The
Terror Next Time: The Daesh Story Is Not Ending
By
Ramzy Baroud
August
31, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Iraq’s second largest city, Mosul, has been
reduced to rubble. It has been finally
conquered, snatched back from the notorious
group, Daesh, after months of merciless
bombardment by the US-led war coalition, and a
massive ground war.
But ‘victory’ can hardly be the term assigned to
this moment. Mosul, once Iraq’s cultural jewel
and model of co-existence, is now a ‘city of
corpses’, as described
by a foreign journalist who
walked through the ruins, while shielding his
nose from a foul smell.
“You’ve
probably heard of thousands killed, the civilian
suffering,” Murad Gazdiev said. “What you likely
haven’t heard of is the smell. It’s nauseating,
repulsive, and it’s everywhere – the smell of
rotting bodies.”
Actually, the “smell of rotting bodies” can be
found everywhere that Daesh has been defeated.
The group that once declared a Caliphate – an
Islamic state – in Iraq and Syria in 2014, and
was left to freely expand in all directions, is
now being hurriedly vanquished.
Such a
fact leaves one wondering how a small group,
itself a spawn of other equally notorious
groups, could have declared, expanded and
sustained a ‘state’ for years, in a region rife
with foreign armies, militias and the world’s
most powerful intelligences?
But
should not such a question be rendered
irrelevant now, considering that Daesh is
finally being routed, in most violent and
decisive methods?
Well,
this is what almost everyone seems to agree on;
even political and military rivals are openly
united over this very objective.
Aside
from the city of Mosul in Iraq, Daesh has also
been defeated in its stronghold in the city of
Raqqa, in the east of Syria.
Those who astonishingly survived the battles of
Mosul and Raqqa are now holed
in Deir ez-Zor,
which promises to be their last major battle.
In fact, the war on Daesh is already moving to
areas outside large population centers where the
militant group had sought safe haven. Yet, Daesh
militants are being flushed out of these regions
as well, for example, in the
western Qalamoun region on
the Syria-Lebanon border.
Even the open desert is no longer safe. The
Badiya Desert, extending from central Syria to
the borders of Iraq and Jordan, is now
witnessing heavy fighting,
centered in the town of Sukhnah.
Brett McGurk, US special envoy for the ‘Global
Coalition to Counter ISIS’, recently returned to
the US after spending a few days the region. He
talked to CBS television
network with palpable confidence.
Daesh
forces are “fighting for their life,
block-by-block,” he said, reporting that the
militant group had lost roughly 78 percent of
areas it formerly controlled in Iraq since its
peak in 2014, and about 58 percent of its
territories in Syria.
Expectedly, US officials and media are mostly
emphasizing military gains they attribute to
US-led forces and ignore all others, while
Russian-led allies are doing just the opposite.
Aside
from the numerous humanitarian tragedies
associated with these victories, none of the
parties involved have taken any responsibility
for the rise of Daesh, in the first place.
They
have to, and not only as a matter of moral
accountability. Without understanding and
confronting the reasons behind the rise of Daesh,
one is certain that the fall of Daesh will spawn
yet another group with an equally nefarious,
despairing and violent vision.
Those
in mainstream media, who have attempted to
deconstruct the roots of Daesh, unwisely
confront its ideological influences without
paying the slightest heed to the political
reality from which the group was incepted.
Whether
Daesh, Al-Qaeda or any other, such groups are
typically born and reborn in places suffering
from the same, chronic ailment: a weak central
government, foreign invasion, military
occupation and state terror.
Terrorism is the by-product of brutality and
humiliation, regardless of the source, but is
most pronounced when that source is a foreign
one.
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If
these factors are not genuinely addressed, there
can be no ending to terrorism.
Thus,
it should come as no surprise that Daesh was
molded, and thrived, in countries like Iraq,
Syria, Libya and regions like the Sinai Desert.
Moreover, many of those who answered Daesh’s
call also emerged from communities that suffered
the cruelty of merciless Arab regimes, or
neglect, hate and alienation in western
societies.
The
reason that many refuse to acknowledge such a
fact – and would fight tooth and nail to
discredit such an argument – is that an
admission of guilt would make many responsible
for the very creation of the terrorism they
claim to fight.
Those
who are content in blaming Islam, a religion
that was one of the main contributing factors to
the European cultural renaissance, are not
simply ignorant; many of them are guided by
sinister agendas. But their mindless notion of
blaming religion is as stupid as George W.
Bush’s ill-defined ‘war on terror.’
Wholesale, uninformed judgements can only
prolong conflict.
Moreover, generalized notions prevent us from a
narrowed-down attempt at confronting specific,
and clearly obvious
links, for
example, between Al-Qaeda’s advent in Iraq and
the US invasion of that country; between the
rise of the sectarian-brand of al-Qaeda under
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and the sectarian division
of that country under US administrator in Iraq,
Paul Bremer, and his allies in the Shia-led
government in Baghdad.
It
should have been clear from the start that Daesh,
as notoriously violent as it is, was one of the
symptoms, not the cause. After all, Daesh is
only 3-years-old. Foreign occupation and war in
the region predates its inception by many years.
Although we were told – by Daesh itself, but
also media pundits – that Daesh
is here to stay,
it turned out that the group is but a passing
phase in a long, ugly montage, rife with
violence and bereft of both morality and the
intellectual courage to examine the true roots
of violence.
It is
likely that the victory over Daesh is
short-lived. The group will surely develop a new
warfare strategy or will further mutate. History
has taught us that much.
It is
also likely that those who are proudly taking
credit for systematically and efficiently
annihilating the group – along with whole cities
– will not pause for a moment to think of what
they must do differently to prevent a new Daesh
from taking form.
Strangely, the ‘US-led Global Coalition to
Counter ISIS’ seems to have access to the
firepower needed to turn cities into rubble, but
not the wisdom to understand that unchecked
violence inspires nothing but violence; and that
state terror, foreign interventions and
collective humiliation of entire nations are all
the necessary ingredients to restart
the bloodbath all
over again.
Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and editor
of Palestine Chronicle. His forthcoming book
is ‘The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story’ (Pluto
Press). Baroud has a Ph.D. in Palestine Studies
from the University of Exeter and is a
Non-Resident Scholar at Orfalea Center for
Global and International Studies, University of
California. Visit his website: www.ramzybaroud.net.
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