(Reuters) - For Saudi Arabia,
the war against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is a vital struggle
for the future of the Middle East that must be fought – but not by its
own young men. Alarmed by how jihadi veterans back home from Afghanistan and Iraq
joined an al Qaeda uprising a decade ago, Riyadh is now trying to halt
recruitment of Saudis to the militant cause, even as it funds and arms
rebels in Syria. The
government and clerics are pushing their message in both the media and
the mosque: Saudis who join radical groups such as Islamic State will
get sucked into a jihadist experience that is ugly and futile. Local
media have highlighted the case of Fahd al-Zaidi, a Saudi who said he
was duped into joining a war against fellow Sunni Muslims instead of
fighting for their freedom. "Anyone
who dared to question the Islamic State would be put in isolation and
prevented from contacting others," he said in comments reported in the
local Arab News and carried widely by other Saudi media. "We spent days
and nights wondering how we allowed ourselves to be fooled by a bunch of
conmen." With the largely
Sunni rebel groups often fighting each other rather than Assad's
forces, Riyadh believes the Syrian war should be left to Syrians. Those
Saudis who shift their allegiance from the ruling Al Saud family to
Islamic State's caliphate, which it is fighting to establish across Syria and Iraq, represent a threat to the government of the U.S. ally. Informed by its previous experience, the kingdom is using an array of tools against jihadi recruitment apart from the media. A
royal decree in February ordered long jail terms for people who went to
fight overseas or helped others do so, or for those giving moral or
material aid to groups including Islamic State and al Qaeda's official
offshoot in Syria, the Nusra Front. Several people have already been
convicted. Top clerics
including the Grand Mufti and members of the Senior Council of Scholars,
the highest religious bodies in the kingdom, have repeatedly denounced
militant groups in sermons and fatwas. While some senior
government-appointed clerics have described the Syrian war as a jihad,
they have made clear it is one that should be fought by Syrians, not by
Saudis. Nevertheless,
thousands of young men appear to have slipped through the net and joined
Islamic State and other groups. The authorities say they are aware of
2,500 Saudis fighting overseas, but admit there may be more. Unlike in previous conflicts before militants learnt to use social media networks as recruitment tools, would-be jihadis no longer need extensive contact with facilitators inside Saudi Arabia. Some have simply flown to Turkey
and headed for the Syrian or Iraqi border. Others used online contacts
to get a mobile phone number for somebody who would help them once they
arrived. Salman, whose brother followed the route via Turkey
to fight alongside Islamic State and Nusra Front in Syria, said his
sibling had been recruited online. But the brother, who is now on a
government deradicalization program, found the promises of a pure jihad
did not match a far messier reality. "His
situation was very bad. He saw a lot of blood... there was a very big
change in him when he came back. He blamed himself very much," Salman
said in a phone interview arranged by a psychologist working with the
program and conducted on condition of anonymity. Based
in a secure facility in Riyadh, the program uses clerics to argue
against militancy, and provides art and sports classes where
psychologists monitor inmates' behavior. It
encourages family visits and has helped inmates - or "beneficiaries" as
the authorities call them - to find jobs and even marriage partners to
help reintegrate them into society. It has a recidivism rate of around
one in 10, officials say. MUSLIM SOLIDARITY Saudis
went to previous jihadist wars mostly out of a sense of international
Muslim solidarity which the authorities had fostered for decades as a
counterweight to secular anti-monarchist ideology, say analysts. In the 1980s it was the government and ruling family which encouraged Saudis to join the fight against Soviet forces occupying Afghanistan. But many clergy, particularly at a local level, were involved in recruitment. The
kingdom's strict Wahhabi school of Islam, with its message of
intolerance of Shi'ites and non-Muslims, may also have made Saudis more
open to militant thinking. The
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, which deposed the Sunni leadership of Saddam
Hussein in 2003 and brought a Shi'ite-led government to power, deepened
a belief among many young Sunnis, including Saudis, that their branch
of Islam faced persecution. "I
saw on the television news that my brother Muslims needed help, so I
thought I'd go and join them," said Ayad al-Onazi, who spent four years
fighting alongside Iraqi insurgents before his group fell apart after a
battle with al Qaeda. When
he told his family he had arrived in Iraq in 2005, they begged him to
return but, sure he was doing the right thing, he stayed until 2009. Today,
Islamic State is countering pressure on its fighters to come home. In a
recent video, it showed a young man identified as Abu Hajr al-Jazrawi
who was about to become a suicide bomber. Jazrawi tried to tell his
parents that they were wrong to want him back. "O
my mother and father, as long as you say to return, to leave this path
and not be deceived by Islamic State, and not to be deluded by the
Caliphate, I will only repeat the words of he who said: 'would that my
people knew!'," he said in the video, translated by SITE Monitoring. Not
all Saudi families have been upset to see loved ones risk death. Some
publicly celebrated their sons' "martyrdom" a decade ago, said Thomas
Hegghammer, author of the book Jihad in Saudi Arabia and a research
fellow at the Norwegian Defense Research Establishment. "Their friends
would post phone numbers for people to call and congratulate," he said. Such
displays no longer occur, but it is unclear whether this is because
public attitudes have changed or Saudis are simply frightened of the
security services. Nevertheless, the government campaign has clearly
driven much of the recruitment effort further underground, making it
harder to assess who is going to Syria and Iraq and why. "There's
so much less visibility now into the jihadi community. They don't write
as much about themselves as they used to. Activists in Saudi Arabia are
more restrained now online than they used to be," said Hegghammer. FAMILY PUSH BACK In
August people in the small desert town of Tumair, about 160 km (100
miles) north of Riyadh, tipped off the authorities that two mosque imams
were recruiting jihadis. The
clerics, identified in local media as Ali al-Salloum and Hamad al-Rais,
were detained with six others in Tumair on suspicion of working to send
people to Islamic State, the Interior Ministry later said without
confirming their names. This
showed both how local religious networks can still pose a threat, and
how Saudi society is growing less tolerant of such efforts. But in a
sign of how sensitive such subjects are, no Tumair residents contacted
by Reuters would discuss the case. Ali
al-Afnan, the psychologist working with the deradicalization program,
said family ties were at the center of its strategy to stop people going
to war or entice back those who had already done so. What
authorities now fear most, he said, is the ease with which militants
can use YouTube and Twitter to encourage young men to go to Syria or
Iraq. This is a problem they share with other Arab governments, as well
as Western countries which are also trying to discourage their citizens
from joining jihad. Riyadh
has helped mothers of fighters in Syria to share their pain on
television. In February a woman who called herself "Umm Mohammed" or
"mother of Mohammed" appeared on a popular television to castigate
firebrand preachers for luring her 17-year-old son to Syria. The
show's host, Dawood Al Shirian, told Reuters that the government had
been very receptive to his efforts to speak to such people and the son,
Misfer, had eventually returned home after seeing his mother's appeal. Misfer
later appeared on the program himself and said on it that he had
decided to join the jihad after listening to sermons online by an
influential Syrian preacher, the Saudi-controlled al-Arabiya news
channel reported at the time. He
traveled to Turkey alone and paid a smuggler to help him cross the
border, but he grew disillusioned because some of the rebels in his
group drank alcohol, he said.
Saudi Arabia mobilizes clergy and media against jihadi recruitment
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Reuters
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