Al-Qaeda founder launches fierce attack on Osama bin Laden
One of al-Qaeda's founding leaders, Dr Fadl, has begun an ideological revolt against Osama bin Laden, blaming him for "every drop" of blood spilt in Afghanistan and Iraq.
By David Blair in Cairo
Last Updated: 10:36PM GMT 20 Feb 2009
Sayyid Imam al-Sharif: The terrorist attacks on September 11 were both immoral and counterproductive, he writes
Sayyid Imam al-Sharif, who goes by the nom de guerre Dr Fadl, helped bin Laden create al-Qaeda and then led an Islamist insurgency in Egypt in the 1990s.
But in a book written from inside an Egyptian prison, he has launched a frontal attack on al-Qaeda's ideology and the personal failings of bin Laden and particularly his Egyptian deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri.
Twenty years ago, Dr Fadl became al-Qaeda's intellectual figurehead with a crucial book setting out the rationale for global jihad against the West.
Today, however, he believes the murder of innocent people is both contrary to Islam and a strategic error. "Every drop of blood that was shed or is being shed in Afghanistan and Iraq is the responsibility of bin Laden and Zawahiri and their followers," writes Dr Fadl.
The terrorist attacks on September 11 were both immoral and counterproductive, he writes. "Ramming America has become the shortest road to fame and leadership among the Arabs and Muslims. But what good is it if you destroy one of your enemy's buildings, and he destroys one of your countries? What good is it if you kill one of his people, and he kills a thousand of yours?" asks Dr Fadl. "That, in short, is my evaluation of 9/11."
He is equally unsparing about Muslims who move to the West and then take up terrorism. "If they gave you permission to enter their homes and live with them, and if they gave you security for yourself and your money, and if they gave you the opportunity to work or study, or they granted you political asylum," writes Dr Fadl, then it is "not honourable" to "betray them, through killing and destruction".
In particular, Dr Fadl focuses his attack on Zawahiri, a key figure in al-Qaeda's core leadership and a fellow Egyptian whom he has known for 40 years. Zawahiri is a "liar" who was paid by Sudan's intelligence service to organise terrorist attacks in Egypt in the 1990s, he writes.
The criticisms have emerged from Dr Fadl's cell in Tora prison in southern Cairo, where a sand-coloured perimeter wall is lined with watchtowers, each holding a sentry wielding a Kalashnikov assault rifle. Torture inside Egyptian jails is "widespread and systematic", according to Amnesty International.
Zawahiri has alleged that his former comrade was tortured into recanting. But the al-Qaeda leader still felt the need to compose a detailed, 200-page rebuttal of his antagonist.
The fact that Zawahiri went to this trouble could prove the credibility of Dr Fadl and the fact that his criticisms have stung their target. The central question is whether this attack on al-Qaeda's ideology will sway a wider audience in the Muslim world.
Fouad Allam, who spent 26 years in the State Security Directorate, Egypt's equivalent of MI5, said that Dr Fadl's assault on al-Qaeda's core leaders had been "very effective, both in prison and outside".
He added: "Within these secret organisations, leadership is very important. So when someone attacks the leadership from inside, especially personal attacks and character assassinations, this is very bad for them."
A western diplomat in Cairo agreed with this assessment, saying: "It has upset Zawahiri personally. You don't write 200 pages about something that doesn't bother you, especially if you're under some pressure, which I imagine Zawahiri is at the moment."
Dr Fadl was a central figure from the very outset of bin Laden's campaign. He was part of the tight circle which founded al-Qaeda in 1988 in the closing stages of the war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. By then, Dr Fadl was already the leader of Egyptian Islamic Jihad, an extremist movement which fought the Cairo regime until its defeat in the 1990s.
Dr Fadl fled to Yemen, where he was arrested after September 11 and transferred to Egypt, where he is serving a life sentence. "He has the credibility of someone who has really gone through the whole system," said the diplomat. "Nobody's questioning the fact that he was the mentor of Zawahiri and the ideologue of Egyptian Islamic Jihad."
Terrorist movements across the world have a history of alienating their popular support by waging campaigns of indiscriminate murder. This process of disintegration often begins with a senior leader publicly denouncing his old colleagues. Dr Fadl's missives may show that al-Qaeda has entered this vital stage.
Taschen
Nine West
Vero Moda
Let's all hope and pray, that is the start of a continuing public condemnation of the perversion of al-Qaeda in it's perversion of Islam. Now if we can get Muslims in the streets here, in Europe, and eventually around the world demonstrating against al-Qaeda, there is an excellent chance of stamping out these Islamofacists once and for all.
1thanks for this post grandpa...i had read brief snippets of this story yesterday but didn't get the full thing like this. I'm proud that we had a president willing to stand up to these terrorists when they attacked our country and this turnaround just makes me feel even more so that we did the right thing after 9/11.
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Hope is what you offer people when you have nothing more substantial. - Lainetm
2I was impressed with what he had to say about Islams who come to live in our country and honor.
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3"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have." Thomas Jefferson
ccpdm, Islam like all religions when practiced as originally intended are based on charity and justice. It is why I am so upset that moderate Muslim sects have not stood up vocally condemning the perversion of Islam by Islamofacists. Instead of embracing the term "Islamofacism" and assigning it where it belongs, the moderates took the "victim hood" role, and in the worlds eyes put themselves in the same campas the backers of al Qaeda, throughout the non-Muslim worlds eyes. Dr.Fadl's condemnation should have been preached, in every mosque and school throughout Islam,from the Day those planes hit the twin towers forward. Any public celebration of support of those terrorists should have been met with a counter demonstration of condemnation. The term "Islamofacist" was first coined by a Muslim, by the way.
4I hope this is a move in the right direction.
5Thank you for posting this, Grandpa - I hadn't heard about this! I will definitely be looking around online to find out more.
My husband is a Muslim and I can definitely tell you that the vast majority of Muslims I know do not support Al-Qaeda.
6Thank you for posting this, Grandpa - I hadn't heard about this! I will definitely be looking around online to find out more.
My husband is a Muslim and I can definitely tell you that the vast majority of Muslims I know do not support Al-Qaeda.
7Sorry for the double post! Using a new computer....
8Thanks for the information Grandpa!!!
9I found this on an Islamic website. It is part of a fatwa against the targeting of innocent civilians, delivered by Shaykh Muhammad Afifi al-Akiti:
My God, I thank You for a Teacher You inspired
With words of light to face down Dajjal's advocates.
Allâh bless you, Ustadh Afifi, for Defending the Transgressed
By Censuring the Reckless Against the Killing of Civilians!
Let the powers that be and every actor-speaker high and low
Heed this unique Fatwa of knowledge and responsibility.
Let every lover of truth proclaim, with pride once more,
What the war-mongers try to bury under lies and bombs:
Islam is peace and truth, the Rule of Law, justice and right!
Murderous suicide is never martyrdom but rather perversion,
Just as no flag on earth can ever justify oppression.
And may God save us from all criminals, East and west!
I pray with you, GP
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Lay Down Your Guns.
love & peace xox
Thanks GP and Secret for your posts. I hope and pray this is the turning point where Islamofacists will be denounced everywhere and the world can become safer for everyone.
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11"If by the mere force of numbers a majority should deprive a minority of any clearly written constitutional right, it might, in a moral point of view, justify revolution." Abraham Lincoln, First Inaugural Address, 4 March 1861
One can only hope but I would be surprised if some radical does not pass a death sentence on him for speaking out. What i would want to know, is what made him finally speak out.
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"Ever tried, ever failed, no matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail Better." - Samuel Beckett
articles like this make me really happy, and show that G-d willing change will come soon. thanks for the post Grandpa!! and I am praying with you as well
**for everything in life, moderation is key
13we have all sorts of human beings around the world - i know REAL great Muslims - and love them like my brothers and sisters - yet as in all "bunches" of people we find any face and human and still WE ARE ALL HUMANS...
14Thank you for that post - Grandpa!
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