Then you should see how this battle for "hearts and minds" took off with the start of "9/11" inside job.
THE BATTLE FOR HEARTS AND MINDS 
 
 
It was after the events of 9/11 that the hatred for Islam by many in the West was paraded openly. The 
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq proved for many thinkers that Capitalism gained no currency in the 
Muslim world. In fact stories of Iraqi’s welcoming US troops were found to be lies concocted by the 
US spin machine. Clearly it is no coincidence that the areas that are ultimately targets of the so-called 
‘war on terror’ are Islamic countries with Muslim majority populations that could provide a base for 
future Islamic governance. These are the same countries where strategic resources - most notably oil 
and natural gas are concentrated. It is also no coincidence that both the 2002 and 2006 versions of the 
Pentagon's Quadrennial Review demonized Muslims, Islamic countries and Islam, in various guises, as 
grave threats to US security. The highest US officials were convinced that America’s greatest ideological 
challenge is what they call ‘a highly politicized form of Islam’ and that Washington and its allies cannot 
afford to stand by and watch Muslims realise their political destiny, the Khilafah.  
 
Lord Curzon, the British Foreign Minister at the time of the Khilafah’s demise in 1924 announced to 
the House of Commons: 
 
“We must put an end to anything which brings about any Islamic unity between the 
sons of the Muslims. As we have already succeeded in finishing off the Caliphate, so we 
must ensure that there will never arise again unity for the Muslims, whether it be 
intellectual or cultural unity.”   
This encapsulated how the superpower of the day viewed Islam as a threat to its very existence. 
 
The fall of Communism in 1990 brought Islam into a direct clash with Capitalism. The former secretary 
general of NATO Willie Claes stated: 
 
“The Alliance has placed Islam as a target for its hostility in place of the Soviet Union.”  
This led to a new onslaught against Islam. America has realised that cultural colonialism has not worked 
against the Muslims and now what is required is direct military colonisation. Paul Wolfowitz said at a 
press conference in Singapore: 
 
“It’s true that our war against terrorism is a war against evil people, but it is also 
ultimately a battle for ideals as well as a battle of minds.”5 
 
The US national intelligence council published its report following its ‘global 2020’ project, entitled 
‘mapping the global future.’ The National Intelligence Council (NIC) is the American intelligence 
community’s centre for mid-term and long-term strategic thinking. The report set out the likely 
scenario the world will face in 2020. It concluded that the appeal of Islam today is a call to return to the 
earlier roots of Islam where the Islamic civilisation was at the forefront of global change under the 
Khilafah. Portraying a fictional  scenario ‘of how a global movement fuelled  by radical religious identity could 
emerge,’6  the report revealed unequivocally that at the highest levels of US policy planning, preparation is 
being made for the emergence of the Khilafah. Other reports from US policy makers and think tanks 
across the world acknowledged there is a broad based ideological movement seeking the return of the 
Khilafah. 
 
As a result senior policy makers including George W. Bush have ‘warned’ of the consequences of the 
Khilafah’s re-establishment. Bush, in a speech to the American nation in October 2005 stated: 
 
“The militants believe that controlling  one country will rally the Muslim masses, 
enabling them to overthrow all moderate governments in the region, and establish a 
radical Islamic empire that spans from Spain to Indonesia.” 
 
On December 5th 2005, the then US Secretary of Defence, Donald Rumsfeld in remarks pertaining to 
the future of Iraq at John Hopkins University said: 
“Iraq would serve as the base of a new Islamic Caliphate to extend throughout the 
Middle East and which would threaten the legitimate governments in Europe, Africa, 
and Asia. This is their plan. They have said so. We make a terrible mistake if we fail to 
listen and learn.” 
 
Tony Blair after 7/7 also referred to the need to confront an  “an evil ideology”  that included  “the 
establishment of effectively Taliban States and Shari’ah law in the Arab world en route to one Caliphate of all Muslim nations.” General David Petraeus, when asked about his priorities in the ‘surge’ operations in Iraq, in an interview with the Times published on June 20th  2007, said: 
“It is to disrupt al-Qaeda and its ability to conduct sensational attacks and to try to 
continue the cycle of violence, which they have been trying to do all along. In addition, 
they are attempting try establish a real al-Qaeda sanctuary in Iraq, a caliphate.” 
 
These statements amongst numerous other arguments are being forwarded in an attempt to discredit 
and divert efforts towards the re-establishment of the Khilafah, particularly through seeking to associate 
it exclusively with terrorism. The effort has also been extended to malign the goals of Islamic politics 
more generally.   
 
Thus alongside physical occupation, placing troops at strategic locations around the world and creating 
revolutions which are western friendly, a battle to win the hearts and minds of Muslims across the 
world is being fought. A suite of McCarthyite labels such as ‘extremist’, ‘radical’, ‘fanatic’ and ‘militant’ 
have become common currency in order to bring Muslims on side under the banner of a cultural war. 
Their definitions are dangerously loose and ever-broadening and manipulate the fact that there is no 
consensus on the definition of terrorism to brand Muslims as more prone to violence. 
 
A consensus now exists across the Western world that a battle for hearts and minds needs to be fought 
and won otherwise more and more Muslims will turn to radicalism (Islam). In January 2007, Tony 
Blair’s successor Prime Minister Gordon Brown, mentioned in regards to the Iraq war and ‘terrorism’: 
 
“But you will not win against extreme terrorist activities and particularly the propaganda 
activities, unless you have this battle of hearts and minds that is won. And that makes 
me think of the same cultural war that had to be fought against communism from the 
1940s and 50s onwards, is in a sense the model for what we've got to do here.”7
  
 
The RAND institute  published a report,  ‘Building Moderate Muslim Networks,’ making a similar 
argument that the experience gained from supporting movements against the Soviet Union should be 
used as a template for the West to support networks of ‘moderate’ Muslims in order to counter, what 
they argue are, the radical and dogmatic interpretations of Islam that are gaining ground in the Muslim 
world. 
 
The result of this led the US to develop a new plan in the battle for hearts and minds. 
 
In July 2003, the government’s leading players in winning the ‘war of ideas’ against terrorism gathered 
at the National Defence University in Washington DC. There were crisis managers from the White 
House, diplomats from the State Department, and Pentagon specialists in psychological operations. 
Washington’s quick victory over Saddam Hussein’s army that spring had done little to quell surging 
anti-Americanism overseas. Polls showed Osama bin Laden a more trusted figure than George W. 
Bush across the Muslim world including within US allies like Indonesia and Jordan. 
 
After repeated missteps since the 9/11 attacks,  the US government embarked on a campaign of 
political warfare unmatched since  the height of the Cold War. From military psychological-operations 
teams and CIA covert operatives to openly funded media and think tanks, Washington was prepared to 
plough tens of millions of dollars into a campaign to influence not only Muslim societies but Islam 
itself. America realised it can no longer sit on the sidelines as radicals and moderates fight over the 
future of the Muslim world. The result has been a growing effort to influence what officials describe as 
an Islamic reformation. 
 
The previously undisclosed effort was identified in the course of a four-month US News investigation, 
based on more than 100 interviews and a review of a dozen internal reports and memorandums. The 
investigation disclosed the various battles that were being fought or going to be initiated.  
 
The CIA was revitalizing programs of covert action that once helped win the Cold War, targeting 
Islamic media, religious leaders, and political parties. The agency is receiving ‘an exponential increase in 
money, people, and assets’ to help it influence Muslim societies. Among the tactics are, working with 
militants at odds with al Qaeda and waging secret campaigns to discredit the worst anti-American 
zealots. The tools with which to fight back are varied. To the CIA, they are covert operations involving 
political influence and propaganda. At the Pentagon, they are called ‘psyops’ or strategic-influence 
efforts. At the State Department, they are called public diplomacy. All seek to use information to 
influence, inform, and motivate  America’s friends and enemies abroad. Many are controversial, 
particularly in light of recent revelations that administration officials have peddled fake video news 
reports and paid columnists to boost public perceptions of policies in the US. But to those toiling on 
the front lines against terrorism, the war of ideas and the tools to fight it are essential. How those tools 
have come back into use, and what Washington is doing with them, is a story that begins half a century 
ago, in the heyday of Soviet communism. 
 
The White House has approved a classified new strategy, titled “Muslim World Outreach,” which is a 
national security interest in influencing what happens within Islam. Because America is so hated across 
the Muslim world, the plan calls for working  through third parties, moderate Muslim nations, 
foundations, and reform groups to promote shared values of democracy, women’s rights and tolerance. 
The US has already quietly funded Islamic radio and TV shows, coursework in Muslim schools, Muslim 
think-tanks, political workshops and other programs that promote moderate Islam. Radio Sawa, a pop   11
music-news station and Alhurra a satellite-TV news network have both been exposed as part of the US 
plan. Zeyno Baran, a terrorism analyst at the Nixon Centre said: 
 
“You provide money and help create the political space for moderate Muslims to 
organize, publish, broadcast, and translate their work.” She also says “the dilemma for 
Americans is that the ideological challenge of our day comes in the form of a religion—
militant Islam, replete with its political manifestos, edicts, and armies.”  
“We need an Islamic reformation, and I think there is real hope for one.” 
 
Daniel Pipes of the Philadelphia-based Middle East Forum (MEF), recently declared that the “ultimate 
goal” of the war on terrorism had to be Islam’s modernisation, or, as he put it, “religion-building.” 
 
US aid is also finding its way to ensure US foreign policy aims are met. Working behind the scenes, 
State Department USAID now helps fund over 30 Muslim organizations across the Muslim world. 
Among the programmes are media productions, workshops for Islamic preachers, and curriculum 
reform for schools from rural academies to Islamic universities. One talk show on Islam and tolerance 
is relayed to radio stations in 40 cities and sends a weekly column to over a hundred newspapers. The 
grant list includes Islamic think-tanks that are  fostering a body of scholarly research showing  ‘liberal’ 
Islam’s compatibility with democracy and human rights. 
 
Another aspect of the strategy being pursued is to make peace with radical Muslim figures who eschew 
violence. At the top of the list is the Muslim  Brotherhood, founded in 1928. Many brotherhood 
members, particularly in Egypt and Jordan, are at serious odds with al Qaeda. “I can guarantee that if you go 
to some of the unlikely points of contact in the Islamic world, you will find greater reception than you thought,” said Milt Bearden, whose 30-year CIA career included long service in the Muslim world. “The Muslim Brotherhood is probably more a part of the solution than it is a part of the problem.” He confirmed that US intelligence officers have been meeting not only with sections of the Muslim Brotherhood but also with members of traditional Muslim movements in Pakistan; Cooperative clerics have helped dampen down  fatwa’s calling for anti-American jihad and persuaded jailed militants to renounce violence.  
A Key aspect of the struggle is to reform Islam itself. However reform is unlikely to come from the 
Muslim world but rather from outside the Arab world. One solution being pushed is offering backdoor 
US support to reformers tied to Sufism, considered a tolerant branch of Islam.   12
 
The US is already funding Sufi Turkish religious leaders, leaders that oppose the State enforcement of 
Islamic law, believing that most Islamic regulations concern people’s private lives and only a few on 
matters of governance. The State, they believe, should not enforce Islamic law, because religion is a 
private matter, and the requirements of any particular faith should not be imposed on an entire 
population.  Fethullah Gülen  asserts the compatibility of Islam and democracy and accepts the 
argument that the idea of republicanism is very much in accord with early Islamic concepts of shura. He 
holds that the Turkish interpretation and experience of Islam are different  from those of others, 
especially the Arabs. He writes of an “Anatolian Islam” that is based on tolerance and that excludes 
harsh restrictions or fanaticism.
8
 
 
Another aspect of the battle is the drive to develop a wedge between Muslims by dividing Muslims 
along lines of moderate and extremist. The RAND report  ‘civil democratic Islam’ divided the Ummah 
into four camps; fundamentalists, traditionalists, modernists and secularists. The aim here is to work
 with the various moderate groups whilst isolating those that believe Islam is the solution. This includes 
the likes of the Nahdlatul Ulama an Institute for Islamic and Social Studies (LKiS) who hold that instead 
of creating specifically Islamic schools, Muslims should ensure that all institutions are infused with 
values of social justice and tolerance. The “i” in LKiS (which stands for Islam) is deliberately written in 
lower case to underscore that LKiS is against the type of Islamism that emphasizes Islam’s superiority 
over other religions. LKiS is currently involved in human-rights training in  pesantren,9  the Indonesian 
Islamic boarding schools. 
 
The US has also sponsored Euro Islam Projects including a student initiative sponsored by the pro–
European Union Students’ Forum AEGEE. The  group sponsors workshops, student exchanges, 
lecture events, and publications aimed at defining and promoting a specifically European, modern 
Islam that retains an Islamic character yet is open to the surrounding society 
 
Help has also been extended to modernists and  secularists such as Bassam Tibi, who has a frequent 
presence on the European lecture circuit. As the founder of the Arab Organization for Human Rights 
and a member of several organizations that promote Muslim-Jewish and Muslim-Christian-Jewish 
dialogue. He is strongly supportive of the integration of Muslim minorities into mainstream European 
society and opposed to parallel legal, cultural and  social systems. His outspoken belief is that 
immigrants should accept the values of the dominant Western culture (the  Leitkultur) instead of 
attempting to subvert or change it. He also opposes what is called Parallelgesellschaft (Parallel Security). In 
this regard Tibi differs persistently and insistently with the Islamist premise that Islam is necessarily 
entwined with the public space and with politics; he opposes any inroads of Islamic law in Europe, 
arguing that “the relationship between shari’ah and human rights is like that between fire and water.”10
 
 
The US Defence Department recognized in its Quadrennial Defence Review Report, that the United 
States is involved in a war that is “both a battle of arms and a battle of ideas,” in which ultimate victory can 
only be won “when extremist ideologies are discredited in the eyes of their host populations and tacit supporters.”11
  
 
The National Security Strategy document of September 2002 elucidated a refined conception of 
security that emphasizes the consequences of internal conditions of other States particularly the lack of 
democracy. This theme was to be reinforced over the course of the next several years, from the 9/11 
Commission Report to, perhaps most dramatically, President Bush’s second inaugural address. From its 
prominence in a series of high-profile documents and speeches, the President’s “Freedom Agenda” can 
be considered a US “grand strategy” in the Global War on Terrorism. The agenda identifies social 
sectors that would constitute the building blocks of the proposed reformation of Islam giving priority 
to liberal and secular Muslim academics and intellectuals, young moderate religious scholars, 
community activists, Women’s groups engaged in gender equality campaigns and moderate journalists 
and writers.