International Jihadist groups before the 80's.

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Khilafah420
Does anyone know whether there were any Jihadi groups (by modern definition) before the 80's? Since it really seems like Islamic Terrorism as we know it today really set up its roots in Afghanistan during the Soviet war there. Namely because that's the period of time when al-Qaeda and the Taliban really set up their recruitment base and multi-national infrastructure.

Also, al-Qaeda's traditional core areas have been around Afghanistan, and the Taliban is also based in Afghanistan.


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there were some islamic nationalist groups who used terrorist tactics against the ottomans in the late 1800s.  there's also the hashashins from the 11th century, who used "terrorist" tactics against persian provinces.other than that, there isnt much that i can find with cursory research. the geopolitical shakeup caused by western intervention in the middle east is the primary catalyst for all the strife right now, and the advent of the information age has allowed fundamentalist ideology to spread around the world, so thats why the islamic coalition groups that we know are a modern phenomena. they really started sprouting after the iranian revolution in 1979. lots of disillusioned muslims empathized with the ayatollah khomeini's anti-western philosophy, emphasis on the virtues of the jihad, and perhaps these groups feel that they must mirror the ayatollah's revolution in other parts of the world.

my understanding of middle eastern history is EXTREMELY rudimentary, so you'll have to forgive errors. there have most certainly been islamic fringe groups which threaten central authority in the middle east as far back as the beginning of the islamic empire, but the nature of our industrialized and ever-advancing global society is what allowed groups like ISIL and al Qaeda to exist in this capacity.
Last Edit: April 08, 2015, 11:39:57 PM by Azumarill


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Khilafah420
there were some islamic nationalist groups who used terrorist tactics against the ottomans in the late 1800s.  there's also the hashashins from the 11th century, who used "terrorist" tactics against persian provinces.other than that, there isnt much that i can find with cursory research. the geopolitical shakeup caused by western intervention in the middle east is the primary catalyst for all the strife right now, and the advent of the information age has allowed fundamentalist ideology to spread around the world, so thats why the islamic coalition groups that we know are a modern phenomena. they really started sprouting after the iranian revolution in 1979. lots of disillusioned muslims empathized with the ayatollah khomeini's anti-western philosophy, emphasis on the virtues of the jihad, and perhaps these groups feel that they must mirror the ayatollah's revolution in other parts of the world.

my understanding of middle eastern history is EXTREMELY rudimentary, so you'll have to forgive errors. there have most certainly been islamic fringe groups which threaten central authority in the middle east as far back as the beginning of the islamic empire, but the nature of our industrialized and ever-advancing global society is what allowed groups like ISIL and al Qaeda to exist in this capacity.
So what I'm saying is pretty much confirmed..

Which is that Islamic terrorism wasn't really a major problem until the 80's. Lots of what you were mentioning sounded like political terrorism with a bit of religion, while today's Islamic terrorism is largely religion-motivated.


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there were some islamic nationalist groups who used terrorist tactics against the ottomans in the late 1800s.  there's also the hashashins from the 11th century, who used "terrorist" tactics against persian provinces.other than that, there isnt much that i can find with cursory research. the geopolitical shakeup caused by western intervention in the middle east is the primary catalyst for all the strife right now, and the advent of the information age has allowed fundamentalist ideology to spread around the world, so thats why the islamic coalition groups that we know are a modern phenomena. they really started sprouting after the iranian revolution in 1979. lots of disillusioned muslims empathized with the ayatollah khomeini's anti-western philosophy, emphasis on the virtues of the jihad, and perhaps these groups feel that they must mirror the ayatollah's revolution in other parts of the world.

my understanding of middle eastern history is EXTREMELY rudimentary, so you'll have to forgive errors. there have most certainly been islamic fringe groups which threaten central authority in the middle east as far back as the beginning of the islamic empire, but the nature of our industrialized and ever-advancing global society is what allowed groups like ISIL and al Qaeda to exist in this capacity.
So what I'm saying is pretty much confirmed..

Which is that Islamic terrorism wasn't really a major problem until the 80's. Lots of what you were mentioning sounded like political terrorism with a bit of religion, while today's Islamic terrorism is largely religion-motivated.
well, we dont have all of the necessary contextual information, so id tread lightly, but id say youre on the right track. groups like the hashashins were heavily steeped in religious conflict/ideology, tracing their origins to the first crusade, but ultimately existed to serve some political purpose. its said that the leader of the hashinshins gave his followers hashish and polluted their minds, promising that he would be the harbinger of their salvation. this inspired a fanatical devotion to the cause, which isnt dissimilar to the fanatical devotion we see in our modern terrorist groups.

historical precedent dictates that religious militarism almost always masks a more complex political purpose, so im reluctant to say that these militant islamic organizations exist to deliver the world to paradise. that is to say, the religious aspect of this may be a facade, and the leaders are brainwashing their followers to serve their own agendas.

of course, there's much more nuance to this than i understand right now, so take all of this with a grain of salt.
Last Edit: April 09, 2015, 12:11:54 AM by Azumarill


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Khilafah420
there were some islamic nationalist groups who used terrorist tactics against the ottomans in the late 1800s.  there's also the hashashins from the 11th century, who used "terrorist" tactics against persian provinces.other than that, there isnt much that i can find with cursory research. the geopolitical shakeup caused by western intervention in the middle east is the primary catalyst for all the strife right now, and the advent of the information age has allowed fundamentalist ideology to spread around the world, so thats why the islamic coalition groups that we know are a modern phenomena. they really started sprouting after the iranian revolution in 1979. lots of disillusioned muslims empathized with the ayatollah khomeini's anti-western philosophy, emphasis on the virtues of the jihad, and perhaps these groups feel that they must mirror the ayatollah's revolution in other parts of the world.

my understanding of middle eastern history is EXTREMELY rudimentary, so you'll have to forgive errors. there have most certainly been islamic fringe groups which threaten central authority in the middle east as far back as the beginning of the islamic empire, but the nature of our industrialized and ever-advancing global society is what allowed groups like ISIL and al Qaeda to exist in this capacity.
So what I'm saying is pretty much confirmed..

Which is that Islamic terrorism wasn't really a major problem until the 80's. Lots of what you were mentioning sounded like political terrorism with a bit of religion, while today's Islamic terrorism is largely religion-motivated.
well, we dont have all of the necessary contextual information, so id tread lightly, but id say youre on the right track. groups like the hashashins were heavily steeped in religious conflict/ideology, tracing their origins to the first crusade, but ultimately existed to serve some political purpose. its said that the leader of the hashinshins gave his followers hashish and polluted their minds, promising that he would be the harbinger of their salvation. this inspired a fanatical devotion to the cause, which isnt dissimilar to the fanatical devotion we see in our modern terrorist groups.

historical precedent dictates that religious militarism almost always masks a more complex political purpose, so im reluctant to say that these militant islamic organizations exist to deliver the world to paradise. that is to say, the religious aspect of this may be a facade, and the leaders are brainwashing their followers to serve their own agendas.

of course, there's much more nuance to this than i understand right now, so take all of this with a grain of salt.
Yeah, both al-Qaeda and the Taliban originated from the same ideals at the time, which were to resist the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. And IS rooted from (at least during its independent phase) as a resistance group against the tyrannical Syrian and Iraqi governments.


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Of course, Muslims have been terrorists and terrorizing for thousands of years. It's in their nature.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Back in the early 1800s, Thomas Jefferson had to deal with Barbary pirates who used the Qur'an as justification for enslaving American sailors. The Muslim Brotherhood was set up on Islamist principles in the 1920s. Jews in Palestine had faced sporadic violence from Palestinians since at least 1929. And in the early 1900s General Pershing had to deal with Islamic terrorism in the Moro Province of the Philippines.


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If I'm not here, I'm doing photography. Or I'm asleep. Or in lockdown. One of those three, anyway.

The current titlebar/avatar setup is just normal.
Not exactly jihadist, but the IRA and IRB have been around for territory/religious reasons since the 1900's, and have done some bombing campaigns and turning police officers into disappearing acts.

Interesting fact from Wikipedia, Gadafi gave them a bunch of AK's around the 80's, and got a bit of support from the Nazis too in the form of MP40's.
Last Edit: April 09, 2015, 10:42:04 AM by SuperIrish