guardian | Considered as a broad moral category, what Margalit defines as radical evil is not uncommon. The colonial genocide of the Herero people
in German South-West Africa (now Namibia) at the start of the 20th
century was implemented against a background of ersatz-scientific racist
ideology that denied the humanity of Africans. (The genocide included
the use of Hereros as subjects of medical experiments, conducted by
doctors some of whom returned to Germany to teach physicians later
implicated in experiments on prisoners in Nazi camps.) The institution
of slavery in antebellum America and South African apartheid rested on a
similar denial. A refusal of moral standing to some of those they rule
is a feature of societies of widely different varieties in many times
and places. In one form or another, denying the shared humanity of
others seems to be a universal human trait.
Describing Isis’s behaviour as “psychopathic”,
as David Cameron has done, represents the group as being more humanly
aberrant than the record allows. Aside from the fact that it publicises
them on the internet, Isis’s atrocities are not greatly different from
those that have been committed in many other situations of acute
conflict. To cite only a few of the more recent examples, murder of
hostages, mass killings and systematic rape have been used as methods of
warfare in the former Yugoslavia, Chechnya, Rwanda, and the Congo.
A campaign of mass murder is never simply an expression of
psychopathic aggression. In the case of Isis, the ideology of Wahhabism
has played an important role. Ever since the 1920s, the rulers of the
Saudi kingdom have promoted this 18th-century brand of highly repressive
and exclusionary Sunni Islam as part of the project of legitimating the
Saudi state. More recently, Saudi sponsorship of Wahhabi ideology has
been a response to the threat posed by the rise of Shia Iran. If the
ungoverned space in which Isis operates has been created by the west’s
exercises in regime change, the group’s advances are also a byproduct of
the struggle for hegemony between Iran and the Saudis. In such
conditions of intense geopolitical rivalry there can be no effective
government in Iraq, no end to the Syrian civil war and no meaningful
regional coalition against the self-styled caliphate.
But the rise of Isis is also part of a war of religion. Nothing is
more commonplace than the assertion that religion is a tool of power,
which ruling elites use to control the people. No doubt that’s often
true. But a contrary view is also true: politics may be a continuation
of religion by other means. In Europe religion was a primary force in
politics for many centuries. When religion seemed to be in retreat, it
renewed itself in political creeds – Jacobinism, nationalism and
varieties of totalitarianism – that were partly religious in nature.
Something similar is happening in the Middle East. Fuelled by movements
that combine radical fundamentalism with elements borrowed from secular
ideologies such as Leninism and fascism, conflict between Shia and Sunni
communities looks set to continue for generations to come. Even if Isis
is defeated, it will not be the last movement of its kind. Along with
war, religion is not declining, but continuously mutating into hybrid
forms.
Western intervention in the Middle East has been guided by a view of
the world that itself has some of the functions of religion. There is no
factual basis for thinking that something like the democratic
nation-state provides a model on which the region could be remade.
States of this kind emerged in modern Europe, after much bloodshed, but
their future is far from assured and they are not the goal or end-point
of modern political development. From an empirical viewpoint, any
endpoint can only be an act of faith. All that can be observed is a
succession of political experiments whose outcomes are highly
contingent. Launched in circumstances in which states constructed under
the aegis of western colonialism have broken down under the impact of
more recent western intervention, the gruesome tyranny established by
Isis will go down in history as one of these experiments.
The weakness of faith-based liberalism is that it contains nothing
that helps in the choices that must be made between different kinds and
degrees of evil. Given the west’s role in bringing about the anarchy in
which the Yazidis, the Kurds and other communities face a deadly threat,
non-intervention is a morally compromised option. If sufficient
resources are available – something that cannot be taken for granted –
military action may be justified. But it is hard to see how there can be
lasting peace in territories where there is no functioning state. Our
leaders have helped create a situation that their view of the world
claims cannot exist: an intractable conflict in which there are no good
outcomes.
2 comments:
Can you say, "OK, eh...??" in Arabic...??
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