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A natural path of evolution

Thanks to Osama bin Laden, conservative Islam has got international acceptance today.

Updated on: May 01, 2012 08:24 PM IST
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It has been a year since Osama bin Laden was killed. What is remarkable about this past year is how little “the most dangerous man in the world” has figured in the political debate among his fellow Arabs and how diminished his terrorist organisation, al-Qaeda, is on the priorities of international security.

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HT Image

The popular governments created by the Arab spring are now consumed with the difficult process of piecing together democratic governments. Even in Syria, ravaged by a civil war, bin Laden’s name is never invoked and al-Qaeda rarely mentioned. The US and other governments remain wary of al-Qaeda. But the days when its name could rustle up billions of budgetary dollars and have governments chasing intelligence shadows are gone. Al-Qaeda continues to have offshoots — in Yemen, Nigeria, North Africa and so on — but these are often indigenous militancies that have adopted the brand but keep organisational independence. They operate on the margins of the international system. They are threatening, but not earth-shakingly so. Bin Laden was an inspirational model for radical Islam, a politicised and violent distortion of one of the world’s great religions. The terrorist wave he initiated disgusted many — including the overwhelming majority of Muslims. In his last days, even bin Laden worried that al-Qaeda’s name and standing had been fatally compromised by the indiscriminate nature of its violence. He took radical Islam to unusual levels of international importance and influence — and then unwittingly brought it down again through his own tactics.

 
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