The Saudi Wahhabis are the real foe
The Saudi Wahhabis are the real foe
“It is madness to hate
all roses because you got scratched with one thorn.”
Antoine de Saint Exupery
By: Nassim Nicholas
Taleb
Taken From: Politico
Since 2001
our policy for fighting Islamic terrorists has been, to put it politely,
missing the elephant in the room, sort of like treating symptoms and completely
missing the disease.
Policymakers
and slow-thinking bureaucrats stupidly let terrorism grow by ignoring the
roots. So we lost a generation: Someone who went to grammar school in Saudi
Arabia (our “ally”) after September 11 is now an adult, indoctrinated into
believing and supporting Salafi violence, hence encouraged to finance it —
while we got distracted by the use of complicated weapons and machinery.
Even worse,
the Wahhabis have accelerated their brainwashing of East and West Asians with
their madrassas, thanks to high oil revenues.
So instead
of invading Iraq, blowing up Jihadi John and individual terrorists, thus
causing a multiplication of these agents, it would have been be easier to focus
on the source of all problems: the Wahhabi/Salafi education and the promotion
of intolerance by which a Shiite or a Yazidi or a Christian are deviant people.
If we
absolutely need to put people in Guantanamo, it would be far more effective to
ship the Salafi preachers and Wahhabi clerics over there, not just the people
swayed by their teaching. And if we need to correct the profound Saudi problem,
we need to start by sending to them our preachers, educating them into
tolerance, explaining the very concept of the separation of church and state.
Or, better even, encourage Muslim preachers who promote religious tolerance
(“laka dinak wa li dini“) — instead of seeing them ostracized.
And if you
find violence unavoidable, it should be directed at the Saudi and Qatari
funders of violence, as well as the Salafi theorists, rather than the young
performers.
P.S. Beware
the usual ISIL crypto-sympathizer who sort of “explains” (that is, justifies)
what happened (the intentional targeting of civilians) with some other Western
event that can hark all the way to the Crusades… Otherwise it is presented as
“biased.” You can spot such people from a mile away. For them, you cannot
condemn ISIL without at the same time trying to be “balanced.” Who are they
fooling? This is the technique of bundling together problems that should be
treated independently, and you need to learn to deal with such people by
forcing them to discuss the problem of ISIL on its own.
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