When ISIS Rapists Win
International
New York Times | 28 August 2015
David Brooks
David Brooks
The ISIS atrocities have
descended like distant nightmares upon the numbed conscience of the world. The first beheadings of
Americans had the power to shock, but since then there has been a steady
barrage of inhumanity: mass executions of Christians and others, throwing
gay men from rooftops, the destruction of ancient archaeological treasures, the
routine use of poison gas.
Even the recent reports in The Times about the Islamic State’s highly structured rape program have
produced shock but barely a ripple of action.
And yet something bigger is going on. It’s as if some secret
wormhole into a different historical epoch has been discovered and the knowledge of centuries is being unlearned.
This is happening in the moral
sphere. State-sponsored slavery seemed like a thing of the past, but now ISIS is an unapologetic slave state. Yazidi
women are carefully cataloged, warehoused and bid upon.
The rapes are theocratized.
The rapists pray devoutly before and after the act. The religious leader’s handbook governing the rape program has a handy Frequently Asked Questions
section for the young rapists:
“Question 12: May a man kiss the female slave of another, with the owner’s
permission?
“A man may not kiss the female slave of another, for kissing
[involves] pleasure, and pleasure is prohibited unless [the man] owns [the
slave] exclusively.
“Question 13: Is it permissible to have intercourse with a female slave who hasn’t
reached puberty?
“It is permissible to have intercourse with the female slave who
hasn’t reached puberty if she is fit for intercourse; however, if she is not
fit for intercourse it is enough to enjoy her without intercourse.”
This wasn’t supposed to happen in the 21st century. Western
experts have stared the thing in the face, trying to figure out the cause and
significance of the moral disaster we are witnessing. There was a very
fine essay
in The New York Review of Books by a veteran Middle
East expert who chose to remain anonymous and who more or less threw up his
hands.
Writing in The
National Interest, Ross Harrison shows how the ISIS wormhole into a different
moral epoch is accompanied by a political wormhole designed to take
the Middle East into a different geostrategic epoch. For
the past many decades the Middle East has been defined by nation- states and
the Arab mind has been influenced by nationalism. But these nation-states have
been weakened (Egypt) or destroyed (Iraq and Syria). Nationalism
no longer mobilizes popular passion or provides a convincing historical
narrative.
ISIS has arisen, Harrison argues, to bury nationalism and to
destroy the Arab nation-state.
“It is tapping into a belief
that the pre-nationalist Islamic era represents the glorious halcyon days for
the Arab world, while the later era in which secular nationalism flourished was
one of decline and foreign domination,” he writes.
ISIS consistently tries to destroy the borders between
nation-states. It undermines, confuses or smashes national identities. It
eliminates national and pre-caliphate memories.
Meanwhile, it offers a confident vision of the future: a unified
caliphate. It fills the vacuum left by decaying nationalist ideologies. As
Harrison puts it, “ISIS has cut off almost all
pathways to a future other than its self-proclaimed caliphate. The intent is to use this as a wedge with which
to expand beyond its base in Iraq and Syria and weaken secular nationalist
bonds in Lebanon, Jordan and in even more innately nationalist countries like
Egypt.”
President Obama has
said that ISIS stands for nothing but savagery. That’s clearly incorrect. Our
military leaders speak of the struggle against ISIS as an attempt to kill as
many ISIS leaders and soldiers as possible. But this is a war about a vision of
history. ISIS ideas have legitimacy because it controls territory and has a
place to enact them.
So far the response to ISIS has been pathetic. The U.S. pledged
$500 million to train and equip Syrian moderates, hoping to create 15,000
fighters. After three years we turned out a grand total of 60 fighters, of whom
a third were immediately captured.
It’s time to stop
underestimating this force as some group of self-discrediting madmen. ISIS is a moral and political threat to the
fragile and ugly stability that exists in what’s left in the Middle East. ISIS will thrive and spread its ideas for as long
as it has its land.
We are looking into a future with a resurgent Iran, a contagious ISIS and a collapsing
state order. If this isn’t a cause for alarm and reappraisal, I don’t know
what is.
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