Arrian
I'm not sure why LOTM picked this one to pre-empt. It's sorta a boring one. The article says what everyone knows, that hardliners have rhetoric they use to appeal to moderates, hoping to draw them into the cause. (This is true of most any faction out there.)
The only real issue I'd take with the article is that it seems to be arguing towards "balance" from a backwards perspective. Highlighted by this part of the article:
It's not a moot point. AQ knows it has to appeal to more sensible people. We have to realize that that is the real battle to win. Because we aren't going to win the hearts and minds of AQ. That's obvious. The battle is for the hearts and minds of more sensible people.
Our policy has not been to deal with the problem by addressing it in regards to the "reciprocity" argument. We have been acting in a manner which addresses the underlying ideology of AQ (as presented in this article), and ignoring the effect that the "reciprocity" argument has on more moderate Muslims.
I'm not sure why LOTM picked this one to pre-empt. It's sorta a boring one. The article says what everyone knows, that hardliners have rhetoric they use to appeal to moderates, hoping to draw them into the cause. (This is true of most any faction out there.)
The only real issue I'd take with the article is that it seems to be arguing towards "balance" from a backwards perspective. Highlighted by this part of the article:
Consider the following excerpt — one of many — which renders Al Qaeda's reciprocal-treatment argument moot.
Our policy has not been to deal with the problem by addressing it in regards to the "reciprocity" argument. We have been acting in a manner which addresses the underlying ideology of AQ (as presented in this article), and ignoring the effect that the "reciprocity" argument has on more moderate Muslims.
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