By Daniel Pipes
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
As recently as 2012, it appeared that Islamists could
overcome their many internal dissimilarities -- sectarian (Sunni, Shi'ite),
political (monarchical, republican), tactical (political, violent), or
attitudes toward modernity (Salafi, Muslim Brotherhood) -- and cooperate. In
Tunisia, for example, Salafis and the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) types found
common ground. Differences between all these groups were real but secondary, as
I put it then, because "all Islamists pull in the same direction, toward the
full and severe application of Islamic law (the Shari'a)."
This sort of cooperation still persists in small ways, as
shown by a recent meeting between a member of Turkey's ruling party and the
head of a Salafi organization in Germany. But Islamists have in recent months
abruptly and overwhelmingly thrown themselves at each others' throats.
Islamists still constitute a single movement who share similar supremacist and
utopian goals, but they also have different personnel, ethnic affiliations,
methods, and philosophies.
Islamist internecine hostilities have flared up in many
other Muslim-majority countries. Sunni vs Shi'a tensions can be seen in Turkey
vs Iran, also due to different approaches to Islamism; in Lebanon, where it's
Sunni vs Shi'ite Islamists and Sunni Islamists vs the army; Sunni vs Shi'ite
Islamists in Syria; Sunni vs Shi'ite Islamists in Iraq; Sunni Islamists vs
Shi'ites in Egypt; and Houthis vs Salafis in Yemen.
More often, however, members of the same sect fight each
other: Khamene'i vs Ahmedinejad in Iran; the AKP vs the Gülenists in Turkey;
Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq vs Muqtada al-Sadr in Iraq; monarchy vs the MB in Saudi
Arabia; Islamic Liberation Front vs the Nusra Front in Syria; Egypt's MB vs
Hamas regarding hostilities toward Israel; MB vs the Salafis in Egypt; and a
clash of two leading ideologues and politicians, Omar al-Bashir vs Hassan
al-Turabi, in the Sudan. In Tunisia, the Salafis (called Ansar al-Sharia) are
fighting the MB-style organization (called Ennahda).
Seemingly minor differences can take on a complex
quality. Just try to follow a Beirut newspaper's arcane account of hostilities
in the northern Lebanese town of Tripoli:
Clashes between the various Islamist groups in Tripoli, divided between the March 8 and March 14 political movements, are on the rise. … Since the assassination of March 14 figure and intelligence chief Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hasan in October, disputes between Islamist groups in Tripoli have been heading toward a major conflagration, particularly following the killing of Sheikh Abdel-Razzaq Asmar, an official from the Islamic Tawhid Movement, just hours after Hasan's death. The sheikh was shot dead … during an armed clash that erupted when supporters of Kanaan Naji, an independent Islamist figure associated with the National Islamist Gathering, attempted to take over the headquarters of the Islamic Tawhid Movement.
This pattern of fracturing brings to mind the 1950s
divisions of pan-Arab nationalists. They aspired to unify all Arabic-speaking
peoples, as the expression then went, "From the [Atlantic] ocean to the
[Persian] gulf." However appealing the dream, its leaders fell out as the
movement grew in power, dooming pan-Arab nationalism to the point that it
eventually collapsed under the weight of kaleidoscopic and ever-more minute
clashes. These included:
• Gamal Abdul Nasser of Egypt vs the Ba'th (or Baath)
parties ruling in Syria and Iraq.
• The Syrian Ba'th party vs the Iraqi Ba'th party.
• The Sunni Syrian Ba'thists vs the Alawi Syrian
Ba'thists
• The Jadidist Alawi Syrian Ba'thists vs the Assadist
Alawi Syrian Ba'thists.
And so on. In fact, every effort at forming an Arab union
failed -- in particular the United Arab Republic between Egypt and Syria
(1958-61) but also lesser attempts such as the Arab Federation (1958), the
United Arab States (1958-61), the Federation of Arab Republics (1972-77), the
Syrian domination of Lebanon (1976-2005), and the Iraqi annexation of Kuwait
(1990-91).
Reflecting deep Middle East patterns, dissension among
Islamists likewise prevents them from working together. As the movement surges,
as its members approach power and actually rule, its cracks become increasingly
divisive. Rivalries papered over when Islamists languish in the opposition
emerge when they wield power.
Should the fissiparous tendency hold, the Islamist
movement is doomed, like fascism and communism, to be no more than a
civilizational threat inflicting immense damage but never prevailing. This
possible limit on Islamist power, which became visible only in 2013, offers
grounds for optimism but not for complacency. Even if things look brighter than
a year ago, trends can quickly turn around again. The long and difficult job of
defeating Islamism remains ahead.
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