Setting Up An Islamic State

Annie

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Nov 22, 2003
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Manifesto found on the internet. There's lots more at the site:

http://jamestown.org/news_details.php?news_id=100

03/18/2005 - An interesting new publication to hit the web gives insight into the thinking of an al-Qaeda strategist on the next stages of the struggle. Posted on the al-Ikhlas jihadi forum [http://ekhlas.com/forum] the work is entitled Idarat al-Tawahhush, "The Management of Barbarism," further defined as "the phase of transition to the Islamic state." Due to the strategic importance of the document, Terrorism Focus has undertaken an in-depth examination of the Arabic text.

Published by the Center of Islamic Studies and Research (an al-Qaeda affiliate), the 113-page work ‘Management of Barbarism' aims to map out the progressive stages of establishing an Islamic state, from early beginnings in defined areas in the Arabian Peninsula, or Nigeria, Jordan, the Maghreb, Pakistan or Yemen, and its subsequent global expansion. The author is Abu Bakr Naji, a name familiar from his contributions to the Sawt al-Jihad online magazine (which are republished at the end of this book).

By "Management of Barbarism" the author refers to the period just after the collapse of a superpower, the period of "savage chaos". It appears pointedly to be a method of not repeating the experience of Afghanistan prior to the rule of the Taliban, and of improving controls over the periods experienced, for instance, in Somalia after the fall of Siad Barre.

Contents

After ample prolegomena on Middle East history and the causes of the rise and fall of superpowers, the book substantially falls into five broad themes:

1) Definition of ‘Management of Barbarism'
2) The Path of Empowerment
3) The Most Important Principles and Policies
4) The Most Pressing Difficulties and Obstacles
5) Conclusion – demonstrating jihad as the ideal solution

Jihadi strategy

The ‘Path of Empowerment' theme constitutes the strategy of the mujahideen. In this the author further sub-divides into three distinct phases:

1) The Disruption and Exhaustion phase
2) The Management of Barbarism phase
3) The Empowerment phase

In the first "Disruption and Exhaustion" phase, the mujahideen are to a) exhaust the enemy's forces by stretching them through dispersal of targets and b) "attract the youth through exemplary targeting such as occurred at Bali, Al-Muhayya and Djerba."

At the "Management of Barbarism phase", the mujahideen are to "establish internal security, ensure food and medical supplies, defend the zone from external attack, establish Shari'ah justice, an armed force, an intelligence service, provide economic sufficiency, defend against [public] hypocrisy and deviant opinions and ensure obedience, and the establishment of alliances with neighboring elements that are yet to give total conformity to the Management, and improve management structures."

The "Empowerment" phase is an extension of the above. The policy is to continue Disruption and Exhaustion activities, at the same time establishing logistic links with the various Management zones. A conspicuous example of this phase is the series of events leading up to the September 11 attacks on the United States, which "destroyed the peoples' awe of America and of the lesser ranking Apostate armies." The fall of Afghanistan, the author explains, was either planned to happen, or was due to happen even without the September 11 events, and had as the result the multiplication of jihadi groups bent on revenge.

As for future targeting, this should be variegated "in all parts of the Islamic world and beyond it. For instance, in striking at tourist resorts frequented by Crusaders, all tourist resorts will have to be secured," with all the dispersal of energy and costs this involves. The same goes for Crusader banks in Turkey employing interest, or petrol installations near Aden, which will subsequently oblige security hikes for refineries, pipelines and shipping. "If two apostate authors are simultaneously liquidated in two different countries, it will require the security for thousands of writers in the Islamic world."

An important feature of this phase is the attention to be given to media and propaganda strategy, both for winning support and recruitment, and for deterring opposition. The media strategy should ‘target in depth middle ranking officers in the armed forces [of Muslim nations] to push them to join the jihad.' It should ‘aim at every stage to justify operations to the populous legally and intellectually … given that, assuming that our long struggle will require half a million mujahideen, getting such a number from a nation of millions is easier than from the ranks of the Islamic movement.'[...]
 
Gee, this doesn't sound like Arabian's Islam which is all peaceful and loves all religions and would only kill to defend itself from attack.

I think there will come a point where western countries, and the US in particular, will have to ask themselves if they can continue the war playing by our rules instead of theirs. We give 100X more value to their lives than they do and that is their greatest weapon against us.
 
HorhayAtAMD said:
Gee, this doesn't sound like Arabian's Islam which is all peaceful and loves all religions and would only kill to defend itself from attack.

I think there will come a point where western countries, and the US in particular, will have to ask themselves if they can continue the war playing by our rules instead of theirs. We give 100X more value to their lives than they do and that is their greatest weapon against us.

I agree. Notice how many of these 'steps' are already being fought about in Canada and Europe? There is a process to their madness.
 
Kat, a couple of days ago you posted some WWI pics that were in color. Did you notice the burned and bombed out churches in the pics? Yet in this war, we are too PC to bomb a Mosque while they are shooting at us from it. How things have changed....
 
freeandfun1 said:
Kat, a couple of days ago you posted some WWI pics that were in color. Did you notice the burned and bombed out churches in the pics? Yet in this war, we are too PC to bomb a Mosque while they are shooting at us from it. How things have changed....

Well it may be pc, but I think it may have more to do with precision bombing.
 
Kathianne said:
Well it may be pc, but I think it may have more to do with precision bombing.

Monte Cassino.

Not precision bombing, PC. Remeber a few months back when we knew they were shooting at us from Mosques and that they were storing weapons there to kill us with and everybody screamed.... "You can't enter a Mosque, that is disrespectful."
 
freeandfun1 said:
Monte Cassino.

Not precision bombing, PC. Remeber a few months back when we knew they were shooting at us from Mosques and that they were storing weapons there to kill us with and everybody screamed.... "You can't enter a Mosque, that is disrespectful."

On that I agree. But remember we did enter the mosques in Monsul, for good reason. Made sure we took along Iraqis so it would be documented who was firing bullets in there.
 
One can only hope it does not take europe a few hundred years to realize the conquest of Islam throughout its lands as happened before the crusades.
 
Yurt said:
One can only hope it does not take europe a few hundred years to realize the conquest of Islam throughout its lands as happened before the crusades.

They do not have a few hundred years, heck I doubt some of them have more than a decade.
 
Another example of "peaceful" Islam:

KUWAIT CITY - A liberal university professor — tired of legal and verbal assaults from fundamentalists who say he mocks Islam — has given up his fight for freedom of speech in a country he says has become infested with the "germs and viruses of hatred and tyranny."



Ahmed al-Baghdadi — sentenced last week to a suspended one-year prison term for mocking Islam — said he has written his last newspaper column. Earlier, he said he would seek asylum in a Western country to protect his life, his family and his freedom of expression.

The legal battle stemmed from a June 5, 2004, column in which al-Baghdadi wrote that he sent his son to an expensive foreign school rather than a state school because he did not want "ignorant" teachers to teach him "how to disrespect women and non-Muslims." Wrong teachings could lead his son to terrorism, he said.


"In short, I want to have a son with an education and a mind I can be proud of, not (a son) with backward thinking," he wrote.


The U.S.-educated al-Baghdadi, who specializes in political Islam, has been campaigning for years against fundamentalists who he said "terrorize" writers and journalists.


"If terrorism spreads, nobody will be spared. Everyone could be gripped by the neck for a word or a joke unsuspiciously uttered, and accused of being against religion," he wrote in a December 1999 column.


That year, al-Baghdadi was convicted of blaspheming Islam when he wrote that the Prophet Mohammed initially failed to convert nonbelievers in the holy city of Mecca. Kuwait's emir, Sheik Jaber Al Ahmed Al Sabah, pardoned the professor and he was released from prison after serving about half of his one-month sentence.
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