Munich Olympics give way to Soccer v. Jihad
By James M. Dorsey
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In
many ways, the Black September attack on the Olympic Games in Munich in 1972
discloses little about the evolution of the targeting of sporting events by
political and religious militants even though it remains to date the
incident with the greatest number of fatalities.
If anything, the Munich attack was never replicated in scale and drama. It introduced
a post-World War Two period in which secular nationalists rather than religious
militants dominated the targeting of sporting events, executives, and athletes.
That may have been different if plans for attacks by religious militants had
not failed or been foiled. Interestingly and more as a result of local
circumstances, successful attacks on sporting events and personalities since
Munich have struck a balance between having been perpetrated by secularists and
religious militants. This is true even if political violence since the 1980s
increasingly has been perpetrated by religious rather than secular militants.
Moreover,
Munich contains few lessons for understanding the evolution of political
violence in the half a century since. What the record of political violence in
the last 50 years does show is
a shift in the 1980s from secular and nationalist to militant religious
perpetrators. The record also illustrates that the
targeting of sporting events constitutes a minority of the number of
trans-national incidents of political violence in the
past 40 years. That picture changes when local occurrences such as attacks in
Iraq and Nigeria are taken into account. Analysis as highlighted in the below
table further shows that the deadliest attacks have been carried out by
Islamists, perhaps because Islamists are more prone to embrace death by suicide
while secular perpetrators maintain the hope that they may survive the attack.
Five
Decades of Attacks Targeting Sports
Islamist attacks |
1998 Foiled Al
Qaeda attack on World Cup match |
2002 A militant
suicide bomber explodes outside a Karachi hotel hosting the New Zealand
cricket team killing 14 people, including the squad's physiotherapist |
2005 Foiled
attack on Manchester United Stadium |
2005 Foiled plot
on Melbourne’s MCG Stadium |
2006 15 Iraqi tae
kwon do experts were abducted and killed as they were ravelling by bus
through the Anbar desert on their way to a training camp in Jordan |
2006 Gunmen storm
Iraqi sports ministry conference and kidnap the head of Iraq’s Olympic
committee, and some 30 other officials and athletes. An unspecified number of
victims were killed or remain missing |
2008 A suspected
Tamil Tiger suicide bomber detonated a device at the start of a marathon
celebrating the start of Sri Lanka's new year, killing a dozen people and
injuring almost 100 |
2009 Al Qaeda
bombing of Ritz Carlton and Marriott Hotels in Jakarta, killing nine and
wounding 53 |
2010 Foiled plot
to bomb an unidentified US stadium |
2010 Foiled Al
Qaeda plot to attack the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. |
2010 Al Shabab bombed two sites in the Ugandan capital of Kampala
where fans had gathered to watch the World Cup final in South Africa. 74
people were killed and 85 wounded. |
2013. Tamerlan
and Dzhokhar Tsarnev planted two bombs near the finish line of the Boston
Marathon in Massachusetts. Three people were killed and 260 wounded |
2014 Militants
target sporting grounds in Iraq
and Nigeria |
2015 Islamic
State militants attack multiple targets in Paris, including a sports stadium
hosting a match between France and Germany. French President François
Hollande was among the spectators. 130 people were killed and 416 wounded |
2015 German police foil days after Paris a suspected
Islamic State attacks against a stadium in the German city of Hannover barely
an hour before the German national team was scheduled to play. [i]
2015 Belgium cancels friendly soccer against Spain. |
|
Secular attacks |
1983 Former head
of Salvadoran Olympic Committee assassinated by unidentified gunmen[ii] |
1986 ‘Into the
Blue Commando of the Revolutionary Cells’ claimed responsibility for bombing
the headquarters of the 1992 Olympics candidature committee in Amsterdam. No
casualties. |
1992 Basque
Fatherland and Freedom (ETA) suspected in an arson attack on a five-star
hotel near the Olympic village |
1996 Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC)
kidnap and kill Russian cyclist en route to the Atlanta Summer Olympics |
2004 Foiled
Palestinian bombing of Jerusalem’s Bloomfield in 2004 |
2009 Gunmen open
fire on a bus in Lahore carrying the Sri Lanka national cricket team. Six
athletes were wounded and eight people killed |
2011 Foiled Palestinian attack on Jerusalem’s
Teddy Kollek Stadium in 2011 |
2015 Islamic
State militants attack multiple targets in Paris, including a sports stadium
hosting a match between France and Germany. French President François
Hollande was among the spectators. 130 people were killed and 416 wounded |
Source:
James M. Dorsey
Osama bin Laden and Malaysian-born, Al Qaeda-affiliated bomb maker Noordin Mohammed Top would have perhaps come closest to emulating Black September’s success
had their separate plans succeeded. Bin Laden authorized a plan by Algerian
jihadists to attack the 1998 World Cup. The Algerians pinpointed a match
between England and Tunisia scheduled to be played in Marseille as well as US
matches against Germany, Iran, and Yugoslavia as targets. The England-Tunisia
match was expected to attract a worldwide television audience of half a billion
people while the US match against Iran was already highly political because of
the strained relations between the two countries. “This is a game that
will determine the future of our planet and possibly the
most important single sporting event that’s ever been played in the history of
the world,” said US player Alexi Lalas referring to his squad’s match against
Iran. The plan, which also included an attack on the Paris hotel of the US
team, was foiled when police raided homes in seven European countries and
hauled some 100 suspected associates of Algeria’s Groupe Islamique Arme (GIA)
in for questioning.
Some scholars and journalists have suggested that the failure of the
plot persuaded Al Qaeda to opt instead for the bombing of US embassies in Kenya
and Tanzania in the summer of that same year in which 224 people were killed.[iii] Similarly, purported
messages by Top claimed that the bombings in 2009 of the Ritz Carlton and
Marriott hotels in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta were intended to kill the
visiting Manchester United team. Nine people were killed, and 53 others wounded
in the attacks. The bombs exploded two days before the team was scheduled to
check into the Ritz and prompted it to cancel its visit.
Noor said in one of three online statements that one aim of the attacks
was “to create an example for the Muslims regarding Wala' (Loyalty) and Baro'
(Enmity), especially for the forthcoming visit of Manchester United (MU)
Football Club at the hotel. Those (football) players are made up of salibis
(Crusaders). Thus, it is not right that the Muslim ummah (community) devote
their loyalty (wala’) and honour to these enemies of Allah.”
A double-edged sword
The absence of a major sports event-related attack since 2015 suggests
that counterterrorism efforts have successful degraded transnational religious
militants’ ability to strike. It also, at least temporarily, resolves an issue
that did not pose itself to the perpetrators of Munich. Sport offers an
attractive environment for recruitment and expressions of empathy for both
jihadists and nationalists. Not only do thousands attend matches, but the games
are also broadcast live to huge national, regional and global audiences.
Jihadists and religious militants, however, in contrast to journalists,
seek to polarize communities, exacerbate social tensions, and drive the
marginalized further into the margins even if is likely to alienate large
numbers of fans. As a result, soccer poses an unresolved dilemma for jihadists
and religious militants: it divides groups between those that see the game’s
benefits and those that reject it outright and sparking contradictory attitudes
among hardcore activists and fellow travellers.
The Great Mosque in Mosul, the major Iraqi city that was occupied by the
Islamic State (IS), where Abu Baker Al-Baghdadi, who as a student was known as
a talented soccer player, declared himself caliph in June 2015 was packed with
men, many of whom were sporting soccer jerseys. Similarly, an online review by
Vocativ of jihadist and militant Islamist Facebook pages showed that many continue to be
soccer fans. They rooted for Algeria during the World Cup but switched their
allegiance to Brazil, Italy, England ,and France once the Algerians had been
knocked out of the tournament despite their condemnation of the Europeans as
enemies of Islam. “Jihadis are in some ways like any other fans – they support
the local favourites,” wrote Versha Sharama, who conducted the review.
The Islamic State emerged in the 2010s as the foremost transnational
threat in recent years and remains that despite its losses in Syria, including
the destruction of its territorial base. The group embodies the jihadists’
struggle with soccer and spotlights the pitch as a battlefield. The Islamic
State’s initial sweep through northern Iraq in June 2015 was preceded by a
bombing campaign in which soccer pitches figured prominently.
The Islamic State further signalled its dim view of soccer in a purported letter to
world soccer governance body FIFA demanding that the group deprive Qatar of the
right to host the 2022 World Cup. Addressing former FIFA president Sepp
Blatter by his formal first name, Joseph, the letter, published on a since
defunct jihadist website, Alplatformmedia.com, said: “We sent you a message in
2010 when you decided or were bribed by the former emir of Qatar to have the
2022 World Cup in Qatar. Now, after the establishment of the Caliphate, we
declare that there will be no World Cup in Qatar since Qatar will be part of
the Caliphate (that) doesn’t allow corruption and diversion from Islam in the
land of the Muslims. This is why we suggest that you decide to replace Qatar.
The Islamic State has long-range Scud missiles that can easily reach Qatar, as
the Americans already know.”
Many jihadists see soccer as an infidel
invention designed to distract the faithful from fulfilling their religious
obligations. Yet, others are soccer fans or former, failed, or disaffected
players who see the sport as an effective recruitment and bonding tool. Men
like Bin Laden, Hamas’ Ismail Haniyeh and Hezbollah’s Hassan Nasrallah base
their advocacy of the utility of soccer on those Salafi and mainstream Islamic
scholars who argue that the Prophet Mohammed advocated physical exercise to
maintain a healthy body as opposed to more militant students of Islam who at
best seek to re-write the rules of the game to Islamicize it, if not outright
ban the sport.
Al-Baghdadi and his successors as did Bin
Laden embodied the jihadists’ double-edged attitude towards soccer. A passionate player in his pre-IS days, Al-Baghdadi’s Islamic State and its affiliates took credit for scores
of attacks on stadia. Had the attack on a major soccer match in Europe, would
have gone a long way to achieve the group’s goals of polarizing communities,
exacerbating social tensions, and driving the marginalized further into the
margins.
Straddling the fence
The Islamic State positioned itself with
its spate of attacks and letter to FIFA squarely in the camp of those militant
Islamists, jihadists and Salafists, puritan Muslims who want to emulate life at
the time of the Prophet Mohammed and his immediate successors. In attempting to
do so, they oppose soccer as an infidel creation intended to distract the
faithful from their religious obligations. They argue that soccer is not one of
several sports mentioned in the Qur’an. As a result, the Islamic State joined
the likes of Boko Haram in Nigeria and Al Shabab in Somalia, an Al Qaeda
affiliate, that in 2014 targeted venues where fans gathered to watch World Cup
matches on huge television screens. The spate of attacks emulated Al Shabab’s
bombing in 2010 of two sites in the Ugandan capital of Kampala where fans had
gathered to watch the World Cup finals in South Africa.
Anti-soccer jihadists are strengthened in
their resolve by fatwas or religious opinions issued by one segment of the
Salafi and ultra-conservative clergy opposed to any form of entertainment which
they view as a threat to the performance of religious duties. The views of
these clergymen are opposed by other Salafist imams who argue that the Quran
encourages sports as long as it is in line with Islamic precepts.
Twisted rulings of radical Egyptian and
Saudi clergy provided the theological underpinnings of the attitudes towards
soccer of militant groups like the Taliban and Boko Haram, informed Al Shabab’s
drive to recruit soccer-playing kids in Somalia and inspired some players to
become fighters and suicide bombers in foreign lands.
With us or against us
Jihadist proponents of soccer’s utility
recognize the fact that fans like jihadists live in a world characterized best
by US President George W. Bush’s us-against-them response to 9/11: “You are
either with us or against us.” It is a world in which deep-seated polarization
has been perpetuated by populists, the far right, and narcissists like Donald
J. Trump. The track record of soccer-players-turned suicide bombers proved the
point. Soccer was perfect for the creation and sustenance of strong and
cohesive jihadist groups. It facilitated personal contact and the expansion of
informal networks which, in their turn, encouraged individual participation and
the mobilization of resources. These informal individual connections
contributed to jihadist activity in a variety of ways.
They facilitated the circulation of
information and therefore the speed of decision making. In the absence of any
formal coordination among jihadi organizations, recruitment, enlistment, and
cooperation focussed on individuals. Another important function of multiple
informal individual relationships was their contribution to the growth of
feelings of mutual trust," said Indonesian security consultant Noor Huda
Ismail, a consultant on the impact of religion on political violence.
“Recruitment into most jihadi groups is not like recruitment into the police or
army or college. Indeed, previous formal or informal membership in action-oriented groups such as
soccer or cricket teams, and other informal ties, may facilitate the passage
from radicalization into jihad and on to joining suicide attack teams," he said.
Similarly, University of Michigan professor
Scott Atran noted that “a reliable predictor of whether or not someone joins
the Jihad is being a member of an action-oriented group of friends. It’s surprising how many soccer buddies join together.” Atran’s
yardstick is evident in the analysis of past violent incidents. The perpetrators of the 2004 Madrid subway bombings played soccer together[iv] and some Hamas suicide bombers traced their roots to the same football club in the conservative West Bank town of Hebron.
Soccer’s value to jihadists was illustrated
by the histories of various, suicide bombers and foreign fighters. That was
true for the biographies of Mohammed Emwazi who gained notoriety as Jihadi
John, a Kuwaiti-born British national who featured in several Islamic State
videos in 2014 and 2015 as the executioner of British and American hostages and
his European associates. Emwazi was killed in 2015 by an American drone strike.
Political grievances v. religiosity
The jihadist dilemma posed by soccer as a
recruitment and bonding tool on the one hand and a convenient target on the
other was symbolized by expressions in stadia of the appeal of jihadist groups
like the Islamic State that reflects more often than not domestic political grievances or a
conspiratorial worldview rooted in puritan interpretations of Islam such as Wahhabism rather than an ideological commitment to jihadism.
The dichotomy was evident when Turkish fans twice in late 2015 disrupted
moments of silence for victims of Islamic State attacks in Ankara and Paris. Boos and jeers were also heard during a minute's silence in Dublin at a Euro 2016 play-off between Ireland and Bosnia and Herzegovina. The
interruptions demonstrated the kind of intolerance bred by religiously-cloaked
authoritarianism in countries like Turkey and Saudi Arabia that fails to ensure
that all segments of society have a stake in the existing order.
The Turkish fans shouting of Allahu Akbar,
God is Great, during moments of silence at the beginning of two soccer matches
represented more than simple identification with the jihadist group or evidence
of a substantial support base in Turkey. It signalled a shift in attitudes
among some segments of Turkish society as a result of 12 years of rule by
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, one of modern Turkey’s most important leaders
that increasingly has been infused with notions of ‘us’ and ‘them.’ In Turkey,
them often refers to Kurds, who account for up to 23 per cent of the
population. Kurds were prominent among the 102 victims in Ankara in October 2015 and an earlier
Islamic State attack in July of that year in the south-eastern Turkish town of
Suruc. The Suruc attack sparked renewed
hostilities between the Turkish military and the insurgent Kurdistan Workers’
Party (PKK), which has waged a low-intensity war in southeast Turkey since 1984
in which tens of thousands have died.
Erdogan’s polarization persuaded Diyarbakır
Büyükşehir Belediyespor, the Kurdish club in Diyarbakir, a city that is viewed
as the capital of Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish southeast, to change its name
in 2015 to Amed. Amed is the long-banned Kurdish name of Diyarbakir. The club
also adopted as its identity the colours of the Kurdish flag, yellow, red, and
green of the Kurdish flag. The move constituted part of Kurdish resistance to long-standing restrictions on the use of their
languages and expressions of ethnic or national identity.
The Turkish fan’s provocative disrespect
for innocent victims of political violence resembled tweets by conservative
followers of Wahhabism, Saudi Arabia’s austere interpretation of Islam
described by dissident Saudi scholar Madawi Al-Rasheed as “militarized religious nationalism.” On Twitter, these Saudis projected the downing of a Russian airliner
in 2015 and that year’s attacks in Paris, including a stadium, as legitimate
revenge for atrocities committed by French colonial rule in Algeria and Russia
in its wars in Afghanistan, Chechnya and Syria.
Turkish fan disrespect for the victims of
IS violence “reflects an alarming sense of estrangement from the victims and
the communities to which they belong. This lack of empathy could well stem from
the callousness of excluding ‘the other’ (and possibly lead to one’s own sense of exclusion being transformed
into radical hostility expressed in violent action) … The whistles and chants,
which continued during the Greek national anthem, demonstrate how Turkey’s
political culture has changed since President Erdogan’s Justice and Development
Party (AKP) came to power in 2002,” said Al-Monitor columnist Kadir Gursel.
Supporters of Nacacililar Konyaspor, a club
in the conservative Anatolian city of Konya, expressed that sense of
estrangement in their justification of their disruption of the honouring of the
victims during a soccer match. They published a video on their Facebook page
that asserted “the moment of silence was not allowed in Konya.” It described
the Ankara victims who died while participating in a peace march as “peace-loving traitors.”
Like many incidents of expression of
sympathy for jihadism or jihadist activism, the Turkish soccer manifestations
are shrouded in controversy that stems from governments in various Islamic
countries viewing the militants as a force to be utilized for their own
political purposes rather than a reflection of societal problems that need to
be addressed. In the case of Turkey, which has long been accused of turning a
blind eye to the Islamic State in the hope that it would check the revival of
Kurdish nationalism in neighbouring Syria, Cumhuriyet newspaper reported that
the youth wing of Erdogan’s ruling party whose members had been granted free
access to the stadium had instigated the booing of a moment of silence for the 130 victims of the Paris attacks at the beginning of a match in
Istanbul. Two of Cumhurriyet’s top journalists were indicted in November 2015 on charges of espionage for disclosing that trucks belonging to the Turkish intelligence agency
MIT had been used to ferry weapons to Islamist opposition groups in Syria.
Turkish-American soccer blogger John
Blasing said the fan disrespect represented “a nationalist/Islamist undercurrent within Turkish society that has occasionally raised its head with disastrous consequences, and
one that now wants to equate all Kurds and leftists with the labels
‘terrorists’ and ‘traitor.’ It is, for lack of a better term, a dangerous
latent Islamo-fascism lying just beneath the surface of Turkish society. It is
the same undercurrent that expresses itself in the Turkish state’s ambivalence
towards ISIS,” a reference to the Islamic State’s former name.
The alleged government connection to the
Turkish incidents like a French decision in the wake of the Paris attacks to
temporarily ban fans from travelling to their team’s away from home matches recognized the mobilization aspect of the sport that jihadist leaders
see. French fears were grounded in a degree of alienation among segments of
youth with an immigrant background that has prompted them to refuse to support
the French national team in a manifestation of their sense that there is no
equal place for them in French society.
French fears were also rooted in a history
of immigrant soccer violence irrespective of whether the French team wins or
not dating back to France’s winning of the World Cup in 1998 with a team that
brought together a generation of players who all had their origins outside
France and was widely seen as a symbol of successful French integration of
minorities. Days earlier, police in France and four other European countries
had arrested 100 people of Algerian descent associated with the Groupe
Islamique Arme (GIA), a militant Islamist group fighting in Algeria’s civil war
in the 1990s that left at least 100,000 people dead.
Eleven years later, some 12,000 youths of Algerian descent poured into Paris Champs Elysees
for celebrations to celebrate Algeria’s defeat of Egypt in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum rather than support France which
was preparing for a crucial World Cup qualifier against Ireland. The
celebrations degenerated into clashes with police prompting a student to tell
Andrew Hussey, a scholar who has charted French-North African relations and the
soccer politics of French communities of North African origin: “I can't believe
it. I've never seen anything like it. It's not just about football. It has to
be about something else.” Hussey argued that the riots were not simply about
perceived racism in France but harked back to French colonial rule that viewed
Algeria as an integral part of France but treated Algerians as second-class
citizens.
It is those societal divisions that the
Islamic State targeted with its attack on the Stade de France and its alleged
plots in Germany. In doing so, the group was seeking to exploit a perception of
prejudice, discrimination and abandonment that stretches far beyond France and
is not restricted to communities that feel disenfranchised and hopeless.
Ironically, that may have failed with French and other Muslims far more
assertive in their condemnation of the Paris attacks than of the assault in
January 2015 on French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and a Jewish
supermarket.
However, mixed with the abhorrence felt by
French Muslims at the carnage in Paris was a sense among many soccer fans that
Muslims are being stereotyped and targeted whether at home or in countries far
and near. That sense evident across Europe is reinforced by Europe’s military
and law enforcement-focused response to jihadism and Islamist militancy. Said a
French taxi driver of Algerian descent who supports Paris Saint-Germaine:
“Nothing justified what happened. These people are beasts. But France and others
can’t go round the world bombing countries and leaving ordinary people to pick
up the pieces. It’s logical that there would be a reaction. This, however, was
not the way to do it.”
The blurry lines between hardcore jihadists
and soccer fans for whom the Islamic State constitutes primarily a symbol of
resistance as well as the mix of rejection and a degree of empathy were also
evident in a one-minute video clip on YouTube that left little doubt about
support for IS among supporters of storied Moroccan soccer club Raja Club
Athletic. A video clip on the Internet showed fans of the Casablanca club that
prides itself on its nationalist credentials dating back to opposition to
colonial French rule and its reputation as the team of ordinary Moroccans chanting: “Daesh, Daesh,” the Arabic acronym for Islamic State and “God is Great, let’s go on
jihad.”
The clip appeared to reaffirm the Islamic
State’s widespread emotional appeal to a segment of youth across the Middle
East and North Africa rather than a willingness to actually become a foreign
fighter in Syria or Iraq. “We have a high rate of unemployment. Young people want politicians to think about them… Some of them can’t
understand… They are too impatient,” Moncef Mazrouki, the former president of Tunisia, the Arab country
with the largest number of Arab foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq, said in an
interview with Al Jazeera.
While Raja Athletic’s management failed to
respond to the video on its official website and Facebook page that has more
than 3.1 million followers, supporters of the club sought to minimize the
clip’s significance. Writing on their Facebook page with its 118,830 likes,
supporters quipped: “We are terrorists… Our goal is to bomb other clubs. We do not want land or oil, we want
titles” below a mock picture of Islamic State fighters
with the inscription, “Raja’s Volunteer Championship.”
The supporters asserted elsewhere on their
Facebook page that “we will not start to argue and beg people to believe that
this is a sarcastic action and a joke.” Some supporters dismissed the video as
a public relations stunt. They insisted that they were demanding reform, not
radical change. To emphasize the point, the supporters posted two days after
the appearance of the video an image of Osama Bin Laden with the words: “Rest
in Pieces Motherf*****r.”
The Islamic State’s appeal as a symbol for
Moroccan youth is rooted in the gap in perceptions of King Mohammad VI. The monarch, unlike most of the region’s
rulers, neutralized anti-government protests in 2011 by endorsing a new
constitution that brought limited change but kept the country’s basic political
structure in place. As a result, foreign media have described Mohammed VI as
the King of Cool. Moroccans however have seen little change in their economic,
social and political prospects while journalists and activists face increased
repression.
Conclusion
The 1972 Black September attack on the
Olympic Village in Munich represents an era of political violence that has been
superseded by religious militancy. Militants in the 1970s and the 1980s were
driven by secular nationalist grievances and aspirations. Perpetrators of
political violence saw their actions as a way to force governments and
international public opinion to pay attention and recognize the legitimacy of
their cause. They accepted the risk of dying but retained hope that they would
survive the attacks they carried out. Arguably, Palestinian attacks in Israel,
Europe and elsewhere and the hijacking of aeroplanes moved their aspirations
centre stage.
By contrast, jihadist perpetrators of political
violence that targets sports were seeking to exploit existing societal wedges
and aggravate social tensions to attract frustrated Muslim youth and converts.
Osama bin Laden’s 9/11 attacks succeeded in undermining multi-cultural policies
in relatively ethnically and religiously homogeneous European societies that
struggled with migration from other continents, ethnicities, and religious
backgrounds. In doing so, the attacks reshaped global politics and attitudes
towards large numbers of people fleeing political and economic collapse as “the
other”—instead of viewing them as victims of misconceived Western policies that
backfired in countries governed and mismanaged by corrupt politicians and
political and economic structures.
Analysis of the different goals and
approaches leads to the conclusion that groups like the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) and various of its constituent elements successfully used
violence in Munich and operations since to create political opportunities for
fulfilling their aspirations and garnering mass support. By contrast, jihadists
successfully exploited tensions, recruited marginalized youth, spread fear, and
sparked revulsion but proved unable and/or uninterested in creating
opportunities for solutions to social, economic, and political problems and
failed to win hearts and minds among significant segments of Muslim youth.
This
chapter is an updated version of a working paper originally published by the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies and the submitted-non-edited version
of an article in Israel Affairs.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and scholar, a Senior Fellow at the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute and Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer.
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