Talking to the Enemy: Faith, Brotherhood, and the (Un)Making of Terrorists (74 page)

BOOK: Talking to the Enemy: Faith, Brotherhood, and the (Un)Making of Terrorists
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Trashorras, Emilio, 170, 191–93, 192, 198, 200, 204, 209
tribe, 8–9.
See also
brotherhoods
cooperation and, 293, 303
globalization and tribal world, 40–42
“homeland” security concept and, 9
killing and dying for, 33
religion and, 32
social identity and, 41
tribal appeals as “reducing transaction costs,” 10
tribal humans and religion, 38
United States as tribalized, 9
universal religion and, 69–70
wars and, 9–10
Trust
(Fukuyama), 462
Tuburova, Mariam, 327
Turabi, Hassan al-, 99
Turkey
Hamas in, 368, 489
moderate method of coexistence, 372
nationalism in, 86
secularists in, 86, 250
World Federation of Scientists meeting, Damascus (2009), 396
“Young Turks” in, 86
Turner, Nat, 470
Turner Diaries, The
(Pierce), 474
Ubeid, 152, 153, 164
Umar Patek,
134
Unequal Democracy
(Bartels), 461
United States
abortion and capital punishment issues, 383
Afghanistan war, 243, 253–54, 257–60, 261, 263–65
American Dream, 279, 458, 459
anarchists as terrorists in, 92–98
assassination of McKinley, 94, 97
Bin Laden’s
fatwa
against, 103
Christmas Day attempted airline bombing, 114
civil rights movement, 470–71
as Commonwealth of Christian Virtue, 470
conservatives in, 458–59, 461–62
Constitution, 466
counterterrorism efforts, 284–87
culture, 34, 492n 9
distrust of other cultures, 469
as “far enemy,” 90, 102–3
foreign policy, “rational-actor” models, 393
Haidt and Joseph’s Internet Study of Five Foundations of Morality, 458–59
human rights and, 424, 425, 460
Iran foreign policy, 381
Iraq policy, 87–88
Iraq War, 272, 319, 465, 495n 13, 495n 15
jihadi schemes thwarted, 269
liberals in, 458–59, 464
localization vs. centralization in politics, 462, 463
Muslim population, 58, 279, 413
Muslim prisoners, 279, 413
Muslims, violent, 58
as “new Mongols,” 90
Philippines and, 95–96
Protestant Ethic, 469
religion in, 415, 429, 461–69
slavery and abolitionism, 470
small group dynamics and culture, 33
Soviet-Afghan War and, 99
Spanish-American War, 95
terrorism, overreaction to and grievous harm, 267, 277–78
terrorism policy, 132, 233
Times Square attempted bombing, 114
“zero tolerance” policy for jihadi activity, 282, 413
Urban, Pope, 72
Urwah, 152, 164, 165
U.S. Department of Homeland Security, 237, 480
USS
Cole
bombing, 103, 160, 257
U.S. Secret Service, 96
van Leeuwenhoek, Antony, 75
Van Vugt, Mark, 325
Vietnam War, 338, 414
Voltaire, 424
von Salomon, Ernst, 320
Wahab, Muhammad ibn ‘Abd Al-, 84
Wahhabism, 84, 88–89, 99–100
Wallace, Alfred Russel, 300
Wan Mat, Wan Win bin,
134,
145, 146, 501n 13
war, 318–47.
See also specific wars
antiwar movements, 331
brotherhoods, 13, 335
the Cause and, 335–40
as cause of death, 328–29
Clausewitz delusion, 332–33, 340–41
cooperation to compete and, 456
deception and, 316
dehumanizing of enemy, 321, 322
deterrence of, 330
ethics and, 367
evolutionary drive and, 320
fighting for a cause, 333–34, 335–40
fighting for comrades, 333–35, 345–46
Good Prince Harry sentiment, 316–17
group defined by, 323
homicide statistics in peacetime and, 325
lack of reason or rational calculation, 340–44, 347
living with no end to war, 330–31
manhood, male sexuality and, 324–25
mass killing encouraged, 322
as matter of principle/moral duty, 340–44
“moral absolutist” sentiment, 377
as moral act, 322–24
as noble and exciting, 318–24, 329
nuclear threat, 28–29, 330
predictions of future casualties, 329
religious vs. secular, 414
rising risk from asymmetric conflicts and very big wars, 328–30
sacred values and, 344–47
team fighting spirit, 317, 333–34
why soldiers fight, 317, 333–37
women vs. men as killers, 324–28
War on Terror, 39, 93, 94–95, 235, 485
where we’re losing, 260
where we’re winning, 260–61
Washington, George, 92–93, 347
Washington, Levar Haney, 280–81, 282
Wealth of Nations
(Smith), 59, 322–23
Weber, Max, 469
Webster, Justin, 503n 3
Weinberg, Steven, 416
Why We Fight
(Capra), 339
Wilson, Charlie, 253
Wilson, Margo, 327
women
in Afghanistan, 250, 255–56, 260
Butterfly Laskar, Sulawesi, 19
discrimination of Muslim, 52
group cooperation and, 325
jihad and, 328
motivations for killing, 327–28
Pastun culture and, 255–56, 260
rights of, 371
studies on moral imperative for terrorism, 341–44
subordination of, 425
as warriors or suicide bombers, 324–29
World Federation of Scientists, 519n 7
meeting, Damascus (2009), 396
Permanent Monitoring Panel on Terrorism, 484–87
World War I, 96, 322, 329, 333
World War II
apologies, 389–90, 391
Battle of Britain, 339–40
deaths in, 329
“Death Volunteers,” 336
Free French, 331
Freikorps, 319–20
Japanese emperor and, 392
Landser
(infantryman), 335
Nazi dehumanizing of enemy, 321
Nazi SS units, 334–35
soldiers’ motivations for fighting, 333–36, 339–40
Wright, Lawrence, 130
Yarkas, Imad Eddin Barakat (Abu Dahdah), 174, 175,
175,
178–83
Yassin, Ahmad, 25, 365, 386
Yazid Sufaat,
134
Yemen, 98, 140
York, Sgt. Alvin, 322
Yudhoyono, President, 153, 165
Yusef, Ahmed, 386, 519n 7
Yusef, Hassan, 385
Zahir, Shah, 244, 250, 252
Zaini, 159
Zamzulri, 159
Zangwill, Israel, 520n 21
Zarqawi, Abu Musab al-, 50, 115, 152, 273
Web site, 195, 196
Zawahiri, Ayman, 99, 100–101, 102, 135, 181, 499n 9
ideology, 130
“Jihad Against Crusaders and Jews,” 104
Zazi, Najibullah, 269
Zghayer, Shadi, 405, 406,
408
Zimbardo, Philip, 221
Zindane, Zinedine, 51–52, 487
Zoroastrians, 69
Zougam, Jamal, 176, 179–80, 181, 196, 198–99, 200
Zouheir, Rafa, 191–93,
192
Zulkarnaen, 125, 141, 143, 145, 146, 148, 155, 156, 157, 158–59, 161, 162, 501n 12
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

 

I am grateful to Isaac Ben Israel, Noam Chomsky, Baruch Fischhoff, Joseph Henrich, Lawrence Hirschfeld, Pervez Hoodbhoy, Douglas Medin, Ariel Merari, Richard Nisbett, Ara Norenzayan, Dan Sperber, and Blanka Zizka. All will no doubt recognize the strong influence that our collaborations and communications have had on what I’ve written. Joining Lord John Alderdice, Robert Axelrod, Richard Davis, Jeremy Ginges, Marc Sageman, and Khalil Shikaki on science projects in the field aimed at lessening threats to international peace was a particular privilege.
France’s Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and the Institut Jean Nicod at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris have given me the professional freedom to work as long and hard on any problem that I needed to. Charles Strozier and Jeremy Travis at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice gave a home to my research projects when other universities shied away from anything to do with actually talking to terrorists. The U.S. National Science Foundation, Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Office of Naval Research, and Army Research Office supported much of the scientific research that underpins the stories I tell.
My thanks also go to Andrea Fatica, Laura Reynolds, Dominick Wright, and Justin Magouirk, who coordinated the efforts of my research teams and responded with patience and diligence to often fitful demands. John Brockman prodded me into writing this work; Bob Axelrod and Lisa Chase endeavored mightily to edit out the error and confusion; and Lisa Chase and Dan Halpern at Ecco/HarperCollins helped me to realize that less can be more. Ximena Lois, our son Emiliano, my daughters Tatiana and Laura, and my brother, Harris, and our parents have worried about me as they shouldn’t have had to. My hope is that ways will be found in the spirit of this work to ultimately lessen the worries of all people I care for.
ALSO BY SCOTT ATRAN
Cognitive Foundations of Natural History
In Gods We Trust
Plants of the Petén Itza’ Maya
(with Ximena Lois and Edilberto Ucan Ek’)
The Native Mind and the Cultural Construction of Nature
(with Douglas Medin)

 

PREFACE

 

America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter, and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves.
—ABRAHAM LINCOLN

 

T
his work is about what almost everybody believes in but only some are willing to die for. It’s about believing in something worthwhile that transcends the interests of individuals and their immediate families. It’s about the nature of faith, the origins of society, and the limits of reason. It tries to answer the question, “Why do people believe in a cause, and why do some die and kill for it?”
BOOK: Talking to the Enemy: Faith, Brotherhood, and the (Un)Making of Terrorists
9.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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