Spencer For Hire wrote:Well he is a highly respected expert on terrorism, and I thought the programme's facts were pretty solid... or are you telling us these websites and those who contribute to them don't exist?
The websites definitely exist, no doubt about it. But, in and of itself, it doesn't prove anything.
I'm trying to think of a comparison to draw. Take for example survivalist sites in America. There are hundreds of them, and tens of thousands make up their numbers. They are all heavily armed and have a rabidly anti-government stance on almost anything, especially on the UN, foreign policy and Christian stuff (for example, gays, abortions, etc etc).
The only thing that links these groups is a common ideology, and that will vary to quite an extent to.
Whether you think he was guilty or not, Timothy McVeigh, executed for the Oklahoma City bombings in 1995, was a member of the survivalist movement. Or to be more precise, one particular group within that movement.
Just as with all these terrorist/militant groups supposedly representing Islam, there is little linking them except an ideology. They do not act in concert - they do not take orders from anyone, generally. There is an international supply chain of illegal guns and explosives, and these individual, unconnected groups simply buy from the same suppliers.
Inventing "Al Qaeda" to describe these disparate groups and pretending it is an organisation, no matter how loose the connections, is logically absurd. One could argue it is a "movement", but not an organisation. This difference is crucial - a "movement", without central organisation, manpower or purchasing power, can't really do that much. An organisation can. This is why I and apparently lots of others believe that, even despite this month's bombings, the threat is completely overblown.
In the same way it would be logically absurd to come to a conclusion that there is an "Al Qaeda" organisation with survivalists.
Spencer For Hire wrote:I didn't see any of The Power Of Nightmares I'm afraid, but the fact is people around the world are being killed... and there is a movement trying to whip up hatred against 'the West' in the name of Muslim fundamentalism, call it Al Qaeda or whatever you like. Perhaps last night's programme didn't fit in with your view of the situation, but I'd rather believe someone who has researched the matter for over a year than draw inferrences from a number of minor coincidences and reporting errors.
Spencer, if you go onto some of the P2P systems, like Emule, you should find "Power Of Nightmares" pretty easily. I would recommend it - it's a fascinating documentary with very tight commentary and reasoning (in my opinion).
I don't doubt that last night's reporter has studied the subject for a year, but look at who he's been talking to. The vast majority of the people in last night's programme agreed with the Bush administration. Just for shock value (and the lone Muslim voice, iirc), he got a radical cleric in to demonstrate his belief. That radical cleric has no army, no financing, no advanced communication system, nothing - the threat he poses is not comparable to what Tony Blair called "an existential threat to our existence".
Both Adam Curtis in the "Power Of Nightmares" and the guy last night each had their own opinion and sought to justify it in the programme. That's what documentary makers generally do, especially on political subjects and there's nothing wrong with that. From a personal point of view, I found Curtis's way of dealing with the subject intellectual and evidence-based. Last night's programme did not display that to anywhere near the same degree in my opinion.
Spencer For Hire wrote:In previous posts, you seem to accept that the war on Iraq has made us a greater target for terrorists, so I don't see why the idea that we're being targeted by terrorists is such a strange idea.
Terrorism definitely exists - that's for certain. I'd never deny that.
What I disagree with is the nature of the threat we are facing. To re-iterate, is "Al Qaeda" a worldwide network of terror with 60,000 operatives spread around the world, or is it an idea, unproven after years of supposed existence (for example, try to find out how many terror suspects have been arrested, whether they were charged, and if they were convicted, what it was for)?
So, if the suspects for the London bombings were the guilty party (and that's far from proven), were they a few lone nutcases (probably imo) or foot soldiers in Islam's war again the west (highly unlikely imo)?