Al-Qaida, the sect

All that was necessary for the events of 11 September 2001 was present before the tragedy. But as with all strategic revolutions, the attacks brought together accelerating trends, causing the first conflict between a state and a sect, and the first war without a front, its aim not territorial conquest but the physical destruction of an adversary. This strategic revolution demands a complete reappraisal of concepts on which western analysts have based their reasoning.

Few observers have examined changes in the Islamic world with regard to the sectarian movements that have spread through the world over the last two decades. Islam gives believers considerable freedom to interpret religious texts, and does not treat recent Islamist groups as sects. Al-Qaida has much in common with other sects, in particular its millennarian ideology and fascination with death.

Osama bin Laden has been operating in an exclusively religious frame of reference. In a statement, broadcast by Al Jazeera television, he said: "Our nation has been tasting this humiliation and contempt for more than 80 years." This is a reference neither to Palestine nor Iraq, but to Kemal Ataturk's abolition of the Caliphate in 1924. He added that the US would not "enjoy security before we can see it as a reality in Palestine [with Jerusalem liberated] and before all the infidel armies leave the land of Muhammad [Saudi Arabia]". Significantly, he did not refer to local political issues, such as the embargo on Iraq or the situation in Algeria.

Bin Laden, a follower of Salafi Sunnism, does not express absolute solidarity with all Muslims. The assassination of Ahmad Shah Massoud, also a Muslim, meant nothing to him. Nor does he claim to have the support of the regime in Iran, which is Islamist, but also Shia.

The religious intensity ties with the millenarian beliefs underlying Bin Laden's statements; politics play a poor second role. Military Studies in the Jihad Against the Tyrants, a 200-page document found in the UK in 2000, enjoins combatants to "martyrdom for the purpose of establishing the religion of majestic Allah on earth" (1). As with all sects, religion takes precedence over politics and renders them pointless, announcing instead the advent of paradise on earth.

This new radical Islamism has fed on a growing awareness of political and ideological setbacks. The third world no longer counts as a political force, Arab socialism is bankrupt, and political Islamism has reached a dead end (2). All this coincides with a realisation that Arab governments have nationalised their official religious authorities (as Egypt has done with al-Azhar university).

None of the terrorists who died on 11 September had a militant background. None was linked to an Islamist political party. As Trotsky refused the notion of "socialism in one country", Bin Laden rejects the idea of Islamism in one country. He does not have a national strategy because he is working for the global triumph of Allah.

A fascination with death

Another sect-type characteristic of this form of Islam is its fascination with death. Hamas suicide bombers are not isolated. In Algeria, the Armed Islamic Group (GIA) and the Salafi Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) made no attempt to justify their atrocities as political legitimacy or strategic necessity. Bloodshed became the method of war. Bin Laden borrowed the notion of martyrdom from the Shia in Iran, for whom it is commonplace- as demonstrated by the bassiji, young volunteers the Khomeini regime sent to the front against Iraq to defend Islam and the revolution (3).

All the attacks attributed to al-Qaida - the 1998 bombings of US embassies and the strike on the USS Cole in 2000 - required the sacrifice of men. The death of the believer is necessary, the price for paradise - a recurrent feature of group suicides (the People's Temple in Guyana, Heaven's Gate in California). It recurs in the punishment for betraying a political sect (Japanese Red Army, Tamil Tigers) or a religious sect (Aum Shinrikyo in Japan).

Sects see innocent victims as necessary to their objectives. The will in Muhammad Atta's luggage shows no pity for those about to die, sometimes referred to as enemies simply because they were not Muslims. Aum Shinrikyo, which carried out a sarin nerve gas attack in the Tokyo underground in 1995 (4), promised both victims and combatants a speedy passage to paradise. There are many millennarian sects and some even uphold the myth of magical invincibility. Combatants of Uganda's Holy Spirit Movement walk into enemy fire, convinced it cannot harm them.

A guru is also essential. Members of Bin Laden's inner circle call him Sheikh Osama or Emir bin Laden in respect (he is not a religious scholar) (6). In the first videos, he was standing in front of a cave, a reference to Muhammad's banishment from Mecca. He implicitly identifies with the Prophet in exile, with Saladin driving out the crusaders, or with Hassan Ibn al-Sabbah, the "Old Man of the Mountain", head of the Nizari sect, better known as the Assassins.

His ideology is based on the intellectual comfort provided by unequivocal racism. The enemy are "Jews and the crusaders" according to the 1998 fatwa supporting Sheikh Omar Abdul Rahman, convicted for the first bombing of the World Trade Centre: "The ruling to kill the Americans and their allies - civilians and military - is an individual duty for every Muslim."" This is close to other simplistic sect-originated ideas, such as the claim that the Jews invented the Shia to weaken the Sunni.

Bin Laden's racism surfaces in his obsession with the idea that the Jews rule the financial world. Although the attacks did not target the Vatican, the Knesset or the Statue of Liberty, but the World Trade Centre, demonstrating an anti-globalisation ideaology rather than a war of religion. Bin Laden condemned the US as "the modern world's symbol of paganism". This mixture of theology and anti-globalisation mirrors the deep schizophrenia of Saudi society, which enjoys abroad what it will not allow at home. At the same time it considers anywhere else, particularly the US, hell. Yet that inferno is much like paradise, since wine and women will greet the martyr, according to the notebook in Atta's bag.

There are three generations of al-Qaida combatants. The founding fathers are all from the Middle East, veterans of the jihad against the Soviets in Afghanistan (Bin Laden himself and his right-hand man Ayman al-Zawahri). The second generation date from 1992-93; these are the attackers of 11 September (Ramzi Yousef). They are outcasts by necessity, children of marriages between parents with complicated backgrounds, immigrants without papers. They are not Palestinians. Some come from Pakistan, others from the Philippines or East Africa (such as Zacarias Moussaoui or Samir al-Jarrah). Life in the West radicalised them. As in sects, recruits must break with family, birthplace and home country.

A one-way trip

For many this is the start of a one-way trip. If they go home, they face prison, even the death penalty. Afghanistan was a refuge for all those who wanted or had to flee. Martyrdom is a perfect way out of this. Bin Laden sifted through these exiles and bright-eyed kamikazes. The Taliban put him in charge of recruiting non-Afghan jihadi. This generation lived through the failure of Islamist parties in various countries and backed the fight against the new enemy, the West. The number of Saudis among the perpetrators of 11 September - between a half and two-thirds - highlights the political and moral crisis in their country. Like the Russian Nihilists, these men - children of upper middle-class families, with a university education - form an intelligentsia that speaks to the people through attacks designed to provoke it into action.

The most recent generation are youths in revolt. In the 1960s they would have joined a Maoist movement. Now they convert to Islam, following a similar route to John Walker Lindh, the American who joined the Taliban. They have not lost their citizenship. Some hold several nationalities. Wadi al-Hajwas born in Lebanon, but holds a US passport. (He was convicted for the first World Trade Centre attack. ) They enjoyed rapid early promotion, followed by setbacks, and, disappointed, were an easy prey for radicalisation (Moussaoui and Kamel Daoudi). The recruiting agencies are based in mosques around the West. They are particularly active in Tabligh centres - Finsbury Park in London, Mantes La Jolie near Paris, Brooklyn.

Al-Qaida is like a holding company run by a council (shura) including representatives of terrorist movements. It verges on totalitarianism, with sub-divisions to manage key functions: ideology, media, administration and military action. This organisation provides all the backup terrorist operations need, probably including care for the families of martyrs. It may make alliances, terrorist joint ventures, with other movements with which it has links, the Egyptian Jihad or the Abu Sayyaf group in the Philippines (7).

The list of 27 targets of anti-terrorist action published by the US, to which 39 more objectives was later added, includes groups, charities and personalities - a reflection of the complexity of the web that Bin Laden has woven. Al-Qaida, like any self-respecting sect, controls a financial network that handles donations and other income, transforming them into covert funds. The US is convinced that major Islamic foundations, such as al-Barakat, are a party to these.

Islam is prey to the sectarianism that exacerbates the excesses common to any creed. It is unsurprising that al-Qaida has launched an all-inclusive condemnation of the US, the official Muslim authorities, Israel, the UN and the global economy.