|


|
|

What Osama bin Laden learned from the Left
Waller R. Newell
Much has been written about Osama bin Laden's Islamic
fundamentalism; less about the contribution of European Marxist
postmodernism to bin Laden's thinking. In fact, the
ideology by which al Qaeda justifies its acts of terror owes as
much to baleful trends in Western thought as it does to a
perversion of Muslim beliefs. Osama's doctrine of terror
is partly a Western export.
To see this, it is necessary to revisit the intellectual brew
that produced the ideology of Third World socialism in the
1960s. A key figure here is the German philosopher Martin
Heidegger (1889-1976), who not only helped shape several
generations of European leftists and founded postmodernism, but
also was a leading supporter of the Nazis. Heidegger
argued for the "primacy of peoples" in contrast with the
alienating "individualism of modernity." In order to
escape the yoke of Western capitalism and the "idle chatter" of
constitutional democracy, "the people" would have to return to
its primordial destiny through an act of "violent revolutionary
resolve."
Heidegger saw in the Nazis just this return to the
blood-and-soil heritage of the authentic German people.
Paradoxically, the Nazis embraced technology at its most
advanced to shatter the iron cage of modernity and bring back
the purity of the distant past. And they embraced terror
and violence to push beyond the modern present -- hence the term
postmodern -- and vault the people back before modernity, with
its individual liberties and market economy, to the imagined
collective austerity of the feudal age.
This vision of the postmodernist revolution went straight from
Heidegger into the French postwar Left, especially the works of
Jean-Paul Sartre, eager apologist for Stalinism and the Cultural
Revolution in China. Sartre's protégé, the Algerian writer
Frantz Fanon, crystallized the Third World variant of
postmodernist revolution in "The Wretched of the Earth" (1961).
From there, it entered the world of Middle Eastern radicals.
Many of the leaders of the Shiite revolution in Iran that
deposed the modernizing shah and brought the Ayatollah Khomeini
to power in 1979 had studied Fanon's brand of Marxism. Ali
Shari'at, the Sorbonne-educated Iranian sociologist of religion
considered by many the intellectual father of the Shiite
revolution, translated "The Wretched of the Earth" and Sartre's
"Being and Nothingness" into Persian. The Iranian
revolution was a synthesis of Islamic fundamentalism and
European Third World socialism.
In the postmodernist leftism of these revolutionaries, "the
people" supplanted Marx's proletariat as the agent of
revolution. Following Heidegger and Fanon, leaders like Lin Piao,
ideologist of the Red Guards in China and Pol Pot, student of
leftist philosophy in France before becoming a founder of the
Khmer Rouge, justified revolution as a therapeutic act by which
non-Western peoples would regain the dignity they had lost to
colonial oppressors and to American-style materialism,
selfishness, and immorality. A purifying violence would
purge the people of egoism and hedonism and draw them back into
a primitive collective of self-sacrifice.
Many elements in the ideology of al Qaeda -- set forth most
clearly in Osama bin Laden's 1996 "Declaration
of War Against America" -- derive from this same mix.
Indeed, in Arab intellectual circles today, bin Laden is already
being likened to an earlier icon of Third World revolution who
renounced a life of privilege to head for the mountains and
fight the American oppressor, Che Guevara. According to
Cairo journalist Issandr Elamsani, Arab leftist intellectuals
still see the world very much in 1960s terms. "They are
all ex-Sorbonne, old Marxists," he says, "who look at everything
through a postcolonial prism."
Just as Heidegger wanted the German people to return to a foggy,
medieval, blood-and-soil collectivism purged of the corruptions
of modernity and just as Pol Pot wanted Cambodia to return to
the Year Zero, so does Osama dream of returning his world to the
imagined purity of seventh-century Islam. And just as
Fanon argued that revolution can never accomplish its goals
through negotiation or peaceful reform, so does Osama regard
terror as good in itself, a therapeutic act, quite apart from
any concrete aim. The willingness to kill is proof of
one's purity.
According to journalist Robert Worth, writing in the New York
Times on the intellectual roots of Islamic terror, bin Laden is
poorly educated in Islamic theology. A wealthy playboy in
his youth, he fell under the influence of radical Arab
intellectuals of the 1960's, who blended calls for Marxist
revolution with calls for a pure Islamic state.
Many of these men were imprisoned and executed for their attacks
on Arab regimes;
Sayyid Qutb,
for example, a major figure in the rise of Islamic
fundamentalism, was executed in Egypt in 1965. But their
ideas lived on. Qutb's intellectual progeny included Fathi
Yakan, who likened the coming Islamic revolution to the French
and Russian revolutions, Abdullah Azzam, a Palestinian activist
killed in a car bombing in 1989 and Safar Al-Hawali, a Saudi
fundamentalist frequently jailed by the Saudi government.
As such men dreamed of a pure Islamic state, European
revolutionary ideology was seldom far from their minds.
Wrote Fathi Yakan, "The groundwork for the French Revolution was
laid by Rousseau, Voltaire and Montesquieu; the Communist
Revolution realized plans set by Marx, Engels and Lenin.
The same holds true for us as well."
The influence of Qutb's "Signposts on the Road" (1964) is
clearly traceable in pronouncements by Islamic Jihad, the group
that would justify its assassination of Egyptian president Anwar
Sadat in 1981 as a step toward ending American domination of
Egypt and ushering in a pure Islamic order. In the 1990's,
Islamic Jihad would merge with al Qaeda and Osama's "Declaration
of War Against America" in turn would show an obvious debt to
the Islamic Jihad manifesto, "The Neglected Duty."
It can be argued, then, that the birthplace of Osama's brand of
terrorism was Paris 1968, when, amid the student riots and
radical teach-ins, the influence of Sartre, Fanon, and the new
postmodernist Marxist champions of the "people's destiny" was at
its peak. By the mid '70s, according to Claire Sterling's
"The Terror Network," "practically every terrorist and guerrilla
force to speak of was represented in Paris. The
Palestinians especially were there in force." This was the
heyday of Yasser Arafat's terrorist organization Al Fatah, whose
1968 tract "The Revolution and Violence" has been called "a
selective précis of 'The Wretched of the Earth.'"
While Al Fatah occasionally still used the old-fashioned
Leninist language of class struggle, the increasingly radical
groups that succeeded it perfected the melding of Islamism and
Third World socialism. Their tracts blended Heidegger and
Fanon with calls to revive a strict Islamic social order.
"We declare," says the Shiite terrorist group Hezbollah in its
"Open Letter to the Downtrodden in Lebanon and the World"
(1985), "that we are a nation that fears only God" and will not
accept "humiliation from America and its allies and the Zionist
entity that has usurped the sacred Islamic land." The aim
of violent struggle is "giving all our people the opportunity to
determine their fate." But that fate must follow the
prescribed course: "We do not hide our commitment to the rule of
Islam, ... which alone guarantees justice and dignity for all
and prevents any new imperialist attempt to infiltrate our
country. This Islamic resistance must ... with God's help
receive from all Muslims in all parts of the world utter
support."
These 1980's calls to revolution could have been uttered last
week by Osama bin Laden. Indeed, the chief doctrinal
difference between the radicals of several decades ago and Osama
only confirms the influence of postmodernist socialism on the
latter: Whereas Qutb and other early Islamists looked mainly
inward, concentrating on revolution in Muslim countries, Osama
directs his struggle primarily outward, against American
hegemony. While for the early revolutionaries, toppling
their own tainted regimes was the principal path to the purified
Islamic state, for Osama, the chief goal is bringing America to
its knees.
The relationship between postmodernist European leftism and
Islamic radicalism is a two-way street. Not only have
Islamists drawn on the legacy of the European Left but European
Marxists have taken heart from Islamic terrorists who seemed
close to achieving the longed-for revolution against American
hegemony. Consider Michel Foucault and Jacques Derrida,
two leading avatars of postmodernism. Foucault was sent by the
Italian daily Corriere della Sera to observe the Iranian
revolution and the rise of the Ayatollah Khomeini. Like
Sartre, who had rhapsodized over the Algerian revolution,
Foucault was enthralled, pronouncing Khomeini "a kind of mystic
saint." The Frenchman welcomed "Islamic government" as a
new form of "political spirituality" that could inspire Western
radicals to combat capitalist hegemony.
Heavily influenced by Heidegger and Sartre, Foucault was typical
of postmodernist socialists in having neither concrete political
aims nor the slightest interest in tangible economic grievances
as motives for revolution. To him, the appeal of
revolution was aesthetic and voyeuristic: "a violence, an
intensity, an utterly remarkable passion." For Foucault as
for Fanon, Hezbollah and the rest down to Osama, the purpose of
violence is not to relieve poverty or adjust borders.
Violence is an end in itself. Foucault exalts it as "the
craving, the taste, the capacity, the possibility of an absolute
sacrifice." In this, he is at one with Osama's followers,
who claim to love death while the Americans "love Coca-Cola."
Derrida, meanwhile, reacted to the collapse of the Soviet Union
by calling for a "new international." Whereas the old
international was made up of the economically oppressed, the new
one would be a grab bag of the culturally alienated, "the
dispossessed and the marginalized": students, feminists,
environmentalists, gays, aboriginals, all uniting to combat
American-led globalization. Islamic fundamentalists were
obvious candidates for inclusion.
And so it is that in the latest leftist potboiler, "Empire,"
Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri depict the American-dominated
global order as today's version of the bourgeoisie. Rising
up against it is Derrida's "new international." Hardt and
Negri identify Islamist terrorism as a spearhead of "the
postmodern revolution" against "the new imperial order."
Why? Because of "its refusal of modernity as a weapon of
Euro-American hegemony."
"Empire" is currently flavor of the month among American
postmodernists. It is almost eerily appropriate that the
book should be the joint production of an actual terrorist,
currently in jail, and a professor of literature at Duke, the
university that led postmodernism's conquest of American
academia. In professorial hands, postmodernism is reduced
to a parlor game in which "we deconstruct" great works of the
past and impose our own meaning on them without regard for the
authors' intentions or the truth or falsity of our
interpretations. This has damaged liberal education in
America. Still, it doesn't kill people -- unlike the
deadly postmodernism out there in the world. Heirs to
Heidegger and his leftist devotees, the terrorists don't limit
themselves to deconstructing texts. They want to
deconstruct the West, through acts like those we witnessed on
September 11.
What the terrorists have in common with our armchair nihilists
is a belief in the primacy of the radical will, unrestrained by
traditional moral teachings such as the requirements of
prudence, fairness, and reason. The terrorists seek to put
this belief into action, shattering tradition through acts of
violent revolutionary resolve. That is how al Qaeda can
ignore mainstream Islam, which prohibits the deliberate killing
of noncombatants and slaughter innocents in the name of creating
a new world, the latest in a long line of grimly punitive
collectivist utopias.
Reprinted from
The Weekly Standard -- Waller R. Newell is professor of
political science and philosophy at Carleton University in
Ottawa.

©
copyright Beckwith 2007
all right reserved
Best viewed at 1024 X 768 pixels, small fonts
|
|