Past and
Present Islamist, Democratic and Nazi International
Brigades
By James
Petras
January 10,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
The Islamic
State (IS) has become a magnet for international
brigades, drawing over 30,000 fighters from 5
continents and 86 countries to their war in Iraq and
Syria.
While the
international brigades are part of a global
movement, most of the volunteers come from two-dozen
countries, mainly in the Middle East, Maghreb,
Western Europe, Russia and Central Asia.
Most Islamist
internationalists are paid a salary to fight and
engage in police functions within IS-occupied
regions.
This essay
will identify the principle sources of recruitment
of Islamist internationalists and the reasons
underlying their commitment. We will also contrast
and compare IS internationalists to the
earlier international brigades fighting for the
Spanish Republic against fascists in the
1930’s; fascist internationalists fighting for the
Nazis against the USSR in the 1940’s; and
the democratic internationalists in the 1970’s who
joined the Sandinista revolution against the Somoza
dictatorship.
Comparing IS to Past Internationalists
The IS
‘volunteers’ most closely resemble the Nazi
internationalists in the substance and style of
their politics. Both fused rabid nationalism and
religion in their fight against ‘godless atheism and
communism’, as was the case of the Ukrainian
volunteers who collaborated with the Nazi armies
invading the USSR. IS uses similar slogans in its
attacks against secularSyria and Westernized Iraq.
Both the Nazi volunteers and IS fighters
are financed by established rightwing regimes: in
the past by Hitler’s Germany and today by Saudi
Arabia, the US and Turkey.
In contrast
the international brigades that fought for the
Spanish Republic were mostly secular democrats,
socialists and communists who received some arms
from the USSR and limited financial aid from leftist
individuals and organizations in the Western
capitalist democracies.
The
internationalists who went to Nicaragua to join with
the Sandinista struggle against the Somoza
dictatorship were mostly Latin Americans, with a
sprinkling of Europeans and North Americans. Most
of the volunteers were from Central America (El
Salvador, Panama and Costa Rica) as well as
political refugees who had fled the brutal military
takeovers in Chile, Argentina and Uruguay. The
conflict pitted internationalists who were
anti-imperialist, democrats, socialists and
supporters of liberation theology against a
US-backed oligarchical dictatorship monopolizing the
land, wealth and power.
The
Sandinistas, like the IS, opposed US dominance but
clearly differ in their tactics, allies and
strategic goals. The internationalist volunteers in
Nicaragua fought for a secular democratic socialist
government with close ties to socialist Cuba. IS
retains ideological links and economic ties with the
theocratic absolutist monarchy of Saudi Arabia and
the authoritarian Islamist regime of Recep Erdogan
of Turkey.
The IS
internationalists engage in generalized terror, mass
murder, and destruction of historic and symbolic
sites in conquered towns, cities and villages to
ensure conformity. Likewise the pro-Nazi
internationalists in Ukraine and the Baltic States
and elsewhere had imposed a regime of terror,
murdering members of trade unions, cooperatives, as
well as Jewish and leftist organizations.
A major
difference between the Nazi collaborators and
Islamist volunteers is found in the areas of
action. Most of the Nazi internationalists engaged
in terrorist activity overseas against their
republican, democratic and communist enemies. In
contrast IS volunteers rotate from their home base
to Iraq-Syria and return. According to one study up
to 39% of the European jihadist internationalists go
back to their home countries. Many continue to
support and practice Islamist armed struggle. In
contrast, the Spanish Republican and Nicaraguan
internationalists of the 1930’s and 1970’s returned
home to pursue democratic and socialist politics
via elections and mass movements, where possible,
and by arms where necessary (like in El Salvador).
In summary,
whereas the internationalism of the earlier periods
in the 20th Century reflected the
polarization between left and right, between
Hitlerian fascism and varieties of socialism; today left
internationalism is in decline and rightwing
Islamist internationalism is on the rise.
According
to recent studies the number of IS volunteers has
doubled between 2014 and 2015. From January – June
2015 over 30,000 overseas volunteers joined IS
fighters compared to 12,000 fighters a year earlier
(Independent 8/12/15).
The
Growth Centers of IS Internationalists
The number
of IS volunteers from Western Europe has doubled
over the past year, to over 5,000. (In contrast the
number from North America remains around 280
jihadists.) The number of IS volunteers from Russia
and Central Asia have increased 300% reaching 4,700,
of which 2,400 are Russians (mostly Chechens and
Dagestanis) and 2,100 are Turks and Kazaks.
The key
centers of IS growth are found in the Middle East,
where 8,240 fighters joined the terrorist army in
Syria and Iraq. Other “hot spots” are the Gulf
States, with 2,500 Saudis and more than 6,000 from
the Maghreb, mostly Tunisians.
IS
internationalists are increasing in direct
proportion to the increasing military intervention
of US, EU and Russia. The reasons for joining IS
vary by country and cannot be subsumed under a
single cause, whether it is religion, ethnicity,
class, imperialism or economic remuneration.
In many
ways IS has become a magnet for global
grievance-holders in a deteriorating world. Force
and violence coming from the dominant Western
countries has provoked a reciprocal response from a
great variety of uprooted, deracinated and educated
classes. The IS war against the West is, in part a
convergence, of Saudi billionaires experiencing
vicarious holy wars and underworld
semi-literate fighters from Europe’s urban ghettos.
The IS is a
multi-national and national army, ruling by fiat,
bound by a rigid hierarchical structure and
fundamentalist ideology, which is transmitted
through the use of sophisticated high-tech social
media. Like the Israeli State, IS harnesses
billionaires and high-tech innovations to primitive,
tribal ethno-religious beliefs of a ‘superior
people’. IS draws economic support from various,
apparently contradictory, forces. Financial backing
from oil sales via Turkey to Israel; billions from
the Saudi regime at war with Shia and secular
regimes and movements; arms from the US and EU
seeking ‘regime change’ in Bashar Al-Assad’s Syrian
government.
IS
and Washington’s ‘Coalition of 60’
Washington’s claim that it leads a coalition of
60 governments against IS is deeply flawed
because it is based on verbal commitments from
regimes, which, in practice, are actually
working with the IS. Moreover, for many
crucial US ‘partners’ the fight against IS
is a pretext for other political-military
priorities.
A prime
example is Turkey, which attacks and bombs the
secular Kurds in Syria and Northern Iraq under the
pretext of fighting IS. Ankara supplies ‘volunteers’,
supplies arms, training, financing and sanctuaries
to the IS. Erdogan’s Turkomen proxies in
Syria fight against Kurds as well as the government
of Bashar Al-Assad.
Saudi
Arabia and the Gulf States provide ‘volunteers’,
finances, religious ideology and arms to IS and
other extremists groups to fight and defeat the Shia
regime in Iraq, the secular government in Syria and
the Houthis movement in Yemen – all the while
claiming to be a member of the US coalition against
IS.
Israel,
which claims to oppose IS and Islamist terrorism,
provides cross border medical care to IS fighters
wounded in southern Syria and bombs the Syrian armed
forces as they pursue IS fighters.
Worst of
all, most of the IS arms come from the US, either
captured from retreating Iraqi armies or received
directly from so-called “moderate rebels”
who either sell, or join the jihadis and hand over
their US arms to IS.
Like the
Nazi international brigades, IS internationalists
have powerful state backers who wage phony wars in a
game of mutual manipulation. The Saudis export
their domestic extremists to Syria and Iraq to
safeguard the absolutist monarchy. The US and EU
allowed IS volunteers to travel to Syria to
overthrow the Bashar Al Assad government – and then
exploit the returnees’ links to terrorism, to
strengthen the domestic police state. Turkey
promotes IS to prevent an autonomous Kurdish state
in northern Syria and to expand its southern border
by annexing a band of Syrian territory.
Russia,
Iran and Hezbollah, which were invited by the
Damascus government to fight against
IS, are seriously engaged in the war against IS.
They fear an IS conquest of Syria will result in
a launch-pad for terrorists returning to their
countries. Chechens and Dagestani fighters among
the IS jihadis receive arms, training and financing
and are committed to return to Russia to apply the
terror they learned in Syria and Iraq.
Turkey’s
aggression and attack against Russia – including the
shooting down of a Russian jet which had been
bombing IS oil convoys heading for Turkey and
Ankara’s proxies among the Turkomen – is indicative
of its powerful links to IS.
Conclusion
The formal
and informal international organization of Islamist
extremists, led and inspired by IS, has encouraged
tens of thousands of volunteers from dozens of
countries in 5 continents. These international
brigades are recruited on the basis
of various appeals – not merely religious, but with
personal, political and monetary appeals. Many go
abroad to Syria and Iraq to secure training with the
intention of returning to engage in armed attacks in
their country of origin. Their strength is not so
much in their numbers or commitments but in
the powerful support they receive from major powers
in the region and the world. If it was not for
Turkey, they would not be able to enter Syria nor
receive pay or arms because of IS oil sales via the
Erdogan connection. The volunteers would not
advance in battle if it were not for US arms
captured or bought from Iraqi arms depots and those
supplied by the US to its Syrian ‘moderate rebels’.
Wounded IS volunteers would not return to battle if
it were not for Israeli medical care.
Many IS
volunteers would not fight under the banner of
Wahhabi extremism if the Saudi Arabians did not pay
their salaries and buy their arms. In other words,
IS “internationalism” is
largely state-sponsored, dependent on the interests
and strategic needs of global and regional powers.
In contrast
the internationalists who fought on the side of the
Spanish democratic Republic (1936-39) against
fascist Franco and great regional powers (Germany
and Italy) were not supported by the US, Great
Britain, France etc.
Likewise,
the internationalists, who fought with the
Nicaraguan Sandinistas against the Somoza
dictatorship, fought against the Great Powers –
mainly the US – and received marginal support from
Cuba and Panama.
The questions
of internationalism and the justice of the cause are
largely determined by the nature of the class
composition, ideology and backers of their struggle.
The
internationalism of the current IS led movement is
backed by regional and global imperial powers intent
on using international volunteers as cannon fodder
for their imperial goals, which include destroying
independent governments, establishing client
regimes, seizing economic resources and expanding
territory in order to establish military bases
surrounding global and regional rivals, Russia, Iran
and China.
James Petras
is a Bartle Professor (Emeritus) of Sociology at
Binghamton University, New York. |