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12 - A Not So Happy New Year?

from PART II - AGE OF TERRORISM, WAR IN IRAQ

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2015

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Summary

As one year is about to end and another begin, the outward calm of this holiday season belies uncertainty and unease. Religion-inspired terrorists, who would rather destroy the modern world as we know it if they cannot change it to one of their liking, are on the offensive from Bali to Mombassa. The spectre of war looms in the Middle East as Mr Saddam Hussein inclines towards a self-perceived heroic end by exacting maximum destruction on his foes, and, by extension, on his country.

Where Islamic terrorists and Mr Saddam's regime used to be as different as oil and water, each loathing the other, a war against Iraq could lead Al Qaeda to opportunistically step up its own attacks in order to tap into the Muslim sentiment aroused by the war.

Ironies and surprises come in quick succession. As Al Qaeda tries to dress its religious terrorist agenda in a pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel mantle in order to win over more Muslims for its war against “Jews and Crusaders”, Mr Ariel Sharon in Israel seeks to tarnish Palestinians with the Al Qaeda brush.

The radical absolutists in the Muslim world are being matched in their anti-pluralist absolutism by sections of the Christian right in America. And to complicate an already dismal international situation, North Korea has chosen this moment, when America's attention is absorbed by Iraq and the war on terror, to embark on its own game of brinkmanship.

However, a conflict of civilizations is unlikely, given the moderate character of many Muslim regimes, and the common sense of much of the Muslim street, especially in Southeast Asia. After all, half of the world's Muslims live in South Asia, Bangladesh, India and Turkey, and they are less likely to heed the clarion call of the terrorist version of jihad.

In Singapore, most people are preoccupied with jobs, incomes and economy. All could be affected significantly by the events that will unfold over the next several months. Some intellectuals still debate the rights and wrongs of an American attack on Iraq, when the time for such debate is past. It is past because, unless Mr Saddam suddenly changes course (he is capable of near twelfth-hour about turns) or he is overthrown, war looks inevitable. More relevant at this stage would be discussion of the possible consequences of war, especially of what can go wrong.

Type
Chapter
Information
By Design or Accident
Reflections on Asian Security
, pp. 48 - 51
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2010

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