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© 2001 by Samir
Amin
Artwork © 2002 by David G. klein
Political Islam
by Samir Amin
Samir Amin shines much needed light on a
dimly understood
phenomenon
What is the nature and function, in the
contemporary Muslim world, of the political movements claiming to be
the one true Islamic faith? These movements are commonly designated
“Islamic fundamentalism” in the West, but I prefer the phrase used
in the Arab world: “Political Islam.” We do not have religious
movements, per se, here – the various groups are all quite
close to one another – but something much more banal: political
organizations whose aim is the conquest of state power, nothing
more, nothing less. Wrapping such organizations in the flag of Islam
is simple, straightforward opportunism.
Modern Political Islam was invented by the
orientalists serving British colonialism in India and was adopted
intact by Mawdudi of Pakistan. It consisted mainly in “proving” that
Muslim believers may only live under the rule of an Islamic State –
anticipating the partition of India – because Islam cannot permit
separation of Church and State. The orientalists conveniently forgot
that the English of the 13th Century held precisely such ideas about
Christianity.
Merciless Adversary of
Liberation
Political Islam is not
interested in the religion which it invokes, and does not propose
any theological or social critique. It is not a “liberation
theology” analogous to what has happened in Latin America. Political
Islam is the adversary of liberation theology. It advocates
submission, not emancipation. Mahmoud Taha of Sudan was the only
Islamic intellectual who attempted to emphasize the element of
emancipation in his interpretation of Islam. Condemned to death by
the authorities of Khartoum for his ideas, Taha's execution was not
protested by any Islamic group, “radical” or “moderate.” Nor was he
defended by any of the intellectuals identifying themselves with
“Islamic Renaissance” or even by those merely willing to “dialogue”
with such movements. It was not even reported in the Western media.
The heralds of “Islamic Renaissance” are not
interested in theology and they never refer to classic theological
texts. For such thinkers, an Islamic community is defined by
inheritance, like ethnicity, rather than by a strong and intimate
personal conviction. It is a question of asserting a “collective
identity” and nothing more. That is why the phrase “Political Islam”
is the appropriate designation for such movements.
Of Islam, Political Islam retains only the
shared habits of contemporary Muslim life – notably rituals for
which it demands absolute respect. At the same time, it demands a
complete cultural return to public and private rules which were
practiced two centuries ago in the Ottoman Empire, in Iran and in
Central Asia, by the powers of that time. Political Islam believes,
or pretends to believe, that these rules are those of the “real
Islam,” the Islam of the age of the Prophet. But this is not
important. Certainly Islam permits this interpretation as
legitimation for the exercise of power, as it has been used from
Islam's origin to modern times.
In this sense Islam is not original.
Christianity has done the same to sustain the structures of
political and social power in pre-modern Europe, for example. Anyone
with a minimum of awareness and critical sense recognizes that
behind legitimizing discourse stand real social systems, with real
histories. Political Islam is not interested in this. It does not
propose any analysis or critique of these systems. Contemporary
Islam is only an ideology based on the past, an ideology which
proposes a pure and simple return to the past, and more precisely,
to the period immediately preceding the submission of the Muslim
world to the expansion of capitalism and Western imperialism. That
religions – Islam, Christianity, and others – are thus interpreted
in a reactionary, obscurantist way, does not exclude other
interpretations, reformist or even revolutionary. Not only is the
return to the past not desirable (nor actually desired by the
peoples in whose name Political Islam pretends to be speaking); it
is, quite simply, impossible. That is why the movements which
constitute Political Islam refuse to offer a precise program,
contrary to what is customary in political life. For its answer to
concrete questions of social and economic life, Political Islam
repeats the empty slogan: Islam is the solution. When pushed
to the wall, the spokesmen for Political Islam never fail to choose
an answer harmonious with liberal capitalism, as when the Egyptian
parliament grants absolute freedom of maneuver to landowners and
nothing whatsoever to the peasant farmers who work their land. In
their unhappy effort to produce an “Islamic Political Economy,” the
authors of manuals on the subject (financed by Saudi Arabia) have
only succeeded in applying a coat of religious whitewash to the most
banal tenets of American liberalism.
A Turbaned Dictatorship In
Iran
The Islamic Republic of Iran
proves the general rule, despite the confusions that contributed to
its success: rapid development of the Islamist movement in parallel
with the secular, socialist struggle waged against the socially
reactionary U.S.-aligned dictatorship of the Shah. Following the
Shah's overthrow, the extremely eccentric behavior of the Mullahs
was offset by their anti-imperialist positions, from which they
derived a powerful popular legitimacy which echoed well beyond the
borders of Iran. Gradually the regime showed that it was incapable
of providing the leadership required to stimulate vigorous and
innovative socioeconomic development. The turbaned dictatorship of
the men of religion, who took over from that of the “Caps” (military
and technocrats), resulted in a fantastic degradation of the
country's economic machinery. Iran which boasted about “doing the
same as S. Korea,” now ranks among the group of “Fourth World”
countries.
The indifference of the regime's hard right
wing to the social problems facing the country's working class gave
rise to the “reformers” whose aim has been to moderate the harshness
of the theocratic dictatorship, but without renouncing its basic
principle – the monopoly of political power. Recognizing the extent
of the Islamic Republic's economic disaster, the “reformers” have
made the pragmatic decision to gradually revise their
“anti-imperialist” postures. They are in the process of
reintegrating Iran into the commonplace comprador world of
capitalism on the peripheries. The system of Political Islam in Iran
has reached deadlock. The political and social struggles into which
the Iranian people have now been plunged might soon lead to
rejection of the very principle of “wilaya al faquih” which
places the clergy above all other institutions of political and
civil society.
The Islamic Republic of Iran has conceived no
other political system than that of a one-party dictatorship
monopolized by the Mullahs. False comparisons are frequently made
between the Islamist parties and the Christian Democratic parties of
Europe (i.e., if the Christian Democrats have governed Italy
for 50 years, why shouldn't an Islamist party govern Algeria and
Egypt?). But once in power, an Islamist government immediately and
definitively abolishes any form of legal political opposition.
Neoliberal
Theocracy
If Political Islam is
only a version of neoliberalism, extolling the virtues of the market
– completely unregulated, naturally – it is also an absolute refusal
of democracy. According to Political Islam, religious law (the
Shari'a) has already given the answer to every question,
thereby relieving humanity of the difficulty of inventing laws – a
basic definition of democracy – and allows us at most to interpret
the nuances of divine law. This kind of ideological talk ignores
reality, ignores the actual history of Muslim societies, in which it
has obviously been necessary to invent laws, although this was done
without saying so. It meant that only the governing class had the
right, and the power to interpret the Shari'a. The extreme
example of this kind of autocracy is Saudi Arabia, a country without
a constitution, whose rulers claim that the Qur'an is a satisfactory
substitute. In actual practice, the House of Saud has the power of
an absolute monarchy or tribal chiefdom.
Contemporary Political Islam is not the outcome
of a reaction to the so-called abuses of secularism, as often
purported, unfortunately. No Muslim society of modern times, except
in the former Soviet Union, has ever been truly secular, let alone
offended by the daring innovations of any atheistic and aggressive
power. The semi-modern States of Kemal's Turkey, Nasser's Egypt,
Baathist Syria and Iraq, merely subjugated the men of religion (as
often happened in former times) to impose on them concepts aimed
solely at legitimizing the State's political options.
Western support for Political Islam
has thus gone to grotesque extreme of furnishing weapons, financial
backing and military training to the agents of Political Islam. In
the case of Afghanistan, the pretext was “fighting communism,” but
the odious behavior of these Islamists (closing schools for girls
opened by the terrible “communists”) apparently gave no cause for
regret – neither to the Western governments supporting them, nor to
Western feminist organizations.
Political Islam is in fact nothing other than
an adaptation to the subordinate status of comprador capitalism. Its
so-called “moderate” form therefore probably constitutes the
principal danger threatening the people concerned since the violence
of the “radicals” only serves to destabilize the State, impeding the
installation of a new comprador power suitable to the designs of the
“moderates” beloved by the West (those of Iran are a good example).
The constant support offered by the pro-American diplomacies of the
Triad countries (U.S., Europe and Japan) toward finding this
“solution” to the problem is absolutely consistent with their desire
to impose the globalized neoliberal order in the service of dominant
transnational capital.
The combination of neoliberal economy and
political autocracy is perfectly suited to the dominant comprador
class charged with management of societies at the contemporary
capitalist periphery. The Islamist parties are all instruments of
this class. This is true not only of the Muslim Brotherhood and
other organizations considered moderate, and whose close ties to the
bourgeoisie are well known. It is equally true of the small
clandestine organizations which practice “terrorism.” Both are
useful tools of Political Islam, and the division of labor is highly
complimentary between those using violence and those infiltrating
state institutions (especially education, the judiciary, the mass
media and, if possible, the police and military). For all such
groups and activities, there is one objective: seizure of state
power, although on the morning after the anticipated victory, the
“moderates” will put an end to the excesses of the “radicals.”
Immediately after the Iranian revolution, the Mullahs massacred the
left-wing militants (Fedayin and Mojahedin) who had attempted to
make common cause between their populist, revolutionary aims
inspired by Socialism and the deeper mobilization of Political
Islam. Without the Fedayin and Mojahedin, the triumph of the
“Islamic” revolution would not have been possible. Since then, the
Mullahs have recruited and trained millions of political terrorists
from among the lumpen proletariat in order to enforce its
rule.*
The existing power structures against which the
movements of Political Islam are hurling themselves are the
compradors, the national bourgeoisie of the region, fully
subordinate to the diktats of neoliberal globalization. The
comprador classes are not particularly democratic, even when they
offer the gift of parliamentary elections which they call
“multi-party,” and they often rely on the pretext of Islamic
terrorism to justify their refusal of meaningful democracy (as in
Algeria).
What this means is that the contest between the
compradors and the Islamists is only a conflict between factions of
the ruling class – a struggle for power, nothing more, between
opposing leaders and their clients. Depending on the circumstances,
the shape of the conflict varies from extreme violence, as in the
case of Algeria, to dialogue, as in Egypt, where the government
holds direct talks with the Muslim Brotherhood. Both sides in the
conflict utilize Islamic demagogy in their attempts to capture for
their own benefit the allegiance of the politically confused
populace. Contemporary popular political confusion closely resembles
that which followed the failure of hopes based on the populist
nationalisms of the previous era (Nasser, Boumedienne, Le Bass).
This time it results from widespread recognition of the social
destruction wrought by the neoliberalism of the ruling comprador
classes.
Popular political confusion in the Islamic
world is in no small part due to the extreme timidity of the
critique that the left had addressed in the previous period to the
ruling forces of national populism. Yet the bourgeoisie in power is
by no means secular. It pretends to be as “Islamic” as its
adversaries, for example by enforcing many of the precepts of
Islamic law – especially in the domain of the family – thus
gradually making the ruse into reality. The resulting “compromise”
solutions inevitably augment the dominant neoliberal and
antidemocratic order. Thus the dominant international political and
economic powers, led primarily by the U.S., see no inconvenience in
the exercise of power by Political Islam. This says a great deal
about the hypocrisy of Western advocacy of “democracy” and
demonstrates that, contrary to the Western ideological equation of
“market” and “democracy,” the two principles are in fact in direct
conflict.
Ideological
Complementarity
The two discourses
of globalized neoliberal capitalism and Political Islam do not
conflict, but are complementary. The ideology of American
“communitarianisms” being popularized by current fashion overshadows
the conscience and social struggles and substitutes for them
so-called collective “identities” that ignore them. This ideology is
therefore perfectly manipulated in the strategy of capital
domination because it transfers the struggle from the arena of real
social contradictions to the imaginary world that is said to be
cultural, trans-historical and absolute, whereas Political Islam is
precisely a “communitarianism.”
The diplomacy of the G7 powers, particularly
that of the U.S., knowingly chooses to support Political Islam. The
G7 lends such aid and assistance from Egypt to Algeria. In
Afghanistan, U.S. support took the form of describing Afghan
Islamists as “freedom fighters” against the horrible dictatorship of
communism, which was in fact an enlightened, modernist, national and
populist despotism that had the audacity to open schools for girls.
Western leaders know that Political Islam has the virtue – for them
– of making the peoples concerned helpless and consequently ensuring
their compradorization without difficulty.
Given its inherent cynicism, the American
Establishment knows how to take a second advantage of Political
Islam. The barbaric “drifts” of the regimes that Political Islam
inspires – the Taliban, for instance – are not drifts at all, but
actually fall within the logic of their programs, and can be
exploited whenever imperialism finds it expedient to intervene
brutally, if necessary. The “savagery” attributed to the peoples who
are the first victims of Political Islam is likely to encourage
“Islamophobia” which may facilitate the acceptance of a “global
apartheid,” the logical and necessary outcome of an ever-polarizing
capitalist expansion.
Western support for Political Islam has thus
gone to the grotesque extreme of furnishing weapons, financial
backing and military training to the agents of Political Islam. In
the case of Afghanistan, the pretext was “fighting communism,” but
the odious behavior of these Islamists (closing schools for girls
opened by the terrible “communists”) apparently gave no cause for
regret – neither to the Western governments supporting them, nor to
Western feminist organizations. Those the West called “Afghan
freedom fighters” (in fact, hoodlums trained by the CIA) and
“volunteers” (Algerian, Egyptian and other Muslims), nowadays fill
decisive roles in military-terrorist actions around the globe,
including major U.S. cities. Support for Political Islam has
included the illusory rubric of “political refugee” status, offered
by the U.S., Britain and Germany, which has given the militants of
Political Islam the power to organize and command their operations
from abroad, thus maximizing efficiency and minimizing risk.
The ideological accompaniment to this alliance
between the Western powers and Political Islam is an endless
campaign of legitimation in the Western mass media, usually turning
on an illusory distinction between “moderates” and “radicals,” or a
pious chant of praise for the virtues of multi-cultural diversity,
so dear to Americans, as everyone knows. Such forms of “respect” for
diverse “communities” are very useful for the management purposes of
neoliberalism and globalization, because they do not imply any
confrontation on the terrain of real challenges. The “communities”
in question play the game of neoliberalism, shifting the debate, if
and when it occurs, from the real and practical problems of the here
and now into the harmless celestial regions of the cultural
imaginary.
Political Islam is thus in no way the adversary
of imperialism, but is, quite the contrary, its perfect servant.
This fact does not prevent Western ideologues and opinion-managers
from resorting, whenever necessary, to the fairytale formulae of
Islam as an implacable enemy of Western modernity, the “clash of
cultures” so dear to Samuel Huntington and his CIA patrons. Such
wars occur only on the imaginary plane, whereas in the real world,
the victims of the “communities” represented by Political Islam
suffer terribly under very real blows. The ideological war,
furthermore, provides yet another cover for military-political
intervention by the U.S. and its subaltern “allies” when and
wherever the need might arise.
We should not be surprised that the U.S. is
pleased by the services that Political Islam renders to its project
of world hegemony. With the exception of Hamas in Palestine and
Hizbollah in Lebanon (pre-911) and the Taliban (post-911), no
movement of Political Islam is designated as an enemy by Washington.
The pre-911 designation of Hamas and Hizbollah by the U.S. State
Department as “terrorist organizations” was clearly an accident of
political geography, since both are opposed to the state of Israel,
which evidently takes precedence in U.S. considerations over
everything else. Hamas and Hizbollah are the only manifestations of
Political Islam fighting foreign military occupation, whereas the
others direct their violence only at their compatriots. Double
standards and hypocrisy – can we expect anything else from the
imperialists?
911 and
Beyond
Will the attacks of
September 11 oblige Washington to revise its alliance with Political
Islam? Diplomatic and intelligence cooperation with Iran and Sudan
suggests otherwise. But we cannot help noticing that the events of
911 occurred at precisely the right moment to permit the U.S. to
install itself in petroleum-rich Central Asia, a region
well-situated to allow another turn of the geostrategic vise which
the West has clamped around Russia, China and India. This has been
the openly proclaimed strategic objective of the U.S. for over 10
years. Saddam Hussein has served well as justification for permanent
U.S. military installations in the Gulf. Osama bin Laden could well
do the same for U.S. policy in Central Asia. One cannot exclude the
hypothesis that machinations of the CIA and its faithful ally Mossad
may have been involved in some way.
In order to sustain and extend its hegemony the
United States must always give supreme importance to its military
interventions. We forget this at our peril.
Samir Amin was born in Egypt in 1931 and
received his Ph.D. in economics in Paris in 1957. He is director of
Forum Tiers Monde, a research institute of Dakar, Senegal. He is the
author of numerous books, including Accumulation on a World
Scale: A Critique of the Theory of Underdevelopment (1974);
Maldevelopment, Anatomy of a Global Failure (1990); Empire
of Chaos (1992); Re-Reading the Postwar World: An
Intellectual Itinerary (1994); Spectres of Capitalism; A
Critique of Current Intellectual Fashions (1998).
Gabi Christov helped with translation of this article.
* For an analysis of the Iranian Revolution and its
aftermath, see CovertAction Quarterly, No. 37, pp. 52-60.
“Political Islam” appears in CovertAction Quarterly, No.
71, Winter 2001, pp. 3-6.
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