[COMMENT: It is about time our government woke up. The cost of their ignorance has been considerable. Our ignorance of the Muslim mentality has severely hampered the spiritual war going on, which is far more important than the military war.
So, the deeper question is why Christians are incapable of mounting an offensive strategy. Jesus was on the offensive, He was always forcing the other side to respond to Him. We will eventually wake up, but Western Christians are still getting further and further behind. (Red emphasis below is original). E. Fox]
By
Paul Sperry
FrontPageMagazine.com | December 14, 2005
Washington's
policy-makers have been careful in the war on terror to distinguish between
Islam and the terrorists. The distinction has rankled conservatives who see
scarce difference.
A little-noticed speech by President Bush in October gave them some hope. In
a major rhetorical shift, he described the enemy as "Islamic radicals" and
not just "terrorists," although he still denies that radicalism has anything
to do with their religion.
Now for the first time, a key Pentagon intelligence
agency involved in homeland security is delving into Islam's holy texts to
answer whether Islam is being radicalized by the terrorists or is already
radical. Military brass want a better
understanding of what's motivating the insurgents in Iraq and the terrorists
around the globe, including those inside America who may be preparing to
strike domestic military bases. The enemy appears indefatigable, even more
active now than before 9/11.
Are the terrorists really driven by self-serving politics and personal
demons? Or are they driven by religion? And if it's religion, are they
following a manual of war contained in their scripture?
Answers are hard to come by.
Four years
into the war on terror, U.S. intelligence officials tell me there are no
baseline studies of the Muslim prophet Muhammad or his ideological or
military doctrine found at either the CIA or Defense Intelligence Agency, or
even the war colleges.
[Clausewitz, Sun
Tzu --yes; Mohammed-- No?]
But that is slowly starting to change as the Pentagon develops a new
strategy to deal with the threat from Islamic terrorists through its
little-known intelligence agency called the
Counterintelligence Field Activity or CIFA, which
staffs hundreds of investigators and analysts to help coordinate Pentagon
security efforts at home and abroad. CIFA also supports Northern Command in
Colorado, which was established after 9/11 to help military forces react to
terrorist threats in the continental United States.
Dealing with the threat on a tactical and operational level through
counterstrikes and capture has proven only marginally successful. Now
military leaders want to combat it from a strategic standpoint, using
informational warfare, among other things. A critical part of that strategy
involves studying Islam, including the Quran and the hadiths, or traditions
of Muhammad.
"Today we are confronted with a stateless threat that does not have at the
strategic level targetable entities: no capitals, no economic base, no
military formations or installations," states a new Pentagon briefing paper
I've obtained. "Yet political Islam wages an ideological battle against the
non-Islamic world at the tactical, operational and strategic level.
The
West's response is focused at the tactical and operation level, leaving the
strategic level -- Islam -- unaddressed."
So far the conclusions of intelligence analysts assigned to the project, who
include both private contractors and career military officials, contradict
the commonly held notion that Islam is a peaceful religion hijacked or
distorted by terrorists. They've found that
the
terrorists for the most part are following a war-fighting doct rine
articulated through Muhammad in the Quran, elaborated on in the hadiths,
codified in Islamic or sharia law, and reinforced by recent interpretations
or fatwahs.
"Islam is an ideological engine of war (Jihad)," concludes the sensitive
Pentagon briefing paper. And "no one is looking for its off switch."
Why? One major reason, the briefing states, is government-wide "indecision
[over] whether Islam is radical or being radicalized."
So, which is it?
"Strategic themes suggest Islam is radical by
nature," according to the briefing, which goes on to cite the 26 chapters of
the Quran dealing with violent jihad and the examples of the Muslim prophet,
who it says sponsored "terror and slaughter" against unbelievers.
"Muhammad's behaviors today would be defined as radical," the defense
document says, and Muslims today are commanded by their "militant" holy book
to follow his example. It adds:
Western
leaders can no longer afford to overlook the "cult characteristics of
Islam."
It also ties Muslim charity to war. Zakat, the alms-giving pillar of Islam,
is described in the briefing as "an asymmetrical war-fighting funding
mechanism." Which in English translates to: combat support under the guise
of tithing. Of the eight obligatory categories of disbursement of Muslim
charitable donations, it notes that two are for funding jihad, or holy war.
Indeed, authorities have traced millions of dollars received by major jihadi
terror groups like Hamas and al-Qaida back to Saudi and other foreign Isamic
charities and also U.S. Muslim charities, such as the Holy Land Foundation.
According to the Quran, jihad is not something a Muslim can opt out of. It
demands able-bodied believers join the fight. Those unable -- women and the
elderly -- are not exempt; they must give "asylum and aid" (Surah 8:74) to
those who do fight the unbelievers in the cause of Allah.
In analyzing the threat on the domestic front, the Pentagon briefing draws
perhaps its most disturbing conclusions. It argues the U.S. has not suffered
from scattered insurgent attacks -- as opposed to the concentrated and
catastrophic attack by al-Qaida on 9-11 -- in large part because it has a
relatively small Muslim population. But that could change as the Muslim
minority grows and gains more influence.
The internal document explains that
Islam
divides offensive jihad into a "three-phase attack strategy" for gaining
control of lands for Allah. The first phase is the "Meccan," or weakened,
period, whereby a small Muslim minority asserts itself through largely
peaceful and political measures involving Islamic NGOs -- such as the
Islamic Society of North America, which investigators say has its roots in
the militant Muslim Brotherhood, and Muslim pressure groups, such as the
Council on American-Islamic Relations, whose leaders are on record
expressing their desire to Islamize America.
In the second "preparation" phase, a "reasonably influential" Muslim
minority starts to turn more militant. The briefing uses Britain and the
Netherlands as examples.
And in the final jihad period, or "Medina Stage," a large minority uses its
strength of numbers and power to rise up against the majority, as Muslim
youth recently demonstrated in terrorizing France, the Pentagon paper notes.
It
also notes that
unlike Judaism and Christianity, Islam advocates
expansion by force. The final command of jihad, as revealed to Muhammad in
the Quran, is to conquer the world in the name of Islam.
The defense briefing adds that Islam is also unique in classifying
unbelievers as "standing enemies against whom it is legitimate to wage war."
Right now political leaders don't understand the
true nature of the threat,\ it says, because the intelligence community has
yet to educate them. They still think Muslim terrorists, even suicide
bombers, are mindless "criminals" motivated by "hatred of our freedoms,"
rather than religious zealots motivated by their faith. And as a result, we
have no real strategic plan for winning a war against jihadists.
Even many intelligence analysts and investigators working in the field with
the Joint Terrorism Task Forces have a shallow understanding of Islam.
"I don't like to criticize our intelligence services, because we did win the
Cold War," says a Northern Command intelligence official. "However, all of
these organizations have made only limited progress adjusting to the current
threat or the sharing of information."
Why?
"All suffer heavily from political correctness,"
he explains.
PC still infects the Pentagon, four years after jihadists hit the nation's
military headquarters.
"A
lot of folks here have a very pedestrian understanding of Islam and the
Islamic threat," a Pentagon intelligence analyst working on the project told
me. "We're getting Islam 101, and we need Islam 404."
The hardest part of formulating a strategic
response to the threat is defining Islam as a political and military enemy.
Once that psychological barrier has been crossed, defense sources tell me,
the development of countermeasures -- such as educating the public about the
militant nature of Islam and exploiting "critical vulnerabilities" or rifts
within the Muslim faith and community -- can begin.
"Most Americans don't realize we are in a war of survival -- a war that is
going to continue for decades," the Northcom official warns.
It remains to be seen, however, whether our
PC-addled political leaders would ever adopt such controversial measures.
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