by Daveed Gartenstein-Ross and Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi
Al Nusra's treatment of Syrian Druze rivals the brutality ISIS has inflicted on Yezidis, Kurds, and other minorities.
Originally published under the title "Druze Clues: Al Nusra's Rebranding and What It Means for Syria."
Syria's Druze community has borne the brunt of Al Nusra sectarian killings and forced conversions.
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One indication of al Qaeda's success in this regard is that its Syrian affiliate group, Jabhat al Nusra, now openly receives financial and other material support from major U.S. allies, an arrangement that would have been unthinkable four years ago. Al Nusra plays a critical role in Jaysh al Fatah, the rebel coalition fighting against Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad in northern Syria. Jaysh al Fatah, in turn, is backed by Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey. (The United States and other Western countries are more suspicious of the coalition and find regional powers' decisions to back it alarming, but they have not gone out of their way to end the support.) Despite the more reasonable face that al Nusra has tried to show the world, its treatment of the Druze of Idlib province is little better than the brutality ISIS has inflicted on Yezidis, Kurds, and other minorities unfortunate enough to find themselves within their reach.
Al Nusra's treatment of Syrian Druze rivals the brutality ISIS has inflicted on Yezidis, Kurds, and other minorities.
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Going Mainstream
Al Jazeera broadcast a fawning interview with Al Nusra emir Abu Muhammad al-Julani in May 2015.
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The group's implementation of sharia law has been relatively gradual in the areas that it has come to control, and al Nusra's preference for fighting with partners and as part of coalitions is designed to ease locals' fears about their intentions. For example, in March 2015, al Nusra and several other prominent rebel groups, including the hard-line Salafi organization Ahrar al Sham, formed the Jaysh al Fatah coalition. The group's preference for working with coalition partners and its behavior following its victories are designed to signal that al Nusra is open to sharing power with other organizations. After Jaysh al Fatah captured Idlib city, Julani stated that al Nusra would not "strive to rule the city or to monopolize it without others." This approach allowed al Nusra to amass considerable public support, even though there were a few periods in which it got caught up in infighting with other rebels.
Al Nusra has worked to ingratiate itself into the Syrian opposition and appear more moderate to an international audience.
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Besides the Al Jazeera interviews, most of al Nusra's efforts to take itself into the mainstream have been on the ground in Syria, through its cooperation with other rebel groups. Keen observers of the Syrian conflict have recognized the effort to legitimize al Nusra within the Syrian opposition. "The slow 'mainstreaming' of Jabhat al Nusra thanks in no small part to Al Jazeera will haunt Syria and its people for a long time," said Emile Hokayem, Senior Fellow for Middle East Security at International Institute for Strategic Studies, via Twitter. The Lebanon-based anti-Assad Druze politician Walid Jumblatt has been one of al Nusra's most visible supporters, frequently telling the media that they should not be seen as terrorists.
ISIS itself has even helped to foster the view that al Nusra is a more moderate group that would protect religious minorities; in the tenth issue of Dabiq, ISIS' English-language magazine, it published a withering attack on the organization. A generic photo of the Druze in Dabiq was captioned "The wretched Druze, an apostate sect under the protection of the Julani front." It was followed by a lengthy screed about how the Druze and other "apostate" sects cannot be afforded the second-class dhimmi status given to Jews and Christians. Dabiq likewise took al Nusra's apology for a June 2015 massacre in one of the Druze villages in Idlib as indicative of the group's protection of the sect. "So according to the Julani front and their allies, spilling the blood of the apostate and treacherous Druze is oppression!" the publication thundered. Al Nusra has not directly responded to ISIS' attack on its policies toward the Druze.
It might appear that al Nusra straddles two identities: one is a rebel group fighting the Assad regime in Syria, and the other is an al Qaeda affiliate and a proponent of religious extremism. But there is, in reality, more harmony between these two priorities than might initially be evident. Ever since the defeat of al Qaeda in Iraq (the affiliate that would later become ISIS), top al Qaeda commanders have explored how to repair the organization's reputation. They appear to have settled for trying to be seen as fulfilling the aspirations of various local groups. In a letter from an unknown al Qaeda official to the affiliate al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the official criticized al Qaeda in Iraq for killing tribesmen and inciting a rebellion and stressed the importance of gaining public support, noting that "people's support to the mujahidin is as important as the water for fish." In a May 2010 letter, former al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden himself proposed commencing a "new phase" in al Qaeda's operations that would "regain the trust of a large portion of those who had lost their trust in the Mujahidin." He emphasized minimizing Muslim casualties and directing affiliates to exert caution when civilians could be harmed, and he also urged a new media strategy.
ISIS' unchecked atrocities make al Nusra and al Qaeda appear more reasonable.
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In other words, rather than trying to carry out two incompatible missions, al Nusra's activities in Syria fundamentally advance al Qaeda's long-standing desire to be seen in a new light. Indeed, today Syria is perhaps the foremost testing ground for al Qaeda's rebranding strategy.
Old Wine in New Bottles
But despite al Nusra's softened image, its brutality toward the Druze is clear. The Druze in Idlib inhabit a region known as Jabal al-Summaq, over which al Nusra gained control in the summer of 2014. Al Nusra's emir for the area, Abu Abd al-Rahman al-Tunisi, forced the Druze to issue a statement from representatives of the various villages agreeing to renounce their religion. This was the second such statement that the Druze were compelled to issue, with the first coming when ISIS had control over Jabal al-Summaq. In the statement, the Druze agreed to allow their shrines to be leveled, to abide by al Nusra's regulations on public morality, and to submit to lessons on Islamic doctrine and jurisprudence.
Some of the Druze villagers slaughtered by al Nusra on June 10, 2015 in the village of Qalb Lawze.
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Following the massacre, al Nusra appointed a new emir for the area, Abu Qatada al-Iraqi (not to be confused with ISIS' emir in Mosul). Iraqi began his term by delivering a speech at a mosque in Kaftin. In a recording of the speech, he does not mention the June massacre at all but focuses instead on what is seen as the real problem: lack of proper observance of sharia. Although this is a common complaint by jihadists attempting to force citizens to conform to hard-line religious law, the problem may be particularly acute in Jabal al-Summaq because the Druze had been compelled to "convert" to begin with.
Al Nusra's atrocities against Syrian Druze belie its efforts to portray itself as more moderate.
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Although al Nusra has been attempting to portray itself as a more moderate jihadist group, its treatment of the Druze belies these efforts. Although al Nusra is capable of appearing moderate in comparison with ISIS, the latter group is a particularly poor point of comparison.
Unfortunately, al Nusra's mistreatment of the Druze and other religious minorities is unlikely to undermine its rebranding campaign or the efforts of the broader al Qaeda organization to reposition itself. Indeed, al Qaeda's rebranding may be an issue that observers wake up to only after they have lost the ability to stop it and are left dealing with a world where the jihadist organization has far more ability to operate than it did before the Arab Spring. Yet al Nusra's determination to stamp out non-dhimmi religious minorities in Syria demonstrates that al Qaeda's intentions remain unchanged, even if the group is making its tactics more palatable to the masses.
Daveed Gartenstein-Ross is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, CEO of the consulting firm Valens Global, and an adjunct assistant professor at Georgetown University.
Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi is a research fellow at Middle East Forum's Jihad Intel project.
Source: http://www.meforum.org/5561/al-nusra-druze
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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