Friday, June 15, 2007

Another sign that the Taliban is desperate?


I read these tales and I wonder how anyone can think Islam is a religion of peace.

Sharon Chadha (author of Jihad and International Security) blogs on the BBC report that the Taliban (Taleban) are now recruiting children as soldiers to fight the legitimate Afghan government and American coalition troops.

JRH
****************************

Another sign that the Taliban is desperate?
June 14, 2007

Somehow I can't believe that having to recruit children is a sign of strength.

Anyway, that is my reaction to yesterday's BBC report from Tank, Pakistan, that "pro-Taleban militants" are trying to get children as young as 11 to go fight their jihad.

Most families in Tank are reportedly too afraid to talk about what is going on a local teacher was prodded to go on the record and this is some of what he said:

"They don't really kidnap the children," says a local teacher. But he is hesitant and thinks his words through.


"The Taleban convince them it is their duty to carry out jihad [holy struggle]." But then he admits what he's left unsaid.


"How much convincing does a child need? ... Especially when promised adventure." The trouble is that in most cases, the "adventure" the Taleban offer usually results in no possibility of return.


"They are being trained as fidayeen," the teacher half whispers. "Fidayeen" literally means "those who sacrifice their lives".
As the BBC goes on to report, what this translates to is that these youngsters are being recruited for suicide missions.

The BBC did ask the obvious question: that is, why the adults in charge don't intervene in this process.

"Do you want me to lose my neck?" one summed up the situation for the reporter. "The Taleban don't ask for permission - they just tell us."

In March, however, some adults did intervene. When the Taliban showed up at a private English school, Oxford High, the students were still taking their exams. The militants were convinced to let the kids finish. By the time the test was over, security forces had been summoned and were able to drive the militants out - at least for a minute.

But the militants are back now and now it seems it is the security forces who are in retreat.

If the adults in Tank live in fear of the militants, the youth in town are more ambivalent. "We are not extremists... we are liberal people," a college physics student told the BBC. "But our identity is Islamic," he added, clarifying his position.

Another student was frustrated by the government's impotence: "They are the ones who should be protecting us," as one told the reporter.

Anyway, it must be fun to raise a family in Tank. One, um, hair-raising adventure.


________________________
Michael Rubin, Editor, Middle East Quarterly critiquing the book "Jihad and International Security:"


Jalil Roshandel and Sharon Chadha have written the definitive account of Jihadism. With clarity, breadth, and depth, they delve into the men, money, and ideas which support this lethal phenomenon in the Middle East and around the world. Jihad and International Security should be a must-read for policymakers, journalists, and anyone wanting to understand the roots, ideology, and tactics of what is today perhaps the West's greatest challenge.

No comments: