THE AGE OF HORRORISM
by Martin Amis
It was mid-October 2001, and night
was closing in on the border city of
At this time of day, their
equivalents, in the great conurbations of Europe and America, could expect to
ease their not very sharp frustrations by downing a lot of alcohol, by eating
large meals with no dietary restrictions, by racing around to one another's
apartments in powerful and expensive machines, by downing a lot more alcohol as
well as additional stimulants and relaxants, by jumping up and down for several
hours on strobe-lashed dancefloors, and (in a fair
number of cases) by having galvanic sex with near-perfect strangers. These
diversions were not available to the young men of
More proximately, just over the
frontier, the West was in the early stages of invading
'Why you want these? You like
Osama?'
I can almost hear the tone of the
reply I would have given - reedy, wavering, wholly defeatist. As for the
substance, it would have been the reply of the cornered trimmer, and intended,
really, just to give myself time to seek the foetal position and fold my hands
over my face. Something like: 'Well I quite like him, but I think he overdid it
a bit in
'You like Osama?'
'Of course. He is my brother.'
'He is your brother?'
'All men are my brothers.'
All men are my brothers. I would
have liked to have said it then, and I would like to say it now: all men are my
brothers. But all men are not my brothers. Why? Because all
women are my sisters. And the brother who denies the rights of his
sister: that brother is not my brother. At the very best, he is my half-brother
- by definition. Osama is not my brother.
Religion is sensitive ground, as
well it might be. Here we walk on eggshells. Because religion
is itself an eggshell. Today, in the West, there are no good excuses for
religious belief - unless we think that ignorance, reaction and sentimentality
are good excuses. This is of course not so in the East, where, we acknowledge,
almost every living citizen in many huge and populous countries is intimately defined
by religious belief. The excuses, here, are very persuasive; and we duly accept
that 'faith' - recently and almost endearingly defined as 'the desire for the
approval of supernatural beings' - is a world-historical force and a
world-historical actor. All religions, unsurprisingly, have their terrorists,
Christian, Jewish, Hindu, even Buddhist. But we are not hearing from those
religions. We are hearing from Islam.
Let us make the position clear. We
can begin by saying, not only that we respect Muhammad, but that no serious
person could fail to respect Muhammad - a unique and luminous historical being.
Judged by the continuities he was able to set in motion, he remains a titanic
figure, and, for Muslims, all-answering: a revolutionary, a warrior, and a
sovereign, a Christ and a Caesar, 'with a Koran in one hand', as Bagehot
imagined him, 'and a sword in the other'. Muhammad has strong claims to being
the most extraordinary man who ever lived. And always a man,
as he always maintained, and not a god. Naturally we respect Muhammad.
But we do not respect Muhammad Atta.
Until recently it was being said
that what we are confronted with, here, is 'a civil war' within Islam. That's
what all this was supposed to be: not a clash of civilisations or anything like that, but a civil war within Islam. Well, the civil war
appears to be over. And Islamism won it. The loser, moderate Islam, is always
deceptively well-represented on the level of the op-ed page and the public
debate; elsewhere, it is supine and inaudible. We are not hearing from moderate
Islam. Whereas Islamism, as a mover and shaper of world events, is pretty well
all there is.
So, to repeat, we respect Islam -
the donor of countless benefits to mankind, and the possessor of a thrilling
history. But Islamism? No, we can hardly be asked to
respect a creedal wave that calls for our own elimination. More, we regard the
Great Leap Backwards as a tragic development in Islam's story, and now in ours.
Naturally we respect Islam. But we do not respect Islamism, just as we respect
Muhammad and do not respect Muhammad Atta.
I will soon come to Donald Rumsfeld,
the architect and guarantor of the hideous cataclysm in
All writers of fiction will at some
point find themselves abandoning a piece of work - or find themselves putting
it aside, as we gently say. The original idea, the initiating 'throb'
(Nabokov), encounters certain 'points of resistance' (Updike); and these points
of resistance, on occasion, are simply too obdurate, numerous, and pervasive.
You come to write the next page, and it's dead - as if
your subconscious, the part of you quietly responsible for so much daily
labour, has been neutralised, or switched off. Norman Mailer has said that one
of the few real sorrows of 'the spooky art' is that it requires you to spend
too many days among dead things. Recently, and for the first time in my life, I
abandoned, not a dead thing, but a thriving novella; and I did so for reasons
that were wholly extraneous. I am aware that this is hardly a tectonic event;
but for me the episode was existential. In the West, writers are acclimatised
to freedom - to limitless and gluttonous freedom. And I discovered something.
Writing is freedom; and as soon as that freedom is in shadow, the writer can no
longer proceed. The shadow, in this case, was not a fear of repercussion. It
was as if, most reluctantly, I was receiving a new vibration or frequency from
the planetary shimmer. The novella was a satire called The Unknown Known
Secretary Rumsfeld was unfairly ridiculed, some thought, for his haiku-like taxonomy of the
terrorist threat:
'The message is: there are known
"knowns". There are things that we know
that we know. There are known unknowns. That is to say, there are things that
we know we don't know. But there are also unknown unknowns. There are things we
don't know we don't know.'
Like his habit of talking in 'the
third person passive once removed', this is 'very Rumsfeldian'.
And Rumsfeld can be even more Rumsfeldian than that.
According to Bob Woodward's Plan of Attack, at a closed-door senatorial
briefing in September 2002 (the idea was to sell regime-change in Iraq),
Rumsfeld exasperated everyone present with a torrent of Rumsfeldisms,
including the following strophe: 'We know what we know, we know there are
things we do not know, and we know there are things we know we don't know we
don't know.' Anyway, the three categories remain quite helpful as analytical
tools. And they certainly appealed very powerfully to the narrator of The
Unknown Known - Ayed, a diminutive Islamist terrorist
who plies his trade in
Ayed's outfit, which is called
'the "Prism"', used to consist of three sectors named, not very
imaginatively, Sector One, Sector Two and Sector Three. But Ayed
and his colleagues are attentive readers of the Western press, and the sectors
now have new titles. Known Knowns (sector one)
concerns itself with daily logistics: bombs, mines, shells, and various
improvised explosive devices. The work of Known Unknowns (sector two) is more
peripatetic and long-term; it involves, for example, trolling around
Shifts in the paradigm like the
attack of 11 September 2001. Paradigm shifts open a window; and, once opened,
the window will close. Ayed observes that 11
September was instantly unrepeatable; indeed, the tactic was obsolete by 10am
the same morning. Its efficacy lasted for 71 minutes, from 8.46, when American
11 hit the
I found it reassuringly difficult,
dreaming up paradigm shifts. And Ayed and his friends
in sector three find it difficult too. Synergy, maximalisation
- these are the kinds of concept that are tossed from cushion to floormat in Unknown Unknowns. Here, a comrade argues for
the dynamiting of the San Andreas Fault; there, another envisages the
large-scale introduction of rabies (admixed with smallpox, methamphetamine and
steroids) to the fauna of
Ayed's conceptual breakthrough
did not go down at all well in Sector Three, as it was then called; in fact, it
was widely mocked. But Ayed used a family connection,
and gained an audience with Mullah Omar, the one-eyed Islamist cleric who
briefly ruled
As the story opens, the CRs have been en route to G,C for almost five years,
crossing central Africa, in minibuses and on foot, and suffering many a
sanguinary reverse (a host of some 30,000 Janjaweed
in Sudan, a 'child militia', armed with pangas, in
Congo). On top of all this, as if he didn't have enough to worry about, Ayed is not getting on very well with his wives.
Those who know the field will be
undismayed by the singling out of
Since then the world has undergone a
moral crash - the spiritual equivalent, in its global depth and reach, of the
Great Depression of the Thirties. On our side, extraordinary rendition,
coercive psychological procedures, enhanced interrogation techniques,
Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, Haditha,
Mahmudiya, two wars, and tens of thousands of dead
bodies. All this should of course be soberly compared to the feats of the
opposed ideology, an ideology which, in its most millennial form, conjures up
the image of an abattoir within a madhouse. I will spell this out, because it
has not been broadly assimilated. The most extreme Islamists want to kill
everyone on earth except the most extreme Islamists; but every jihadi sees the need for eliminating all non-Muslims,
either by conversion or by execution. And we now know what happens when
Islamism gets its hands on an army (
Things started to go wrong for poor Sayyid during the Atlantic crossing from
Established in a modest way as a
writer, Sayyid took a job at the Ministry of
Education. This radicalised him. He felt oppressed by the vestiges of the
British protectorate in
Sayyid was presumably still
sorely shaken by the birth of
He didn't like
During his six months at the
Colorado State College of Education (and thereafter in
'And the air is full of lust.'
'Lust' is Bernard Lewis's translation, but several other writers prefer the
word 'love'. And while lust has greater immediate impact, love may in the end
be more resonant. Why should Qutb mind if the air is
full of love? We are forced to wonder whether love can be said to exist, as we
understand it, in the ferocious patriarchy of Islamism. If death and hate are
the twin opposites of love, then it may not be merely whimsical and mawkish to
suggest that the terrorist, the bringer of death and hate, the death-hate
cultist, is in essence the enemy of love. Qutb:
'A girl looks at you, appearing as
if she were an enchanting nymph or an escaped mermaid, but as she approaches,
you sense only the screaming instinct inside her, and you can smell her burning
body, not the scent of perfume but flesh, only flesh.'
In his excellent book, Terror and
Liberalism, Paul Berman has many sharp things to say about the corpus of Sayyid Qutb; but he manages to
goad himself into receptivity, and ends up, in my view, sounding almost
absurdly respectful - 'rich, nuanced, deep, soulful, and heartfelt'. Qutb, who would go on to write a 30-volume gloss on it,
spent his childhood memorising the Koran. He was 10 by the time he was done.
Now, given that, it seems idle to expect much sense from him; and so it proves.
On the last of the 46 pages he devotes to Qutb,
Berman wraps things up with a long quotation. This is its repetitive first
paragraph:
'The Surah
[the sayings of the Prophet] tells the Muslims that, in the fight to uphold
God's universal Truth, lives will have to be sacrificed. Those who risk their
lives and go out to fight, and who are prepared to lay down their lives for the
cause of God, are honourable people, pure of heart and blessed of soul. But the
great surprise is that those among them who are killed in the struggle must not
be considered or described as dead. They continue to live, as God Himself
clearly states.'
Savouring that last phrase, we
realise that any voyage taken with Sayyid Qutb is doomed to a leaden-witted circularity. The
emptiness, the mere iteration, at the heart of his philosophy is steadily
colonised by a vast entanglement of bitternesses; and
here, too, we detect the presence of that peculiarly Islamist triumvirate
(codified early on by Christopher Hitchens) of
self-righteousness, self-pity, and self-hatred - the self-righteousness dating
from the seventh century, the self-pity from the 13th (when the 'last' Caliph
was kicked to death in Baghdad by the Mongol warlord Hulagu),
and the self-hatred from the 20th. And most astounding of all, in Qutb, is the level of self-awareness, which is less than
zero. It is as if the very act of self-examination were something unmanly or
profane: something unrighteous, in a word.
Still, one way or the other, Qutb is the father of Islamism. Here are the chief tenets
he inspired: that America, and its clients, are jahiliyya
(the word classically applied to pre-Muhammadan
Arabia - barbarous and benighted); that America is controlled by Jews; that
Americans are infidels, that they are animals, and, worse, arrogant animals,
and are unworthy of life; that America promotes pride and promiscuity in the
service of human degradation; that America seeks to 'exterminate' Islam - and
that it will accomplish this not by conquest, not by colonial annexation, but
by example. As Bernard Lewis puts it in The Crisis of Islam
'This is what is meant by the term
the Great Satan, applied to the
Lewis might have added that these
are the closing words of the Koran. So they echo.
The West isn't being seductive, of
course; all the West is being is attractive. But the Islamist's paranoia
extends to a kind of thwarted narcissism. We think again of Qutb's
buxom, smooth-legged nurse, supposedly smacking her thirsty lips at the news of
the death of Hasan al-Banna.
Far from wanting or trying to exterminate it, the West had no views whatever
about Islam per se before 11 September 2001. Of course, views were then
formulated, and very soon the bestseller list was a column of primers on Islam.
Some things take longer to sink in than others, true; but now we know. In the
West we had brought into being a society whose main purpose, whose raison d'etre,
was the tantalisation of good Muslims.
The theme of the 'tempter' can be
taken a little further, in the case of Qutb. When the
tempter is a temptress, and really wants you to sin, she needs to be both
available and willing. And it is almost inconceivable that poor Sayyid, the frail, humourless civil servant, and turgid
anti-semite (salting his talk with quotes from that
long-exploded fabrication, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion), ever
encountered anything that resembled an offer. It is more pitiful than that.
Seduction did not come his way, but it was coming the way of others, he sensed,
and a part of him wanted it too. That desire made him very afraid, and also
shamed him and dishonoured him, and turned his thoughts to murder. Then the
thinkers of Islam took his books and did what they did to them; and Sayyid Qutb is now a part of our
daily reality. We should understand that the Islamists' hatred of
Qutb has perhaps a single
parallel in world history. Another shambling invert, another sexual truant (not
a virgin but a career cuckold), another marginal quack and dabbler (talentless
but not philistine), he too wrote a book, in prison, that fell into the worst
possible hands. His name was Nikolai Chernyshevsky;
and his novel (What Is To Be Done?) was read five
times by Vladimir Lenin in the course of a single summer. It was Chernyshevsky who determined, not the content, but the
emotional dynamic of the Soviet experiment. The centennial of his birth was
celebrated with much pomp in the
This text was taken from
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2006/sep/10/september11.politicsphilosophyandsociety
(Viewed on November the 5th,
2008)