Archive for 'Islam'
Seeing the Syrian Conflict through Narrative
By Jeffry R. Halverson Unlike the protests of the Arab Spring in Tunisia and Egypt, the campaigns underway against the Assad regime in Syria have a distinctly sectarian character. The Assad regime is dominated by the Alawites, a little-known esoteric Shi‘ite sect. However, the majority of Syria’s population is Sunni Muslim (approx. 75%). And caught [...]
Posted: July 27th, 2011 under Analysis, Framing, Government, Islam, Narrative, Politics, Religion, Syria.
Comments: 2
Implicit Master Narratives in Extremist Website Launch
by Jeffry R. Halverson If you’ve read our book Master Narratives of Islamist Extremism then you already have a solid understanding of the major master narratives employed by Islamist extremists in their communications. For example, you’re able to recognize the significance of a Pharaoh reference when an extremist is condemning a world leader. Or you’re [...]
Posted: July 13th, 2011 under Analysis, Islam, Language, Narrative, Religion, Sensemaking, Strategic Comm..
Comments: 1
Zawahiri’s Curious Recollection of Karbala in Bin Laden Eulogy
by Jeffry R. Halverson The Karbala master narrative is one of the most rich and influential in the Islamic world, specifically among Shi‘a societies. We devoted an entire chapter to it in the book Master Narratives of Islamist Extremism, and Kamran Scott Aghaie has penned a wonderful study of it in relation to the history [...]
Posted: July 1st, 2011 under bin Laden, Egypt, Identification, Islam, Language, Narrative, Religion.
Comments: 1
“Firebrand” Extinguished? Abu Bakar Basyir Sentenced to 15 Years
by Chris Lundry The next chapter in the saga of Abu Bakar Basyir, called the spiritual leader of terrorist organization Jemaah Islamiyah, came to an end on June 16. The court in South Jakarta pronounced its verdict of guilty to the charges of inciting terrorism related to the Jemaah Islamiyah training camp in Aceh — [...]
Posted: June 17th, 2011 under Analysis, Counterterrorism, Indonesia, Islam, Media, Southeast Asia.
Comments: none
The Iranian Narrative Landscape Stirs
by Jeffry R. Halverson Recently, the Islamic Republic of Iran has been abuzz over the release of a video entitled “The Coming is Very Near,” a 28-minute production created by a group of Twelver Shi‘a devotees of the Hidden Imam al-Mahdi, known as the Harbingers of the Coming (perhaps associated with the Hojjatieh Society). It [...]
Posted: April 21st, 2011 under Analysis, Framing, Iran, Islam, Narrative, Politics, Religion.
Comments: none
New Third Way Narrative Poses Challenge to U.S. Strategic Communication
by Bud Goodall There is a new narrative responsible for the success of the uprisings that spread from Tunisia through Egypt and now are heard in the streets of Syria, Yemen, Libya, and elsewhere. It is a secular narrative generated by young Muslims who recognize that older jihadist forms of “telling their resistance story” by [...]
Posted: April 11th, 2011 under Analysis, Counterterrorism, Diplomacy, Egypt, Intelligence, Islam, Israel, Language, Movements, Narrative, Obama, Politics, Religion, Strategic Comm..
Comments: 4
A Different Kind of Crusader?
by Chris Lundry In our work identifying and tracking the use of Islamist narratives here at the CSC, the second most frequently invoked among Islamist extremists in our research (after Nakba or Palestine) has been the Crusader master narrative. The use of this term among Islamists connotes religious war, subjugation by Western Christians, injustice, and eventual colonization. [...]
Posted: April 7th, 2011 under Analysis, Bush, Diplomacy, Islam, Language, Media, Narrative, Obama, Religion, Strategic Comm., Syria.
Comments: 2
Putin’s Crusade Remark a Master Narrative Snafu
by Jeffry R. Halverson and Bud Goodall Muammar Gaddafi, “Leader and Guide” of Libya, and Vladimir Putin, current Prime Minister of Russia and former head of the FSB (formerly KGB), have separately denounced (Putin here ) UN Security Council Resolution 1973, approving military action in Libya, as something resembling “the medieval Crusades.” We understand why [...]
Posted: March 21st, 2011 under Framing, Islam, Narrative, Russia, Strategic Comm..
Comments: none
Should We Fear Muslim Brotherhood Influence in Egypt?
by Jeffry R. Halverson There are a lot of questions and speculation about the Ikhwan al-Muslimun (The Muslim Brotherhood, or MB) and their role in the future of Egypt. The coverage of the organization in the U.S. media has been better than expected. However, I am still struck by some of the more ominous rhetoric [...]
Posted: February 4th, 2011 under Egypt, Government, Islam, Muslim Brotherhood, Politics, Religion, Sharia.
Comments: 4
Democracy, God, the People, and the Pharaoh: A Master Narrative’s Work is Never Done
by Bud Goodall The Jasmine Revolution in Tunisia last week beget further democracy uprisings in Egypt and Yemen this week, as well as protests in Jordan and Mauritania. If the protesters are finally successful in Egypt and President Hosni Mubarak is forced out, this eruption of game-changing scenarios inspired by deep conflicts between the people [...]
Posted: January 29th, 2011 under Analysis, Diplomacy, Egypt, Framing, Identification, Islam, Israel, Media, Narrative, Obama, Religion, Sensemaking, State Dept., technology, Uncertainty.
Comments: 1