Islamic Fascism
Following a series of terrorist attacks against the United States which culminated in the attacks of September 11th, 2011, the most pressing terrorist threat facing the country is that posed by Islamic Fascism, because it represents a diffuse, dedicated, and ongoing effort to attack the United States as frequently and destructively as possible, whether domestically or abroad. As a result, the United States government has dedicated substantial time and resources towards studying and confronting the threat posed by Islamic Fascism, but it remains a difficult task, not least of all because of the movement's diffuse, decentralized organization. When considering Islamic Fascism and the terrorism it encourages, one must confront the sometimes blurry boundary between domestic and international terrorism, as well as the way in which globalization has allowed money and resources to unite otherwise distant groups. Examining the establishment of Islamic terrorism in the United States reveals that it cannot be strictly viewed as an example of domestic terrorism, because even if lone actors perpetrate acts independent of any international coordination, the motivation behind those attacks is rooted in a transnational cause (as opposed to the more directly national motivations of truly domestic terrorist threats, such as the militia or sovereign citizen movements. Furthermore, this international/transnational ideology is supported and perpetuated by a network of similarly transnational organizations, whether semi-legitimate in the form of charities or obviously illegal in the form of drug trafficking and sale.
To understand how Islamic Fascism functions in the United States, it is first necessary to distinguish between domestic and transnational terrorism and subsequently demonstrate why Islamic terrorism represents a form of transnational terrorism, even when the perpetrators are American citizens acting without coordination with international groups. Perhaps the easiest way to see why Islamic terrorism in the United States should not be considered domestic terrorism is to consider the Federal Bureau of Investigation's brief definition of "the threat of domestic terror -- Americans attacking Americans based on U.S.-based extremist ideologies" (U.S. Department of Justice, 2009). Though brief, the FBI's definition includes two parameters that must be met for something to qualify as domestic terror.
Firstly, the act must be an example of "Americans attacking Americans," and one can easily identify a number of cases in which Islamic terrorism perpetrated in the United States meets this requirement; two notable examples include the attempted bombing of Times Square in 2010, perpetrated by Faisal Shahzad, a naturalized American citizen of Pakistani origin, and the killing of thirteen people at Fort Hood, of which Nidal Hasan, another American citizen, stands accused. This is by no means an exhaustive list of all of the attempted and successful Islamic terrorist attacks carried out by American citizens on American soil, but it is enough to demonstrate that based solely on the first parameter of the FBI's definition of domestic terror, Islamic terrorism would seemingly qualify.
However, the cases of Shahzad and Hasan, as well as other terror attacks planned or perpetrate by Americans against Americans in the name of Islam, do not fit the second parameter included in the FBI's definition of domestic terror, because they were not motivated by "U.S.-based extremist ideologies." It is important to note what is meant here by "U.S.-based," because one might be inclined to argue that because Islamic fundamentalism has found some foothold in the United States (even if only in single individuals), then it has subsequently become a "U.S.-based" ideology. In actuality, "U.S.-based" in this context means that the particular ideology relates to the United States itself; that is to say, the ideological framework in which the terror threat emerges deals specifically with the United States and views itself as inherently American.
In other words, domestic terror groups view themselves as part of the United States, even if they believe that they represent a "true" interpretation of what the country should be in contrast to the corrupted or illegitimate country that currently exists. In a perverse way, then, truly domestic terror groups do not view themselves as oriented against the United States, but rather against the institutions and practices that they view as anathema to the ideal United States. The most obvious examples of this include the militia movement and the sovereign citizen movement, which explicitly purport to represent a "correct" interpretation of the Constitution and the United States, but even domestic anarchist groups and eco-terrorists may be considered domestic terrorists, because their goals nevertheless operate on a domestic scale (U.S. DOJ, 2009). This is even true of certain militia groups that incorporate Christian beliefs into their ideology; even though...
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