BY MARK DURIE (FRONTPAGEMAG.COM)
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US special forces under attack in Afghanistan |
In the past two weeks at least nine Americans have been killed by their Afghan allies in what is known to as “insider
killings.” Members of the Afghan army, having been trained and armed by
NATO forces, are turning their weapons in increasing numbers against their
foreign allies, killing at least 40 NATO troops this year so far.
These killings are demoralizing, not only for the
troops, but also for the folks back home. They make people
war-weary. Mrs. Marina Buckley, the mother of Lance Corporal Gregory
Buckley who was killed by one of his Afghan allies just before he was due to
return home, spoke for many when she said: “Our forces shouldn’t be
there. It should be over. It’s done. No more.”
These killings have been blamed on foreign spies and
Taliban infiltrators, but such theories have been discounted by military investigators, who could only link one in ten killings to
Taliban infiltration.
The generals seem to be mystified, for Colonel Lapan,
spokesman for the US Joint Chiefs of Staff commented, “we don’t know what’s
causing them, and we’re looking at everything.”
They could also look at Islam, and at history.
Let us wind the clock back 120 years to Aceh, today
part of Indonesia. In 1892 the sultanate of Aceh, a staunchly Islamic
region, had been under Dutch military occupation for twice as many years as the
Americans have been in Afghanistan. When the Dutch first stormed the
Acehnese capital Kutaraja (now Banda Aceh) in 1871 they naively assumed that
control of the rest of the countryside would quickly follow. Instead they became
entangled in a conflict which lasted for decades.
A poignant legacy of the Aceh-Dutch war is a military
cemetery in Banda Aceh, reputed to be the largest graveyard of Dutch troops
outside Holland.
As the decades passed, the Acehnese waged a tenacious
insurgency from jungle hideouts, and Dutch leaders cycled through various
theories to explain their military failures. One theory was that the
passing of time would see a steady reduction in hostilities. Time did
pass, and this theory ended up in the trash. Another theory was that a
“concentration line” of forts could effect a safe haven around the capital to
guarantee security, but the attacks continued.
A particularly demoralizing aspect of the conflict was
a pattern of Acehnese allies turning against and killing Dutch soldiers. Teuku Umar was an early
leader of the Acehnese resistance who became an ally of the Dutch, as a result
of which he was rewarded with weapons, money and command of hundreds of
troops. Then he turned these weapons and troops against his supposed
“allies,” inflicting heavy casualties. The Dutch regarded this as an
odious betrayal, yet today the name of Teuku Umar is recognized as one of
Indonesia’s greatest heroes and boulevards all over the country are named after
him.
The problem of deceit and betrayal was also a
rank-and-file problem. There was no shortage of would-be Acehnese martyrs
who, for the sake of gaining a victim, were willing to feign friendship with
the Dutch, before drawing their knives against them. The phenomenon of
unpredictable killings by the Acehnese came to be known as Atjèh-moord ”Acehnese
murder.”
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The Acehnese warriors |
The failure of Dutch military policy in Aceh – and the
resulting drain of Dutch blood and treasure – caused a host of political
difficulties for governments back in Holland. The war became intensely
unpopular.
The turning point in the Aceh-Dutch war came in
1891-92 when Christian Snouck Hurgronje, an expert in Arabic and Islam, was
sent to do field research into “the pernicious Aceh Question” (het
verderfelijke Atjeh-questie).
Snouck Hurgronje was the preeminent Western expert on
Islam of his generation. After completing a PhD on Islamic theology in
Holland, he spent a year in Mecca in 1884-85, living as a Muslim, studying at
the feet of the Sheikhs, and making a special study of Indonesian Muslims.
After his field trip to Aceh, Snouck Hurgronje
published a two-volume report on the Acehnese society in 1893, which included a
military analysis, and offered a blueprint for winning the insurgency.
At the heart of Snouck Hurgronje’s explanation of the
“Aceh Question” was a theological analysis. The Acehnese war, he
explained, was jihad, a theologically motivated struggle against the
Dutch as infidel-occupiers of Islamic territory.
Because it was a
theological struggle, grounded in the deeply held Islamic convictions of the
Acehnese people, the Aceh war could not be won by capturing a few key cities or
neutralizing a handful of key leaders. Indeed, as time passed, and the
early chieftain leaders were superseded, the insurgency came to be dominated by
clerics, whose influence greatly increased as a result of the jihad.
(This same pattern can be observed in Afghanistan over the past decade.)
Snouck Hurgronje’s thesis was rejected by many when it
first saw the light of day. In time however, it proved triumphant, and
provided the basis for the successful pacification of Aceh. It was only
when the Dutch authorities aligned their military strategy with Snouck
Hurgronje’s insights that they began to win the war. Military success
came as a huge relief to the Dutch authorities, and meant that by 1902 Snouck
Hurgronje was able to write, “Now no one any longer doubts that the dogmas of
Islam on the subject of religious war, so fanatical in their terms, supplied
the principal similes to the obstinate rebellion.” (However individual
acts of “Acehnese murder” did continue – albeit in significantly decreasing
numbers – right up until the Japanese occupation in 1942.)
The theological framework for the Acehnese jihad,
which Snouck Hurgronje exposed to the understanding of Dutch leaders in 1893,
happens to be exactly the same as that used by jihadi scholars such as
Abdullah Azzam in the late 20th and early 21st centuries to stimulate what
western elites refer to as “terrorism.”
It is a classical dogma of Islam that when Muslim
lands are occupied by infidel forces, it is an individual religious obligation
upon all Muslims to do their utmost to defend their lands against the infidels.
This belief drove the Acehnese insurgency over a century ago, and it drives the
Afghan conflict today.
Snouck Hurgronje also explained that the practice of
deceit – manifested in feigned friendship leading to what we would now call
“insider killings” – can be derived from the dogmas of Islam and specifically
from religious attitudes to infidels.
It is disappointing that after more than a decade of
war, the US Joint Chiefs of Staff are mystified by the phenomenon of “insider
killings.” Has political correctness so neutered their capacity to wage war?
Are they so blind to the religious nature of the war they are
fighting? How can they be unfamiliar with the classical dogmas of jihad,
which make it a compulsory religious duty for individual Muslims to fight
against infidel occupiers of Muslim lands?
The US generals, indeed any army fighting a jihad
insurgency in Muslim lands, would do well to read Snouck Hurgronje’s report.
The insider killings of Afghanistan today are
essentially the same phenomenon as “Acehnese murder” of over a century ago. The
straightforward, rational explanation for Afghan soldiers turning their
US-supplied weapons against their “allies” can be found in the beliefs outlined
by Snouck Hurgronje in the late 19th
century: the dogma that Muslims have a duty to defend Muslim lands against
infidel occupation; the dogma that if Muslims are killed in jihad,
paradise will be their reward; and the dogma that in jihad, deceiving
the infidel is no sin.
Reuters has reported that in Afghanistan: Field commanders have also been given discretion to
increase numbers of so-called “guardian angel” sentries who oversee foreign
soldiers in crowded areas such as gyms and food halls, to respond to any rogue
shooting incidents.
This is reminiscent of remarks by the Acehnese poet
Anzib Lamnyong, reflecting on the assassination of a Dutchman by Lém Abah, an
Acehnese man from his own village: Very often people attacked the Dutch like that, so
that the Dutch had to keep a very close guard on Banda Aceh, night and day, all
around the whole city. But no matter how well those guards kept watch,
they still kept getting attacked by our people, who would strike them down
… The Dutch were in great consternation about our brave people, who did
not fear the bullet that might strike them dead in the twinkling of an eye.
One expects that, when the
last infidel troops have left Afghanistan, and Muslim sovereignty has been
fully restored, the memory of the Afghan jihadis who are even now perpetrating
“insider killings” may come to be held in high renown, just as the name of
Teuku Umar is revered in Indonesia to this day.[]
'Insider Killing' in Afghanistan Almost The Same As Aceh War
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
August 24, 2012
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