July 18,
2008:Because al Qaeda doesn't have any
real estate to call its own, much less a capital city to capture, determining
who wins, or is even winning, the war on terror has always been subject to
interpretation.
Those (in
the West, and especially the U.S.) who believe the war is being won point to
the lack of anymore terrorist attacks in the United States, the killing or
capture of most known al Qaeda leaders, and defeat of al Qaeda in Iraq. Here al
Qaeda openly declared they were fighting a major war with their infidel
enemies, and now just as openly admit they were beaten. Then there are the
opinion surveys throughout the Moslem world showing the steady decline of al
Qaedas popularity since 2003.
Those
(again in the West) who believe the war isn't being won point to the continued
existence of al Qaeda, thousands of pro-terrorist web sites, and the existence
of pro-al Qaeda groups in Europe and the Moslem world. Al Qaeda and the Taliban
still thrive in Pakistan, where government inaction has provided a sanctuary.
In the
Moslem nations, particularly those which provide most of the al Qaeda manpower
(Arab nations like Saudi Arabia, Syria and Iraq, plus North African nations
like Algeria and Libya) also tend to have two views of who is winning. Those
who believe al Qaeda are winning tend to be Islamic radicals who want to get
involved, but usually don't (aside from Internet cheerleading, and occasional
public demonstrations). Since al Qaeda is on a mission from God, belief in
ultimate victory is a matter of faith. Facts have little to do with it. Those
who see al Qaeda as defeated, or losing, are those appalled by the number of
Moslems killed by al Qaeda attacks, and the intolerance (towards Islamic
practices not recognized by Islamic conservatives) expressed by al Qaeda
members.
Different
perceptions of progress in a war, and how it is being prosecuted, is nothing
new. In every American war, including the revolution, there were numerous, and
vehement, critics of how things were being done, and the results of those
efforts.
In Moslem,
and especially Arab, countries, the support for al Qaeda was originally based on the initial al Qaeda efforts to
overthrow the corrupt governments that run most of these nations. Al Qaedas
turn towards Western targets in the 1990s was the result of the terrorists
failure to overthrow those Arab tyrants. Those same tyrants had long supported
the belief that economic and other problems in Arab countries were the result
of what the West had done (colonialism, persistent interference and support for
Israel), and not the local despots. With decades of this anti-West propaganda,
and the inability to get rid of their own tyrants, it was easy to blame
everything on the West. Still is. Hard to tell who is winning or losing in that
department.
The debate
over who won, and how, will go on long after al Qaeda has completely faded
away. That's also nothing new. Books are still being written about who won, or
lost, or should, and in what manner, during World War II.