posted Nov 7, 2009 3:13 PM by RSD Reports
[
updated Nov 7, 2009 3:31 PM
]
By Ted R. Bromund and Lisa Curtis The
Pakistan-Britain terror connection poses a serious threat to Great
Britain and its allies, including the United States. Breaking the
personnel, financial, and ideological links will require fighting
terrorism on three fronts: Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Britain. In
Afghanistan, the U.S., the U.K., and their allies need to continue to
fight the Taliban and al-Qaeda. They should also hold Pakistan
accountable for its failure to act decisively against terrorism. In
Britain, the government needs to enforce the tightened immigration and
asylum practices, refuse to cooperate with radical Islamism, and
promote citizenship and economic opportunity to help immigrants
assimilate into British society. There is a terror
connection between Pakistan and Great Britain. Many of the planned or
successful Islamist attacks in Britain have been linked directly or
indirectly to Pakistan. British authorities have acknowledged that the
al-Qaeda network based in Pakistan poses the greatest terrorist threat
to Britain. This threat includes both terrorist attacks and the
financial and ideological networks that support and inspire attacks. For
many years, the Pakistani state has minimized the danger that this
threat posed to its neighbors, Western democracies, and its own
existence. However, Pakistani resolve in fighting terrorism is
beginning to strengthen, especially after several failed peace deals
with militant groups and a fresh wave of attacks on military officials
and installations. One sign of Islamabad's deepening commitment to
fight terrorism is the new military offensive in South Waziristan in
the tribal areas, which could be a turning point in the battle against
terrorists hiding along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. Breaking
this terror connection between Pakistan and Britain is central to
winning the war on terrorism. It would improve the security of Britain
and its allies, including the United States. It would also enhance
Pakistan's stability and the security of important American partners,
including India. However, breaking the terror connection will require
U.S.-British cooperation in Afghanistan, a coordinated U.S.-British
policy toward Pakistan, and a wide-ranging set of reforms in Britain. Defeating
the Islamist ideological challenge is central to breaking the
connection. Unless Islamist ideologies are discredited, no victory in
battle or policy will be permanent. The Western response, particularly
the British response, to this challenge needs to include bold and
repeated restatements by elected leaders of the political and civic
principles of liberal government, the importance of equal rights under
law, and the value of national citizenship. Thus, the state has
an indispensable role to play in confronting Islamism. However, because
assimilating immigrants into the existing society is the basic problem
in Britain and in the West as a whole, the state cannot do it all. The
state's role in promoting the principles of citizenship must be
balanced by its adoption of economic policies that emphasize
private-sector job creation as the most effective way to integrate
citizens of all national origins into the life of the nation. Al-Qaeda in Pakistan and Islamist Terrorism in Great Britain In
January 2009, MI-5 Director General Jonathan Evans stated that,
although the number of plots the domestic security agency was tracking
had declined since 2007, at least 2,000 individuals in Britain were
directly connected to Islamist terrorist plots, and many more
individuals supported terrorism through fundraising and propaganda.[1]
Britain's first al-Qaeda-related terrorist plot was uncovered in
November 2000, but since 9/11, the number and scale of the plots have
increased dramatically. From September 11, 2001, through March 31,
2008, there were 1,471 terrorism arrests in England and Wales, which
resulted in 340 terrorism-related charges.[2]
As of March 31, 2008, 125 terrorist prisoners were being held in
England and Wales, of which 91 percent classified themselves as Muslim.[3] Recent
terrorism in Britain is thus tied closely to radical Islamist
ideologies. It is specifically tied to al-Qaeda and therefore to
Pakistan, al-Qaeda's most important base of operations. After the
Mumbai attacks in November 2008, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown
stated that "three quarters of the most serious terrorism cases
investigated by British police have links to al-Qaeda in Pakistan."[4] A
study by The Heritage Foundation bears out Prime Minister Brown's
assertion. Of the 87 individuals convicted or punished in Britain for
involvement in major Islamist terrorist plots between September 10,
2001, and August 14, 2009, at least 61 were affiliated with al-Qaeda,
and 27 were trained in Pakistan or Afghanistan -- more than in any
other country in the world.[5]
While other regions of the world, especially North Africa, contributed
substantially to Islamist terrorism in Britain, al-Qaeda in Pakistan
posed by far the greatest danger. Closing the terror connection
between Pakistan and Britain is therefore central to protecting Britain
from Islamist terrorism. Because al-Qaeda also seeks to use European
nationals to gain entry into the U.S. and carry out attacks against it,
the Pakistan-Britain connection also poses a serious threat to U.S.
homeland security. This danger is illustrated by the large proportion
of the individuals recruited by Islamist terrorist groups in Britain
who are British citizens. Of the 125 terrorist prisoners held in
England and Wales, 62 percent were British nationals.[6] The
Heritage Foundation study confirms that British nationals have played a
significant role in Islamist terrorism in Britain. At least 48 of 87
individuals punished for involvement in major Islamist terrorist plots
were British citizens. At least 18 individuals were born in Britain,
and at least 18 individuals received terrorist training in Britain --
more than in any other country except Pakistan.[7]
Islamist terrorism directed or inspired by al-Qaeda in Pakistan thus
poses a threat not only to Britain, but also to the rest of the world
because of the ease with which British citizens can travel from Britain
to Europe, the U.S., or other nations. U.S. Citizens Also Susceptible to al-Qaeda Ideology Recent
arrests in the U.S. of suspected terrorists with links to al-Qaeda
demonstrate that U.S. citizens can also become radicalized and
motivated to conduct terrorist acts. The most recent and serious case
involves Najibullah Zazi, a 24-year-old resident of Colorado and
permanent legal U.S. resident from Afghanistan. He had allegedly
plotted to detonate explosives on New York's mass transit system. U.S.
Attorney General Eric Holder said that the arrest of Zazi and two
others disrupted "one of the most serious terrorist threats to our
country since Sept. 11, 2001." Investigators allege that, in 2008, Zazi
and his associates traveled to Pakistan, where they were trained in
making explosives at an al-Qaeda camp. Another recent case
involves a ring of terrorist suspects in North Carolina. Six U.S.
citizens and one legal U.S. resident living in North Carolina have been
charged with providing material support to terrorism and for
"conspiracy to murder, kidnap, maim, and injure persons abroad."[8]
An eighth suspect traveled to Pakistan in October 2008 and is believed
to still be there. In a third case, Bryant Neal Vinas, a 24-year-old
American was arrested in Pakistan in late 2008 after allegedly training
with al-Qaeda in the Pakistan-Afghan border areas. This shows that
al-Qaeda is capable of linking up with and training U.S. citizens.
Vinas apparently passed his knowledge of the New York mass transit
system on to al-Qaeda's high command, prompting New York authorities to
put most of the city's transit facilities on high alert following his
arrest in November. These events demonstrate that al-Qaeda will
not necessarily need to rely on British citizens to carry out attacks
in the U.S. and the importance of confronting the broader ideological
challenge posed by the political vision of radical Islamism and of
breaking both the physical and the ideological links between al-Qaeda
and the West. Because the links between Britain and al-Qaeda's
stronghold in Pakistan are particularly close, disrupting them is of
special importance in the war against terrorism. Pakistan's Ambivalence Toward Extremists While
Islamist extremism has a domestic hold in Britain and in many other
countries, the battle against it must be fought first in Pakistan and
Afghanistan, where Britain, the U.S., and their allies have forces on
the ground. The problem is closely related to the continued existence
of terrorist training camps in Pakistan, Pakistan's failure to break up
terrorist networks on its own soil, and its ambivalence toward cracking
down on Islamist extremists, who have served as assets to Pakistan in
pursuing its regional security goals. Because Kashmir-focused
terrorist groups, which intermingle and cooperate with al-Qaeda, have
ties to Pakistan's security establishment, Pakistan has often acted
half-heartedly against terrorist threats against Western targets. This
ambivalence has damaged international efforts to combat terrorism.
Pakistani security officials have been particularly reluctant to crack
down on terrorist groups located on its territory that fight India,
such as the Lashkar-e-Tayyiba (LeT), because they believe these groups
help to destabilize India and thus strengthen Pakistan's hand in
bilateral discussions with India, especially in the dispute over
Kashmir. A recent alleged terrorist plot shows that the LeT is
closely connected to al-Qaeda and is part of a global terrorist
syndicate that threatens not only India, but also Western democracies
in general. In October, U.S. authorities in Chicago arrested David
Coleman Headley, a Pakistani-American businessman, for conspiring with
LeT in Pakistan to conduct further attacks in India and for plotting an
attack on Jyllands-Posten, the Danish newspaper that first published cartoons of the prophet Muhammed.[9] Headley had apparently traveled frequently to Pakistan, where he received terrorist training from the LeT. In
light of the bloody terror attack in Mumbai and the recently exposed
Headley terrorist plots, the Pakistani authorities' reluctance to
prosecute LeT leader Hafez Mohammed Sayeed should be a major concern
for Washington and London. Indian authorities say that the lone
surviving gunman involved in the Mumbai attacks has revealed that
Sayeed gave his blessing to the terrorists shortly before they left
Pakistan. In June, Sayeed was released from a Pakistani jail by the
Lahore High Court on grounds of insufficient evidence. Although
Pakistani authorities have recently placed him under house arrest, his
ability to escape prosecution signals other terrorists inside Pakistan
that they will remain above the law, especially if their activities
include targeting archrival India. Pakistan has also withheld
full cooperation from Western authorities when the suspected terrorists
appear to have links to Kashmir-focused groups. For example, Rashid
Rauf, a British national of Pakistani origin, was arrested in Pakistan
for his role in the 2006 plot to bomb airliners flying from London to
Washington. While cooperation from Pakistani authorities was crucial in
breaking up the airliner plot, it appears that the Pakistani government
rebuffed British requests to extradite Rauf to the U.K. In December
2007, shortly before his expected extradition, Rauf mysteriously
escaped from Pakistani custody. Rauf, who was also allegedly
involved in the 2005 London bus and subway attacks, was reportedly
connected to Masood Azhar, leader of Jaish-E-Mohammed, a terrorist
organization with a pan-Islamic ideology that focuses its attacks on
Indian interests. Rashid Rauf was targeted by a U.S. Predator drone
strike in November 2008 in Pakistan's tribal areas, but recent media
reports indicate he may have survived unharmed.An expert testifying
before the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee noted that the
Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence, Pakistan's intelligence
service, was unhelpful in investigations into the London transport
attacks on July 7, 2005, and had "misdirected U.S. and U.K.
intelligence services on a number of recent occasions."[10] Rauf's
role in the 2006 plot highlights thepractice of using Pakistanis with
British citizenship to carry out terrorist acts. This practice began in
the early 1990s with operations related to the Kashmir dispute. In
1994, Omar Syed Sheikh, a British citizen of Pakistani origin, lured
Westerners in India into situations in which they could be kidnapped to
win the release of Pakistani militant leader Masood Azhar from an
Indian jail. At that time, Azhar was the leader of Harakat ul-Ansar, a
terrorist organization. He had been arrested by the Indian authorities
shortly after he arrived in Indian Kashmir in 1993. Omar Sheikh's
kidnapping ruse failed, and he was arrested by the Indian authorities.
Azhar's terrorist organization subsequently kidnapped a U.S. tourist
and four Europeans who were hiking in Indian Kashmir in 1995. Again,
Azhar remained behind bars, and the five hostages are believed to have
been murdered by their captors. The Indian government was
finally forced to release both Azhar and Omar Syed Sheikh in December
1999 when terrorists hijacked Indian Airlines Flight IC-814 and
demanded the release of Azhar, Sheikh, and Ahmed Zargar in exchange for
the safety of the 150 passengers aboard the flight. All three
individuals returned to Pakistan, where they operated openly. In 2002,
Sheikh was charged and jailed in Pakistan for his role in the
kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. Azhar remains at large and is most likely in Pakistan's tribal border areas. The
Pakistani state has thus far refused to act decisively against
terrorist groups and insurgents acting against both India and
Afghanistan. It has also failed to control all of its nominal
territory. These failures permit al-Qaeda and the Taliban a secure base
of operations inside Pakistan. Pakistan's ambivalence toward Islamist
terrorism poses a serious threat to India and to the West, and these
countries have a right to defend themselves against the results of this
failure of Pakistani governance. However, the foremost Islamist threat
is to Pakistan itself and to democratic and tolerant Pakistanis because
al-Qaeda uses its secure base to plot against and subvert the
recognized governments of both Afghanistan and Pakistan. As one expert recently testified before the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee: [B]y
encouraging and supporting extremists, like the Taliban, as a tool to
retain and hold influence in Afghanistan, Pakistan has inadvertently
introduced changes that have undermined its ability to maintain its own
writ within its borders and which have resulted in wider domestic
instability.[11] A
string of militant attacks by the Pakistani Taliban and Punjabi
militant groups in early October on Pakistani security installations,
including the military's headquarters in Rawalpindi, may help to unify
and strengthen resolve within Pakistan's senior military command to
take on the militants, including those that have focused their attacks
on India. In responding to this threat and seeking to break the
Pakistan-Britain terror connection, the U.S. and Britain will be
protecting not only themselves and their allies, but also the cause of
a modern and stable Pakistan and a peaceful South Asia. Assessing the Connections and Britain's Response The
Pakistan-Britain terror connection is both physical and ideological.
Breaking the physical links and limiting the appeal of the Islamist
ideological links would be important contributions to British, U.S.,
and Western security. Travel and Financial Connections.
The physical links between Pakistan and Britain fall into four
categories: visits to Pakistan by British citizens, especially those of
Pakistani descent; immigration and/or asylum seekers from Pakistan to
Britain; Pakistani and other foreign Islamist radicals who reside in
Britain; and the flows of funding from Britain to Pakistan. Approximately 400,000 individuals fly round trip from Britain to Pakistan every year.[12] The vast majority of these visits are innocent; a few are not.[13]
Individuals with something to hide can travel from Britain to the
continent and then to Pakistan and return by the same route. This
conceals the visit to Pakistan from British authorities. Many of the
travelers are British citizens, which makes it impossible to prevent
them from traveling. The result is that, while British authorities can
and do surveil travel to and from Pakistan and the Middle East,
controls on travel between Britain and Pakistan are not fully effective.[14] Therefore, focusing solely on more careful screening of travel between Britain and Pakistan cannot break the terror connection. The
announcement in late October that Britain would assist Pakistan in
establishing a domestic security service similar to MI-5 offers the
prospect of more effective Pakistani assistance in screening travel and
in the broader struggle against terrorism, but it will be some time
before the effectiveness of the new institution can be assessed.[15] Immigration Enforcement.
In late 2008, Britain adopted a points-based immigration system that is
explicitly designed to restrict immigration to immigrants with
appropriate professional qualifications.[16]
After a series of scandals in the early 2000s, it has also reworked its
processing of asylum seekers and has embarked on an ambitious reform of
its border controls.[17]
However, since Enoch Powell's "Rivers of Blood" speech in 1968, most
British governments have worried more that the British public will
react with hostility to immigrants and asylum seekers than about the
issues, such as Islamic radicalism, that can be associated with
immigration and asylum seeking. The points-based immigration
system and the new controls are sound in theory. Yet the June 2009
conviction of three Indian individuals for forging credentials used to
secure at least 1,000 British visas demonstrates that the system still
has significant weaknesses. The prosecutor in the case described
Britain's border controls as "shambolic."[18]
Many visitor categories, especially student visas, are ripe for abuse,
as evidenced by Home Office Minister Phil Woolas's admission in March
2009 that fake colleges and language schools are the "biggest loophole"
in the system. A Home Office investigation found that 25 percent of
British colleges were established to evade immigration controls.[19]
The asylum system still allows approximately 60 percent of asylum
seekers to remain in Britain, even though only about 25 percent of
applicants successfully claim asylum.[20] In
2005, the Home Office estimated that 430,000 illegal immigrants live in
Britain. The number has certainly risen since then given the documented
problem with visa overstaying.[21]
The recent announcement that Pakistan has agreed to facilitate the
return of thousands of Pakistanis living illegally in the U.K. is
welcome, but it also points out the scale of the challenge in Britain.[22]
It is therefore too soon to claim that the recent reforms are an
effective response to the problems that they claim to address. The
points-based immigration system, the new border controls, and the
revised asylum procedures should not be considered effective simply
because they promise to end previous abuses. Britain's tendency
to announce so-called tough new policies to calm public anxieties,
instead of to implement serious responses to difficult issues,
prevailed for too long on the question of tolerating foreign radicals.
By the late 1990s, Britain had acquired the dangerous reputation of
being soft on Islamist radicalism, and London had become, in the words
of one critic, "the hub of the European terrorist networks."[23]
In August 2005, Prime Minister Tony Blair responded to the London
bombings of the previous month by announcing a 12-point program to
prevent terrorist attacks. The program included barring foreign
radicals from entering Britain and deporting those residing in it. This
sounded firm, but as of late 2008, only one person had been deported,
two dual citizens were stripped of their British citizenship, and 79
individuals have been denied entry on grounds of extremism.[24] More recently, entry bans have accelerated, with another 22 individuals barred in the first four months of 2009 alone.[25] While
the British government has been reluctant to act, the British judiciary
has also obstructed government action by interpreting the European
Convention on Human Rights -- incorporated into British law in 1997 --
to make it difficult to deport or detain foreign terrorist suspects.[26]
Too often, British judges appear more afraid of the supposed
intolerance and illiberality of Britain than of Islamic radicalism. One
judge stated that to detain foreign suspects pending deportation was
associated "with Soviet Russia in the Stalinist era."[27] Neither
the government nor the judges have been consistently willing to
acknowledge that careful national control of borders is an essential
feature of an open and liberal society. If borders are not controlled,
the alternative is more intensive domestic surveillance. The House of
Commons Select Committee on Home Affairs accepted this point in 2006:
"The focus can no longer remain so heavily weighted toward initial
entry and border control.... [F]ar greater effort will in future have
to go into the enforcement of the Immigration Rules within the UK."[28]
The committee thus concluded that the problem of illegal immigration
and overstaying of visas was insuperable without tighter domestic
controls. Enforcement against those who violate immigration laws
should raise no objections. However, before Britain further tightens
domestic enforcement in any way that would broadly restrain domestic
liberties, it should ensure that the new immigration and asylum systems
and the associated controls, such as those on schools that were
established to facilitate the granting of phony student visas, are
being fully and vigorously enforced. Only after showing that these
systems and the necessary associated controls have been tried and
failed should Britain proceed with any new domestic enforcement
measures. The rise of domestic surveillance has been a distinct and
unwholesome feature of the Labour government.[29]
British liberties need to be defended against all threats, and the most
appropriate place for that defense is on the borders of the nation. Terrorist Funding.
The funding connection runs from Britain to Pakistan and other nations.
British-based Islamic charities have been repeatedly accused of funding
Islamist terrorism. In 2004, before the House of Commons Home Affairs
Select Committee, one witness correctly stated that "the most important
measure that Western governments and regulators can yet take is to
further tighten controls on such charities by adding them to official
lists of terrorist organisations and, correspondingly, freezing their
assets."[30]
Britain maintains an extensive list of such charities and asserts that
it has taken a leading role in international efforts to restrict
terrorist finance.[31] Yet
reports continue to circulate that Islamic charities in Britain are
funding terrorism. In 2006, Jamat-ud-Dawa, a charity now banned by
Britain and the U.S. that acts as a front organization for the
Lashkar-e-Tayyiba,[32]
was accused with the British-based Crescent Relief of providing
financial support for the thwarted "liquid bomb" plot against
transatlantic airliners.[33]
In late 2008, the U.S. Treasury Department designated the Union of
Good, a coalition of Islamic charities, as a Hamas supporter. The
coalition's members also have connections in Afghanistan and Pakistan,
yet it continues to operate in Britain.[34] The
British government has sought to walk the tightrope of restricting
terrorist financing, while not appearing to discriminate against
British Muslims, but recognizing the traditional importance of the
British charitable sector and sustaining the City of London's role as a
center of international finance. In 2006, Gordon Brown, then-Chancellor
of the Exchequer, demonstrated the government's determination to
support the City when he called for Britain to become the global center
of "Shariah-compliant" finance.[35] This was an undesirable step. The
state has no legitimate role to play in promoting Shariah finance. In
so doing, it overrides the market mechanism and takes sides in a
theological debate, giving state sanction to a particular
interpretation of adherents' religious obligations. At worst,
government promotion of Shariah-compliant finance in Britain is
dangerous because "it reinforces the perception of mutual
incompatibility between the West and Islam" and thereby encourages
Muslims in Britain to regard themselves as unable to participate fully
in and as inherently separate from Western institutions.[36]
It thus discourages assimilation and promotes the Islamist vision. The
financial gains of promoting Shariah-compliant finance in Britain are
not worth its ideological costs. Shariah financing aside, the
number of contributors to charities, the frequency with which the
concerned charities change their names, and the complexity of the
international financial system make controlling terrorist finance
exceptionally difficult. As with many British policies announced as
contributions to breaking the terror connection between Britain and
Pakistan, the problem lies not in the policies, but in the ways that
they are understood and implemented. Ideological Connections and the British Response.
With the Internet and the open nature of British society, it is
impossible to quantify the volume or the importance of the ideological
connections between radical Islamists in Britain and those in Pakistan
and elsewhere. Yet the evidence strongly suggests that these
connections are substantial, easily accessible, and important. In the
U.S., the men convicted of plotting to attack Fort Dix, a U.S. Army
base in New Jersey, were partially inspired by the writings of American
Islamist Anwar al Awlaki, which they downloaded from the Internet.[37]
A study by the British-based Centre for Social Cohesion concluded that
"the failure of the government's present strategy is [evidenced by the
fact] that radical sermons by many individuals jailed for incitement to
violence remain freely available online on websites run by their
British followers."[38] Ideological
connections can also come through direct contact. In a February 2009
study, the Quilliam Foundation concluded that "out of 152 mosques, 92
percent [of imams] trained abroad." Resorting to British-trained imams
would not necessarily improve the situation because the "current annual
output of graduates from highly conservative, literalist Deobandi
seminaries in northern England will meet the Government's emphasis on
'English-speaking imams', but will fail to support British values of
equality, tolerance, liberty and religious pluralism." It found that
Britain's mosques were "far from resilient" in their ability to resist
extremism.[39]
In an earlier report, Quilliam concluded that there was an "abject lack
of awareness among the vast majority of Britain's Muslims about
extremism." It concluded that too many British Muslim political
leaders, such as Sir Iqbal Sacranie, who was knighted in 2005 and who
has repeatedly refused to retract his statement that "death was too
easy for Salman Rushdie," were "men who believe in foreign political
ideologies."[40] In
the long run, these ideological connections between Britain and
Islamist radicalism abroad may be more important than any physical
links to Pakistan, because it is belief that makes bombers. It is
reasonable to expect Western states to limit, if not to eliminate
fully, the negative elements of the direct connections, but controlling
the ideological ones, even if technologically feasible, would require
unacceptable restrictions on freedom of speech. The only possible
approach is to focus on the demand side: If residents of Britain and
the U.S. treat Islamism with contempt, its availability will pose only
a limited and controllable threat. The reasons why Islamism has
made inroads in Britain and elsewhere in the West have been intensely
debated. Maajid Nawaz's testimony before the U.S. Senate in July 2008
is compelling. Nawaz is a British-born Muslim of Pakistani descent who
became acommitted activist with the extremist group Hizb ut-Tahrir. He
has since renounced this affiliation and become an opponent of Islamism: Not
feeling fully accepted in the country of my birth left me wondering
whether I was British, English, Pakistani, Muslim or even something
else entirely. What I did know was that I could not relate in any way
to the Pakistani heritage of my grandfather.... Through this rude
awakening, and for the first time in my life, I became critically aware
of a Muslim identity... ...I came to believe that we] were not
Pakistani or British, rather we hailed from the pre-colonial Caliphate,
an exclusively Muslim political entity for an exclusively Muslim
political identity.[41] Like
all citizens, British Muslims need a political identity. If that need
is not filled by a British identity, it will be filled by something
else. In Nawaz's case, as in others, that something else was Islamism.
In short, it is a problem of assimilation. What is lacking is not
necessarily assimilation into particular British cultural practices. As
Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller, the former Director General of MI-5,
noted in 2006, the "path from adolescent dreamer interested in cricket
to radicalised jihadi ready to blow up himself and others can be
frighteningly short."[42] The
fundamental need is to assimilate immigrants into British political
culture. Some commentators argue that this cannot be done. Others argue
that the liberties of Europe and the rights of the illiberal minority
will permanently conflict.[43]
Both arguments are rooted in despair. Assimilation certainly will not
happen if it is not tried, and if it is not tried successfully, the
result will be the enduring creation of a politically separate and
politically illiberal community within Britain. This will be bad for
the minority community and bad for Britain. Americans are well
acquainted with the concept of political assimilation and recognize
that, while it does imply a slow process of cultural adaptation and
participation in the social mainstream, it does not imply religious
conversion. It is also entirely compatible with the continued practice
of many everyday customs, as long as these practices are not legally
offensive to the society that the immigrants have voluntarily entered.[44]
Britain, like continental Europe, has less than 60 years of experience
with large-scale immigration. It thus has less familiarity and less
comfort with assimilation than the U.S., where immigration accompanied
by assimilation has been a source of great national strength and
considerable pride. The challenge is particularly acute because British
national identity itself is eroding both from below (in the form of
devolution to Scotland and Wales) and from above (in the form of both
the European Union's efforts to build a "European" citizenry and of the
even vaguer concept of the "global citizen.") As a result,
British responses to radical Islamist ideology have been confused. On
one hand, the March 2008 National Security Strategy explicitly states
that "prevention," defined as "challeng[ing] the ideology behind
violent extremism," is an explicit part of CONTEST, its
counterterrorism strategy. CONTEST II, the revised strategy published
in March 2009, reiterates this claim.[45]
The implication is that Islamism has a political vision that must be
defeated if the violent extremism it promotes is to be ended. This is
correct. On the other hand, British Foreign Secretary David
Miliband claimed in a January 2009 speech in India that "the
motivations and identities of terrorist groups...are disparate not
singular."[46]
His argument that part of the Western response must be to disaggregate
-- that is, to break into separate groups -- the Islamist threat was
sound, but his claim that Islamist extremism poses no unified
ideological challenge and is solely about particular grievances is
incorrect and directly contradicts the government's own
counterterrorism strategy. It is particularly disturbing that the
government has since stated that its prevention policy will focus on
"deprived white areas," which are not central to the problem of radical
Islamism.[47]
The government's refusal to clearly state in this context that radical
Islamism poses a major political challenge illustrates its discomfort
with the entire subject. In the absence of a coherent vision on
the political challenge of Islamism, British policy toward assimilation
has been characterized by two strands, both problematic. First, it has
been government-driven. It is characteristic of British commentary to
assume that the U.S. has a successful record of assimilation because
somewhere there exists a U.S. government committee that is responsible
for it. The result has been that when the British government has
addressed the problem of Britishness, it has usually sought to do so
through official mechanisms, such as citizenship tests.[48]
In early 2007, for example, Gordon Brown suggested that immigrants
should be compelled by the government to carry out community service
before they were deemed acceptable as citizens.[49] While
government action does matter, the reality is that the state can more
easily ruin political assimilation than promote it. Britain needs to
accept that Islamism poses a real ideological challenge, which requires
an ideological response. However, the most fruitful responses will not
center around creating new committees or promoting new official
initiatives. To the extent that the government can play a constructive
role in this realm, it must largely consist of elected leaders of all
parties repeatedly stating and endorsing the principles of liberal
government, the importance of equal rights under law, and the value of
national citizenship in a country with a democratic government. Second,
because of its optimistic and misguided beliefs about the disunified
nature of Islamism and its reliance on state action, British policy has
emphasized working with self-nominated "community leaders." All three
major parties have been strongly criticized for collaborating with
British Muslims who have publicly supported extremism and, in some
cases, even appointing them to party offices. This
collaboration, in turn, is part of a broader state-led
multiculturalism. For example, the riots in Bradford in 2001 were led
by youths of Pakistani origin and followed a decade of increasing
Islamist influence in the area. The official British response centered
on the need to promote "community cohesion," which the Home Office in
2005 understood as implying the need to promote the view that "no one
set of cultural values should be privileged more than another."[50] This
is an untrue and dangerous claim, precisely because one of Britain's
cultural values is support for the principles of liberal government --
principles that are of universal relevance. Immigrants to Britain need
to adapt to this value, which must be privileged over other values.
That is the essence of political assimilation. "Community cohesion," as
advanced by the Home Office, implies that it is wrong to privilege this
cultural aspect of political assimilation. The result of its
multiculturalism will be further growth of a British Muslim community
that is politically separated and alienated from the broader society in
which it lives. Laudably and in defiance of its own claims about
the merits of community cohesion, the government embarked in 2007 on a
Britishness initiative for immigrants and in schools. However, the
president of the National Union of Teachers dismissed this initiative:
"To demand that people conform to an imposed view of Britishness only
fuels...racism.... [I am] a global citizen."[51] By early 2009, The Guardian was reporting that the initiative had been abandoned.[52]
This liberal cringe, which represents an unwillingness to uphold the
value of a shared political and civic identity, is central to Britain's
failure to develop an effective response to the ideological challenge
of the Pakistan-Britain terror connection. What Britain Should Do on Its Own To break the terror connection between Pakistan and Britain and to defeat Islamism at home, Britain should: - Enforce its tightened immigration and asylum practices.
A
significant portion of the radical Islamist challenge in Britain is
homegrown, but that is no excuse for refusing to prevent the problem
from getting worse. Immigration is not inherently negative. Indeed, the
many people who wish to leave their countries and live instead in
Britain are an important testimony to the attractiveness of Britain's
free society. It is for the people of Britain to decide the appropriate
level of immigration. Yet whatever their decision, immigration should
occur through legal and well-controlled channels. This is the only
approach that can prevent Islamist radicals, human traffickers, and
other criminals from exploiting the system. Britain should therefore
firmly enforce its new immigration and asylum procedures and ensure
they are not defeated or circumvented by fraud or administrative laxity. - Not engage radicalism, but deport radicals when possible.
Over
the past decade, all of the major parties and the government have
sought to display their multicultural credentials by engaging
"community leaders" who advocate the overthrow of the British state,
the incorporation of Shariah into British law, the murder of apostates,
or the Islamicization of Britain. Any sort of cooperation with Islamist
radicals should be as unacceptable as cooperation with Holocaust
deniers. Furthermore, British citizens who violate the law while
advocating radicalism should be prosecuted. British citizens have the
right to believe what they want to believe, but Britain's democratic
parties should not debase themselves by consorting with democracy's
enemies. The European Convention on Human Rights is a serious
barrier to any action against foreign radicals residing in Britain. The
British government has suffered a string of defeats in various legal
fora in its efforts to use control orders to hold foreign terrorist
suspects in Britain.[53]
European courts have thwarted efforts by other European states to
deport radicals by finding that the radicals would face the threat of
torture abroad, which renders deportation extremely difficult.[54]
If Britain cannot find a legally acceptable way to hold or to deport
foreigners within the current system, it should declare by an act of
Parliament that, while British law applies to all in Britain, the
convention's protections apply only to citizens of EU member states. If
the EU were to gain increased competence over issues related to legal
and illegal migration, and asylum -- as proposed by the Lisbon Treaty
-- and if Britain accedes to the treaty and abandons its national
opt-out on these issues, Britain would lose the power to control its
own borders. Even if Britain retains its opt-out, its control of its
borders would be threatened by the treaty's Charter of Fundamental
Rights, which the European Court of Justice could interpret in ways
that would reduce the practical importance of the opt-out. The
EU is already mulling "immigration burden-sharing," under which all EU
members would pledge to "take in a certain number of refugees each
year, alleviating the burden placed on Malta, Italy and Spain."[55]
Losing control of migration and asylum would directly assault British
sovereignty and security, especially given the lax attitude toward
illegal immigration in much of southern Europe. It is therefore not in
the British interest to support this expansion of EU authority. Nor is
it in the interests of the United States to back any measure, such as
the Lisbon Treaty, that would reduce the ability of Britain and other
EU member states to enforce higher and more secure standards than the
rest of the EU. - Emphasize the deep deradicalization of economic opportunity.
Regrettably,
radical Islamism is an attractive ideology for some. This ideology must
be confronted and defeated. However, suppressing radical Islamist Web
sites and literature would require measures that violate fundamental
freedoms.[56]
Nor is there much evidence that talking to the most radical Islamists
can turn them away from violence or that engaging community leaders is
a central part of the solution. British politicians do not
engage in this self-conscious way with Hindu, Sikh, or Buddhist
community leaders. Adherents of these faiths are treated as normal,
individual citizens, which is how British Muslims should be treated.
Doing anything else promotes the belief that British Muslims are a
separate community governed by a set of political values that can only
be "engaged" through self-appointed leaders. This is a dangerous
concession to an Islamist worldview.Anyengagement should rest on the
universal values of liberal government. The British government also
needs the discernment to identify the moderates and the willpower to
stop engaging the radicals, and it has demonstrated neither to date.[57] The
central need is to discourage the formation of politically self-defined
Muslim communities, which appear to be gaining ground in the United
Kingdom, based on the preferences of young British Muslims.[58]
Like all immigrants, British Muslims need to adapt and move into the
prevailing society far more than that society needs to adapt to them.
If British Muslims are well integrated into everyday society and if
they share its political values, the process of integration will be
complete. In those circumstances, the occasional Islamist radical will
be more easily detected. The crucial question is how to achieve
assimilation without government coercion, which would be ineffective
and counterproductive. This question has no easy and certain
answers, but one important approach can be found in the U.S.: economic
opportunity. The radical Islamism on the rise in Britain today is a
toxic mix of violent political theology and the almost equally
disturbing violence that has come to characterize portions of British
society, especially among the young.[59]
Job creation is of central importance in combating both problems
because having a steady job is the most effective way to involve anyone
in the regular life of respectable, everyday society. Regrettably, the
government's record on job creation is poor: The Financial Times has found that two out of three jobs created in Britain since 1996 have been in the public sector.[60] The
U.S. has pursued the policy of economic opportunity for many reasons.
One reason is that America, as a society of immigrants, has long
recognized that having a job -- initially, even a low-paying job -- is
essential to integrating into American society. Furthermore, pursuit of
better jobs encourages individuals to move outside the ethnic
communities that immigrants in all societies commonly form. In this
way, the pursuit of self-interest advances social integration and
discourages political communalism without heavy-handed government
intervention. This is particularly important for the more highly
educated members of society, who are the most likely to be disappointed
with their status in society and to become politically disillusioned if
they cannot find a job appropriate to their level of education. By
contrast, the provision of welfare and government jobs encourages
social and political communalism because it discourages job seekers
from moving to better their condition. It also creates an unhealthy
clientism that discourages recipients from conceiving of themselves as
citizens with both rights and responsibilities. As Britain has become
an immigrant society, it needs to move toward the American model. Of
course, the British and American situations are dissimilar in many
respects, not least because their immigrants have different mixes of
national backgrounds. However, arguments that the American model is
fundamentally unsuited for British conditions or values ignore the
reality that Britain already has immigration on an American scale.
Refusing to recognize this reality will only make it more difficult for
Britain to assimilate its immigrants. Pakistanis and
Bangladeshis stand to benefit the most from increased economic
opportunity, precisely because they are the least economically
advantaged of all the ethnic groups in Britain. In 2001 and 2002, these
groups had the highest rates of unemployment and economic inactivity
not caused by participation in education in Britain. The argument that
this reflects racial prejudice in British society is refuted by the
rates of unemployment and economic inactivity in the Indian population,
which are only slightly higher than those of white Britons.[61]
Instead, it reflects the reality that the percentage of Pakistanis and
Bangladeshis with no educational qualifications (over 30 percent of the
working-age population) is the highest of all ethnic groups and more
than twice the national average. Over the long run, these populations
obviously need to improve their qualifications, and participation in a
more active labor market will encourage them to do this. Yet right now,
they need jobs at wages that businesses can afford to pay given these
workers' lower productivity. The British government should
therefore promote job creation in the only effective way that it can:
by reducing the burdens that it places on private enterprise, the only
sustainable source of job creation. Britain should begin by ending its
national minimum wage, which prices less-qualified workers out of the
job market.[62]
It should also roll back taxation and the growth of the welfare state,
reduce the state's role as an employer, and reduce business-strangling
regulations.[63]
These measures are not, as the left claims, an essential safety net.
They are perpetuating the reality that there are too few jobs in
Britain, thus condemning a substantial portion of Britain's ethnic
population to exclusion from the job market and shielding it from the
assimilative effects of employment. The
elite classes and the media are largely opposed to any efforts to speak
positively of any aspect of British history or achievements. Yet this
liberal cringe is the most important obstacle to breaking the terror
connection between Pakistan and Britain, because it lies behind the
government's unwillingness and inability to take action in all policy
areas. Nonetheless, an effort needs to be made. It will not be
possible develop a concept of Pakistani-Britons, paralleling that of
Pakistani-Americans, because no other ethnic group in Britain thinks of
itself in this way. The concept to promote is not a hyphenated
identity, but a single one: Britons. This is a concept historically
associated with the union of nationalities (English, Scottish, Welsh,
and Irish) and a national identity. Like American national identity, it
is political and civic, and closed to no one because of ethnicity. It
emphasizes the importance of equal rights under law and the rise of the
security of property, religious freedom, and political rights within
the framework of the supremacy and sovereignty of Parliament. While
the Britishness initiative in the schools has disappeared without a
trace, it was a move in the right direction. However, it was also
hypocritical, coming from a government that has been both
enthusiastically European and an underminer of U.K. unity. The next
government should go further. The dilemma is that, while British
education already suffers greatly from governmental intrusion, the
effort would fail without a national, patriotic curriculum that is
supervised in some way because British teachers will not spontaneously
decide to teach the merits of Great Britain. The next government
should take two steps. First, on an all-party basis if possible, it
should create a strong national curriculum, limited to a small number
of subjects, and pass appropriate legislation through Parliament. This
curriculum should be enforced by the existing national system of school
inspections. Second, it should emphasize, as the Conservative Party has
committed to do, the development of independent state schools that are
supported by a voucher system. This would allow schools that wish to go
beyond the national curriculum to do so.[64] What Britain and the United States Should Do Together To defeat Islamist ideology and terrorism, the U.S. and the U.K. should: - Recognize
reliable and representative Muslim organizations that support religious
pluralism, tolerance, and democratic principles. There are
respected Muslim leaders in the U.S. and U.K. that view Islam as
compatible with individual liberty and democracy. They sometimes face
ridicule and even violent threats from Islamists who believe the
precepts of democracy run counter to traditional Islam. The debate on
the compatibility of Islam with democracy must occur within Muslim
communities and among the leaders of those communities. The U.S. and
U.K. governments should recognize the value of this debate and protect
those engaged in it from threats of violence without trying to
influence the debate directly. Both governments need to rigorously
enforce laws against forced marriages, so-called honor killings, and
any other practices -- regardless of their cultural origins -- that are
offensive to the laws of their societies.[65]
- Remain committed to stabilizing Afghanistan over the long term.
The next British government needs to abandon the current failed public
relations strategy for the war, which revolves around saying as little
about it as possible, while Britain and the U.S. fight a
counterinsurgency war in Afghanistan. To prevent the Taliban from
regaining influence in Afghanistan, coalition forces need to remain
committed to that war over the long term and focus more attention on
training and mentoring Afghan security forces, which will ultimately
need to guarantee the safety and security of Afghan citizens.
- Coordinate more closely in monitoring international travel to and from Pakistan.
As the first condition of existence and recognition, every state is
responsible for controlling its own territory. Pakistan does not do
this. Other states therefore have the right to defend themselves
against Pakistan's failure. The U.S. and Britain should form the core
of a voluntary and self-monitoring group of nations that agree to share
all data about international travel to and from Pakistan. They should
intensively question anyone who visits Pakistan for an extended time.
This principle should be extended to all other states, such as Somalia,
that similarly fail in their duties and that are prominent sources of
Islamist terrorism.[66]
- Continue to cooperate closely on homeland security.
The number of British citizens involved in Islamist terrorist plots
means that U.S. and British authorities need to continue their close
cooperation to ensure that al-Qaeda cannot use British or other
European nationals to infiltrate the U.S. To facilitate this
cooperation, the U.S. should require long-time members of the Visa
Waiver Program (VWP) to sign bilateral security agreements with the
United States. While newer VWP members have entered into bilateral
agreements to implement the 2007 security measures, several long-time
members have not because the new measures were not required when they
entered the program. Congress should demand that these members meet the
new requirements and sign bilateral agreements with the United States.
The VWP should not have two sets of security standards -- one for new
members and one for old. The same standards should apply to all VWP
countries, regardless of when they joined the program.[67]
- Adopt consistent policies toward Pakistan that hold the country's officials accountable for stopping all support to terrorists.
The connections among al-Qaeda, the Kashmir-focused terrorist groups,
and the Pakistani security establishment are troubling and pose a
direct security threat to Britain, the U.S., and other Western
democracies. The U.S. and Britain should continue to pressure the
Pakistan government to shut down Pakistan-based terrorist groups, such
as the Lashkar-e-Tayyiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed, which increasingly
threaten Pakistan's own stability. The U.S. and the U.K. also need to
address forthrightly Pakistani noncooperation against terrorist
targets. Both Washington and London seek counterterrorism partnerships
with Pakistan, but they need to be willing to tell their publics when
efforts to cooperate with Pakistan fail. Too often U.S. officials have
sought to downplay instances when Pakistan has failed to cooperate with
U.S. counterterrorism efforts in order to protect other channels of
cooperation.
-
Work to get a better handle on the extremist threat inside Pakistan.
The Pakistani authorities need to demonstrate their willingness to
punish any citizens that incite, support, or otherwise abet terrorism
anywhere in the world. The U.S. and the U.K. need to convince Pakistan
that cases against terrorists who attack India should be treated no
differently than cases against terrorists who act in other parts of the
world. By treating terrorists focused on India with kid gloves,
Islamabad has created a permissive environment for terrorists to
operate more generally, especially since many of the various terrorist
groups share a pan-Islamist ideology and provide each other with
tactical cooperation and logistical support. Firming up
Pakistan's response to terrorism will require Pakistan to improve the
functioning and impartiality of its criminal justice system to ensure
that terrorists who may have links to individuals within the
bureaucracy and/or security services do not receive preferential
treatment after they are detained. If the government cannot effectively
punish individuals involved in terrorist acts, terrorists will find it
easier to challenge overall Pakistani state authority and to impose
their ideologies on an intimidated public.
- Work
with Pakistani civilian leaders to build a consensus within Pakistan
against extremist messages and ideologies that foster terrorism.
The allies can provide support for interfaith dialogue and activities
in Pakistan that promote religious pluralism and empower mainstream
religious leaders to actively engage and challenge radical
interpretations of the religion of Islam. This would involve diplomats
more actively engaging local religious leaders, lawyers, and human
rights activists on topics, such as the role of religion in society and
governance. In an August 2009 report, the Quilliam Foundation rightly
argued that the question over Islamist extremism in Pakistan should be
recast as an "ideological rather than a religious debate." Quilliam
supports making a clear distinction between the faith of Islam and the
political nature of Islamism so that "rejecting the Islamist agenda
does not equate to a rejection of Islam." The Quilliam report argues
that the best way to counter trends toward Islamism in Pakistan is to
encourage civil society actors to challenge Islamism through a renewed
commitment to democracy and the promotion of pluralistic values.[68]
Conclusion The
ultimate answer to the problem of Islamist-inspired terrorism based in
Pakistan and Afghanistan is clear: Both states need to develop
effective institutions that control the entirety of their national
territory. In the absence of such control, Britain, the U.S., and their
allies need to act to protect themselves. The terrorist links between
Britain and Pakistan cannot be broken in one place or all at once.
They were built up over generations and will take years to defeat. For
that very reason, it is essential to start now and to work on several
fronts at once. The first front is in Afghanistan, where the
U.S., the U.K., and their allies need to continue to put military
pressure on the Taliban and al-Qaeda. The second front is in Pakistan,
which should be held accountable for its failure to act decisively
against terrorism. The third front is in Britain, where a well-run
system of border controls needs to supplement a firm rejection of
cooperation with radical Islamism by all the parties and the promotion
of citizenship and economic opportunity. The United States can
offer both direct assistance and inspiration for this battle. It is
providing the majority of the forces employed in Afghanistan, and it
needs to remain firmly committed to this battle. President Obama's
statement that Afghanistan is a "war of necessity" is correct.[69]
The U.S. also has a vital role to play in pressuring Pakistan to live
up to its basic responsibilities as a recognized member of the
international state system and in coordinating measures to protect
itself and others from Pakistan's deficiencies. Equally, the
U.S., as a nation of immigrants, offers an important example as Britain
recognizes the broader implications of the substantially increased
immigration into Britain since the late 1990s. The U.S. has long been a
proudly patriotic nation, one of economic opportunity and of personal
and social mobility as a result. All of these attributes have value for
many reasons, but in this context they are important because they
promote the assimilation of immigrants into the broader society. In the
long run, the most valuable service that the United States can provide
is to keep faith with its founding virtues. Ted R. Bromund, Ph.D.,
is Senior Research Fellow in the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom,
a division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for
International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation. Lisa Curtis is Senior Research Fellow for South Asia in the Asian Studies Center at The Heritage Foundation. This article was first published by The Heritage Foundation
[1]David Stringer, "MI5 Chief: Terror Plots Against UK Have Fallen," Associated Press, January 7, 2009, at http://abcnews.go.com/International/ wireStory?id=6592084 (July 21, 2009). [6]U.K. Home Office, "Statistics on Terrorism Arrests and Outcomes," p. 7. [7]Bromund and Roach, "Islamist Terrorist Plots in Great Britain." [8]Mike Baker, "NC Terror Suspect May Be in Pakistan," Associated Press, July 29, 2009. [17]For a contemporary assessment of these scandals, see Steve Moxon, The Great Immigration Scandal, 2nd ed. (Exeter, U.K.: Imprint Academic, 2006). For the e-borders initiative, see U.K. Border Agency, "E-Borders," 2009, at http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/managingborders /technology/eborders (September 21, 2009). [19]Tom Whitehead, "Bogus Colleges Are 'Achilles Heel' of Immigration System, Say Phil Woolas," Telegraph, March 31, 2009, at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationnews/5083517/ Bogus-colleges-are-Achilles-Heel-of-immigration-system- say-Phil-Woolas.html (September 29, 2009), and U.K. House of Commons, Home Affairs Committee, "Bogus Colleges," July 21, 2009, at http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200809/ cmselect/cmhaff/595/59503.htm (September 29, 2009). [20]The
calculations on this subject are imprecise because not all asylum
applications are dealt with within a calendar year, but the most recent
data is illustrative. In 2008, the U.K. received 25,670 applications
for asylum. On initial decision, it granted asylum in 3,725 cases. On
appeal, another 2,475 cases were allowed. In the same year, the U.K
enforced 7,165 departures, and another 3,660 individuals left
voluntarily. Thus, 6,200 individuals (24 percent) were granted asylum,
and 10,825 (42 percent) were removed, leaving 8,645 individuals (34
percent) unaccounted for and remaining in the U.K. See U.K. Home
Office, "Control of Immigration: Quarterly Statistical Summary, United
Kingdom," January-March 2009, Tables 2, 4, and 7a, at http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs09/immiq109.pdf (October 2, 2009). [23]Melanie Phillips, Londonistan (London: Encounter Books, 2006), p. xi. [26]Phillips, Londonistan, pp. 32-34. [28]U.K. House of Commons, Immigration Control, para. 73. [32]Lashkar-e-Tayyiba was behind the November 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks. [33]David Montero, "British Bomb Plot Spotlights Charities," The Christian Science Monitor, August 16, 2006, at http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/ 0816/p01s02-wosc.html (September 29, 2009), and Lee Glendinning, "Charity Funds Are Frozen in Terror Investigation," The Times, August 24, 2006, at http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article618572.ece (September 29, 2009). [34]Press release, "Treasury Designates the Union of Good," U.S. Department of the Treasury, November 12, 2008, at http://www.ustreas.gov/press/releases/hp1267.htm
(September 29, 2009), and Steve Merley, "The Union of Good: INTERPAL
and the U.K. Member Organizations," NEFA Foundation, March 23, 2009, at
http://www.nefafoundation.org/miscellaneous/FeaturedDocs /nefaunionofgoodmemberorgs0309.pdf (September 29, 2009). [43]For examples of the two arguments, see Christopher Caldwell, Reflections on the Revolution in Europe: Immigration, Islam, and the West (New York: Doubleday, 2009), and "In Knots over Headscarves," The Economist, September 19, 2009, at http://www.economist.com/world/europe/ displayStory.cfm?story_id=14447929 (October 2, 2009). [50]David Conway, Disunited Kingdom: How the Government's Community Cohesion Agenda Undermines British Identity and Nationhood (London: Civitas, 2009), pp. 70-71 and 105. [56]Brandon, Virtual Caliphate. [57]TaxPayers' Alliance, "No. 5: The Prevent Strategy," September 8, 2008, at http://www.taxpayersalliance.com/prevent.pdf
(October 2, 2009), and Martin Bright, "When Progressives Treat with
Reactionaries: The British State's Flirtation with Radical Islamism,"
Policy Exchange, July 1, 2006, at http://issuu.com/ufuq.de/docs/islamism_in_gb (October 27, 2009). [60]Editorial, "The Big Boss State," Financial Times, November 24, 2008. [61]U.K. Office for National Statistics, "Labour Market: Banglasdeshis' Unemployment Highest," January 8, 2004, at http://www.statistics.gov.uk/CCI/nugget.asp?ID= 1089&Pos=6&ColRank=2&Rank=896
(October 2, 2009), and U.K. Office for National Statistics, "Education:
Chinese Pupils Have Best GCSE Results," February 21, 2006, at (October
2, 2009). [65]Brandon and Hafez, "Crimes of the Community." |
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