Raymond Ibrahim
Special to IPT News
http://www.investigativeproject.org/3831/ayman-zawahiri-and-egypt-a-trip-through-time
Around 1985, current al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri fled his
homeland of Egypt, presumably never to return. From his early beginnings
as a teenage leader of a small jihadi cell devoted to overthrowing
Egyptian regimes (first Nasser's then Sadat's) until he merged forces
with Osama bin Laden, expanding his objectives to include targeting the
United States of America, Zawahiri never forgot his original objective:
transforming Egypt into an Islamist state that upholds and enforces the
totality of Sharia law, and that works towards the resurrection of a
global caliphate.
This vision is on its way to being fulfilled. With Islamist political
victories, culminating with a Muslim Brotherhood president, Muhammad
Morsi, Egypt is taking the first major steps to becoming the sort of
state Zawahiri wished to see. Zawahiri regularly congratulates Egypt's
Islamists—most recently the attacks on the U.S. embassy in Cairo—urging
them to continue Islamizing the Middle East's most strategic nation.
He sent a lengthy communiqué during the Egyptian revolution in
February 2011, for example, titled "Messages of Hope and Glad Tidings to
our People in Egypt." In it, he reiterated themes widely popularized by
al-Qaeda, including: secular regimes are the enemies of Islam;
democracy is a sham; Sharia must be instituted; the U.S. and the
"Zionist enemy" are the true source behind all of the Islamic world's
ills.
Zawahiri continues to push these themes. Late last month, he sent messages criticizing Morsi, especially for not helping "the jihad to liberate Palestine;" called for the kidnapping of Westerners, especially Americans—which the U.S. embassy in Cairo took seriously enough to issue a warning to Americans; and further incited Egypt's Muslims to wage jihad against America because of the YouTube Muhammad movie.
In short, a symbiotic relationship exists between the country of
Egypt and the Egyptian Zawahiri: the country helped shape the man, and
the man is fixated on influencing the country, his homeland.
Accordingly, an examination of Zawahiri's early years and experiences in
Egypt—a case study of sorts—provides context for understanding
Zawahiri, the undisputed leader of the world's most notorious Islamic
terrorist organization and helps explain how Egypt got where it is
today. The two phenomena go hand-in-hand.
In this report, we will explore several questions, including: What
happened in Egypt to turn this once "shy" and "studious" schoolboy who
abhorred physical sports as "inhumane" towards jihad? What happened to
turn many Egyptians to jihad, or at least radical Islam? What is
Zawahiri's relationship to the Muslim Brotherhood and the
Salafis—Egypt's two dominant Islamist political players? Did the 9/11
strikes on America, orchestrated by Zawahiri and al-Qaeda, help or
hinder the Islamists of Egypt?
Background
Little about Zawahiri's upbringing suggests that he would become the
world's most notorious jihadi, partially responsible for the deaths of
thousands of innocents in the September 11 attacks and elsewhere. People
who knew him stress that Zawahiri came from a "prestigious" and
"aristocratic" background (in Egypt, "aristocrats" have traditionally
been among the most liberal and secular). His father Muhammad was a
professor of pharmacology; his mother, Umayma, came from a politically
active family. Ayman had four siblings; he (and his twin sister) were
the eldest. Born in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, on June 19, 1951,
Zawahiri, as a BBC report puts it, "came from a respectable middle-class
family of doctors and scholars. His grandfather, Rabia al-Zawahiri, was
the grand imam of al-Azhar, the centre of Sunni Islamic learning in the
Middle East, while one of his uncles was the first secretary-general of
the Arab League."
Even so, he exhibited signs of a strong and determined character, as
"there was nothing weak about the personality of the child Zawahiri. On
the contrary, he did not like any opinion to be imposed on him. He was
happy to discuss any issue that was difficult for him to understand
until it was made clear, but he did not argue for the sake of argument.
He always listened politely, without giving anyone the chance to control
him."
For all his love of literature and poetry, which Islamists often
portray as running counter to Muslim faith, Zawahiri exhibited a notable
form of piety from youth. "Ayman al-Zawahiri was born into a religious
Muslim family," al-Zayyat wrote. "Following the example of his family,
he not only performed the prayers at the correct times, but he did so in
the mosque…. He always made sure that he performed the morning prayers
[at sunrise] with a group in the mosque, even during the coldest
winters. He attended several classes of Koran interpretation, fiqh [Islamic jurisprudence] and Koran recitation at the mosque."
Otherwise, he appeared to lead a normal, privileged lifestyle. Like
his family, he followed a prestigious career path. Zawahiri joined the
Faculty of Medicine at Cairo University, graduating in 1974 with the
highest possible marks. He then earned a Master's degree in surgery from
the same university in 1978. He went on to receive a PhD in surgery
from a Pakistani university, during his stay in Peshawar, when he was
aiding the mujahidin against the Soviets. People who know Zawahiri say
that the only relationship he had with a woman was with his wife, Azza,
whom he married in 1979, and who held a degree in philosophy. She and
three of Zawahiri's six children were killed in an air strike on
Afghanistan by U.S. forces in late 2001.
Death of a Martyr
The initial influence on Zawahiri's radicalization appears to have
come from his uncle Mahfouz, an opponent to the secular regime and
Islamist in his own right, who was arrested in a militant round up in
1945, following the assassination of Prime Minister Ahmed Mahfouz. In
reference to this event, Zawahiri's uncle even boasted: "I myself was
going to do what Ayman has done," according to Lawrence Wright's The Looming Tower: Al Qaeda and the Road to 9/11.
Though Mahfouz was likely the first to introduce young Ayman to the
political scene of radical Islam, no one appears to have had an impact
on Zawahiri's development as much as Uncle Mahfouz's mentor and Arabic
teacher, Sayyid Qutb—often referred to as the "godfather" of modern
jihad. Qutb, then the Muslim Brotherhood's premiere theoretician of
jihad, has arguably played the greatest role in articulating the
Islamist/jihadi worldview in the modern era, so much so that Zawahiri
and others regularly quote his voluminous writings in their own work.
According to the 9/11 Commission Report,
"Three basic themes emerge from Qutb's writings. First, he claimed that
the world was beset with barbarism, licentiousness, and unbelief (a
condition he called jahiliyya, the religious term for the period of
ignorance prior to the revelations given to the Prophet Mohammed). Qutb
argued that humans can choose only between Islam and jahiliyya. Second,
he warned that more people, including Muslims, were attracted to
jahiliyya and its material comforts than to his view of Islam; jahiliyya
could therefore triumph over Islam. Third, no middle ground exists in
what Qutb conceived as a struggle between God and Satan. All Muslims—as
he defined them—therefore must take up arms in this fight. Any Muslim
who rejects his ideas is just one more nonbeliever worthy of
destruction."
Qutb's primary target—and subsequently Zawahiri's—was the Egyptian
regime, which he accused of being enforcers of jahiliyya, obstructing
the totality of Sharia. Because Qutb was so effective at fomenting
Islamist animosity for the regime, President Gamal Abdel Nasser had him
imprisoned and eventually executed in 1966. That act that only succeeded
in helping propagate Qutb's importance to the jihadi movement, which
came to see him as a "martyr" (a shahid, the highest honor for a Muslim), turning his already popular writings into "eternal classics" for Islamists everywhere.
As Zayyat observes, "In Zawahiri's eyes, Sayyid Qutb's words struck
young Muslims more deeply than those of his contemporaries because his
words eventually led to his execution. Thus, those words provided the
blueprint for his long and glorious lifetime, and eventually led to its
end…. His teaching gave rise to the formation of the nucleus of the
contemporary jihadi movements in Egypt."
It is no coincidence, then, that Zawahiri founded his first jihadi
cell in 1966 – the year of Qutb's execution – when he was only
15-years-old. Embracing Qutb's teachings—that jihad is the only answer,
that talk, diplomacy, and negotiations only serve the infidel enemy's
purposes—his cell originally had a handful of members. Zawahiri
eventually merged it with other small cells to form Egyptian Islamic
Jihad, becoming one of its leaders. Zawahiri sought to recruit military
officers and accumulate weapons, waiting for the right moment to launch a
coup against the regime; or, in Zawahiri's own words as later recorded
by an interrogator, "to establish an Islamic government …. a government
that rules according to the Sharia of Allah Almighty."
Humiliation of Defeat
A year following the establishment of Zawahiri's cell, another event
took place that further paved the way to jihad: the ignominious defeat
of Egypt by Israel in the 1967 war. Until then, Arab nationalism,
spearheaded by Nasser, was the dominant ideology, not just in Egypt, but
the entire Arab world. What began with much euphoria and
conviction—that the Arab world, unified under Arab nationalism and
headed by Nasser would crush Israel, only to lose disastrously in a
week—morphed into disillusionment and disaffection, especially among
Egyptians. It was then that the slogan "Islam is the solution" spread
like wildfire, winning over many to the cause.
At the time of the 1967 war, the future al-Qaeda leader was 16 years
old. Like many young people at the time, he was somewhat traumatized by
Egypt's defeat—a defeat which, 34 years later, he would gloat upon in
his 2001 book Fursan Taht Rayat al-Nabbi, ("Knights Under the Banner of the Prophet"):
"The unfolding events impacted the course of the jihadi movements in
Egypt, namely, the 1967 defeat and the ensuing symbolic collapse of
Gamal Abdel Nasser, who was portrayed to the public by his followers as
the everlasting invincible symbol. The jihadi movements realized that
wormwoods had eaten at this icon, and that it had become fragile. The
1967 defeat shook the earth under this idol until it fell on its face,
causing a severe shock to its disciples, and frightening its subjects.
The jihadi movements grew stronger and stronger as they realized that
their avowed enemy was little more than a statue to be worshipped,
constructed through propaganda, and through the oppression of unarmed
innocents. The direct influence of the 1967 defeat was that a large
number of people, especially youths, returned to their original
identity: that of members of an Islamic civilization."
This theme—that the "enemies of Islam" – first the secular dictators,
followed by the USSR and then the U.S., were "paper tigers" whose bark
was worse than their bite—would come to permeate the writings of
al-Qaeda and other jihadists. For instance, in March 2012, in response
to President Obama's plans to cut Pentagon spending, Zawahiri said,
"The biggest factor that forced America to reduce its defence budget is
Allah's help to the mujahideen [or jihadis] to harm the evil empire of
our time [the U.S.]," adding that American overtures to the Afghan
Taliban for possible reconciliation was further evidence of U.S. defeat.
The 1973 war between Egypt and Israel appears to have had a lesser
impact on Zawahiri, who by then had already confirmed his worldview.
Moreover, it was during the 1970s that he was especially busy with
"normal" life—earning two advanced university degrees (one in 1974,
another in 1978), getting married, and starting a family. Even so, the
subsequent peace treaty that the Egyptian President Anwar Sadat signed
with Israel incensed many Islamists in Egypt, including Zawahiri, who
saw it as a great betrayal to the Islamic Nation, or Umma, prompting
jihadis to act now instead of later.
Accordingly, Sadat was targeted for assassination; the time had come
for a military coup, which was Islamic Jihad's ultimate goal. But the
plan was derailed when authorities learned of it in February, 1981.
Sadat ordered the roundup of more than 1,500 Islamists, including many
Islamic Jihad members (though he missed a cell in the military led by
Lieutenant Khalid Islambouli, who succeeded in assassinating Sadat
during a military parade later that same year).
Prison Torture
Zawahiri was among the thousands of Islamists rounded up after
Sadat's assassination, leading to one of the most talked-of episodes of
Zawahiri's life: his prison experience. He was interrogated and found
guilty of possessing firearms, serving three years in prison. During
that time, he was among many who were tortured in Egyptian prisons.
Much has been made of Zawahiri's prison-time torture. (It is curious
to note that when Egyptian officials called to investigate the officers
accused of torturing the Islamist inmates, Zawahiri did not file a case
against the authorities, though many others did, and though he bothered
to witness to the torture of other members.) Several writers, beginning
with al-Zayyat, suggest that along with the dual-impact of the martyrdom
of Qutb and the 1967 defeat, this event had an especially traumatic
effect on Zawahiri's subsequent development and radicalization.
Still, one should not give this experience more due than it deserves.
Zawahiri was an ardent jihadi well over a decade before he was
imprisoned and tortured; the overly paradigmatic explanation of
humiliation-as-precursor-to-violence so popular in Western thinking is
unnecessary here.
On the other hand, in the vein of "that which does not kill you makes
you stronger," it seems that Zawahiri's prison experience hardened him
and made his already notorious stubbornness and determination that much
more unshakeable. In short, if his prison experience did not initiate
his jihadi inclinations, it likely exacerbated it.
Moreover, being "found out"—had an indirect impact on his
radicalization. After he was released, and knowing that he was being
watched by the authorities, he was compelled to quit his native Egypt,
meeting other Arabic-speaking Islamists abroad. He met Osama bin Laden as early as 1986
in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. That led him to relocate to the Afghan theater
of jihad, where the final coalescing of his global jihad worldview
culminated.
Shifting Strategy
During his time in Egypt, Zawahiri was a staunch proponent of
jihad—believing that no real change or progress can be achieved without
armed struggle. This never changed. However, his strategic goal of
toppling the Egyptian regime grew more ambitious over time, especially
after the Afghan war experience and partnership with bin Laden.
Accordingly, until the late 1990s Zawahiri rarely mentioned what are
today the mainstays of Islamist discontent, such as the Arab/Israel
conflict, or other matters outside Egypt's borders. In fact, in a 1995
article titled "The Way to Jerusalem Passes Through Cairo" published in Al-Mujahidin,
Zawahiri even wrote that "Jerusalem will not be opened [conquered]
until the battles in Egypt and Algeria have been won and until Cairo has
been opened." This is not to say that Zawahiri did not always see
Israel as the enemy. Rather, he deemed it pointless to fight it directly
when one could have the entire might of Egypt's military by simply
overthrowing the regime—precisely the situation today.
Zawahiri's "Mistake"?
It is for all these reasons that many of Egypt's Islamists, beginning with the Muslim Brotherhood, saw al-Qaeda's 9/11 attacks, partially masterminded
by Zawahiri, as a severe setback to their movement. The attacks awoke
the U.S. and the West, setting off the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, and
also giving many Arab regimes – including Mubarak's – free reign to
suppress all Islamists. Those regimes happily took advantage. As
al-Zayyat, Zawahiri's biographer, wrote:
"The poorly conceived decision to launch the attacks of September
11created many victims of a war of which they did not choose to be a
part…. Bin Laden and Zawahiri's behavior [9/11] was met with a lot of
criticism from many Islamists in Egypt and abroad…. In the
post-September 11 world, no countries can afford to be accused of
harboring the enemies of the United States. No one ever imagined that a
Western European country would extradite Islamists who live on its
lands. Before that, Islamists had always thought that arriving in a
European city and applying for political asylum was enough to acquire
permanent resident status. After September 11, 2001, everything
changed…. Even the Muslim Brotherhood was affected by the American
campaign, which targeted everything Islamic."
In retrospect, the "mistake of 9/11" may have indirectly helped
empower Islamists: by bringing unwanted Western attention to the Middle
East, it also made popular the argument that democracy would solve all
the ills of the Middle East. Many Western observers who previously had
little knowledge of the Islamic world, were surprised to discover post
9/11 that dictatorial regimes ran the Muslim world. This led to the
simplistic argument that Islamists were simply lashing out because they
were suppressed. Failing to understand that these dictatorships were the
only thing between full-blown Islamist regimes like Iran, many deemed
democracy a panacea, beginning with U.S. President George W. Bush, who
invaded Afghanistan and Iraq, partially to "spread" and in the name of
democracy.
With the so-called "Arab spring" that began in 2011, the Obama
administration has followed this logic more aggressively by throwing the
U.S's longtime allies like Egypt's Mubarak, under the bus in the name
of democracy—a democracy that has been dominated by the Muslim
Brotherhood, which, as has been mentioned, shares the same ultimate
goals of Zawahiri and other jihadists. Recent events—including
unprecedented attacks on U.S. embassies in Egypt and Libya, ironically,
the two nations the U.S. especially intervened in to pave the way for
Islamist domination—only confirm this.
Zawahiri and the Muslim Brotherhood
While Zawahiri's early decades in Egypt are mostly remembered in the
context of the above—prestigious and academic background, clandestine
radicalization, jihad, prison, followed by fleeing the country—the
al-Qaeda leader has a long history with other Islamists groups in Egypt,
such as the Muslim Brotherhood. Since the "Arab Spring" and ousting of
longtime President Hosni Mubarak, it has been the Brotherhood who have,
not only dominated Egyptian politics, but have a member, Muhammad Morsi,
as Egypt's first elected president.
Zawahiri joined the Brotherhood when he was only 14, then abandoned
it to form his own cell less than two years later after Qutb's
execution. A proponent of the slogan "jihad alone," Zawahiri soon became
critical of the Brotherhood's pragmatic strategies, and wrote an entire
book in 1991 arguing against their nonviolent approach.
Titled Al Hissad Al Murr, or "The Bitter Harvest," Zawahiri
argued that the Brotherhood "takes advantage of the Muslim youths'
fervor by bringing them into the fold only to store them in a
refrigerator. Then, they steer their onetime passionate, Islamic zeal
for jihad to conferences and elections…. And not only have the
Brothers been idle from fulfilling their duty of fighting to the death,
but they have gone as far as to describe the infidel governments as
legitimate, and have joined ranks with them in the ignorant style of
governing, that is, democracies, elections, and parliaments."
It is perhaps ironic that, for all his scathing remarks against them,
time has revealed that the Muslim Brotherhood's strategy of slowly
infiltrating society from a grassroots approach has been more effective
than Zawahiri's and al-Qaeda's jihadi terror. The Brotherhood's patience
and perseverance, by playing the political game, formally disavowing
violence and jihad—all of which earned the ire of Zawahiri and
others—have turned it into a legitimate player. Yet this does not make
the Brotherhood's goals any less troubling. For instance, according to a
January 2012 Al Masry Al Youm report, Brotherhood leader
Muhammad Badie stated that the group's grand goal is the return of a
"rightly guided caliphate and finally mastership of the world"—precisely
what Zawahiri and al-Qaeda seek to achieve. Half a year later, in July
2012, Safwat Hegazy, a popular preacher and Brotherhood member, boasted
that the Brotherhood will be "masters of the world, one of these days."
Zawahiri and Egypt Today
In light of the Egyptian revolution that accomplished what Zawahiri
had tried to accomplish for decades—overthrow the regime—what relevance
does the al-Qaeda leader have for the Egyptian populace today? The best
way to answer this question is in the context of Salafism—the popular
Islamist movement in Egypt and elsewhere that is grounded in the
teachings and patterns of early Islam, beginning with the days of
Islam's Prophet Muhammad and under the first four "righteously guided"
caliphs.
As a Salafist organization, al-Qaeda is very popular with Salafis.
Its current leader, the Egyptian Zawahiri, is especially popular—a
"hero" in every sense of the word—with Egyptian Salafis. Considering
that the Salafis won some 25 percent of votes in recent elections, one
may infer that at least a quarter or of Egypt's population looks
favorably on Zawahiri. In fact, some important Salafis are on record
saying they would like to see Zawahiri return to his native Egypt. Aboud
al-Zomor, for instance, the Egyptian Islamic Jihad leader who was
implicated for the assassination of Sadat, but who has now been released
and is even a leading member of the new Egyptian parliament, has called
for the return of Zawahiri to Egypt, "with his head held high and in
safety."
Zawahiri's brother, Muhammad, is also an influential Islamist in Egypt, affiliated with the Salafis and Al Gamaa Al Islamiyya. He led a mass Islamist demonstration last spring with typical jihadi slogans. He also was among those threatening the U.S. embassy in Cairo to release the Blind Sheikh—the true reason behind the September attack, not a movie—or else be "burned down to the ground." When asked in a recent interview with CNN if he is in touch with his al-Qaeda leader brother, Muhammad only smiled and said "of course not."
Under Zawahiri's leadership, al-Qaeda has made inroads on Egyptian
territory. For example, several recent attacks in Sinai—such as the
attacks on the Egypt-Israel natural-gas pipeline—were in fact conducted
by a new group pledging allegiance to al-Qaeda. Zawahiri publicly
congratulated them for destroying the pipelines, and the organization
itself has pledged its loyalty to Zawahiri. More recently, al-Qaeda in
the Sinai has been blamed for attacking and evicting Christian
minorities living there.
This highlights the fact that groups like the Brotherhood and the
Salafis have the same goals—establishment of a government that upholds
Sharia law—though they differ as to achieve this. Salafis like al-Qaeda
tend to agree that jihad is the solution. Yet, given the Brotherhood's
success using peaceful means—co-opting the language of democracy and
running in elections—many Salafis are now "playing politics" even though
many of them are also on record saying that, once in power, they will
enforce Islamic law and abolish democracy.
It is not clear where Zawahiri stands regarding Egypt. Because of his
deep roots there, Egypt undoubtedly holds a special place for Zawahiri.
But as the leader of a global jihadi network, he cannot afford to
appear biased to Egypt—hence why he addresses the politics of other
nations, Pakistan for example, and themes like the Arab-Israeli
conflict, with equal or more attention.
Likewise, there are different accounts regarding his personality
traits and how they would comport with Egypt's current state. For
example, whereas his biographer described young Zawahiri as averse to
the limelight and open to others' opinions, most contemporary
characterizations of Zawahiri suggest he is intractable and
domineering—a product, perhaps, of some four decades of jihadi
activities, as well as the aforementioned experiences. While the
personality traits attributed to him in youth would certainly aid him in
influencing Egyptian Islamist politics, those attributed to him now
would not.
He has been away too long, and others have stepped in. Either way, to
many Islamists around the world, Egypt in particular, Zawahiri is a
hero—one of the few men to successfully strike the "great enemy,"
America. Such near legendary status will always see to it that Ayman
Zawahiri—and the Salafi ideology al-Qaeda helped popularize—remain
popular among Egypt's Islamists.
Raymond Ibrahim, an expert on al-Qaeda and author of The Al Qaeda Reader, is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an Associate Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
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