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E-raamat: Receding Shadow of the Prophet: The Rise and Fall of Radical Political Islam

  • Formaat: 208 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jun-2004
  • Kirjastus: Praeger Publishers Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780313057137
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  • Formaat: 208 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jun-2004
  • Kirjastus: Praeger Publishers Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780313057137

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The tragic events of September 11, 2001, in the United States renewed fears of an Islamist wave destabilizing the countries of the Muslim world. Yet the alarm raised over a previous wave of Islamism in the early 1990s, which threatened to overwhelm Egypt and Algeria and spill into the Balkans and Central Asia, proved to be unfounded. Takeyh and Gvosdev assert that while Islamism has been successful as an oppositional ideology of wrath, it has failed to provide Islamic societies with any feasible alternative to undertaking fundamental political and economic reforms. By detailing the defeat of Islamist movements in the Middle East, the Balkans, and Central Asia over the last decade, this book encourages us not to overestimate the Islamist threat in the current climate and the years to come.





Radical Islamists have been successful in mobilizing opposition to corrupt regimes, yet they have failed to translate their utopian vision into reality. Furthermore, their emphasis on violence alienates and frightens the middle class and other potential allies. Iran's revolution failed to create a model Islamic republic, and its government is increasingly losing legitimacy to demands for genuine democracy. Islamist governments in Afghanistan and Sudan relied upon violence to remain in power and ultimately collapsed. Islamist movements proved unable to dislodge the existing regimes in Egypt and Algeria. In the Balkans and Central Asia, Islamism has had little attraction for Western-oriented populations. Indeed, throughout the entire Islamic world, former radicals are seeking a new accommodation between Islamic values and liberal democracy. Takeyh and Gvosdev succinctly and accessibly explore the rise of radical Islam, as well as its ultimate demise in various nations.

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Takeyh and Gvosdev encourage us not to overestimate the Islamist threat in the current climate and the years to come.
Acknowledgments ix
Introducton xi
The Islamist Challenge
1(22)
Islamism versus Muslim Politics
2(6)
The Islamist Outlook
8(6)
Attractions and Pitfalls of Islamism
14(9)
Iran: The Islamist State and the Reformist Agenda
23(16)
Revolution and Reform
24(5)
Reform's Real Track Record
29(3)
A Civil War in the Right
32(4)
The New Iran?
36(3)
Islamism in Algeria: A History of Hope and Agony
39(20)
The Growing Political and Social Gaps
39(3)
The Evolution of Political Islam in Algeria
42(2)
The Rise and Fall of the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS)
44(7)
Whither Algeria?
51(8)
Egypt: The Struggle for a Nation's Soul
59(18)
Nasser and the Muslim Brotherhood
60(1)
Killing Pharaoh
61(7)
The Egyptian Stalemate
68(3)
Islamism and Moderation in Egypt
71(6)
Islamism in the Former Yugoslavia
77(28)
Islam and Nationality in Yugoslavia: A General Overview
78(6)
Muslims, Islam, and the War in Bosnia, 1990--2002
84(10)
Albanians, Islam, and Kosovo, 1974--1999
94(2)
Did the Balkans Become an Islamist Beachhead? Concluding Thoughts
96(9)
From the Red Star to the Green Crescent? Islamism in the Former Soviet Union
105(42)
The Shadow of the Crescent? Assumptions about Islam in the Soviet Union
106(8)
Islam, Gorbachev, and the Breakup of the USSR
114(5)
Post-Soviet Islam: General Observations
119(3)
State Islam and the Eurasian Consensus
122(4)
Islamists Ascendant? The Case of Tajikistan
126(5)
Islamists Ascendant? The Case of Chechnya
131(4)
The Islamist Threat in Eurasia: A Realistic Assessment
135(12)
Some Thoughts on Islamist Failures in Sudan and Afghanistan
147(10)
Sudan: Trajectory of Failure
148(4)
Afghanistan: An Islamist Cambodia?
152(5)
Conclusion 157(12)
Selected Bibliography 169(14)
Index 183
RAY TAKEYH is Professor and Director of studies at the Near East and South Asia Center of the National Defense University and author of The Origins of the Eisenhower Doctrine: The U.S., Britain, and Nasser's Eqypt, 1953-57.





NIKOLAS K. GVOSDEV is Executive Editor of The National Interest and a senior fellow for strategic studies at the Nixon Center. His most recent work is Civil Society and the Search for Justice in Russia.