January 14, 2020
© Photo: Wikimedia
According to BBC’s top
expert on jihadist movements, official publications from ISIS are now calling
the killing of the Iranian General Qasem Soleimani an act of God, and are
portraying Shiite Iran as Muslims’ greatest enemy, more so even than powers
that don’t claim to be Muslim.
In a series of tweets from
the BBC’s jihadism-expert, Mina al-Lami, she explains why ISIS is ecstatic that
Soleimani is dead — they say that it’s because the killing of Soleimani is a
strong display from God that God is wreaking revenge against the opponents of
jihad. Her tweets show photos of some of these ISIS publications, paraphrase
from them, and place their statements into a broader context of Islamic history
and of the ancient split between fundamentalist Sunni Islam, on the one hand,
and all of Shiite Islam (including especially Iran’s), on the other.
Here are highlights from
this string of tweets, by Mina al-Lami, the BBC’s expert on jihadist movements.
She makes clear, “Views are mine.” These statements do not come from BBC, but
from herself, to explain why ISIS is so happy that Solomeini is dead:
This is the typical position
of jihadists in such situations: they gloat and pray that God weakens their
enemies’ at the hands of one another, for the benefit of jihadists[:]
IS gloats at death of
Soleimani in first comment on US-Iran crisis
Islamic State group (ISIS) has welcomed the death of Iranian commander Qasem
Soleimani, portraying his demise in a U.S. drone strike on 3 Janua…
6:22 AM – 10 Jan 2020
https://twitter.com/Minalami/status/1215558265272197122
Thread: In the
editorial of its weekly paper #AlNaba, #ISIS welcomes the death of #Soleimani
in a U.S. drone strike, but is careful not to openly credit the U.S. for his
demise but portrays it as an act of God to support IS and Muslims more broadly.
12:57 AM – 10 Jan 2020
https://twitter.com/Minalami/status/1215558269588201472
This is the typical position
of jihadists in such situations: they gloat and pray that God weakens their
enemies’ at the hands of one another, for the benefit of jihadists
12:57 AM – 10
Jan 2020
—
MY COMMENTARY ON THIS:
Though, generally in the
press, jihadism is treated as being just a movement of some crazed Muslims,
that common portrayal is a serious distortion of the reality,
which goes back to 1744, when the fundamentalist Islamic cleric Muhammad ibn
Abd al Wahhab signed a blood oath with the aspiring political leader and
conqueror Muhammad ibn Saud, to form a new Islamic nation, starting in the
desert of what now is Saudi Arabia. It was to be a fusion in which the laws come from
God as based upon the Quran, and the government applies those laws, so that, in
effect, the Quran is to become the constitution for Muslim countries. That’s
Sharia Law — law derived from the Quran and from its expert interpreters as
determined by the Wahhabist clergy. Wahhab hated Shiites and considered them to
be the worst and most hypocritical fake Muslims, followers of distorters of the
will of God as it had been expressed by God’s Prophet Mohammed in the Quran.
Whereas in this new nation, the government would be ruled by descendants from
Muhammad ibn Saud, the clergy would be followers of Muhammad ibn Wahhab. Part
of their shared oath was to convert or kill all Shiites. This is the most
extreme exclusionist version of Islam. In other countries than Saudi Arabia, it
is known not as Wahhabism, but as Salafism, or ancestral Islam, because it is
claimed to represent the purest interpretation of God’s laws. The greatest
threat to it, in that view, is Shia Islam, which must be wiped out in order to
then become enabled to take over the world for God by going after all other
infidels.
On 9 June 2017, I
headlined “All Islamic
Terrorism Is Perpetrated by Fundamentalist Sunnis, Except Terrorism Against Israel” and listed there
the 54 most prominently reported instances of Islamic terrorism, from 11
September 2001 to then — a 16-year period — and all of them except for the ones
that were directed against Israel, were by fundamentalist-Sunni groups. (Israel
also was hit by some Sunni groups, but all other countries only by Sunni
groups.) Not all of those terrorist groups were Wahhabist, but all were either
Wahhabist or Salafist.
ISIS is the most extreme of
all fundamentalist Sunni groups. One of its main differences from Al Qaeda is
that whereas Al Qaeda leadership try to restrain their members from attacking
Shiites, and aim to achieve as wide support from the world’s Muslims as they
possibly can while still advancing the jihadist cause, there are no such
restraints placed upon the followers of ISIS regarding Shiites, all of whom are
instead to be treated as infidels, and either killed or else converted.
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