For the alternative is war on a Bosnian scale not between secularists and Islamists but between Berbers and between Tuaregs
July 27, 2010 No CommentsFor the alternative is war on a Bosnian scale, not between secularists and Islamists but between Berbers and between Tuaregs, within Islamist groups and nationalist militias, between towns and villages. In reality, the extremists on both sides must talk to each other if any dialogue is ever to take place. Would an Islamist Algeria be a friend of the Great Satan?In Western eyes, the “moderates on both sides” must talk to each other. And true, too, the US urges “dialogue” with the Islamists, a policy they do not follow with Hamas or Islamic jihad or any of Israel’s enemies. True, no Americans have been harmed in Algeria (though this may be due to the absence of US citizens).
What of foreign relations?If France supports the current regime, what of the US, which the military government privately accuses of supporting the Islamists – on the grounds that Washington would like another Saudi Arabia in the Maghreb? True, a FIS spokesman remains in Washington. It is said in Algeria that the absence of attacks against the country’s oil and gas reserves implies an understanding by the FIS that Algeria’s natural resources and export potential must remain available to a new regime. Already the Islamic Armed Group (GIA) operates separately from the Islamic Salvation Army (AIS), the military wing of the FIS, which last week announced the appointment of a new “emir”, Madani Merzak, as a “provisional” leader of the organisation – a step which the Algerian government sees as a coup d’tat over the FIS political leadership.Second, the Islamists must, if they attain power, show some awareness of the realities of power: Algeria must have an economic and foreign policy, the ability to run transport, trade, communications, the infrastructure of a modern nation-state. But continued government corruption, the unchecked brutality of the security forces and the sheer horror of the continuing war have convinced many Algerians that any settlement – be it Islamist or secular – is preferable to the current agony.The dilemma for the Islamists is twofold First, they must present a united front to Algerians. Perhaps the “true face” of Islamist violence – throat-slashing, murder, suicide bombings, threats of anarchy – has turned a few fundamentalist voters away from the FIS.
European countries expressed approval; John Major, after all, accepted less from the IRA before he agreed the war might be over in Northern Ireland. But the Algerian government dismissed the initiative; denouncing violence, ministers said, was not the same as “renouncing terrorism”.The real problem for the government in Algeria is that dialogue with the FIS – dialogue involving the political future of the country, its constitution, the re-enactment of the cancelled 1992 second round of parliamentary elections – will inevitably lead to government defeat. The army-backed government is divided between those who still seek compromise and those who have convinced themselves that only a military campaign can crush “terrorism”; thus Algeria finds itself with a president, General Liamine Zeroual, who is trying to arrange presidential elections while his men are trying to liquidate the forces that would have won the last parliamentary elections.The last hope – and Algeria produces a “last hope” almost every week – was the meeting in Rome between the legal opposition and the banned Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), all of whom agreed last month that violence could not resolve the country’s problems. As the Lebanese journalist Rihad al-Rayis wrote last month in An Nahar, Algeria is faced with “a strong Islamist opposition which cannot be destroyed but which is too weak to topple the existing regime”. Unfortunately for the same officer, there are suspicions that the Islamists have infiltrated the security forces, smuggling arms to prisoners in Sekardji jail, alerting the Islamist opposition to police patrol routes.
Why, for example, did the bombers set four bombs under the road near Chaibia? Did they know that the police patrol was made up of four vehicles? Algerians who believe in the conspiracy theory of history have only to recall that it was a police bodyguard who killed President Mohamed Boudiaf in 1992.It is not difficult to find causes for the Algerian tragedy. ONLY HOURS after Islamist gunmen had staged their first serious bomb attack on an Algerian police patrol near the village of Chaibia, a young military officer in Algiers angrily pondered the guerrilla war in which he was now engaged “A classical war like this will never work,” he concluded “It didn’t work for the French It won’t work for us.

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