Let Us Rid
the World of Wahhabism
By Mohammad
Javad Zarif
September 14,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "NYT"
- Tehran — Public relations firms with no qualms
about taking tainted petrodollars are experiencing a
bonanza. Their latest project has been to persuade
us that the Nusra Front,
Al Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria, is no more. As a
Nusra spokesman told CNN, the rebranded rebel
group, supposedly separated from its parent
terrorist organization, has become “moderate.”
Thus is
fanaticism from the Dark Ages sold as a bright
vision for the 21st century. The problem for
the P.R. firms’ wealthy, often Saudi, clients,
who have lavishly funded Nusra, is that the evidence
of their ruinous policies can’t be photoshopped out
of existence. If anyone had any doubt, the
recent video images of other
“moderates” beheading a 12-year-old boy were a
horrifying reality check.
Since the
terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, militant
Wahhabism has undergone a series of face-lifts, but
underneath, the ideology remains the same — whether
it’s the
Taliban, the various incarnations of Al Qaeda or
the so-called Islamic State, which is neither
Islamic nor a state. But the millions of people
faced with the Nusra Front’s tyranny are not buying
the fiction of this disaffiliation. Past experience
of such attempts at whitewashing points to the real
aim: to enable the covert flow of petrodollars to
extremist groups in Syria to become overt, and even
to lure Western governments into supporting these
“moderates.” The fact that Nusra still dominates the
rebel alliance in Aleppo flouts the public relations
message.
Saudi Arabia’s
effort to persuade its Western patrons to back its
shortsighted tactics is based on the false premise
that plunging the Arab world into further chaos will
somehow damage Iran. The fanciful notions that
regional instability will help to “contain” Iran,
and that supposed rivalries between Sunni and Shiite
Muslims are fueling conflicts, are contradicted by
the reality that the worst bloodshed in the region
is caused by Wahhabists fighting fellow Arabs and
murdering fellow Sunnis.
While these
extremists, with the backing of their wealthy
sponsors, have targeted Christians, Jews, Yazidis,
Shiites and other “heretics,” it is their fellow
Sunni Arabs who have been most beleaguered by this
exported doctrine of hate. Indeed, it is not the
supposed ancient sectarian conflict between Sunnis
and Shiites but the contest between Wahhabism and
mainstream Islam that will have the most profound
consequences for the region and beyond.
While the 2003
American-led invasion of Iraq set in motion the
fighting we see today, the key driver of violence
has been this extremist ideology promoted by Saudi
Arabia — even if it was invisible to Western eyes
until the tragedy of 9/11.
The princes in
Riyadh, the Saudi capital, have been desperate to
revive the regional status quo of the days of Saddam
Hussein’s rule in Iraq, when a surrogate repressive
despot, eliciting wealth and material support from
fellow Arabs and a gullible West, countered the
so-called Iranian threat. There is only one problem:
Mr. Hussein is long dead, and the clock cannot be
turned back.
The sooner
Saudi Arabia’s rulers come to terms with this, the
better for all. The new realities in our region can
accommodate even Riyadh, should the Saudis choose to
change their ways.
What would
change mean? Over the past three decades, Riyadh
has spent tens of billions of dollars exporting
Wahhabism through thousands of mosques and madrasas
across the world. From Asia to Africa, from Europe
to the Americas, this theological perversion has
wrought havoc. As one former extremist in Kosovo
told The Times, “The Saudis completely changed
Islam here with their money.”
Though it has
attracted only a minute proportion of Muslims,
Wahhabism has been devastating in its impact.
Virtually every terrorist group abusing the name of
Islam — from Al Qaeda and its offshoots in Syria to
Boko Haram in Nigeria — has been inspired by this
death cult.
So far, the
Saudis have succeeded in inducing their allies to go
along with their folly, whether in Syria or Yemen,
by playing the “Iran card.” That will surely change,
as the realization grows that Riyadh’s persistent
sponsorship of extremism repudiates its claim to be
a force for stability.
The world
cannot afford to sit by and witness Wahhabists
targeting not only Christians, Jews and Shiites but
also Sunnis. With a large section of the Middle East
in turmoil, there is a grave danger that the few
remaining pockets of stability will be undermined by
this clash of Wahhabism and mainstream Sunni Islam.
There needs to
be coordinated action at the United Nations to cut
off the funding for ideologies of hate and
extremism, and a willingness from the international
community to investigate the channels that supply
the cash and the arms. In 2013, Iran’s president,
Hassan Rouhani, proposed an initiative called World
Against Violent Extremism, or WAVE. The United
Nations should build on that framework to foster
greater dialogue between religions and sects to
counter this dangerous medieval fanaticism.
The attacks in
Nice, Paris and Brussels should convince the West
that the toxic threat of Wahhabism cannot be
ignored. After a year of almost weekly tragic news,
the international community needs to do more than
express outrage, sorrow and condolences; concrete
action against extremism is needed.
Though much of
the violence committed in the name of Islam can be
traced to Wahhabism, I by no means suggest that
Saudi Arabia cannot be part of the solution. Quite
the reverse: We invite Saudi rulers to put aside the
rhetoric of blame and fear, and join hands with the
rest of the community of nations to eliminate the
scourge of terrorism and violence that threatens us
all.
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