Salafist jihadism (Arabic: السلفية
الجهادية) is a jihadist movement among Salafi Muslims.
The term was coined by scholar Gilles
Kepel[1][2] to
describe Salafi who
became interested in violent jihad during the mid-1990s. Practitioners are
often referred to as Salafi jihadis or Salafi jihadists.
Whereas "Salafists originally are supposedly not
violent," and the Salafis whom Gilles Kepel encountered in Europe
in the 1980s were "totally apolitical", by the mid 1990s he met some
who felt jihad in the form of "violence and terrorism were justified to
realize their political objectives". The combination of Salafi alienation
from all things non-Muslim—including "mainstream European society"—and
violent jihad created a "volatile mixture"."When you're in the
state of such alienation you become easy prey to the jihadi guys who will feed
you more savory propaganda than the old propaganda of the Salafists who tell
you to pray, fast and who are not taking action."
According to Kepel, Salafist jihadism combined "respect
for the sacred texts in their most literal form, ... with an absolute
commitment to jihad, whose number-one target had to be America ,
perceived as the greatest enemy of the faith."
Salafist jihadists distinguished themselves from salafis
they called "sheikist", so named because they had (according to the
jihadists) forsaken adoration of God for adoration of "the oil sheiks of
the Arabian peninsula , with the Al Saud family at their
head". The theorist was Abd al-Aziz ibn Abd Allah ibn Baaz"the
archetypal court ulema [ulama al-balat]". These "false" salalfi
"had to be striven against and eliminated," but even more dangerous
was the Muslim Brotherhood, who were believed by Salafi
Jihadists to be excessively moderate and lacking in literal interpretation of
holy texts.
Another definition of Salafi jihadism, offered by Mohammed
M. Hafez, is an "extreme form of SunniIslamism that
rejects democracy and Shia rule."
Hafez distinguished them not only with apolitical and conservative Salafi
scholars (such as Muhammad Nasiruddin al-Albani, Muhammad ibn al Uthaymeen,Abd al-Aziz ibn Abd Allah ibn Baaz and Abdul-Azeez ibn Abdullaah Aal
ash-Shaikh), but from thesahwa movement associated with Salman
al-Ouda or Safar Al-Hawali.
According to Mohammed M. Hafez,
contemporary jihadi Salafism is characterized by "five features" immense
emphasis on the concept of tawhid (unity of God); God's sovereignty (hakimiyyat
Allah) which defines right and wrong, good and evil, and which supersedes human
reasoning is applicable in all places on earth and at all times, and makes
unnecessary and unIslamic other ideologies such as liberalism or humanism;
the rejection of all innovation (Bid‘ah)
to Islam; the permissibility and necessity of takfir (the
declaring of a Muslim to be outside the creed, so that they must either repent
or face execution); and on the centrality of jihad against
infidel regimes.
Antecedents of Salafism jihadism include Islamist
author Sayyid Qutb, who developed the idea that the Islamic
world has been replaced by pagan ignorance of Jahiliyyah,
and the group Takfir wal-Hijra, who kidnapped and murdered an
Egyptian ex-government minister in 1978.
Numbers
Journalist Bruce Livesey estimates
Salafi jihadists constitute less than 1 percent of the world's 1.9 billion
Muslims (c. 10 million).
Leaders, groups and activities
Its leaders included Afghan jihad veterans such as the
Palestinian Abu Qatada, the Syrian Mustafa Setmariam Nasar, the Egyptian
Mustapha Kamel, known as Abu Hamza al-Masri and later Osama
bin Laden. The dissident Saudi preachers Salman
al-Ouda and Safar Al-Hawali, were held in high esteem by this
school.
Murad Al-shishani of the The Jamestown Foundation states there
have been three generations of Salafi-jihadists: those waging jihad in Afghanistan, Bosnia and Iraq. As of the mid-2000s,
Arab fighters in Iraq
were "the latest and most important development of the global
Salafi-jihadi movement".[5] These
fighters were usually not Iraqis, but volunteers who had come to Iraq
from other countries, mainlySaudi Arabia. Unlike in earlier Salafi jihadi actions
"a significant constituency of Egyptians" was not among the volunteers.[5] According
to Bruce Livesey Salafist jihadists are currently a "burgeoning presence
in Europe , having attempted more than 30 terrorist
attacks among E.U.
countries" from September 2001 to the beginning of 2005".
According to Mohammed M. Hafez, in Iraq
jihadi salafi are pursuing a "system-collapse stategy" whose goal is
to install an "Islamic emirate based on Sunni dominance,
similar to the Taliban regime in Afghanistan ."
In addition to occupation/coalition personnel they target mainly Iraqi security
forces and Shia civilians,
but also "foreign journalists, translators and transport drivers and the
economic and physical infrastructure of Iran .
2011
In 2011, Salafi jihadists were actively involved with
protests against King Abdullah II of Jordan and the
kidnapping followed by a swift murder of Italian peace
activist Vittorio Arrigoni in Hamas-controlledGaza Strip.
Groups
Salafist jihadists groups include Al Qaeda, the
now defunct Algerian Armed Islamic Group (GIA)[3] and
prior to 2009, Kashmir-based Lashkar-e-Taiba.
According to Mohammed M. Hafez, "as of 2006 the two major groups within
the jihadi Salafi camp" in Iraq
were the Mujahidin Shura Council and the Ansar al Sunna Group.[4] There
are also a number of small jihadist Salafist groups in Azerbaijan.[9] Jund
Ansar Allah is, or was, an armed Salafist jihadist organization in
the Gaza
Strip. On August 14, 2009, the group's spiritual leader, Sheikh Abdel Latif Moussa, announced during Friday
sermon the establishment of an Islamic emirate in the Palestinian territories
attacking the ruling authority, the Islamist group Hamas, for failing to
enforce Sharia law.
Hamas forces responded to his sermon by surrounding his Ibn Taymiyya mosque
complex and attacking it. In the fighting that ensued, 24 people (including
Sheikh Abdel Latif Moussa himself), were killed and over 130 were wounded.
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