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September 28, 2006

Declassified Sections of the NIE's Report on Terrorism

The NIE has one odd conclusion, that anti-globalization and anti-US leftists, inspire by jihadists, may turn to terrorism, as Lindsay notes. Declassified sections of the National Intelligence Estimate report, “"Trends in Global Terrorism: Implications for the United States”".

• The jihadists’ greatest vulnerability is that their ultimate political solution—an ultra-conservative interpretation of shari’a-based governance spanning the Muslim world—is unpopular with the vast majority of Muslims. Exposing the religious and political straitjacket that is implied by the jihadists’ propaganda would help to divide them from the audiences they seek to persuade.

• Recent condemnations of violence and extremist religious interpretations by a few notable Muslim clerics signal a trend that could facilitate the growth of a constructive alternative to jihadist ideology: peaceful political activism. This also could lead to the consistent and dynamic participation of broader Muslim communities in rejecting violence, reducing the ability of radicals to capitalize on passive community support. In this way, the Muslim mainstream emerges as the most powerful weapon in the war on terror.

• Countering the spread of the jihadist movement will require coordinated multilateral efforts that go well beyond operations to capture or kill terrorist leaders.

Posted by Robin Varghese at 02:51 PM | Permalink

Comments

May inspire teror among non-Islamic radicals? Thee is no evidence that there is a substantial anti-globalization movement. Why would such a movement direct its "terrorism" against the US if globalization is something worldwide?

The notion, given in the link in italic, is a supposition and may be simply wrong.

Further, I am suspicious of the release of so important a document that is given in part only. Why have we no access to the entire document?

Posted by: fred lapides | Sep 28, 2006 3:45:39 PM

I didn't see anything I hadn't read in TIME or Newsweek. This just gives it a little gravitas.

Posted by: mr.ed | Sep 29, 2006 8:09:12 AM

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