Showing posts with label terror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label terror. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2011

Storm Brewing: Kenya, Somalia, Uganda and America

I'm nervous for Kenya, whose troops have for the last week been pursuing an aggressive intervention into neighbouring Somalia to hunt down Islamic militants from the al-Shabaab group, some of whom are believed to be behind a series of recent kidnappings and murders in the Kenya boarder area.

US forces are supporting the Kenyan incursion, with an American drone attack today killing 44 people and wounding 63 others in southern Somalia. 

US forces have also recently been sent to Uganda by Presidential decree, apparently to help combat the insurgent LRA in the north of the country. It seems that their presence will add support to US anti-terrorist operations in the horn of Africa.

Al-Shabaab will of course fight back, so the fear is for terror attacks in Nairobi and Mombasa as retaliation for the recent incursions.

I can't see it ending well. 








If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Monday, July 25, 2011

Anders Breivik and the Christian Nationalist Heresy

EDL march in support of Geert Wilders 05.03.10Image by belkus via Flickr




Anders Breivik, the alleged perpetrator of Norway's first domestic terror attack and worst act of violence since the second world war, is being widely described across the media as a "Christian fundamentalist" and a "conservative". Initial speculation by The Sun newspaper, the Daily Mail and CBS that the terror attacks were the work of al-Qaeda affiliates was it seems (not for the first time) a premature conclusion.

As a committed Christian myself, it is always distressing to hear the word "Christian" and "terrorism" appearing in the same sentence. I imagine the vast majority of Muslims can relate to that feeling.

So painful is it to consider the possibility that a professed follower of Christ could willfully arm himself with firearms and fertilizer bombs and, in a calculating fashion deliberately murder scores of innocent people, that it is understandable why some fellow-Christians will instinctively respond to recent events by saying, "He was not a real Christian." Indeed, many people who are not Christians would tend to instinctively come to the same conclusion. 

Such a knee-jerk reaction is understandable. Rightly so, we want to draw a sharp distinction between the murdering fanatic and the peaceable majority, who overwhelmingly reject and abhor the acts of destruction carried out by an apparently lone individual in the name of extremist politicised religion.

Rise of "Christian" Nationalism

Beyond these attempts at distancing themselves from the terrorists, however, European Christians have been reminded through Breivik's outrage of the theological and political challenge, perhaps hitherto ignored, of the rise of the heresy of extreme "Christian" nationalism.

Although there are parallels between this pan-European movement and similar white supremacist movements in the United States (epitomised by the Ku Klux Klan), the roots and manifestation of these two strands are sufficiently distinct to warrant separate investigation. For the purpose of this article, I will focus on the European dimension to the rise in the heresy of ultra-right "Christian" nationalism.


Anders Breivik himself states (in the file-sharing site document.no, to which he has been a regular contributor): 

"I myself am a Protestant and baptized/confirmed to me by my own free will when I was 15. But today's Protestant church is a joke. Priests in jeans who march for Palestine and churches that look like minimalist shopping centres.... The only thing that can save the Protestant church is to go back to basics." 

Andres Breivik's call for church reform illustrates the insidious nature of this heresy: like all false teachings, it clothes itself in language and themes that will resonate with some in the mainstream churches who would never endorse the actions of Norway's worst mass murderer. Like all heretics, the false prophet Anders Breivik espouses a doctrine which contains some common ground with large swathes of mainstream Christian opinion.

This superficial similarity of one aspect of his ideology should not obscure the fact that the rest of his doctrine is completely at odds with the teaching of the Bible and with the mainstream of historic and modern Christian teaching and practice.

Right-Wing Critique

His views share common ground with others on the political right who are critical of multi-culturalism, large scale non-European immigration and what they see as a Marxist-based cultural critique of western history and institutions. Although not terrorists, these themes are discernible in the work of such conservative writers as Bruce Bawer, Melanie Phillips, Mark Steyn, Geert Wilders, Theodore Dalrymple, and Robert Spencer. Some include in their critique the specific idea that Muslims, multi-culturalists, supporters of the European Union and social democrats are part of a plot to undermine Europe’s Christian civilization.

Christians in this respect are at particular risk of being roped into this extremist narrative, in the same way that many within the German churches fell prey to Nazi ideology in the 1930s, or who at least failed to offer a robust theological and political critique of it. Christians should note with concern, for instance, the willingness of some on the far right to employ Christian themes, symbols and  narratives in their search for political influence. It is as bizarre as it disturbing that  the Church of England General Synod found it necessary in 2009 to explicitly ban membership of the BNP on the part of its clergy. 

Secretive

As an aside, it is worth noting that, like Hitler, whose "final solution to the Jewish question" was not central to his public policy at first, the Breivik brand of "Christian" nationalism does not make explicit (until now) the true nature of its doctrines of Nordic and Aryan racial purity which underpin its critique of multi-culturalism.

Elsewhere on Document.no, for instance, Breivik notes that he adheres to the Vienna School of thought on cultural conservatism - which he summarises as avoiding the advocacy of racist-based politics, but achieving the same outcome by emphasising that islamisation and multi-culturalism are themselves racist. In approaching public policy in this duplicitous manner,  Breivik demonstrates the traits of cult leaders through the centuries who have not been explicit and public about their doctrine, but who have only expressed their views openly once they have established power. 

In this vein, Breivik commends the tactics of Geert Wilders whose Party for Freedom emerged as the third-largest in the Dutch Parliament in last year's national elections. Breivik also commends joining the anti-islamic group Stop the Islamisation of Europe (SIOE) and is impressed by the tactics of the English Defence League who he says, have gained political ground by highlighting the alleged racist nature of multiculturalism rather than by espousing an explicit doctrine of white supremacy. Breivik states his three priorities for the conservative nationalist cause in Norway as being the creation of a conservative national newspaper, the control of non-governmental organisations in receipt of state funding and, finally, the establishment of a political party equivalent to the EDL.

The Idea of Christendom

European Christian Nationalism rests upon a toxic mix of beliefs and ideology. At its heart is the Roman Catholic, and later Protestant, idea of Christendom. This is the idea that a nation state, or an empire, can be "Christian". It includes the idea of an official state church (whether Roman Catholic as in the case of southern Europe, Lutheran as in much of Scandanavia, or Anglican as in the UK). The idea has its roots ultimately in the supposed conversion of the Emperor Constantine in the early fourth century and the Edict of Thessaloniki 70 years later which made Christianity not only legal, but the only permitted religion of the Empire.

The church's transition in less than a century from persecuted to persecutor is well expressed in the text of the Edict:
“According to the apostolic teaching and the doctrine of the Gospel, let us believe in the one deity of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, in equal majesty and in a holy Trinity. We authorize the followers of this law to assume the title of Catholic Christians; but as for the others .... they will suffer in the first place the chastisement of the divine condemnation and in the second the punishment of our authority which in accordance with the will of Heaven we shall decide to inflict.”

Although the church and the state were understood as having separate functions within the life of the nation or empire, in practice, the presence of an "official" religion through the medieval and modern period in many western European countries has resulted in the creation of a mindset that equates the one with the other. Even today, in an increasingly secular continent, many millions of citizens will describe themselves by default as belonging to the official state-sanctioned church. To be British is still mistakenly seen by millions as to be Christian.

Confusion, Nominalism and Persecution

As well as contributing hugely to nominalism within the church, such a confusion between the nation state and the church has also historically had a devastating effect on the nations that adhere to it, as well as to their neighbours. The violent expulsion of England's small Jewish community during the reign of Edward I in 1290, for instance, was one of numerous acts of of anti-semitism carried out in the name of Christianity in medieval and modern Europe. The Crusades has a similar theological underpinning.

In the post 9-11 age, the resurgent idea of European Christendom has Islam rather than Judaism in its sights. To be "anti-immigration" in modern Europe is code for being "anti-Muslim immigration."


Brevik's conservative doctrines bear out this view. The manifesto 2083: a European Declaration of Independence was published online on the day of the attacks in Norway and is being claimed as the work of Breivik, written in English under the name Andrew Berwick.  Even if this proves not to be the case, its content is relevant to the discussion on the characteristics of Europe's right-wing extremists. The document is heavily focused on anti-Muslim rhetoric, with over 900 references in its pages, the vast majority pejorative.

Included in the Declaration's critique of multiculturalism, Marxism and Islam is a complaint about the rise of liberal approaches to the Bible in European universities, describing undergraduate courses such as "The Bible as Literature" as a "course designed to denigrate the Bible as cleverly crafted fiction instead of God's truth."

It is common for theologically conservative Christians to express similar concerns about the denigration of the Bible, a fact which  makes the Breivik/Berwick heresy particularly insidious, by mixing falsehood alongside truth in a seamless whole.

The Deception of Common Ground

This appearance of common ground between the extreme right and conservative elements within the churches can be reinforced by a narrative that portrays Christians as increasingly victims of secular policies and laws (such as those promoting gay rights) that are increasingly discriminatory to Christians. In such a charged environment, a simplistic narrative that links individual rulings at employment tribunals with a meta-narrative of a Muslim-Marxist-multi-cultural takeover of Europe are as insidious and harmful as they are appealing to some who are already pre-disposed to a conservative mindset.

As Simon Barrow of think tank Ekklesia notes, Christians must urgently respond to these trends by acknowledging, addressing and combating,

"the sometimes disturbing links in our midst between ideological 'Christianism' (as I think it deserves to be called), anti-foreigner nationalism, and the growth of a sometimes naive and sometimes malevolent 'Christianophobia' narrative. The latter can be seen emerging as talk of 'Christian persecution' within Britain. It is part of a fearful, defensive response to the growth of socio-cultural diversity in Western societies, and to the corresponding demise of a 'Christendom' culture that privileged one kind of civic religion."

The Alternative to Christendom
     
In his ground-breaking book The Reformers and Their Stepchildren , Leonard Verduin sets forth a very different approach to Christendom to that advocated by the new nationalists. The "stepchildren" of the sixteenth-century Reformation were the radical groups which not only held to a Protestant understanding of justification by faith, but who at the same time rejected the idea of a state church and of Christendom itself. In the understanding of these believers, the nation-state is, by definition, a religiously mixed entity. Although rulers throughout history have often found it expedient to adopt and promote an "official religion" held by all their subjects, Verduin shows how the radical reformers (anabaptists and independents) insisted that societies are religiously pluralistic. All they sought was the freedom to gather, preach and worship according to their consciences, without the support or the interference of state regulations, law courts or fines for the non-conformist.

The fact that many of these "third-stream" believers were themselves persecuted by both Catholic and Protestant church and secular rulers during the Reformation era highlights the essential difference between their understanding of the relationship between church and state and that of their Constantinian opponents. The model of the separation of church and state was to find its ultimate expression in the Constitution of the United States some 300 years later.

The German  Experience

More recently, the clarity and courage of the so-called "confessing church" of 1930s Germany provies another alternative to Christendom. Under the leadership of Karl Barth, Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Martin Niemoller the "confessors" separated from the official state-sanctioned Protestant church and protested its nazification of Christianity under the influence of Hitler's religious affairs minister Ludwig Muller. 

As Phil Wood notes:

"Christianity makes a poor civil religion.  Allegedly it 'enfeebled' a people.  The Nazis believed this, hence the attraction of Alfred Rosenburg's 'Positive Christianity'.  Rosenburg attempted to rid the Bible of its Jewish heritage and claimed the 'Aryanhood' of Christ.  His influence can still be traced in today's far-right groups, which espouse either outright paganism or a tractable and bastardized Christianity." 

European Protestants today should take a cautionary note of the fact that it was the writings of the much-admired German-born Martin Luther (particularly the 400th anniversary of his 95 thesis) that were used as a springboard by extremists to promote the "German Christian" (ie, Nazified) movement in the years following WWI.

Urgent Work

It is interesting to note that when Muslim-backed acts of terror take place, they are routinely described in the west as expressions of global jihad. When equally atrocious acts take place by non-Muslim white westerners, they are described as acts of deranged madmen. Such a convenient explanation  has been blown apart in the carnage of the Norway killings. Christians across Europe, not to mention the wider societies they belong to, need to wake up to the heresy that needs confronting. and embark more vigorously on that uncomfortable and urgent work. 

 










If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, November 02, 2010

Interview with the Ink Cartridge Bomber (Yeah-Man!)

Suicide bomber Abdullah Hassan Tali’ Asiri tri...Image via Wikipedia
In a rare global scoop, Philosopher's Tree has secured an exclusive telephone interview with Ibrahim Hassan al-Asiri, regraded by American security experts as the manufacturer of the so-called ink cartridge bombs recently discovered on cargo flights originating in Yemen.

PT: Mr al-Asiri-

A: Please, you infidel, you may call me Ibrahim.


PT: I'm sorry. Ibrahim. Could you please tell me whether you are in any way connected with the recent ink cartridge bombs which were found on their way to Chicago?

I: If it please you, I cannot say.

PT: You are, however, widely regraded by the US authorities as being the mastermind behind the attempted bombing.

I: Mastermind? I thank you, though, I can say no more about my possible involvement with Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

PT: I hadn't mentioned that particular terrorist group.

I: Ah.

PT: You are also credited with the so-called underpants bomb worn by Umar Abdulmutallab in an attempt to blow up a plane on route to Detroit. Can you comment on that report?


I: Underpants are a decadent Western garment and worthy of destruction. Detroit is also a decadent Western city.

PE: A city which contains one of the largest Arabic-speaking populations in America.

I: Why do you accuse Arabs of being involved? You decadent Western bloggers are quick to rush to blame us when underpants are on fire over your beloved automobile manufacturing city, but silent when the sky is on fire due to American-backed Zionist aggression.

PT: Are you saying then that you were involved in the Christmas Day plot?

I: Plot? There was no plot, just an attempt to pin the blame for America's economic collapse on an innocent man.

PT: You mean Mr Abdulmutallab?

I: I mean Father Christmas, you son of a camel. Do you think I am unaware that this innocent figure was originally a middle eastern holy man, centuries before he was stolen by the Coca Cola Company for use in its commercial advertising campaigns?

PT: Moving on, if I may, your brother, Abdullah al-Asiri (pictured) was the suicide bomber involved in the assassination attempt of Saudi Arabia's intelligence minister last year. Were you aware of his plans beforehand?


I: How do you know my dear brother was a suicide bomber? Were you there at the time? No, you have only read the news reports put out by the oppressive Saudi rulers, bankrolled by the imperialist Zionist regime.

PT: But you do accept that your brother did die in the attack?


I: My brother is dead.

PT: Do you know how he died?


I: He exploded, due to excessive consumption of decedent Coca Cola, created by the imperialists in Atlanta, Georgia.

PT: And you accept that he died in the presence of the Saudi intelligence minister?


I: I believe my brother was taking part in a prize giving ceremony for his contribution to the development of the carbonated drinks industry within the Kingdom.

PT: Some security analysts are suggesting that the three bombs which have been linked to you - the underpants bomb, the body cavity bomb and the most recent ink cartridge bomb, were all rather poorly made.

I: How dare you!

PT: It is a fact, is it not, that none of the three devices have so far achieved their intended outcomes so far?

I: Do you know my intended outcomes? Can you see inside my mind?

PT: You were involved in these attacks then?

I: You twist my words like the cords of your underpants. We have a saying in Yemen: some liars tell the truth.

PT: Which seems an appropriate point to thank you for your time today.





end







If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.

Thursday, July 01, 2010

Al Qaeda Launches English Language Magazine?

No-one seems to have read it, but numerous news services are reporting this week the creation of a new English-language online magazine by Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, based in Yemen.

Max Fisher at The Atlantic gives five solid reasons why he thinks it might be a fabrication.

In the meantime, the alleged magazine - named Inspire - shares its title with a Worthing-based Christian magazine with a monthly readership of 200,000.

Now there's an irony.










If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.

Tuesday, April 06, 2010

How to Create More Terrorists

The following video, which I cannot yet embed, shows an American helicopter gun-ship killing a dozen people in the Iraqi suburb of New Baghdad in 2007.

Those killed included two staff members of the Reuters news agency. Two children were also seriously wounded in the attack.

Reuters has been trying without success to obtain the video under America's Freedom of Information Act. On April 5th, the classified video was released by WikiLeaks.

Watch it here and watch American forces recruit more members for al-Qaeda.

Warning, the video is very graphic and disturbing.

Between 2003 and 2009, 139 journalists were killed in Iraq. Professor Scott Lucas at Enduring America has some immediate reaction to the video here.





If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Iran Mosque Bombing: an American Role?

The group or groups blamed for today's bombing of a Shia mosque in southern Iran are, according to former CIA operative Robert Baer, among those who during the Bush era received Congressional funding for their terrorist operations.

The full story is here.







If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

CNN, Iraq and Twitter


The following video from CNN illustrates the routine banality of much of the American mainstream media as it seems to increasingly serve a light entertainment PR role on behalf of large corportations and celebrity culture rather than having a genuinely independent and investigative voice.

The clip consists of an interview between CNN's Kiran Chetry and Twitter founder Jack Dorsey, who is in Iraq today to learn from local people about whether and how the social media platform might serve the cause of nation building in Iraq. Dorsey's patience with the infantile level of interviewing is to his credit.

The thudding noise in the background is either the reverberations from the suicide attack today north of Baghdad which claimed the lives of five civilians, or it might be me banging my head on my desk in despair.












If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Comforting Words from Pakistan

When challenged about his country's need to do more to eradicate terrorism, particularly directed against the UK, Pakistan's High Commissioner to the UK, Wajid Shamsul Hasan, is quoted on the BBC website today as saying that his country was already active in this area and was arresting people in anti-terror raids "every day".

In other words, there are thousands of would-be terrorists in the country, enough for at least 365 of them to be arrested each year.

Why am I not very reassured by this fact?






If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.

Friday, January 23, 2009

The Dude's Got Style

Wow! What is that I'm suddenly breathing?

Oh yeah, it's the breath of fresh air blowing from America.

I am liking day two:

The man is

  • closing Guantanamo
  • banning torture
  • affirming trial by jury and the rule of law
  • stopping waterboarding
  • closing CIA secret prisons

And what's that squeaking noise I can hear?

It must be Dick Cheney riding round in angry circles in his wheelchair.










If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

American Torture - the Evidence Together in One Place

Juan Cole at Informed Comment has brought together a number of reports and articles on the reality of torture by American forces.

Highlights of this excellent resource include:

  • interviews with torture victims, including 66 released from Guantanamo without charge
  • official medical reports of numerous torture victims
  • documents from the Senate and CIA that indicate that the policy of torture originated in the White House office
  • evidence that many initially arrested and detained in Afghanistan were the victims of personal vendettas prompted by the offer of thousands of dollars of rewards for the capture of suspected Taliban sympathizers
The following video is a taste of what is in Juan Cole's post, which also probes the question, "What now in the legal pursuit of those responsible for the formulation of these policies in contravention of international law?"

An important resource.











If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.

Friday, June 13, 2008

An Open Letter to David Davis MP

Dear Mr Davis,

I would like to applaud the statement you made outside Parliament yesterday.

When the history of Britain in the C21 comes to be written, the cost of petrol, fluctuations in house prices and the latest sports results will pale into insignificance compared with the fundamental issues concerning the relationship between the citizen and the state which are being played out at the present time.

I commend you for raising this issue against the backdrop of the divisive bill which has just been passed in Parliament by the narrowest of margins allowing terror suspects to be detained for up to 42 days before being charged.

There is an urgent need to articulate at a senior level that the civil liberties which this bill has eroded are not luxury items for those who are particularly interested in that sort of thing. Rather, they are the bedrock of democracy, justice and the rule of law. Their erosion will affect every ordinary citizen, in some cases turning the moderate into a radical, with terrible implications for all of us.

While I applaud the principled stand taken on this issue by such groups as Liberty and Amnesty, as well as the opposition to the bill by some members of the Labour Party, by your own party leader and by the Liberal Democrats, I believe that you have a unique opportunity through the coming by-election to raise the issue at a broader and more intensive level.

I commend you as well for setting the 42-day detention bill within its broader political and historic context. The relentless erosion of freedoms under the current government has been breathtaking. You are right, in explaining the reasons for your resignation, to highlight the other major areas in which our freedoms have been and are being challenged:

  • detention without charge of terrorist suspects for up to 42 days
  • the introduction of national identity cards for all British residents
  • the growth of the surveillance state through CCTV
  • the emerging national DNA database
  • the subtle erosion of jury trials in certain cases
  • the strengthening of security powers to stifle legitimate public protest
  • the restriction of freedom of speech through the creation of "hate laws"

These are all issues that have been of great concern to me and which, I'm sure you will agree, transcend party politics.

Your campaign deserves the support of people of all political backgrounds who are concerned about the ever intrusive power of the state and the corresponding loss of privacy and freedom.

This is an issue for all who value the principle of human liberty.















If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Guantanamo and the Unravelling of American Justice

The U.S. military judge who's been presiding over the "trial" of Canadian citizen and Guantanamo Bay inmate Omar Khadr has been removed from his position three weeks after he threatened to halt proceedings if the prosecution failed to release the Canadian's detention records.

Col. Peter Brownback had ordered prosecutors to supply a classified prison log by May 22 to the defence, which alleges that Khadr was abused and coerced into making incriminating statements.
Khadr was captured in Afghanistan when he was 15 years old. Two months after he was transferred to Guantanamo, his chief interrogator in Afghanistan was convicted in the death of an Afghan taxi driver while in custody. Now 21, Khadr faces life in prison for allegedly throwing a grenade that killed a U.S. soldier, Sgt. Christopher Speer, in July 2002.

There's no point in beating round the bush (ha, ha). This abuse of the limited judicial process surrounding the Guantanamo Bay detainees is outrageous. It's the sort of thing we used to criticise in China and the old Soviet Union. Now it's happening in America.

I hate what the warmongers have done to the process of justice.

They'll come for all of us if we let them.







If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Monday, April 21, 2008

Bristol Terror Alert

Posts on this blog have been somewhat interrupted this weekend due to a terror alert taking place in my neighbourhood here in Bristol.

I've blogged about it over on my local site and was quite pleased to be the first on the net (I believe) to break the story of the suspect's educational background.

Well done me.

Normal service is now resumed at Philosopher's Tree.




If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.

Monday, March 31, 2008

Bosnia - a Radically Different Prospective

For most of us who witnessed the Bosnian war in the early 1990s from a safe distance, the fault lines appeared fairly straight forward. The analysis, such as it went, read like this: Serbians bad, Croats quite bad but not as bad as the Serbs, Bosnians innocent victims.

This simplistic analysis, versions of which which informed the policy making of western governments and the editorial viewpoint of many media outlets, has been fundamentally challenged in a new book by former NSA advisor John R. Schlinder, a field agent in the former Yugoslavia at the time of the war.

An in-depth review of the book, Unholy Terror: Bosnia, Al-Qa’ida, and the Rise of Global Jihad, is available here. It's a lengthy review, but worth it for the light it sheds on the book's central thesis: that the Bosnian government of the early 90s, far from being a model of modern multi-culturalism, was Islamist in nature, committed to global jihad and linked with terror networks across the Muslim world.

Strong stuff.







If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by email or RSS.