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Tuesday, November 13, 2012

How Leaders Can Fuel Terrorism


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How Leaders Can Fuel Terrorism
Yohanes Sulaiman | September 12, 2012


There is good news and bad news about the latest rash of failed bomb-making attempts by the misguided wannabe-jihadists in Indonesia. 

The good news is that their failure means that the government, through good intelligence and increased cooperation with other countries, has managed to disrupt international terror networks. 

Many of the terrorists that caused bloodbaths in Indonesia in the early 2000s, such as the one in Bali, had good connections with the international jihadist network, notably Al Qaeda, that was cultivated in the 1980s, when many of their colleagues or superiors spent years fighting the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. Thanks to the strong connections, they were adequately trained in bomb-making and terror attacks by instructors in Mindanao, in the Southern Philippines, Pakistan or Afghanistan. That made them uniquely skilled in blowing up their targets and causing many casualties. 

The impact of successful training can be devastating. The Americans experienced it firsthand in Afghanistan and Iraq, where improvised explosive devices were used to cause many casualties. The use of IEDs is apparently so successful in Syria that Syrian soldiers reportedly don’t dare to venture too far from their bases, where tanks and other vehicles are vulnerable to attack. The Syrian rebels seem to have learned the art of bomb-making from Islamists that honed their skills in Iraq. 

The fact that the past few years have seen many aspiring terrorists fail in causing mass casualties, or managed to blow themselves up while making bombs, suggests that the international connections have started to dry up. Terrorist networks are not easy to build. There are many difficulties, notably the problem of trust. Who could guarantee that a new recruit is not a mole planted by the government in order to undermine the network? Or, having spent some years in prison, there are always possibilities that a former prisoner would either be closely watched by the police or has become an informant. 

With each successful crackdown on a terrorist network, it is becoming harder and harder for the network itself to maintain itself. This strain showed up in the recent explosions, or premeditated attacks like the ones in Solo. The police, with little difficulty, are managing to crack down on the entire network. 

Many of these people are simply lacking the proper training to handle and manufacture explosive devices, or more importantly, to create a strong organization that could launch deadlier attacks. 

While they can learn the art of bomb-making from the Internet, it is very different from the hands-on training that experienced instructors provided. Building a strong and deadly terrorist network requires a lot of experience, especially in the art of strategy, notably on the question of how and when to attack, to maximize the impact. 

The bad news about the latest rash of failed attempts, however, is that they also suggested that many of the wannabe jihadists are homegrown. It is easy to blame globalization, growing inequality, or the declining respect and adherence to Pancasila as the state ideology that cements the nation together, as the main culprits of the radicalization of our youth. That would be incorrect. It is the fault of irresponsible religious and political elites. 

Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali labeled the Shia as a deviant sect. By doing this, Suryadharma provided justification for any attacks on the Shia community, while absolving the attackers from blame, since they are attacking the guilty party anyway. 

Similarly, sermons denouncing Buddhists for their attack on the Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar — even though the majority of Buddhists in the world had nothing to do with it — provided a misguided justification for attacks on Buddhists everywhere. 

Not surprisingly, the wannabe terrorists who managed to blow themselves up last Saturday in Depok, West Java, were planning to target a Buddhist center in Jakarta to avenge the Rohingya Muslims. 

What is the right way to handle the rising radicalism in Indonesia? Aside from a strong deradicalization program, the government keeping the pressure up, and surveillance on any suspected terrorist networks, the best answer would be to tell the religious and political elites to stop denouncing others for short-term political gain. By providing justification for further radicalization of society, these people — our leaders — are sacrificing the unity of Indonesia on the altar of selfish personal interests. 


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zerodiversity
10:17am Sep 12, 2012
@ Pak Yohannes

The main problem is Indonesia does not have a real leader who places the country welfare in front of his own personal benefits and ambition as well as the political party benefits. Just take a look at how many ministers are allegedly involved in corruption and how many are really doing their jobs. Not to mention the large number of House representatives being absent from meeting most of the time and you have a government that does not work. A government that does not place the country welfare first will result in many people being dissatisfied and easily recruited into terrorism.


Valkyrie
11:06am Sep 12, 2012
Yohannes...

The people will 'listen' when their stomachs are filled and that they can honestly afford three square meals a day. their children would receive proper education and finally reliable medical services for the poor and needy. Short of any of the above, this country will be susceptible to radical influence.

Radicalism thrives on poverty too! It's frightening when we are told that almost 109 million Indonesians are deprived of clean water.

On another thread, I mentioned about the 23 trillion that was allocated for 2012 to cover travels.

The way to the hearts of the citizenry is through their stomachs.


jchay
11:34am Sep 12, 2012
The continuing problem is we let ourselves being put into different boxes (majority, minority, ahmadiya, sunni, shia, christian, chinese, papuans etc etc), and it is used as justification of discrimination or attacks.

When we start accepting ourselves as one: the people of Indonesia, what left is only the case of some criminals attacking or killing the people of Indonesia (regardless religions or race etc), and it is the responsibility of the Government of Indonesia to assure safety and protection for all Indonesian people.


devine
3:49pm Sep 12, 2012
Bpk Yohannes, although I believe the Ministry of Religious Affairs should not even exist it would alternatively be a good to at least extend the Minister with several Ministers, one of each religion. It is a known fact that the current Minister is called the Minister of Islamic affairs... so there should be a balance, either a Minister that equally respects ALL religions or as said above several ministers that should be allowed to speak out only after a common consent is found among them (vote i.e.)...
and jchay: yes! 100% correct, that would be the real solution!


DrDez
6:41am Sep 13, 2012
Some Indonesian politicians (in the name of Sunni Islam) fuel the hatred and therefore support and encourage acts of sectarian violence and even terrorism - and often as we see mob murder - with impunity from prosecution
In most developed nations they would be jailed or at least stripped of office. Ali is one such man - but there are hundreds more
Yesterday we read about attacks on the West because of some movie being offensive to Islam - well here and now many who are acting under the guise of Islam are offensive to humanity ... We in RI are on a slippery slope and our leaders via greed and/or religious motivation have allowed, nay supported their 'brothers' often openly - it is disgraceful - it is a crime
JC - but whilst a good number of Sunni Muslims push a violent agenda what the rest of us accept matters not one bit


Yohanes-Sulaiman
7:35am Sep 13, 2012
Thank you so much for your kind comments.
@Zerodiversity: It is sadly the case. Most of the so-called representatives and officials are more interested in lining up their pockets than to actually serve. Truly a recipe for a failed state.
@Valkyrie: Poverty matters, but not really in this case. There's a study a couple years ago that actually stated that majority of terrorists had middle-class background or even rich people -- one reason, I suspect, is that these people actually have time and opportunity to actually read and think about this issue -- poor people are too much focused on their stomach and to feed their family. In Indonesia, the "middle-class" is a disputed term, so we might have a nice debate on this, but from what I observe from our suspects here, at least they have the ability not thinking how to feed their wives and offspring, meaning that they actually have some resources available, and this not that poor after all.


Yohanes-Sulaiman
7:39am Sep 13, 2012
@Jchay: I blame that on the short-sighted selfish officials that zerodiversity already condemned. If you don't have the ability to govern and can't make a case that you are a good official, the best way to still come ahead is to condemn others as heretics or kafir or whatever it is. It is politics of hate for selfish interests.

@devine: You raised a good point, but I don't think that's workable. Most importantly: the quality of the ministers. How could you expect that the quality of these six(?) ministers are high, when the one we have here is already a trainwreck with the big cheese doing nothing but composing songs?


Yohanes-Sulaiman
8:57am Sep 13, 2012
@DrDez: As long as they only receive a slap on their wrists, these people will not learn.






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