The Narrative
The official narrative has been produced, ready
for mass consumption. Two men
brandishing balaclavas, military fatigues, armed with AK-47’s, a shotgun, and
an RPG launcher, walked into the wrong address first before finding the proper
Charlie Hebdo building, and then subsequently proceeded to brutally murder a
total of 12 people, including 2 police officers, one allegedly shot at
point-blank range. Despite these missteps, the fact that they
had timed their meeting to coincide with the publications editorial meeting,
their calm demeanors even as police arrived, the apparent rehearsed nature of
the attacks, followed by their successful getaway all point towards professionalism
and military training.
The attackers were heard shouting “Allahu Akbar,”
“The Prophet is avenged,” and “We have killed Charlie Hebdo,” as they conducted
their lethal campaign. Witnesses have stated
they spoke perfect French while proclaiming to be affiliated with Al-Qaeda in
Yemen, or Al-Qaeda in the Arab Peninsula (AQAP). American intelligence told France that the 2
brothers, Said and Cherif Kouachi, had traveled to Yemen in 2011 to receive
training from AQAP. A source within AQAP
reportedly released a
statement
to The Intercept stating that, “The leadership of #AQAP directed the
operation,” although no official claim of responsibility has been made from the
organization. Before his death, Cherif
Kouachi claimed in an interview with BFM TV that he had been to Yemen and
received funding from Anwar al-Awlaki, the infamous Muslim preacher and
American citizen who US officials say is responsible for encouraging terrorist
attacks against Western countries and who was extra-judiciously murdered by a
US drone strike in 2011. Yemeni
officials confirmed to Reuters that Said had met with Awlaki in Yemen.
Initially the police had stated that the Kouachi
brothers had another accomplice, but have remained silent on the account ever
since 18-year old Hamyd Mourad turned himself in late Wednesday with an
ironclad alibi.
Fleeing the scene the brothers evaded several
police cars, and in what has now become a suspicious trademark of alleged al-Qaeda-linked
terror attacks, one of the perpetrators left his ID card conveniently for the
police to find.
The day after this incident a policewoman was
killed in the suburb of Montrouge, the police identifying the killer as Amedy
Coulibaly after having recovered his DNA from an abandoned balaclava. Coulibaly claimed responsibility for the
killing and said that he had synchronized the move with the Kouachi brothers. The massive police search operation eventually
culminated when police cornered the two brothers in a printing facility near
the Charles De Gaulle Airport. Mr.
Coulibaly meanwhile held shopper’s hostage across town in a kosher grocery
store. The police conducted simultaneous
operations at the two locations, killing the two Kouachi brothers as well as
Mr. Coulibaly. It was reported that
Coulibably had killed four hostages and injured five others before the police
had shot him, however it is possible that they were killed as a result of the
raid.
Terrorism is a Result of US Policy in Syria
French intelligence is understandably under pressure
after the terrorist attack; how could such an attack be carried out amidst the
overbearing police-state and surveillance apparatus that has been propped up
now for over a decade since 9/11?
France’s surveillance policies are as well some of
the most extreme in the Europe. A
controversial article in a
2013
defense bill, referred to as the “French Patriot Act,” permits widespread monitoring
and collection of internet user data in real time without judicial oversight,
requiring ISP’s as well as content hosting companies like YouTube to give over
its user’s data upon request from government agencies. La Quadrature Du Net, a French civil
liberties NGO,
said
of the bill, “Considering the recently uncovered evidence of massive and
generalised spying on citizens, the maneuvers of the President and of the
government deceive no one. This bill sets up a generalised surveillance regime
and risks to destroy once and for all the limited trust between citizens and
agencies responsible for security.” The
Wall Street Journal
reports
that France last just year passed, “new laws that allow prosecutors to detain
and prosecute people for the mere act of traveling to Iraq or Syria.”
Despite all of this, the mainstream media has the
answer: intelligence failure. It was a
blunder, the brothers had been under surveillance after their 2011 trip to
Yemen but subsequently were dropped from monitoring last spring after no
suspicious activity was recorded. French
intelligence were forced to allocate resources elsewhere, because, “By 2013,
France was struggling to monitor a flood of citizens suspected of traveling-or
planning to travel-to Syria and Iraq.”
(1)
This statement, or perhaps better termed
‘this excuse’, coupled as well with reports that the Kouachi brothers were part
of the ‘flood of citizens’ who traveled to Syria
(2),
exposes the hypocritical nature of the “War on Terror” and the theft of our
freedoms that it supposedly justifies.
Far from making us safer we have seen how this
“War on Terror” has systematically supported and empowered Islamic jihadists as
a geopolitical tools against the West’s enemies. Graham Fuller, the former Deputy Director of
the National Council on Intelligence and former CIA station chief, stated that,
“The policy of guiding the evolution of Islam and of helping them against our
adversaries worked marvellously well in Afghanistan against the Red Army. The
same doctrines can still be used to destabilize what remains of Russian power,
and especially to counter the Chinese influence in Central Asia.”
(3) In
2007 Seymour Hersh
reported
on the Bush administration’s policy of supporting radical Islam, “To undermine
Iran, which is predominantly Shiite, the Bush Administration has decided, in
effect, to reconfigure its priorities in the Middle East. In Lebanon, the
Administration has cooperated with Saudi Arabia’s government, which is Sunni,
in clandestine operations that are intended to weaken Hezbollah, the Shiite
organization that is backed by Iran. The U.S. has also taken part in
clandestine operations aimed at Iran and its ally Syria. A by-product of these
activities has been the bolstering of Sunni extremist groups that espouse a
militant vision of Islam and are hostile to America and sympathetic to Al
Qaeda.”
This
policy has continued under the Obama administration. The US, apart from army
training
of rebels who go on to join jihadist extremists, has been active in the
coordination of financing and shipping of arms to Syrian rebels through Saudi
Arabia and Qatar, shipments which according to mainstream news reports have
been “
largely
going to hard-line Islamists.” In
addition to this the CIA, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Qatar and other allies,
in bases located in Turkey
(4)
and Jordan
(5),
have been aided ‘vetted’ rebel groups who have admitted to both working
with and funneling US supplied weapons to al-Nusra and ISIS.
(6)(7)(8)(9)(10)
In
the 2007 Seymour Hersh report, Hersh quotes a US government consultant as stating
that Saudi Arabian Prince Bandar, the former Saudi ambassador to the US and former
director of the Saudi Intelligence Agency, has assured the White House that, “they
will keep a very close eye on the religious fundamentalists. Their message to
us was ‘We’ve created this movement, and we can control it.’ It’s not that we
don’t want the Salafis to throw bombs; it’s who they throw them at—Hezbollah,
Moqtada al-Sadr, Iran, and at the Syrians, if they continue to work with
Hezbollah and Iran.” Back in August of
2013, Prince Bandar allegedly
threatened
Putin if he did not change his position regarding Assad and Syria, “I can
give you a guarantee to protect the Winter Olympics in the city of Sochi on the
Black Sea next year. The Chechen groups that threaten the security of the games
are controlled by us, and they will not move in the Syrian territory’s
direction without coordinating with us. These groups do not scare us. We use
them in the face of the Syrian regime but they will have no role or influence
in Syria’s political future,” the Prince was quoted as saying.
Given this, it is easy to see why the covert
operations against Syria by the US and Saud have led to the rise of ISIS,
al-Nusra, and the CIA-vetted groups like the FSA and SRF who admittedly have
been fighting alongside and funneling US weapons to al-Qaeda. Therefore, when US intelligence officials
warn of the terrorist threat emanating from Syria, they are discussing the
direct result of a US policy of fomenting Islamic extremism. Seen in this light, the recent attacks on Charlie
Hebdo cannot be separated from the policy of arming, funding, and training
jihadists to attack the Syrian population and weaken the Syrian state. If it is true that French intelligence were
preoccupied with monitoring terrorists threats emanating from Syria, then this
threat as well is a direct result of the Western policy, which includes the
participation of France
(11),
of fomenting terrorism in Syria.
Holes in
the Narrative
Problems arise when further analysis is laid upon
the official narrative of events, described above.
Firstly, reasonable questions have been raised
regarding the video of the officer shot at point blank range. When inspecting the video we find that when
slowed down it seems as though the shot fired did not hit the police officer,
evidenced by the plume of dust created on the ground in front of him from the
impact of the bullet. This is further
confirmed by the fact that after the shot was fired the officer’s head wasn’t
rocked at all by the blast, no movement is perceived; if the officer was hit
his head would have recoiled from the impact of the blast.
(12)
Although it is
plausible that the officer was shot perhaps in the neck or upper abdomen,
questions arise given that all news sources report that he died from a shot to
the head. It would be wrong to suggest
that Ahmed Merabet has not been killed, however there is reason to suspect that
the cause of his death has not been truthfully reported on.
Secondly, the claims that police had recovered an
ID card confirming the identity of their suspect strains belief and further
sheds doubt upon claims of the suspects identities. These claims could easily be false; we are forced
to take the authorities at their word, without further proof being available.
Thirdly, a police officer assigned to investigate
the Charlie Hebdo murder
committed
suicide on
the night of the attacks, prompting questions relating to the nature of his
suicide, and whether or not it represents an interest in silencing information
that he had uncovered.
Furthermore, the assailants all had histories of
terrorism that was known to French and American intelligence. Cherif Kouachi and Coulibaly had been
imprisoned for terrorist charges, and reports indicate that Coulibady had become
radicalized in prison. The
Washington
Post reports that both men had become devoted followers of Djamel Beghal,
described as having ties to al-Qaeda and being convicted of plotting to blow up
the US Embassy in Paris in 2001. After
his prison sentence Coulibaly met with then French President Sarkozy, and 10
months after this visit police found weapons caches in Coulibably’s
apartment. Coulibaly then was convicted
and sentenced to 5 years in prison relating to an attempt to break another
militant Islamist out of prison, yet he was released early from this
sentence. These facts of intensive
intelligence related to these men’s ties to jihadi extremism, as well as their
connections to French authorities, coupled with reports of the Kouachi brothers
traveling to Syria ostensibly to participate in militant jihadism there,
produce worrying questions about the conduct of French authorities, and further
lay doubt on the practice of widespread surveillance which collects data on the
entire haystack and thus leaves the needles to fall through the cracks.
Julien Assange asks these important questions in a
recent post, “So
conspicuous is the failure in the Charlie Hebdo killings that serious questions
must be asked. Cherif Kouachi had previously been involved in furthering the
Sunni insurgency in the Levant. Were the brothers protected by the French
services as part of French adventurism in Syria, Libya and elsewhere—as a
conduit to funnel money, guns and militants into Africa and the Middle East?
Were the brothers protected because they were witting or unwitting informers?
Were the brothers protected in order to conduct a mediagenic, budget-boosting
arrest seconds before the attack began — but the attack was moved forward? Why
was the security architecture of the Charlie Hebdo building so poor? How is it
that semi-automatic weapons found their way into France and into the hands of
known jihadis? And most of all why has France’s crazed Sunni adventurism in
Syria, Libya and other parts of Africa been tolerated despite the inevitable
destabalization, radicalization and blowback?”
I am
Charlie?
The wave of support associated with the
#IAmCharlie meme should avoid the trap of conflating support for the freedom of
speech with support of the bigoted and racist Charlie Hebdo cartoons, which
include
mocking
the sex slaves of Boko Haram as welfare queens. There exist extreme double standards in the
West in regards to free speech; one would be hard pressed to see people showing
the same amount of support if Charlie Hebdo’s cartoons had been as anti-Semetic
or anti-black as they were anti-Muslim. Instead,
we should not associate our defense of free-speech, even when one finds that
speech repugnant, with vindication of the speech itself. “The reaction should be completely
independent of what [one] thinks about this journal and what it produces. The passionate and ubiquitous chants “I am
Charlie,” and the like, should not be meant to indicate, even hint at, any
association with the journal, at least in the context of defense of freedom of
speech. Rather, they should express
defense of the right of free expression whatever one thinks of the contents,
even if they are regarded as hateful and depraved,” Noam Chomsky
writes
in a recent post.
We should also avoid the divisive mindset set forth
that seeks to explain the situation as a “clash of civilizations,” or one that
portrays the events as the Righteous West versus the depraved Muslim terrorists;
these arguments are not plausible. One
should remember that the majority of Muslims
do
not support Islamic extremism, which is not surprising given that those
most affected by this extremism is not the West, the recent attacks being only
a very small portion of the overall terrorism committed, but are instead Muslim
and Arab populations in Arab countries.
It should be noted that the outcry against
anti-Muslim sentiments also stems from major Western aggressions against Arab
nations and populations. These include
the destruction of Afghanistan, the war in Iraq which is the greatest criminal
act of the 21st century, the transformation of Libya into a failed
state governed by extremism, the constant droning of Pakistan, Yemen,
Afghanistan, Somalia, and others in Obamas illegal drone operations which is the
greatest campaign of terrorism present today, as well as the allied support of
the brutal dictatorships of Jordan, Egypt, the regimes of the UAE, Qatar, and
the medieval-like monarchy of Saudi Arabia, support for Israel’s wanton
aggression and colonization of the Palestinians, etc., etc.
The demonization of Islam, and racism against
Arabs in general, is thus not solely a matter of cartoons and words, but is
instead a widespread phenomenon that is proliferated, tolerated, and encouraged
because it is beneficial to the dominant power-structures interest in
controlling Middle Eastern oil. The
demonization of an entire people is a useful tool when you have an interest in
invading their lands and controlling their resources; it creates an outlook
about the world that garners support amongst the populations of the states that
seek to endeavor in these aggressive actions, and legitimizes atrocities that
would otherwise never have been accepted had the victims not been reduced to
‘the Other’. (A telling example of this
is the
Nazi’s use
of media and propaganda that helped to reduce perception of Jews to little
more than hated monsters that were to be feared, leading ultimately to the
Holocaust.)
Also ignored is the fact that the biggest
perpetrator of jihadi extremism in the world is the West and its allies, as
described above, which uses these militant ideologies as geopolitical weapons
against nations it deems as enemies. In
official
documents leaked by WikiLeaks, then US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
wrote in 2009 of our close ally Saudi Arabia, stating that, “donors in Saudi
Arabia constitute the most significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist
groups worldwide… Saudi Arabia remains a critical financial support base for
al-Qa'ida, the Taliban, LeT, and other terrorist groups.” Middle East specialist Patrick Cockburn
further
reports on Clinton’s statements, “in so far as Saudi Arabia did act against
al-Qa'ida, it was as a domestic threat and not because of its activities
abroad.”
Anti-Muslim arguments also ignore the fact that
the police officer killed attempting to protect the Charlie Hebdo offices,
despite their virulent anti-Muslim sentiments, was himself a Muslim, prompting
the hashtags #IAmAhmed and #JesuisAhmed.
Following terror attacks such as these, the public
is understandably concerned with safety, however the answer is not to further
give up our freedoms to our governments, which weakens our safety given that we
then have to worry of the threat posed by
government
oppression as well as non-state
terrorists (highlighted by the fact that the police-state apparatus, while
accomplishing the theft of our rights and freedoms, has not stopped any terrorist
plots against the West)
(13)(14)(15),
but instead if we honestly want to stop terror we must firstly seek to
understand the legitimate grievances that inspire these acts
(16)(17),
and secondly we must stop our governments from utilizing terrorists against
foreign countries as geopolitical tools of imperialism as well as from engaging
in wars of aggression and resource domination; the world would overnight be
massively rid of the threat of terrorism if the US and its allies would simply
stop participating in it.
Sources:
3.)
Richard Labeviere, Dollars For Terror: The United States and Islam (New York: Algora,
2000)
4.)
Reuters, quoting government sources, reports
that the US is collaborating along with Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey in a
secret command center operated by Turkey near the Syrian border in the city of
Adana. The base had been established to
help direct military and communications support to Assad’s opponents. Hosenball, Mark.
Exclusive:
Obama authorizes secret U.S. support for Syrian rebels. August 1, 2012. Reuters.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/08/01/us-usa-syria-obama-order-idUSBRE8701OK20120801. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).
5.)
The Wall Street Journal reports on a ‘secret’
base in Jordan in which US, Jordanian, Saudi, and other allies’ intelligence
agencies have been coordinating the covert Syrian operations, which includes
vetting of rebel groups and the provision of arms and funding. Entous, Adam et al.
A
Veteran Saudi Power Player Works To Build Support to Topple Assad. August 25, 2013. The Wall Street Journal.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424127887323423804579024452583045962. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).
6.)
Reports of widespread defection of US-supported
FSA factions into the ranks of ISIS in July of 2014. Raja, Abdullah.
FSA
brigades pledge allegiance to ISIS in Al Bukamal, east Syria. July 7, 2014.
Zaman Alwsl.
https://www.zamanalwsl.net/en/readNews.php?id=5696. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).
7.)
In September 2014, US-supported Harakat Hazm
affiliate Aasin Zeidan is quoted by the LATimes as saying, “Inside Syria we
became labeled as secularists and feared Nusra Front was going to battle us… But
Nusra doesn't fight us, we actually fight alongside them. We like Nusra.” Harakat Hazm is, according to the
Washington
Post, “the biggest recipient of U.S. assistance offered under a
small-scale, covert CIA program launched this year [2014], including the first
deliveries of U.S.-made TOW antitank missiles.”
Abdulrahim, Raja.
Syria rebels, once hopeful of U.S. weapons,
lament lack of firepower. Setpember
7, 2014. LA Times.
http://www.latimes.com/world/middleeast/la-fg-syria-harakat-hazm-20140907-story.html#page=1. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).
8.)
In September 2014, the DailyStar quotes
US-backed FSA commander Bassel Idriss as saying that, “We are collaborating
with the Islamic State and the Nusra Front by attacking the Syrian Army’s
gatherings in ... Qalamoun… We have reached a point where we have to
collaborate with anyone against unfairness and injustice… Let’s face it: The
Nusra Front is the biggest power present right now in Qalamoun and we as FSA
would collaborate on any mission they launch as long as it coincides with our
values.” Knutsen, Elise.
Frustration
drives Arsal’s FSA into ISIS ranks. September
8, 2014. The Daily Star.
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Lebanon-News/2014/Sep-08/269883-frustration-drives-arsals-fsa-into-isis-ranks.ashx#ixzz3CpSZVuEG. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).
9.)
In April 2014, The Independent quotes US-backed
SRF leader Jamal Maarouf as saying, “It’s clear that I’m not fighting against
al-Qa’ida. This is a problem outside of Syria’s border, so it’s not our
problem. I don’t have a problem with anyone who fights against the regime
inside Syria.” The report goes on to
state that, “Maarouf admits to fighting alongside Jabhat al-Nusra – one example
being the offensive against Isis, whose brutal tactics were deemed too violent
even for al-Qa’ida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.
While Maarouf maintains that their military supplies are too few to
share, he cites the battle of Yabroud, against the regime, as an example of how
his group shared weapons with Jabhat al-Nusra.
“If the people who support us tell us to send weapons to another group,
we send them. They asked us a month ago to send weapons to Yabroud so we sent a
lot of weapons there. When they asked us to do this, we do it.” Hunter, Isabel.
‘I am
not fighting against al-Qa’ida… it’s not our problem’, says West’s last hope in
Syria. April 2, 2014. The Independent.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/i-am-not-fighting-againstalqaida-itsnot-our-problem-says-wests-last-hope-in-syria-9233424.html. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).
11.)
France24
reports, citing an interview conducted by Le Monde, that French President
Hollande has confirmed that France has delivered aid to Syrian rebels, most
likely weapons caches.
France delivers arms to Syrian rebels,
Hollande confirms. August 21,
2014. France24.
http://www.france24.com/en/20140821-france-arms-syria-rebels-hollande/. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).
13.)In January of 2014 John
Mearsheimer, respected scholar at the University of Chicago, writes on the
Privacy Board established by the Obama administration to investigate the
effectiveness of NSA spying programs, “The Obama administration, not
surprisingly, initially claimed that the nsa’s spying played a key role in
thwarting fifty-four terrorist plots against the United States, implying it
violated the Fourth Amendment for good reason. This was a lie, however. General
Keith Alexander, the nsa director, eventually admitted to Congress that he
could claim only one success, and that involved catching a Somali immigrant and
three cohorts living in San Diego who had sent $8,500 to a terrorist group in
Somalia.” Mearsheimer, John J.
America
Unhinged. January/February 2014,
Number 129. The National Interest.
http://nationalinterest.org/files/digital-edition/1388435556/129%20Digital%20Edition.pdf. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).
14.)
The nonprofit public policy group New American
Foundation has published a report reviewing US terrorist arrests and concludes
that widespread collection of telephone metadata does little to prevent
terrorism. Peter Bergen, director of the
foundations national security program, stated, “Our investigation found that
bulk collection of American phone metadata has had no discernible impact on
preventing acts of terrorism and only the most marginal of impacts on
preventing terrorist-related activity, such as fundraising for a terrorist
group.” Strohm, Chris.
NSA
Data Have No Impact on Terrorism: Report.
January 13, 2014. Bloomberg.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-01-13/nsa-data-has-no-discernible-impact-on-terrorism-report.html. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).
15.)Far from stopping
terrorism, US law enforcement has, in the pursuit of stopping terrorism,
actively engaged in committing terrorism in order to bring about
counterterrorism convictions. Human
Rights Watch has recently published a report with startling revelations of FBI
conduct in regards to counterterrorism operations, stating that in many
instances the FBI has created and developed terrorist plots, and pressured and
encouraged them to take place. It
states, “Since the September 11 attacks, more than 500 individuals have been
prosecuted in US federal courts for terrorism or related offenses. Many prosecutions have properly targeted
individuals engaged in planning or financing terror attacks. But many others
have targeted individuals who do not appear to have been involved in terrorist
plotting or financing at the time the government began to investigate
them. Indeed, in some cases the Federal
Bureau of Investigation may have created terrorists out of law-abiding individuals
by conducting sting operations that facilitated or invented the target’s
willingness to act. According to multiple studies, nearly 50 percent of the
more than 500 federal counterterrorism convictions resulted from
informant-based cases; almost 30 percent of those cases were sting operations
in which the informant played an active role in the underlying plot. In the
case of the “Newburgh Four,” for example, a judge said the government “came up
with the crime, provided the means, and removed all relevant obstacles,” and
had, in the process, made a terrorist out of a man “whose buffoonery is positively
Shakespearean in scope… While some of these cases involved foreign nationals
and conduct overseas, or individuals who are not Muslim, many of the most
high-profile terrorism prosecutions have focused on “homegrown” terrorist
threats allegedly posed by American Muslims. Human Rights Watch and Columbia
Law School’s Human Rights Institute found that at times, in aggressively
pursuing terrorism threats before they even materialize, US law enforcement
overstepped its role by effectively participating in developing terrorism
plots—in at least two cases even offering the defendants money to entice them
to participate in the plot.”
Illusion of Justice: Human Rights Abuses in
US Terrorism Prosecutions. Human
Rights Watch. Columbia Law School Human
Rights Institute. July 2014.
http://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/reports/usterrorism0714_ForUpload_0_0_0.pdf. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).
16.)
Leading national security scholar Nafeez Ahmed
writes in a recent
piece,
“France’s failed policies towards its Muslim minority communities have played a
critical role in establishing a groundswell of social exclusion and alienation,
that makes some French Muslims vulnerable to recruitment by Islamist
extremists. This was even acknowledged
by Bernard Squarcini, the head of France’s Central Directorate of Interior
Intelligence (DCRI), who recently admitted that the reasons France has faced an
increasingly high risk of terrorist attack include the country’s history as a
colonial power, its military involvement in Afghanistan, and the widening restrictions
on Muslim women’s dress including the banning of headscarves in public service
jobs. Yet in some ways, Squarcini also misses the point, even noted by private
US intelligence firm Stratfor, which is closely linked to the American military
intelligence community:
“France has a
significant Muslim minority largely segregated in slums known in French as
‘banlieues’ outside France's major cities. A significant proportion of the
young Muslim men who live in these areas are unemployed and disaffected. This
disaffection has been displayed periodically in the form of large-scale riots …
which resulted in massive property destruction and produced the worst civil
unrest in France since the late 1960s. While not all those involved in the
riots were Muslims, Muslims did play a significant and visible role in them…
Moves by the French government such as the burqa ban have stoked these tensions
and feelings of anger and alienation. The ban, like the 2004 ban against
headscarves in French schools, angered not only jihadists but also some
mainstream Muslims in France and beyond.”
Ahmed, Nafeez.
Blowback in Paris. January 8, 2015.
http://www.middleeasteye.net/columns/blowback-paris-1534074535. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).
17.)Noam Chomsky writes in
2001, citing Wall Street Journal reports, “Immediately after 9-11, the Wall
Street Journal, later others, began to investigate opinions of "moneyed
Muslims": bankers, professionals, managers of multinationals, and so on.
They strongly support US policies in general, but are bitter about the US role
in the region: about US support for corrupt and repressive regimes that
undermine democracy and development, and about specific policies, particularly
regarding Palestine and Iraq. Though they are not surveyed, attitudes in the
slums and villages are probably similar, but harsher; unlike the "moneyed
Muslims," the mass of the population have never agreed that the wealth of
the region should be drained to the West and local collaborators, rather than
serving domestic needs. The "moneyed Muslims" recognize, ruefully,
that Bin Laden's angry rhetoric has considerable resonance, in their own
circles as well, even though they hate and fear him, if only because they are
among his primary targets. Chomsky,
Noam.
Terror and Just Response.
July 2, 2002. Chomsky.info.
http://www.chomsky.info/articles/20020702.htm. (Accessed on 1/11/2015). Waldman, Peter et al.
America
in the Eyes of the Arab World: A Complex Mix of Emotions Fuels Hate. September 14, 2001, The Wall Street
Journal.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB1000432258298173371. (Accessed on 1/11/2015). Waldman, Peter. Pope, Hugh.
'Crusade' Reference Reinforces
Fears War on Terrorism Is Against Muslims.
September 21, 2001. The Wall Street Journal.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB1001020294332922160. (Accessed on 1/11/2015).