2006年VOA标准英语-Debate Centers on Relation Between Terrorism an(在线收听) |
By Peter Fedynsky Last month, portions of a classified U.S. government intelligence estimate on global terrorism were leaked to the media, which reported the document as saying the war in Iraq is creating more terrorists than it is eliminating. The White House says the media misinterpreted the secret information, and President Bush ordered the declassification of relevant portions so everyone, as the president put it, "can draw their own conclusions." ----- After it was declassified, the director of U.S. National Intelligence, John Negroponte, publicly read one of the key assessments from the National Intelligence Estimate (NIE). "The Iraq jihad is shaping a new generation of terrorist leaders and operatives," he read. "However, should jihadists leaving Iraq perceive themselves, and be perceived, to have failed, fewer fighters will be inspired to carry on the fight."
The leak, published in The New York Times newspaper, revealed the assertion of U.S. intelligence agencies that the Iraq conflict is cultivating supporters for the global jihadist movement. However, the declassified estimate named other factors that are also fueling the jihadist spread. They include entrenched grievances in many Muslim nations, such as corruption and injustice, as well as a slow pace of economic, social and political reforms. Cordesman said the Bush administration is not focusing enough attention on reforms to address factors that radicalize people. "We need, honestly, to look at this problem, not in terms of politics, but in terms of governance, economics, basic divisions in the country between ethnic and sectarian groups; how quickly you can actually change people," said Cordesman. "What will their values accept?" The National Intelligence Estimate says the jihadist movement has various vulnerabilities, above all, an ultraconservative interpretation of Shariah-based governance that is unpopular with the vast majority of Muslims. The Heritage Foundation's James Phillips said Afghanistan's deposed Taleban government showed the downside of the radical Islam. "In Afghanistan, what happened was a horror show of tremendous human rights abuses; where women couldn't go work outside their homes, girls couldn't be educated, men were put in jail if they weren't able to grow a beard long enough to suit the Taleban," said Phillips, "and Afghans quickly became tired of that." Phillips said many terrorists, swept up in the emotion of the moment, go to Iraq and fight a jihad, but fail to consider what happens after the war is over. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/10/35090.html |