作者pursuistmi (common people)
看板IA
標題[新聞] 阿拉伯聖戰熱消退
時間Sat Sep 13 10:36:59 2008
標題:Jihad Waning in Osama's Homeland
By BOBBY GHOSH
For an adoptive New Yorker, to spend the 9/11 anniversary in Osama bin
Laden's hometown felt eerie — doubly so because Riyadh has come to be known
as the city of two towers. The Al Faisaliyah and the Kingdom Tower, gleaming
glass-and-steel skyscrapers, are less than a decade old, but already they
have acquired iconic status: on Arabic TV news, the image of either or both
towers is used to signal the viewer that a story's dateline is in Saudi
Arabia.
Two nights earlier, while taking in the glittering lights of Riyadh from the
viewing deck of Al Faisaliyah, I felt a sudden chill despite the warm desert
air when remembering how, on my first visit to New York nearly 14 years ago,
I had bundled up against the icy winds swirling around the deck of the World
Trade Center's South Tower.
I only stayed on the deck of Al Faisaliyah a couple of minutes and didn't
dwell on any parallels with the Twin Towers. It seemed unfair to burden
Riyadh with the legacy of its most notorious son — especially since the city
wants so badly to expurgate him from its self-image. Two Riyadhis I met on
Thursday insisted, erroneously, that bin Laden had been born and raised on
his construction-magnate father's building sites out in the desert. They were
also adamant that, for all his anti-Americanism, the deepest hatred of the
al-Qaeda founder is reserved for his own country. They pointed to al-Qaeda
attacks on several Saudi targets since 9/11 as proof of bin Laden's murderous
intent against his own countrymen.
The 9/11 anniversary wasn't big news in Riyadh; Saudis have other things on
their minds, this being the holy fasting month of Ramadan. But while
counterterrorism experts in the West take this opportunity to bemoan the
resurgence of the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan, it's
worth noting that Saudi Arabia is one of the few places where jihadism is on
the wane — with relatively little help from the Bush Administration's
"global war on terror."
The clearest sign of that success is the freedom with which Riyadhis can
travel around their city during Ramadan. Photographer Franco Pagetti, a
frequent visitor to Saudi Arabia, recalls that in 2004, there were
checkpoints everywhere and a highly visible police and military presence on
the streets and in public places. Last night Franco and I drove from one end
of the city to another without encountering a single checkpoint. There were
no policemen visible amid the crush of midnight shoppers at the suq in the
oldest part of the city. As we went up the Al Faisaliyah tower, the security
measures were barely noticeable; it's harder to get into my co-op on the
Upper East Side.
How did the Saudis do it? They used a combination of brute force and subtle
persuasion. Few details are available on the crackdown on terrorist groups
because the authorities here don't much like talking about it. So it's a fair
guess that many of the means they used wouldn't pass any Western human-rights
test. Riyadhis speak in whispers about midnight raids, arrests, torture and
summary executions. The government also put the squeeze on al-Qaeda's sources
of funding by imposing rules on previously unmonitored religious charities.
In private, officials boast that bin Laden's organization receives no money
from his homeland.
In public, the government of King Abdullah prefers to talk about its efforts
to reason with extremist preachers and rehabilitate young men led astray by
"deviant" ideologies. And Abdullah launched a massive TV, newspaper and
advertising campaign to counter al-Qaeda propaganda; for a time, you couldn't
draw money from an ATM without reading warnings against extremism!
The Saudis also benefited from the overall decline in bin Laden's prestige
across the Arab world. Opinion polls in the region show that al-Qaeda's brand
of jihad has lost much of its appeal, especially after suicide bombers began
to target Muslims — most horrendously in Iraq but also in Afghanistan,
Pakistan, Morocco, Algeria and, of course, Saudi Arabia.
Saudi officials concede that the fight is far from over. There's evidence
that some young Saudis are still traveling abroad to fight the "holy war" on
foreign soil. U.S. military and Iraqi officials say Saudi jihadis underpin
al-Qaeda's Iraqi operation — although there, too, their numbers have
dwindled.
Nor has extremism been entirely exorcised from Saudi soil. The top story in
the Saudi Gazette on 9/11 announced the arrest of three Saudis and two
foreigners for "spreading false propaganda through the Internet." An unnamed
official at the Ministry of the Interior says the propaganda sought to lure
Saudis into schemes with "vicious and wicked goals." The story is short on
details, but it seems clear that the arrested men were trying to recruit
jihadis.
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1840737,00.html?xid=rss-world
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