Forgiving Al-Qaeda in
Pursuit of a New Enemy
By Jim Naureckas
March 20, 2015 "ICH"
- "Fair"
- The New York Times had a
story (3/14/15)
about CIA money ending up in the hands of
Al-Qaeda, an incident the paper described as
just another in a long
list of examples of how the United
States, largely because of poor
oversight and loose financial controls,
has sometimes inadvertently financed the
very militants it is fighting.
But is it really so
inadvertent? There are indications (as noted
by the blog Moon of Alabama–3/11/15)
of a shift in the Western foreign policy
establishment toward seeing groups like
Al-Qaeda–that is, far-right terrorist groups
who espouse a violent strain of Sunni
Islam–not as the main targets of US military
operations but as potential allies against
the governments Washington has identified as
more important enemies, namely Shi'ite-led
Iran and Syria.
Moon of Alabama
(10/2/13)
has previously noted a media campaign to
distinguish between different
Al-Qaeda-affiliated militant groups in
Syria–between the Islamic State in Iraq and
Syria (ISIS), for example, and Jabhat al-Nusra,
described as "more clearly accepted by
mainline rebels" (New York Times,
10/1/13)
and "more moderate" (Washington Post,
10/1/13) than ISIS.
More recently,
Reuters (3/15/15)
and the BBC (3/6/15)
have advanced the notion that Al-Nusra might
split off from Al-Qaeda, paving the way for
US allies like Qatar to (in the words of
BBC guest analyst David
Roberts) "officially commence, with Western
blessing, the supply of one of the most
effective fighting forces in Syria."
But maybe a split between
Al-Nusra and Al-Qaeda isn't necessary. Under
the headline "Accepting Al Qaeda,"
Foreign Policy (3/9/15)
published a piece by Barak Mendelsohn that
argued that
the instability in the
Middle East following the Arab
revolutions and the meteoric rise of the
Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS)
require that Washington rethink its
policy toward Al-Qaeda…. Destabilizing
Al-Qaeda at this time may in fact work
against US efforts to defeat ISIS.
Not only can Al-Qaeda be
"an important player in curtailing ISIS’
growth," but it can help "contain Iran’s
hegemonic aspirations, which threaten US
allies," notes Mendelsohn, a political
science professor at Haverford College and a
veteran of Israeli intelligence.
Al-Qaeda's responsibility
for the single worst massacre on US soil, an
attack that has served to justify 13 years
of continuous warfare, was not addressed.
Why bring up water under the bridge, when
ISIS is clearly so much worse?
The New York
Times' Thomas Friedman suggests
"arming Isis" as "the last Sunni bulwark
to a total Iranian takeover of Iraq."
Then again, maybe ISIS
isn't so bad, either. Here's Thomas
Friedman's latest column in the New
York Times (3/18/15):
Shouldn’t we at least
bomb the Islamic State to smithereens
and help destroy this head-chopping
menace? Now I despise ISIS as much as
anyone, but let me just toss out a
different question: Should we be arming
ISIS? Or let me ask that differently:
Why are we, for the third time since
9/11, fighting a war on behalf of Iran?
The US's invasions of
Afghanistan and Iraq, Friedman says,
"created a vacuum in both Iraq and the wider
Sunni Arab world," allowing "Tehran’s
proxies" to "indirectly dominate four Arab
capitals: Beirut, Damascus, Sana and
Baghdad":
ISIS, with all its
awfulness, emerged as the homegrown
Sunni Arab response to this crushing
defeat of Sunni Arabism…. Obviously, I
abhor ISIS and don’t want to see it
spread or take over Iraq. I simply raise
this question rhetorically because no
one else is: Why is it in our interest
to destroy the last Sunni bulwark to a
total Iranian takeover of Iraq? Because
the Shiite militias now leading the
fight against ISIS will rule better?
Really?
Well, ISIS is openly
committed to a policy of genocide–not only
against non-Muslim minorities like the
Yazidi (New York Times,
10/21/14), but against entire Shia
denomination of Islam ("Shia have no
medicine but the sword" is an
ISIS slogan) who make up two-thirds of
the population of Iraq. Thinking that that
makes ISIS a bad choice to rule Iraq
requires you to think of Shi'ite Muslims as
human beings, I suppose.
Since 1990, Jim Naureckas
has been the editor of Extra!,
FAIR's monthly journal of media criticism.
He is the co-author of The Way Things
Aren't: Rush Limbaugh's Reign of Error,
and co-editor of The FAIR Reader: An
Extra! Review of Press and Politics in the
'90s. He is also the co-manager of
FAIR's website.