Suddenly, Al-Qaida feels upstaged. After
months of waging a war of words with the
Shiite Hezbollah, and after years of
fighting a real war in Iraq against the very
sect that Hezbollah represents, Al-Qaida has
found itself a bit player in a drama that is
capturing imaginations in the Middle East.
As the bruised Israeli army grudgingly
admits that Hezbollah is putting up a much
tougher fight than it expected in Lebanon,
the group is becoming a regional icon. It is
so popular right now that even as some
Sunnis and Shiites kill each other daily in
Iraq and even as Arab leaders express fears
of growing Shiite power in the region, much
of the Arab public -- Sunni, Shiite and
secular -- and some Sunni leaders have
announced support for Hezbollah.
The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, one of
the strongest Sunni organizations in the
Arab world, last week rejected a fatwa
by a Saudi religious authority that
prohibited helping Hezbollah. And the Sunni
head of the Arab Lawyers Union said: ``If
Hezbollah is Shiite, if the struggle is
Shiite, then we are all Shiite.''
It is, therefore, no surprise that Al-Qaida's
powerful second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahiri,
tried Thursday to get in on the act. In a
video, Zawahiri called for Muslims to join
in a holy war against Israel. He is not
likely to get much attention.
What was especially telling in Zawahiri's
speech was that religious puritanism and
sectarianism were no longer topics; instead
he called on ``all the weak'' on earth to
unite against ``injustice.'' Certainly, one
reason for this shift was the apparent
success of Hezbollah, which Sunni Al-Qaida
had previously disdained for practicing a
form of Islam it considers heretical. But
there is another reason the group is
sounding more inclusive: Although it is
rarely talked about, in the nearly five
years since Sept. 11, Al-Qaida's agenda has
failed to capture many hearts and minds in
the Arab world, even as anti-Americanism has
grown.
In fact, last week's images were
striking: At large demonstrations in the
Arab world, many people were carrying
pictures of Hezbollah's leader Hassan
Nasrallah, celebrating him as a hero in ways
that Al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden never
has been.
To be sure, Al-Qaida's threat remains
significant, and the war in Iraq has proven
a great recruiting tool. It's also clear
that many Muslims opposed to the U.S. war in
Iraq support the insurgency there, led in
part by Al-Qaida. Still, the terrorist group
has failed in its attempts to convince the
region to embrace its worldview, which
envisions a Taliban-like fanatical regime
that transcends state boundaries and rules
over Muslims worldwide.
The group hasn't given up on its original
goal; Zawahiri asked Muslims to fight in
Lebanon and Gaza until Islam reigns from
Spain to Iraq. But this time he appeared to
welcome Shiites into the fight, despite the
fact that Al-Qaida operatives in Iraq
continue to kill Shiites.
Al-Qaida's failure thus far to win many
converts to its vision may seem to be
paradoxical given recent trends. Polls done
a year after the Iraq war started indicated
that a plurality of Arabs in several states
identified themselves as Muslims first
rather than as citizens of a particular
country. Over the past two years, meanwhile,
Islamist parties in the Arab world scored
big successes: the electoral victory of the
Palestinian Hamas, the strong showing by the
Muslim Brotherhood in the Egyptian
elections, the victory of Islamist parties
in Iraq, Hezbollah's success in winning
seats in the legislature and Cabinet in
Lebanon, and the recent rise in the power of
Islamists in Somalia.
But a closer look at the strained
relations between Al-Qaida and those newly
empowered Islamist groups and a review of
more recent polls provide evidence that
neither Muslims' anger at the United States
nor their support for more-religious
governments equals approval for a
super-Muslim state ready to do battle with
the West or for a puritanical Taliban-like
political order.
First the polls. Many Arabs probably
identified themselves as Muslims first after
the fall of Baghdad in part because the war
on terrorism and the Iraq war were seen to
be aimed at weakening the Muslim world, not
because they wanted to join together under
one government with other Muslims or because
they embraced Al-Qaida.
A poll I conducted last year with Zogby
International in six Arab countries
supported that notion. Although many said
they wanted religion to play a larger role
in politics and wanted their governments
replaced, they appeared to be thinking more
locally than globally. The majority of
people in those countries -- Egypt, Saudi
Arabia, Morocco, Jordan, Lebanon, and the
United Arab Emirates -- said they want their
government to do what's good for its
citizens, not what's good for Muslims
broadly.
In addition, last year's survey also
showed a decline in the number of people who
identify themselves as Muslims first and a
rise in the number of those identifying with
their state. In a poll Zogby and I conducted
in 2004, a plurality of people identified
themselves as Muslims first in four of six
countries where we polled; in 2005, a
plurality of people in four of the six
countries identified themselves as citizens
of their countries first.
We don't know for sure why the shift
occurred, but it seems likely that people
were terrified by both the anarchy that
followed the dissolution of the Iraqi state
and by the brutal tactics of Al-Qaida in
Iraq under the leadership of Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, who has since been killed by
U.S. forces. Fellow Muslims may have rooted
for Zarqawi to defeat the United States, but
they probably could not envision his ruling
over their children.
Even Al-Qaida's top leadership may have
decided that Zarqawi was hurting the
public's perception of the group. In a
letter last summer that was never
authenticated, Zawahiri advised Zarqawi and
his devout Sunni supporters that the public
beheadings and large-scale killings of
Shiites would amount to ``action that the
masses do not understand or approve.''
Last year's poll also directly shows
little support for Al-Qaida's global goals.
When asked what aspects of Al-Qaida they
sympathized with most, if any, only 6
percent of Arabs polled identified its
advocacy of a puritanical Islamic state,
while 7 percent identified its methods. (A
plurality identified Al-Qaida's fight with
the United States as the strongest aspect.)
This trend was confirmed in a recent Pew
Global Attitudes Project poll, which showed
that confidence in bin Laden has eroded in
several Muslim countries in recent years --
in some cases dramatically.
Moreover, if Al-Qaida's imagined world is
Taliban-like and virulently anti-Western,
the vision is not shared by most in the Arab
world. A majority of Arabs surveyed believe
that women should have the right to work
outside the home, either always or when
economically needed, according to my 2005
poll. The vast majority identify Western
European countries and even the United
States, not Muslim Pakistan, as places where
they want to live or have a family member
study.
There is also increasing evidence that
the recent political successes of Islamists
in the Arab world have been primarily local
phenomena -- not an embrace of Al-Qaida's
agenda. In fact, Al-Qaida has gotten a
chilly reception from several of the groups.
When Somalia's Islamists captured
Mogadishu in June, bin Laden issued an
audiotape that gave advice, including urging
them to resist the deployment of foreign
troops there. But the Somalis didn't appear
to want his counsel. The former leader of
the Islamists there, Sheikh Sharif Ahmed,
said, ``Osama bin Laden is expressing his
views like any other international figure.
We are not concerned about it.''
When Sunni Hamas won the Palestinian
legislative elections in January, Arab
headlines highlighted criticism by Zawahiri.
The powerful Al-Qaida leader accused Hamas
of adopting ``secularist'' rules by
participating in an election that was an
indirect offshoot of the Oslo Accords, which
Al-Qaida deems illegitimate. Hamas' reaction
was fast and strong. Representatives advised
Al-Qaida to stay out, saying that Hamas was
focused on local issues and that its vision
of Islam is different.
Al-Qaida's relations with Hezbollah also
have been troubled. Even before the current
crisis, Hezbollah was popular in the Sunni
Arab world, despite being Shiite, because of
the widely held perception that its attacks
drove Israel out of Lebanon several years
ago. Despite that background, or maybe
partly because of it, Zarqawi -- who led a
bloody war against Iraq's Shiites --
criticized the organization and claimed that
it was shielding Israel from attacks by
preventing his organization from
establishing bases there. In the past week,
some Arab commentators have pointedly noted
that Hezbollah has been far more effective,
with a broader grass-roots base, than Al-Qaida
has been.
All of this, of course, does not diminish
the grave danger that Al-Qaida continues to
pose to the United States and its allies,
nor does it suggest that the terrorist group
won't continue to attract many recruits who
embrace its agenda. In fact, a new report by
the British House of Commons Foreign Affairs
Committee finds that the threat of terrorism
has increased as a consequence of the wars
in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Americans should also be troubled that
most Arabs surveyed now see the United
States as one of the greatest threats to
them (second only to Israel), in large part
because of the Iraq war and the deep
mistrust of U.S. intentions there, according
to my poll with Zogby. In that sense, some
have wanted to see the United States fail
even more than they have wanted to see Iraq
succeed; they worry about Iran, but they
will root for it against Washington; and
they fear Al-Qaida's world, but hope the
group gives America a black eye.
This suggests that the current American
challenge in the region is how to help shape
outcomes, without making them seem part of
an American imperial design. Yet the
statements by the Bush administration in the
first two weeks of the current crisis have
played directly into regional fears. The
reluctance to call for a quick cease-fire
despite the massive damage and civilian
casualties and statements about the
suffering as being ``the birth pangs of a
new Middle East'' have made many in the
region conclude that the Lebanon war is
America's war.
Seen from this perspective, Al-Qaida's
failure does not translate into an American
success.
SHIBLEY
TELHAMI is Anwar Sadat Professor for
Peace and Development at the
University of Maryland and a
non-resident Senior Fellow at the
Saban Center of the Brookings
Institution. He wrote this article
for Perspective.