PeaceVoice
Only religious war remains
James Haught
(8/25) The Taliban seizure of Afghanistan underscores an ugly 21st century fact: Religion-based warfare remains the world’s worst type of armed conflict, and the "holy warriors" display barbaric cruelty.
After America’s CIA under President Reagan helped brutal Muslim tribal warlords drive the Soviet Union out of Afghanistan, victorious warlords fell into conflict with each other. That’s when the Taliban, a movement of armed Islamic students, swept through the mountain nation.
The Puritanical Taliban, like most Muslim extremists, were notorious for their hatred of sex. They ordered all women to wear shroud-like burkas outdoors because "the face of a woman is a source of corruption" for men. Females couldn’t be educated beyond age eight, and before that could study only the Quran. Those who secretly attended underground schools were executed, along with their teachers. Girls’ schools were burned. Females weren’t allowed to work or go outdoors without a family male escort. They couldn’t wear high heels under their burkas because clicking heels might excite lustful men. Apartment windows were painted over. Wearing form-fitting clothes was a capital offense. Public stonings or other executions of women occurred. Eighty percent of brides were forced into marriage.
The Taliban allowed the al-Qaeda terror network to operate from Afghanistan in the 1990s. After the historic 9/11 attack of 2001, America invaded and drove out the fanatics. But two decades of costly American effort to create an Afghan democracy failed, and now the Taliban rule again. Most of the world is holding its breath, waiting to see if sexual savagery returns.
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Actually, the Taliban are merely one of many armed Islamist militias that rise and wage warfare. Some survive and some fade. There’s Boko Haram in Nigeria, al-Shabaab in Somalia, Hamas in Palestinian territory, ISIS in Syria, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, the Islamic Salvation Front in Algeria, al-Qaeda hidden somewhere, Hezbollah spread internationally, and a dozen Muslim militias who have been fighting India’s Hindu army in Kashmir for 70 years.
Back in 2017, when the Taliban seemed rather dormant, a book by an Arabic scholar said: "Boko Haram is now the deadliest terrorist organization operational in the world, by virtue of the sheer number of people the group have killed." The Sunni group is notorious for raiding villages and cities, massacring civilians (including Shi’ite Muslims), raping and abducting girls, and seizing boys to become soldiers.
I wonder if Boko Haram someday may seize Nigeria, as the Taliban did Afghanistan.
Most of these groups employ a tactic not available to other militaries – suicide bombing. Generally, only religious operations can find lone wolf volunteer "martyrs," though desperate guerrilla fighters and others in the past have undertaken suicide missions as well.
Terror attacks may be committed by a larger force such as Boko Haram or al Qaeda, or by smaller groups such as the14 perpetrators who massacred the Charlie Hebdo staff in Paris and the brothers who bombed the Boston Marathon.
Around the globe, warfare has faded enormously in this 21st century. It’s ironic that the world might become war-free, if not for religion.
James Haught, is editor emeritus
of West Virginia’s largest newspaper,
The Charleston
Gazette-Mail.
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