matter… no instead they buried him at sea in the Islamic manner!!… He was shot in the head… was killed in a heavy firefight… a helicopter downed in the attack… but due to mechanical errors… several accounts that can’t be believed by the mind or justified by logic… fabricated pictures… and statements… all of which require investigation
A happening this great has a lot of ambiguity… waiting… doubting… lack of concentration… doubts… belying… believing… waiting… hastening in condolence… like this they swallowed the event… and involved the Ummah in the details rather than dealing with the event itself…. And in this way they scattered the emotions… in order to drain out the initial expressions… taking advantage in that, of the difficulty of immediate reply from Al Qaeda
They worked out, through their aired channels lies and falsehood and fabrications… and they still are… and through those who are riding upon the bones and blood of the sons of man, to spread poison and lies in the minds of the common people… but they harvested nothing except resistance and their language and evil stances were not met by, except with loss… for unique personalities remain great… and great events cannot be hidden, and they cannot be employed at the level of which they remain, in the hearts and minds or both of them
Osama is a thought that brought to life the Aqeedah of the Ummah… and raised the conscience of the people… and united the minds… and prepared to get rid of  transgression and tyranny and tyrants and encouraged to aid the weak and oppressed and set up the Sharia of Allah… the thought of an Aqeedah that cannot be assassinated… and is not an organization, a party or an ideology that lives for a portion of time and then wears off like the wearing off of its people… but they thought so and they still think… so glad tidings for the Ummah the time of whose ideological dominance has arrived… and woe for a Ummah the time of whose demise has drawn close
The heroes of the Ummah, from the very beginning of the message, were blooming youth from 25 years to 30 years of age… all that they had was faith… and whatever else they had, they gave it to others… so they left away bodily, like other sons of man, and remained alive as lofty examples, and ideals that time has remained incapable of erasing, like this were several of the companions… and like this was Muhammad Fatih, and like this began the legend of the young Mujahid Usama until he died old in age… and with the likes of these is the Ummah enliven, and its religion renewed, until Allah fulfils a matter that was decreed. So may Allah have mercy on the honorable Sheikh bin Laden, a vast mercy… and may Allah have mercy upon the loyal sons of the Ummah.
Authored by
Dr. Akram Hijazi
Translated by
Dar Al Murabiteen Publications
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Click the following link for a safe PDF copy: Dr. Akram Ḥijāzī — “Goodbye Oh Honorable Shaykh”
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Articles of the Week – 4/2-4/8

Saturday April 2:
Global Jihad: Summary from Arabic Sources – 2nd Half of January 2011 – ICT’s Jihadi Websites Monitoring Group: https://bit.ly/hDfSyQ
Global Jihad: Summary from Arabic Sources – 1st Half of February 2011 – ICT’s Jihadi Websites Monitoring Group: https://bit.ly/gG7F0E
Of the Mahdi and the Matrix – Charles Cameron, Zenpundit: https://bit.ly/f4kyle
Sunday April 3:
Top jihadi forums of 03 April, 2011 – Aaron Weisburd, Internet Haganah: https://bit.ly/fMe2Bz
Plotting an attack on a jihadi forum, AMAF edition – Aaron Weisburd, Internet Haganah: https://bit.ly/htlTiz
Monday April 4:
AQIM Statement Hoax? – Aaron Y. Zelin, al-Wasat: https://bit.ly/ieqWsD
USA v. Khalid Shaikh Mohammed et al.: The Trial That Might Have Been – J.M. Berger, IntelWire: https://intelwire.net/hdXylf
AQIM and Libya’s missing weapons – Andrew Lebovich, al-Wasat: https://bit.ly/dRPhpK
Tuesday April 5:
A Typology of Lone Wolves: Preliminary Analysis of Lone Islamist Terrorists – Raffaello Pantucci, The International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation: https://bit.ly/dJpUt2
The Han on Haj — Chinese Foreign Policy and its Middle East Applications – Jordan Reimer, Kulna: https://bit.ly/gPPve4
Thursday April 7:
State Department Put ‘Political Pressure’ On FBI To Deport Brother-in-Law Of Osama Bin Laden In 1995 – J.M. Berger, IntelWire: https://bit.ly/hwuOGr
The fall of Egypt’s symbol of progressive Islam – Osama Diab, New Statesman: https://ow.ly/4vEx6
Friday April 8:
Death of Umarov’s Successor Is a Major Setback to Rebel Movement – Mairbek Vatchagaev, North Caucasus Analysis: https://bit.ly/feKsrw

GUEST POST: Hitting the Blind-Spot- A Review of Jean-Pierre Filiu's "Apocalypse in Islam"

NOTE: 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.
Jihadology.net aims to not only provide primary sources for researchers and occasional analysis of them, but also to allow other young and upcoming students as well as established academics or policy wonks to contribute original analysis on issues related to Global Jihadism. If you would like to contribute a piece, please email your idea/post to azelin [at] jihadology [dot] net. Pieces should be no longer than 2,000 words please.


Apocalypse in Islam
Jean-Pierre Filiu, tr. MB DeBevoise
University of California Press (2011)
reviewed by Charles Cameron
Jean-Pierre Filiu’s book, Apocalypse in Islam (University of California Press, 2011) makes a crucially important contribution to our understanding of current events – it illuminates not just one but a cluster of closely-related blind-spots in our current thinking, and it does so with scholarship and verve.
Al-Qaida’s interest in acquiring nuclear weapons — and Iran’s – and the safety of Pakistan’s nuclear materiel – and the situation in Jerusalem – depending how you count ’em, there are a half dozen or so glaring world problems where one spark in the Mahdist underbrush might transform a critical situation. And yet as Ali Allawi put it in his talk to the Jamestown Foundation on Mahdism in Iraq a few years back, Mahdists ferments still tend to be “below our radar”.
Background:
People are always talking about unintended consequences: might I suggest that blind-spots are where unintended consequences come from – and offer some background on apocalyptic, before proceeding to discuss Filiu’s contribution?
We already have a tendency to dismiss religious drivers in considering current events, having concluded in many cases that religion is passé for the serious-minded types who populate diplomatic, military and governmental bureaucracies world-wide – and we are even more reluctant to focus on anyone who talks about the Last Days and Final Judgment, despite the presence of both in the faith statements and scriptures of both Islam and Christianity. We think vaguely of cartoons of bearded and bedraggled men with sandwich boards declaring The End is Nigh, and move along to something more easily understood, something conveniently quantitative like the number of centrifuges unaffected by Stuxnet in Iran, or purely hypothetical, like the association of Taliban and Al Qaida in Afghanistan.
And yet, as I’ve argued before, apocalyptic belief can be a potent force-multiplier – because as Timothy Furnish puts it bluntly in the opening paragraph of his book, Holiest Wars (Praeger, 2005):

Islamic messianic insurrections are qualitatively different from mere fundamentalist ones such as bedevil the world today, despite their surface similarities. In fact, Muslim messianic movements are to fundamentalist uprisings what nuclear weapons are to conventional ones: triggered by the same detonating agents, but far more powerful in scope and effect.

Even if that’s somewhat overstated, it should give us pause.
Stephen O’Leary, in Arguing the Apocalypse (OUP, 1994), noted that apocalyptic studies have generally been considered disreputable, and went on to say,

Apocalyptic arguments made by people of good and sincere faith have apparently succeeded in persuading millions; it is unfair and dangerous to dismiss these arguments as irrational and the audiences persuaded by them as ignorant fools. In a world where bright utopic visions compete with increasingly plausible scenarios of global catastrophe, it seems imperative to understand how our anticipations of the future may be both inspired and limited by the ancient logic of apocalypticism.

Indeed, Jessica Stern, was taken aback at first by the apocalyptic intensity of the terrorists she studied, writing in Terrorism in the Name of God (Harper/Collins, 2003):

I have come to see that apocalyptic violence intended to “cleanse” the world of “impurities” can create a transcendent state. All the terrorist groups examined in this book believe — or at least started out believing — that they are creating a more perfect world. From their perspective, they are purifying the world of injustice, cruelty, and all that is antihuman. When I began this project, I could not understand why the killers I met seemed spiritually intoxicated. Now, I think I understand. They seem that way because they are.

So the bottom line is that we have a very real perceptual problem: an inability to take religious drivers seriously in terms of the special passions they evoke, and an even greater blindness to the most intense form those passions can take – a form which even now powers some significant undercurrents in both Sunni and Shi’ite affairs.
And that, in a nutshell, is why Filiu’s book makes such an important contribution: he’s turning a spot-light on a major blind-spot.
An early warning
Filiu is nothing if not urbane – a European diplomat-scholar with a lively curiosity – so his eye is caught by the garish covers of apocalyptic tracts sprouting across the countries he travels in, much as Drezner’s eye is caught by the current crop of zombie movies, and he begins to collect them, even though – or perhaps because – they’re at the very antipodes of cosmopolitan urbanity.

They mushroom, they explode. And they are indeed eye-catching, grotesque.
Yet just as Hal Lindsey’s The Late Great Planet Earth (Zondervan, 1970) was the number one best-selling non-fiction book in the US in the 1970s, but somehow escaped mention in the Publisher’s Weekly listings, a plethora of pop Islamic apocalyptic titles only too easily escapes our notice.
And like an early jazz critic – or comic book, superhero, or video-game critic – catching on to the sense that something important is brewing, not just “beneath the radar” but frankly “outside the pale”, and intercepting it, interrogating it within the context of a wider literacy, Filiu intercepts Islamic millennialism, interrogating it, bringing it politely to our attention and interpreting it for us.
Angles and learnings
What can we learn from Filiu? What angles does he see that we might otherwise miss?
It may seem pretty basic, but the unit of thought in the Qur’an, equivalent to a Biblical verse, is an aya, a sign: Islam is a religion of reading the ayat, the signs – and prominent among them are the signs of the times, the apocalyptic signs of the end times, the coming of the Mahdi and Judgment day. Christianity has its “signs of the times” too – but Christianity isn’t a religion of “reading the signs” in the way that Islam is, and in Christianity signs don’t have the same force.
Filiu doesn’t emphasize this, but he does make it a departure point for his exploration of Islamic apocalyptic (p. 4), and follows it up by noting that in the first chapter of the Qur’an, God most merciful is spoken of as Master of the Day of Judgment.
But then that’s Islam -– and huge and diverse though Islam may be, it’s still a focus, and must be seen in context. So how’s this for context? Speaking of Iran’s Ahmadinejad and “the most farsighted of American neoconservatives” he notes their common conviction “that an implacable conflict is foretold in prophecy” and observes:

It is … less a clash of civilizations that is now beginning to take shape than a confrontation of millenarianisms.

— which doubles the poignancy of his comment in concluding his Prologue (pp. xix-xxi), just two paragraphs later:

The end of the world is a serious matter — especially for those who are busy preparing for it

And although Filiu’s topic is Apocalypse in Islam, this sense that Islamic apocalyptic finds its mirror image in its Christian analogue will run like a quiet thread through his book, appearing at odd moments, as when he points to Sheikh al-Hawali’s use of Christian apocalyptic materials in his polemic against Christian apocalyptic writers themselves (p. 109), and in the discussion of the parallelisms between Christian and Islamic apocalyptic and their divergences with which Filiu brings his book to a close (Epilogue, pp. 195-99).
The history
In the first half of his book, Filiu presents the history of Islamic apocalyptic…
David Cook has given us his scholarly account of the Sunni traditions in Studies in Islamic Apocalyptic (Darwin Press, 2002), and dealt with more recent developments in his Contemporary Muslim Apocalyptic Literature (Syracuse UP, 2005), though we have yet to see his corresponding work on the Shi’ite side, and Timothy Furnish has given us a treatment of a number of Mahdist movements, similarly weighted towards the Sunni. Filiu’s work covers both the historical and contemporary aspects, in both Sunni and Shi’a schools – and like Furnish, he writes with one eye on his scholarly audience and the other on the interested non-specialist reader.
For the history of Sunni apocalyptic thought, Filiu begins with beginnings – the clear presence of expectation of the Day of Judgment and absence of references to the Mahdi as such in the Qur’an, the paucity of strong Mahdist ahadith in the great hadith collections, and the gradual formation of a corpus of “signs” of impending apocalypse. His chapter “Grand Masters of the Medieval Apocalypse” then calls on Ibn Arabi, al-Qurtubi, Ibn Kathir, Ibn Khaldun and al-Suyuti.
The case of Ibn Arabi is instructive. In Filiu’s view, the great

Articles of the Week – 10/23-10/29

Saturday October 23:
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Volume 33 Issue 11 released: https://bit.ly/9I8NwA
Gadahn and Awlaki, Together At Last? – J.M. Berger, IntelWire: https://bit.ly/9JlCoq
Things We don’t know – Gregory D. Johnsen, Waq al-Waq: https://bit.ly/dywTAW
Thoughts and Analysis on Gadahn’s new video – Aaron Y. Zelin, Jihadology: https://bit.ly/9shHKM
Monday October 25:
Militancy in Pakistan’s Borderlands – Hassan Abbas, The Century Foundation: https://bit.ly/9Thz91
Al Qaeda’s media plays follow the leader – Christopher Anzalone, The AfPak Channel: https://bit.ly/avNAz1
Awlaki Visited the Pentagon in 2001: Was This A Security Failure? – Mark Stout, Spy Blog: https://bit.ly/bo8zSW
Tuesday October 26:
A Crash Course in Jihadi Theory (Part 2) – Joas Wagemakers, Jihadica: https://bit.ly/bV0UW4

Experiments in Map-Making – Kal, The Moor Next Door: https://bit.ly/bFegpb

Wednesday October 27:
Al-Qaeda and the Coptic Converts – Florian Flade, Jih@d Blog: https://bit.ly/be1sbH
Saudi Fatwa Restrictions and the State-Clerical Relationship – Christopher Boucek, Arab Reform Bulletin: https://bit.ly/cj0u2j
Thursday October 28:
Dusting Off a Forgotten Counter-Narrative – Howard G. Clark, Free Rad!cals: https://bit.ly/bmpfn5
Grozny Attack Indicates Revival of Chechen Nationalist Insurgency – Murad Batal Al-Shishani, Central Asia – Caucasus Institute Analyst: https://bit.ly/djHEF9
Charting the Revival of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan – Roman Muzalevsky, Terrorism Monitor: https://bit.ly/cG0B1I
Why Is Osama bin Laden Going After the French? – Andrew Lebovich, Foreign Policy: https://bit.ly/cYgUEN
The German martyrs and the Turkish groups – Mr. Orange’s War Tracker: https://bit.ly/cb2vM6
Friday October 29:
Death Toll In Grozny Parliament Attack May Have Been Far Higher – Liz Fuller, Caucasus Report: https://bit.ly/91WE4v
Osama at the Top of His Game – Michael Scheuer, The National Interest: https://bit.ly/aaUaol
Factional Divisions within the Chechen Separatist Movement – Mairbek Vatchagaev, North Caucasus Analysis: https://bit.ly/dtv5eV