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Omar Ashour

Post-Jihadism and the Inevitability of Democratisation

Filed under: Middle East, Democratisation, Egypt

Major 'Abbud al-Zumur, the former military intelligence officer who served on the governing bodies of both the Jihad organisation and al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya (Islamic Group - IG) in Egypt, published in August 2009 a book entitled The Third Alternative: Between Authoritarianism and Surrender which analyses the causes of violent radicalism and prescribes ways of ending political violence within Arab- and Muslim-majority states.

This book is the latest development in what can be called a second wave of modern Islamist de-radicalisation. It is one of several instances of this literature to address political participation and pluralism explicitly. However authors from the very same movement sometimes have different views on this topic: IG's ideologue Nagih Ibrahim, for example, has called on Islamist movements to abandon politics and focus on missionary activities, while IG leader, Karam Zuhdi, declared that the group's current rejection of democracy could change based on its interests.

This new literature features a departure from upholding fiqh al-'unf (Islamic jurisprudence justifying violence) toward discouraging armed confrontations in general and de-legitimising political violence in Muslim-majority societies in particular. Most of the arguments in de-radicalisation literature are not new but the message bearers made a difference. As one of the former commanders of the IG's armed wing puts it: "Hearing the [theological] arguments directly from the sheikhs [IG leaders] was different….we heard these before from the Salafis and from al-Azhar…we did not accept them…we accepted them from the sheikhs because we knew their history."

The new body of literature mainly deconstructs the eight major arguments of jihadism: al-hakimmiyya (God’s exclusive right to legislate), al-riddah (apostasy, mainly of ruling regimes), al-jihad/qital (fighting) for the Islamic state, jihad al-daf'(defensive jihad),  ahkam al-diyar (rules of conduct in the "abode of Islam" and the "abode of infidelity"), methods for sociopolitical change, the inevitability of confrontation, and the "neo-crusader" arguments.

Deconstructing those arguments in post-jihadist literature entails an inference shift. The theological arguments of jihadism rest on the idea that literal orders from God supersede any rational calculations or material interests. This usually translates into an impetus to engage in armed confrontations against much stronger powers. In post-jihadist literature, there is a shift to the idea that interests determine the interpretation of the text. If a confrontation, or any other behaviour, is likely to lead to negative consequences, it must be forbidden and should be avoided.

Despite the persistence of jihadism, violence, and the conducive conditions to both paths, a post-jihadist era has begun. On the ideological level, post-jihadism involves de-legitimisation and discouragement of political violence in general as well as upholding theologically-sanctioned pragmatism. On the behavioural level, it criticises Islamists who still engage in violence is another feature, and on the organisational level, it aims to disband armed wings and secret units.

Most post-jihadist literature does not take a clear stance on democracy. But accepting the "other," moderating rhetoric and behaviour, and participating in electoral politics may be the only viable options for these groups if they want to remain politically significant. In other words, if jihadism heralded the inevitability of armed confrontation, post-jihadism might well entail the inevitable acceptance of democratisation.

Comments

Dr. Ashour,

This was a very interesting post indeed. I have some questions.

Regarding the deconstruction of 8 main arguments of the terrorist movements, have you noticed any of this new corpus of Islamist literature turning to Salafi arguments - namely those of Al-Albani, Al-Madkhali, or the Jamis? Do they reject Sayyid Qutb?

Would you say they are drifting toward the Muslim Brothers or the Salafi?
Amin - 13 Nov 2009 (12:59)
Dear Amin,

Thanks of the comment. You are right. There is a lot of emphasis on the works/fatwas/arguments of "scholarly-salafism" (also known as quietest, purist, apolitical salafism). But there is also borrowing form other political trends/intellectual heritages -- including mu'tazili, secular, democratic, pacifist and post-modern ones; all recycled in a relevant Islamist framework.

Also, several references to the works of al-Qaradawi, Ibn Baz and Ibn al-Uthaymeen, not sure about al-Madkhali. For moment, 'd say it is drifting towards salafism. But it depends on how politically involved they will get eventually and what will be the future stance on democracy and pluralism. All aforementioned movements strongly deny any influence and/or involvement of the MB in particular (despite the references in the books).
Omar Ashour - 15 Nov 2009 (14:01)
Think the Egyptian and Saudi secret services worked together on this?
Theo - 16 Nov 2009 (14:22)
essential article

<a herf="http://www.bathmateus.com">Bathmate</a>
bathmateus363 - 17 Dec 2009 (12:54)
this is an outstanding blog

the way u write is fabulous.
Thanks a lot

http://www.webroyalty.com
Nick Matyas - 04 Jan 2010 (22:11)

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Printed from http://www.icsr.org/blog/Post-Jihadism-and-the-Inevitability-of-Democratisation on 11/03/10 05:56:57 PM

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