The
over-generalization and bogey-men blaming:
The
recent developments in Iraq reaffirmed the fact so many people in the
west think of themselves as experts in Islamic groups. Way too many
people think they can have a valid opinion about this subject, mostly
non-Arab non-Muslim white males who reside in the northern American
continent. The western narrative on Iraq hasn't been any different
from the general narrative on the Middle East. This are some common
mistakes:
1-
Reducing the situation into black and white binaries and overlooking
the diversity and the wide spectrum of parties involved and
emphasizing the sectarian aspect of the conflict. (Islamist and
secular, Sunni and Shia, Muslim brotherhood and military, rebels and
state security forces.. etc).
Most
of the time this results in the common Arab man who might be
affiliated with neither parties not given any credit. It also doesn't
give any room for imagining a third gray area.
In
case of Iraq it should be recognized that The Islamic State of Iraq
and Sham (ISIS) is not the only sole rebel group that's involved in
the current conflict in Iraq with Al Maliki's army and security
forces.
Although
their role in turning the situation can't be neglected, claiming that
(ISIS) is the only group involved is as ridiculous as the Egyptian
military's claim that everyone in the Egyptian #AntiCoup movement is
a Muslim Brotherhood member or a Morsi supporter. The Iraqi people
should be given credit for their participation in resisting this US
funded puppet regime and people should do an effort in finding more
keys to understanding this.
2-
The Bogeymen, the terrorists, the bad (usually bearded/Jihadi) guys
who get all the attention, who are usually portrayed in an
exaggerated representation and are blamed for everything.
In
Iraq and Syria, the Islamic State of Iraq and Sham happened to be
playing this role. I have my own reservations about the group based
on the firsthand accounts I have heard and read from people in Syria
and Iraq. I also have been following multiple (ISIS) supporting
sources. In addition, like many Jihadi groups, (ISIS) does have a
remarkable Arabic and English online media presence because they
depend on this in recruiting and building a populace ground. The fan
boys of (ISIS) are everywhere on the web, their HD youtube videos,
statements, and articles get translated into several languages. While
you can always read what the terrorist expert white dudes in
Washington DC think about these people, I guess it could be
beneficial to you to read their own productions to get more
perspective.
I'm
not going to get into details about what I think of it personally but
I do think that people need to be doing more reading about it in
multiple context. There's a need to be familiar with the older group
(The Islamic State of Iraq), and the manner in which (ISIS) operates
in Syria verses how it has been operating in Iraq and things like
this.
3-
Blaming the victim and undermining the role of the oppressor.
Just
like with Syria and Egypt, the protesters, the rebels, the
anti-government elements get more criticism than the forces they are
fighting against.
The
protesters in Egypt are violent, the rebels in Syria are foreigners,
the Sunnis in Iraq are armed, the (ISIS) is torturing people, and
thus as a result of this the whole body of the given movement is
illegitimate and these people deserve to be punished. This
is a very common trend in many of the analysis and in the news
coverage about mobilizations in the Arab world.
In
Iraq, while nobody said anything about what Al Maliki's regime has
committed against his own people and against the Sunni population
specifically for years, everyone is talking about the violations
(ISIS) was involved in. Similar to the arguments about Rabaa's sit in
being an armed sit in and what's been said about Syria that I don't
want to get started about. The same thing appears in the argument
“Both sides are guilty” with the Palestine/Israeli conflict.
I'm
not saying we should remain quite about the mistakes of those
involved in a struggle. This is important and necessary however, I'm
against equating two sides when the power dynamics are clear.
The conclusion here is:
1- Undermining
the real forces that are crushing their people and the international
players while giving too much attention to the opposition leads to
justifying the oppression on a larger scale.
2- Focusing
on and amplifying the violations the (ISIS) is involved in while
totally ignoring the atrocities committed by Al Maliki's sectarian
regime that used terrorism laws to crackdown on civilians and fulled
sectarianism to further its control is unjust.
3- Picking
up on the mistakes of the rebels while totally ignoring the role of
the American, Iranian, Syrian and other governments which have
geopolitical and financial interests in Iraq have responded recently
and in the last few years is unjust.
I
have been generally quiet about my opinions regarding what's taking
place in the region even in my own country for a multitude of reasons
but I felt the need to say something about Iraq especially because we
all failed it in many way. As Muslims and Arabs and as anti-war
advocates. All the people in the countries that supported the
invasion of Iraq which started this all shouldn't act like it's over.
Learn and educate yourself before talking. Speak a word of truth
against injustice or stay quiet, and everything will be ok. We have
so many struggles to deal with to be struggling with orientalist self
proclaimed wannabe middle east experts.