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Opinion

The liberal West has a blind spot for Islamism

Extremist groups that speak the language of ‘faith, unity and community’ are being given mainstream platforms while using lawfare to shut down criticism, says counter-extremism expert Liam Duffy

September 26, 2019 12:19
Islamists march in London.
4 min read

Like the hardcore pornography test, it is often said of extremism that while “we know it when we see it”, many of us struggle to provide a definition — even those of us working in the field (countering-extremism, not pornography).

It is almost certainly true that we know the far-right when we see it. Their racism and bigotry can barely conceal itself at the best of times, let alone when it is coming from the frothing mouths of skinheads marching through our town centres.

Yet it seems our collective imagination can only conceive of Islamist extremism when it is gunning people down in those same town centres while yelling “Allahu Akbar”. But terrorism is only one tactic of one small component of the overall challenge posed by global Islamism.

Eighteen years ago, the violent vanguard of this challenge revealed itself to the entire world with the murder of 3,000 innocent people on live television, but the ideological foundation for the 9/11 terrorist attacks goes much deeper. It emerged from a global movement which has been metastasising for decades, and which continues to grow and gain influence even as its jihadi offshoots come and go.